Spenser is smart, witty, compassionate and very strong. I like to think I'm all of those things.
Read More »Book Reviews
Book Review: Galileo’s Children
Examining the never-ending struggle between science and superstition and the moral dilemmas it can create.
Read More »Book Review: The Steerswomen Series by Rosemary Kirstein (Part Two)
The world that Ms. Kirstein has created, and the people she has populated it with are ones we can readily identify with.
Read More »Book Review: The Steerswomen Series by Rosemary Kirstein (Part One)
...the impact of technology on a world when its secrets are held in the hands of only a few
Read More »Book Review: The Da Vinci Fraud
Using The Da Vinci Code as a framework for the general public to explore the historical roots of Christianity.
Read More »Book Review: Discovering Dorothea
If you come across information your subject would not have wanted known to posterity, what should you do with it?
Read More »Book Review: A Puzzled Heart
The book suggests it's different to most in the mystery genre because the first two adult characters encountered are lesbian.
Read More »Book Review: My Very Own Murder
Chick-lit disguised as a cozy mystery-- a pleasant but unsubstantial read.
Read More »Book Review: Reading Families: Women’s Literate Practice in Late Medieval England
Women were, through this engagement with the written word, beginning the long, tortuous climb into the public world.
Read More »Book Review: TCP/IP Guide
If TCP/IP technology is at all important to your job, pick up a copy of this book.
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