8star

  • Book Review: The Mist

    Book Review: The Mist

    That sound wasn’t coming from the market. It was coming from behind me. From outside. Where the mist was. Something that was slipping and sliding and scraping over the cinderblocks. And, maybe, looking for a way in…

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  • Book Review: The Caves of Steel Review – Isaac Asimov (1954)

    In the distant future, human society lives in the massive domed cities of Earth and the use of artificial intelligence and robots is strictly controlled, the people being prejudiced against machines…

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  • Game Review: House of Ashes

    With an interesting premise, a strong main cast of likable characters, and a visual style that is commendable, House of Ashes is the first and so far the only game in the Dark Pictures Anthology that I would highly recommend…

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  • Book Review: The Bad Beginning (A Series of Unfortunate Events #1)

    Witty, dramatic, and darkly charming, the first book in A Series of Unfortunate Events introduces us to the unhappy lives of the Baudelaire siblings…

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  • Book Review: Psycho

    Book Review: Psycho

    During a stormy night she takes a wrong turn off of the highway and finds herself renting a room at the Bates Motel…

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  • Book Review: I, Robot

    Book Review: I, Robot

    Presented as a collection of nine short stories, each exploring and pushing to the limit the Three Laws of Robotics set forth from world maestro of science fiction, professor of biochemistry, and all-round prolific writer Isaac Asimov (1920 – 1992). Read the full review here…

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  • Book Review: The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde

    Robert Louis Stevenson’s classic 1886 novel is primarily a thriller and serves as an allegory of the morality of good and evil, personified into the clashing personalities of character(s) Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde…

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  • Book Review: I Am Legend

    Book Review: I Am Legend

    Richard Matheson’s 1954 novel essentially reignited the vampire genre and gave it a breath of fresh air, subverting the usual expectation of withered old blood suckers skulking around castles by bringing to light a new viewpoint: Humanity is the minority… Read the full review here.

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