Tuesday, March 22, 2016



Last weekend I picked up several books at a used book store, one by the late Anne McCafferey titled Acorna The Unicorn Girl.  This is a wonderful read full of greed, mystery, good vs. evil, deception, and a cold blooded villain named, The Piper.

Three space miners rescue a space pod  with a child of unknown origin asleep in it. They play nursemaid to the youngling until they can get back to civilization. At that time all sorts of people want to keep the child, none of them with good intentions. The three miners, bent on saving their ward, must think fast and guess who to trust for help.

On a planet called Kezdet secret child labor are used in mines and factories. They are brutally beaten and starved while the elite of the planet ignore the conditions of the abused children, the source of their wealth. Acorna and others mount an attack on the status quo, but a mysterious someone called,  The Piper, is blocking all their efforts to rescue the children.

As usual, Anne McCafferey gives the reader a thrilling tale full of conflict and mind stimulating adventure. I can recommend this novel to anyone interested in science fiction and those readers willing to entertain visions of a possible life in space.

Saturday, March 5, 2016

Santa Fe Dead

Santa Fe Dead by Stuart Woods is not a Who Dune It as our mother classified all such books where the reader guesses who the murderer is right up until the last page.  In Santa Fe Dead the reader knows who the murderer is from the first chapter.People are being knocked off all through the novel and the reader knows what will happen beforehand and who pulls the trigger. Even the detectives and the police know who the murders are.  The problem is proving it.  The reader, at lest this reader, frantically turned page after page sure the police or someone would step in and do something. Stuart Woods pulls it all together in a mind boggling climax. Even though Mr. Woods planted a seed several pages back, this reader forgot about it in the final maneuvering of the men hired to take care of the clever killer. This reader could have kicked herself for not anticipating the final killing on the last page. For lovers of fast, action based crime type novels, Santa Fe Dead is a must read.