A Christian Bible is a set of books divided into the Old and New Testament that a Christian denomination has, at some point in their past or present, regarded as divinely inspired scripture.
This book hit me like a ton of bricks. THANK YOU to my amazing friend who recommended it to me.
There is a cliff hanger at the end of each chapter and multiple POV's to keep you sucked in.
I can't give to many details away without ruining it, but this is one of my top 5 thrillers now. THIS IS GOOD. The talent this man has in a single pinky finger is impressive.
This book hit me like a ton of bricks. THANK YOU to my amazing friend who recommended it to me.
There is a cliff hanger at the end of each chapter and multiple POV's to keep you sucked in.
I can't give to many details away without ruining it, but this is one of my top 5 thrillers now. THIS IS GOOD. The talent this man has in a single pinky finger is impressive.
Review of 'NIV Zondervan Study Bible' on 'Goodreads'
5 stars
A beautifully crafted though massively complicated debut to what looks like a rolling series. I worry when I write something like this, because if the author has thrown so much complication at the first book in a series, one wonders A) Is there anything left for the next one? B) to top the first one, is the next one simply going to get labyrinthine to the point of lax and undisciplined (like the later Harry Potter volumes did, I would suggest …)
But that’s just speculation nagging me. And even if the jury is out for me about the rest of the series, there is a huge amount to praise in this first volume. It is certainly well done – well written, well plotted, a world well-fleshed out. It’s a genre novel in pure culture – all the familiar components, shaken up and reassembled – but genre novels have huge …
A beautifully crafted though massively complicated debut to what looks like a rolling series. I worry when I write something like this, because if the author has thrown so much complication at the first book in a series, one wonders A) Is there anything left for the next one? B) to top the first one, is the next one simply going to get labyrinthine to the point of lax and undisciplined (like the later Harry Potter volumes did, I would suggest …)
But that’s just speculation nagging me. And even if the jury is out for me about the rest of the series, there is a huge amount to praise in this first volume. It is certainly well done – well written, well plotted, a world well-fleshed out. It’s a genre novel in pure culture – all the familiar components, shaken up and reassembled – but genre novels have huge appeal, and there was enough that was original in this one that I wasn't left feeling I had read the book before. I quickly believed in the world that Hilliard has created. It felt solid, as if I could look round a corner and there would be more of it, not just the cardboard back of a stage set. That’s a huge achievement for a genre fantasy book.
The cast of characters was compelling. Four of them were really structural for this book and there were several more whom I cared about and would be happy to meet again, perhaps in a more major role in a future volume.
I liked the shades of grey – I have always been interested in the liminal space between good and evil, and this was well charted in some of the characters.
I liked the variant take on various old tropes (oh how I loved those interesting black unicorns – anyone who has been anywhere near a western girl-child in the last few years will have been fed to gagging with fluffy saccharin pastel-coloured ones, so this was a bold innovation, but well achieved.)
I liked the exploration of class and status and race and discrimination – modern issues I haven’t seen explored in this way through this genre before. Done with a lightness of touch that I admired, but still there for the taking.
All in all, a fine debut. Well done Mr Hilliard. I’ll risk the next one and eat humble pie if my opening misgivings are proven wrong.
Review of 'NIV Zondervan Study Bible' on 'Goodreads'
4 stars
I’m glad I read this before reading reviews, but I still expected I would hate Charlie based on the synopsis. On the contrary, I found myself feeling very sympathetic to Charlie—she’s wrong to think the way she does about “100% lesbian women” and she wishes she weren’t so insecure, but she is stuck in feelings and not in logic.
Once Jo was introduced, I felt even more empathy for Charlie’s situation. I didn’t even care that Charlie had apparently become a “distant” girlfriend for the last year of her relationship with Jo—because Jo was such a shitty person (who I think we are supposed to like??).
If you’re in a relationship and you feel like your partner has checked out, you check in. You go to therapy. You encourage them to go to therapy. You try to find ways the two of you can work through the apparent jealousy and …
I’m glad I read this before reading reviews, but I still expected I would hate Charlie based on the synopsis. On the contrary, I found myself feeling very sympathetic to Charlie—she’s wrong to think the way she does about “100% lesbian women” and she wishes she weren’t so insecure, but she is stuck in feelings and not in logic.
Once Jo was introduced, I felt even more empathy for Charlie’s situation. I didn’t even care that Charlie had apparently become a “distant” girlfriend for the last year of her relationship with Jo—because Jo was such a shitty person (who I think we are supposed to like??).
If you’re in a relationship and you feel like your partner has checked out, you check in. You go to therapy. You encourage them to go to therapy. You try to find ways the two of you can work through the apparent jealousy and lack of intimacy. What you DONT fucking do is what Jo did—never say anything, stay with the person you slowly resent until you’re emotionally detached from them, and then engage in a romantic friendship with someone else until you’re in love with that person, and then abruptly leave your partner of 7 years by telling her you have fallen in love with someone else.
Review of 'NIV Zondervan Study Bible' on 'Goodreads'
4 stars
This is one of those Sci-fi stories that follows someone's life. These can go two ways, one where the character becomes an implausible superhero, fingers in every pie, with the perfect scheme, and another where the story meanders so much that you loose all will to live and wish the author would get to the point.
This book balances the two sides well. It's not an action story, but there is lots of action, it's not a slice of life story, but it follows Mariska's coming of age.
I felt connected to our protagonist, and she's very human, living and growing. It does get a tiny bit slow about half way through, but then it picks up again. My only complaint I suppose is that she maybe is a little too mature for a 20-something year old.
I think you should read this book. It's good.
This is one of those Sci-fi stories that follows someone's life. These can go two ways, one where the character becomes an implausible superhero, fingers in every pie, with the perfect scheme, and another where the story meanders so much that you loose all will to live and wish the author would get to the point.
This book balances the two sides well. It's not an action story, but there is lots of action, it's not a slice of life story, but it follows Mariska's coming of age.
I felt connected to our protagonist, and she's very human, living and growing. It does get a tiny bit slow about half way through, but then it picks up again. My only complaint I suppose is that she maybe is a little too mature for a 20-something year old.