
Haunted by James Herbert
Today's 'Way Back Whensday' is the second of three posts in my weeklong special here at John C Adams Reviews on the theme of ghosts.

The Oxford Book of Victorian Ghost Stories
This week's 'Monday Musings' feature from John C Adams Reviews is my review of 'The Oxford Book of Victorian Ghost Stories'

Old Sins Cast Long Shadows in the Fantasy Fiction of David Gemmell
The English proverb 'Old Sins Cast Long Shadows' could easily serve as a motto for the fantasy novels of David Gemmell.

Congo by Michael Crichton
One of our family ended up with a pre-loved double volume of Michael Crichton novels last Christmas as a gift, so I took a look at it.

Tyrant's Blood by Fiona McIntosh
A number of things jumped out at me when I first came across this book in one of our local secondhand bookshops.

Wide Sargasso Sea by Jean Rhys
Until Jean Rhys there was only Jane and a wordless lunatic in the attic. Then, just over fifty years ago, that changed forever.

The Day of the Triffids
The BBC's 1981 adaptation of John Wyndham's most famous novel aired during the thirtieth anniversary of its publication back in 1951.

Father of the Bride
I've listed this review under 'One-Star Wednesday'. Like pretty much everything in that category of my blog, it's a guilty pleasure.

The Steel Remains by Richard K Morgan
The cover quotes from Joe Abercrombie and Steven Erikson hinted that we were going to be in down-in-the-dirt fantasy territory.

The Last Kashmiri Rose by Barbara Cleverly
'The Last Kashmiri Rose' is set in the Golden Age of murder mysteries, the Twenties, but unlike many of the novels of the time it is set in