Whoa we’re halfway there… but I suppose with all that’s going on, living on a prayer is out the window… but books aren’t and no matter what shit storm is going down out that window, the Hall of information vowed to carry on and carry on is what we have done!
Now that we are halfway through 2020, I am also half way through my TBR list and so here’s a breakdown of some of my best reads so far…
‘Dead End’ (Clown Conspiracy Book 1): A Short Thriller’ by Mallory Kelly
Short books don’t get nearly enough credit especially when they do everything a longer book can. This series known as the ‘Clown Conspiracy’ is like a bunch X-files episodes that all carry the same chilling clown type theme but branch out in story with individual arcs in each addition. From this first one I was hooked and went back to the series over the past six months. Give short reads a chance! Here’s my review from January
‘Nocturnal Farm’ by Villimey Mist
Vampire stories are still very relevant today, even more so when they break the usual mould and take a path less travelled like Nocturnal Farm which is the sequel to Nocturnal Blood. Book one was a chase style story that introduced the universe while this one represented more of a rescue effort while uncovering more of the vampire world already introduced. The MC is a sufferer of OCD and anxiety, but it’s not glorified or exploited, it’s highlighted in a brave and original way. The Nocturnal series is definitely the one to watch right now as more sequels are planned! My full review is here.
Break Them All!!: A Modern Era Awakening! by DRTao
The Hall of Information proudly takes on books from all corners of genre. Fiction or non-fiction we’re happy to read them and this unique self help book can best be described as ‘A unique mind opening insight into breaking the shells that govern our existence…’ and that’s taken straight from my review.
Break them all can be picked up by anyone looking for a little more insight into their own mind. It’s written in that accessible way and like I said in my review ‘It’s intelligent but easy to take in and highlights how to see things differently and perhaps not the way we usually see them.’
Nightjar by Paul Jameson
Every now and then a true literary gem comes along and this one took me by complete surprise. So much so I had to drop mostly everything and just read it cover to cover. Nightjar can best be described as something between folklore and fantasy while being written in a classic literary style. It’s a fresh story with an oldie style and that will take you back and it’s a combination that makes this one a potential read of the year! Trust me, check it out, my review is here…
Swinging Sanity by N.F. Mirza
And now some poetry because every reader’s list should have some on and mine is no different. ‘Swinging Sanity’ is a deep and sensory collection of poetry, by that I mean it’s an emotion fuelled account full of feelings that covers a range of subjects. ‘From self harm, depression, anxiety, loneliness, love, individual suffering and pain to everything else that centres around our sanity, you’ll see it represented here without any reservations and with honesty – something the world needs to talk about more…’ Check out my full review here…
The Band Director’s Lessons About Life: Volume 1 – 50 Parables on Life’s Performance Cycle by Donald Lee
The Hall of Information was approached directly by Donald Lee who introduced his work and it didn’t take much to convince me to check it out. This collection of scenarios serve as parables related to the teaching of music that reflects on lessons learned. The subject matter ranges from time management, knowledge, belief, having fun, performing, forgiveness, failure and so much more (50 in total). This is a book that’ll make you think and hopefully motivate you to be better in the same sense. My full review is here…
Memories of Mars: a Novella (Custodian Library Archives Book 1) by Colin Yeoman
I cannot stress how good short books can be when they are good and Memories of Mars is one that caught me off guard yet again. Part science fiction and part literary ficton, this brand of ‘Fringe fiction’ faces the age old question about our origins and that of the red planet’s. To quote my review ‘Colin Yeoman has cleverly fused real elements of biological transmission experimentation with the human memory which possibly fills in the gaps of our history in the universe and more specifically Mars which is wholeheartedly original…’
And so that wraps up my ‘best books of 2020 so far’ but there are a stack of great reads I did not mention as I am saving them for the yearly review. Thanks for stopping by!
Adding these to my Amazon wish list sir. Recommendations are always welcome. I enjoy being one of your readers when you update content. 😀
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Thanks for reading 🙂
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Also, any idea why the memories of mars book is out of print on Amazon?
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I’m not sure. He’s pretty active on Twitter, so maybe reach out to him. I know the sequel is coming soon!
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22 books so far in 2020 is quiet a feat! Congratulations! And thanks for the mention I highly appreciate it 🙂
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I agree re: Band Director’s Lessons about Life, the only one on this list that I’ve read. Night Jar is on my TBR list. Sounds interesting. Keep on reading and reviewing!
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