The Friend, by Joakim Zander

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Joakim Zander is already one of the most powerful Nordic authors who heads a new turn of the Scandinavian thriller, until now focused on a black genre associated with the heinous crime, the disturbing murderer or the dark pending case around which we are offered great tension narrative. Because …

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The Watchmaker's Daughter by Kate Morton

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The nineteenth century always has a complementary aftertaste of melancholy and mystery. At a time when it was still lived in the chiaroscuro of modernity, between beliefs, legends, hoax and the advancement of science at the dawn of technology, everything related ends up acquiring a stranger ...

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Gwendy's button box from Stephen King

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What would Maine be without Stephen King? Or maybe it really is that Stephen King owes much of its inspiration to Maine. Be that as it may, the telluric acquires a special dimension in this literary tandem that widely exceeds the reality of one of the most recommended states for ...

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Gog: the countdown begins, by JJ Benítez

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Gog has always been there, waiting for his moment. The apocalypse is his party, and we are all invited to it. If there is a surprising and surprising writer in terms of the books he is putting out, that is always JJ Benítez. Since I got to know his work, back in the early days of Caballo ...

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Imposters, by Robin Cook

imposters robin cook

It is curious how the great diversification in the most current literary genres can end up leading to very specific subgenres. We recently talked about John Grisham and his own genre of judicial suspense and now it is Robin Cook's turn with his dedication to scientific mystery, medical suspense… And…

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The Forest Knows Your Name, by Alaitz Leceaga

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The XNUMXth century is already a kind of consolidated past in its entirety. With that melancholic feeling of a deadline for life, this century becomes the place to find stories of all kinds. And those of us who occupy that time, to a greater or lesser extent, discover that yes, that ...

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The autumn of innocence, of Stephen King

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Also titled as "The Body." What of Stephen King and the plots around kids or teenagers is a recurring theme. I don't know, it seems as if the author seeks an empathy with that young soul that once occupied us. A spirit open to fantasy or fear, ...

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Hope, eternal spring, of Stephen King

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Or also Rita Hayworth and the redemption of Shawshank. The point is to grant separately all the value of the short novels that make up the great volume of The Four Seasons, by Stephen King. With this incomparable author something singular, indefinable happens. It happens that King is able to write ...

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The lords of time, by Eva García Saenz

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The time has come, the long-awaited closure, the end of the White City trilogy ... Eva García Sáenz has shown that usual tenacity when it comes to sagas and with The Time Lords concludes her trilogy, an exciting set that has run like the ...

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Mr. Penumbra and His 24-Hour Bookstore, by Robin Sloan

Clay Jannon could hardly imagine ending up as a clerk in a strange old bookstore. But his technological future in Silicon Valley was shattered into a thousand pieces and he had to look for alternatives, new paths in which to find a way of life. In a way, the disenchantment with technology ...

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Crystal Tigers, by Toni Hill

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Homicide as hyperbole of guilt and remorse. The idea of ​​evil presented in a way that anyone can empathize with to a greater degree. There are certain things in our past that can expose us to the idea of ​​a great risk taken or something certainly wrong. AND …

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