Captain Garrett of the Enterprise-C on the cover? Great! A Cardassian image also on the cover? This is going to be epic! Or is it?
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The Andromeda Strain
A deadly virus running rampant and killing almost everyone who comes into contact with it. Scientists believe they've got a way to contain it, but the President won't make the call. And now, the coronavirus, er, Andromeda Strain may be spreading even further!
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The Possibility of Life: Science, Imagination, and Our Quest for Kinship in the Cosmos
I hope we're not alone in the universe. When I look up at the stars, I like to imagine that there is life orbiting quite a lot of them. Like in Star Trek. Which is referenced heavily throughout this book. And you know what? I'm here for it!
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The Magician’s Nephew (The Chronicles of Narnia #6)
The creation of Narnia is told in this, the sixth published but first chronological, tale in the Chronic-WHAT?!-cles of Narnia. It is a tale of magic, adventure, and friendship.
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The Horse and His Boy (The Chronicles of Narnia #5)
The Chronic-WHAT?!-cles of Narnia continues with this lovely entry taking place... not in Narnia. Featuring such favored elements of children's literature as horse theft, kidnapping, running away, doing battle, and of course slavery.
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Jack & Jill (Alex Cross #3)
Another day, another Alex Cross adventure. This time, Alex Cross is back in Washington DC where a duo calling themselves Jack and Jill go up the Hill... to kill, to kill, to kill...
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The Haunting of Hill House
Classic horror. A haunted house. Multiple movies/shows based on it. What could go wrong? This book has a lot to offer from the haunts, the investigation, and the psychological chills. But is it really scary? Let's just say that I would have found it entertaining if Zak Bagans and the…
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The Missing (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine)
In this novel, our favorite gruff, no nonsense, good ol' country doctor returns. That's right - Dr. Katherine Pulaski is back!
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Slaughterhouse-Five
This book always seems to be among the favorites of sci-fi and literature readers alike. So, naturally I have to read it. And man-oh-man is it packed with story elements from sad to darkly humorous and from historical to fantastical. It's a lot to unpack. So it goes.
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The First Fifteen Lives of Harry August
What would you do if you lived the same lifetime over and over and remembered everything from your previous lives? Would you try to protect the world? Or destroy it?