more . . .

by Overall Rank  

overall 13 votes: rating onrating onrating onrating onrating half
editor average: rating onrating onrating onrating onrating half

City of Roses by Kip Manley

A Serialized Phantastick on The Ten Thousand Things & The One True Only

City of Roses is about what happens when Jo Maguire, a highly strung underemployed telemarketer, meets Ysabel Perry, a princess of unspecifiable pedigree. It’s also about hearts broken cleanly and otherwise, the City of Portland, Spenser, those moments in pop songs when the bass and all of the drums except maybe a handclap suddenly drop out of the bridge leaving . . .

A serialized novel, updating thrice weekly.
· · · · · · · ·

overall 6 votes: rating onrating onrating onrating onrating half
editor rating: rating onrating onrating onrating halfrating off

Captive Prince by Freece

Damen is the true heir to the throne, but when his half brother seizes power, Damen is captured, stripped of his identity and sent to serve the prince of a rival nation as a pleasure slave. . . .

A serialized novel, updating monthly.
· · · · · · · · · ·



Random Editorial Review

rating onrating onrating onrating onrating half

CITY OF ROSES

Breathless Anticipation

Editor: Morgan O'Friel
December 20, 2008

The first thing I noticed upon viewing the site was that the author utilizes a heavily stylized form of sentence prose. The rhythm of the sentences can get choppy in some areas and overly-long in others. This style’s employed, as far as I can tell, to attempt to mirror the way that people experience the world around them.

[more . . .]

More editorial reviews . . .

Random Member Review

rating onrating onrating onrating onrating half

CITY OF ROSES

Fairies invade my hometown! eek!

Member: MeiLin Miranda
December 6, 2009

I just started reading this, primarily because it’s set in my hometown of Portland. I’m not very far in, but I’m already hooked.

Con: It’s written in present tense, which is hard to pull off and usually annoys me.

Pro: Kip’s pulling [more . . .]

More reviews . . .