It was a fun story that lacks any form of subtlety. The reader does a good job, and I would listen to other books they work on.
Good Performance
Review from The Rules of Supervillainy →
Review from The Rules of Supervillainy →
Review from The Tournament of Supervillainy →
The self aware parody on this book is great It also reads like a really dark silver age comic.The story parodies one of the endless cross overs where heroes from different books all come together to stop a Godlike villain It’s the best parts of Mortal Kombat Secret Wars and Crisis on Infinite EarthsIn the..
Review from The Distance →
Review from Rogue →
Review from Agent G: Saboteur →
I really enjoyed saboteur. I can’t put my finger on why, but I thought it was better than the first one. The pace was great and the characters were solid and I found myself plowing through it at a rapid pace. Really interested to see if the series continues, based on how this book ended..
Review from The Distance →
The first-person, present-tense narrative made the story very cumbersome to take seriously. It read like a 5th Graders “My Crazy Apocalyptic Day” essay. What made this story even more burdensome to digest was the performance of the readers; the uniform rhythm of both created an oral ennui that was only slightly remedied but adjusting the..
Review from Undead →
‘An indoctrination wrapped in a thrill’, as Farbeaux might say. As a thriller, this novel was fairly well-written but fell terribly short when it came to providing facts when discussing environment science. David L. Golemon published this book in 2009 as has Alex, the acclaimed world’s smartest person, proclaiming, ‘The polar ice cap is melting..
Phipps is that rare storyteller who can juggle multiple series with independent themes and characters. He produces engaging, entertaining plots and arcs within each individual book and throughout each series. With “Tournaments”, he has brought some favorite characters from around the CT Phipps multiverse together for an epic battle. The lines between hero and villain..
Review from Angels and the Bad Man →