FSFH Book Review

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Abnett, Dan
Adams, Douglas
Aguirre-Sacasa, Roberto
Allen, Roger MacBride
Allie, Scott
Allston, Aaron
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Barclay, James
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Baum, L. Frank
Bear, Greg
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Bischoff, David
Bisson, Terry
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Bowen, Carl
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Canavan, Trudi
Card, Orson Scott
Chadwick, Paul
Clarke, Arthur C.
Clarke, Susanna
Clemens, James
Collins, Paul
Crichton, Michael
Crispin, A. C.
Cunningham, Elaine
Daley, Brian
David, Peter
DeMatteis, J. M.
Denning, Troy
Dick, Philip K.
Dickens, Charles
Dietz, William C.
Dixon, Chuck
Donaldson, Stephen
Eddings, David
Edginton, Ian
Elrod, P. N.
Erikson, Steven
Feist, Raymond E.
Foster, Alan Dean
Fraction, Matt
Furman, Simon
Gaiman, Neil
Gemmell, David A.
Gerber, Michael
Gibbons, Dave
Golden, Christopher
Goodkind, Terry
Goodwin, Archie
Graham, Mitchell
Grant, Alan
Green, Jonathan
Green, Laurence
Guggenheim, Marc
Hagberg, David
Hambly, Barbara
Hamilton, Laurell K.
Hand, Elizabeth
Harras, Bob
Harrison, Mick
Heinlein, Robert A.
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Herbert, James
Hine, David
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Homer
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Jacques, Brian
James, Charlie Hamilton
Jenkins, Paul
Jeter, K. W.
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King, William
Knaak, Richard A.
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Le Guin, Ursula K.
Lewis, C. S.
Lieberman, A. J.
Loeb, Jeph
Lorey, Dean
Lowder, James
Luceno, James
Lumley, Brian
Macan, Darko
Manning, Russ
Martin, George R. R.
Marz, Ron
Matheson, Richard
McCaffrey, Anne
McIntosh, Neil
McIntyre, Vonda
Michelinie, David
Millar, Mark
Miller, John Jackson
Miller, Karen
Milligan, Peter
Moench, Doug
Moesta, Rebecca
Moore, Alan
Nicholls, Stan
Nicieza, Fabian
Nylund, Eric
O'Neil, Dennis
Ostrander, John
Paolini, Christopher
Perry, S. D.
Perry, Steve
Pratchett, Terry
Pullman, Philip
Quinn, David
Reaves, Michael
Reed, A. W.
Reed, Brian
Rice, Anne
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Roberts, Adam
Rowe, Matthew
Rowling, J. K.
Rubio, Kevin
Rusch, Kristine Kathryn
Salvatore, R.A.
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Shultz, Mark
Simone, Gail
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Simonson, Walter
Smith, L. Neil
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Stackpole, Michael A.
Stevenson, Robert Louis
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Stover, Matthew
Straczynski, J. Michael
Stradley, Randy
Strnad, Jan
Sutcliff, Rosemary
Tolkien, J.R.R.
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van Belkom, Edo
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Wagner, John
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Still to come
Reviewing Literature
The Books of Robert Louis Stevenson

Robert Lewis Balfour Stevenson was born in Edinburgh on the 13th of December 1850.
 
Average Review Score: 4 out of 5 (1 book)

The Strange Case Of Dr Jekyll And Mr Hyde & The Merry Men And Other Tales And Fables
A collection of Stevenson's short stories, most of which have Gothic or supernatural themes.  First and most famous is Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde, which is like Stoker's 'Dracula' and Shelley's 'Frankenstein' in that popular culture has distorted its place in the public consciousness to a degree that the original story has been lost.  It is by far the best story in this book and is a truly great work of Gothic literature, building the story of Dr Jekyll's dark obsession through the investigative eyes of the lawyer Mr Utterson.  The other gems of this book are 'Markheim', in which a murderer wrestles with his conscience whilst goaded on by the Devil, and 'Olalla', in which a recuperating soldier finds himself amid morally degenerate nobility in Spain.  The book also has its weak points and the worst of these is 'Will O' The Mill' which attempts to be some sort of parable but which sadly reads as little more than self-indulgent nonsense.  Overall this is a great collection of stories in which Stevenson explores an obvious fascination with the supernatural.
4 out of 5
'Mr Utterson the lawyer was a man of rugged countenance, that was never lighted by a smile; cold, scanty and embarrassed in discourse; backward in sentiment; lean, long, dusty, dreary, and yet somehow lovable.'

If you liked Stevenson:
Then check out those other Gothic classics, 'Dracula' and 'Frankenstein'.

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