The first time I read The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, it changed my reading tastes significantly. I’d always been drawn to mysteries in books, growing up as an admirer of Harry Potter and Sherlock Holmes. But the Millennium books had so
When I read The Girl in the Spider’s Web, it gave me satisfaction that the wonderful characters left behind by Stieg Larsson would be left in good hands. That book might not have been perfect, but it did its job in progressing
When I finished the first three books of the Millennium series, I knew it would be hard to continue—with Girl in the Spider’s Web—knowing that the original author Stieg Larsson had passed away. I had become loyal to his way of writing
After reading Monster by Naoki Urasawa last year, I was blown away by his ability to hold the reader’s attention throughout a long and suspenseful series, without it ever feeling like a drag. The way he’s able to keep readers guessing constantly,
One thing about being a book worm is that I’m always stumbling upon new books that I want to read. This leads me to piling up on my Amazon Wish List. It’s so bad that I even have an Amazon Wish List
The Girl Who Kicked The Hornet’s Nest follows on from book two in the Millennium series, The Girl Who Played With Fire. It picks up right where the second book left of and has a similar pace. By similar pace, I mean
The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo is a book I would describe as having a slow start, but a satisfying build and conclusion. The start of this book presented me with so many characters that I had to make note of them