There's a really good vampire series of books by Linda Lael Miller which includes Forever and the Night, For All Eternity, Time Without End and Tonight and Always.
Susan Krinard is a very good writer who has written about both vampires (Chasing Midnight is the first in a series of vampire romances and another called Prince of Dreams) and werewolves (Touch of the Wolf is the first book in a series of historical werewolf romances) and The Forest Lord (first in the Fane series about Faeries).
For other vampire stories/vampire romances stories, check these lists:
http://monsterlibrarian.com/vampiresya.htm
http://www.vampireromancebooks.com/
http://www.ourgaggleofgirls.com/books/?p=61
http://www.vampirelibrary.com/
I hope this helps.
2007-11-13 13:19:50
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answer #1
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answered by ck1 7
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Eragon, Eldest- Christopher Paolini Inkheart, Inkspell, Dragon Rider, The thief lord- Cornelia Funke Pendragon books- D.J. Macdale Magyk, Flyte, Physik- Angie Sage Series of unfourtunate events- Lemony Snicket Land of Elyon books-Patrick Carman
2007-11-13 15:11:45
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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If you like reading non-fiction, about what goes on nowadays - I recommend these two -
1) "Under the Loving Care of the Fatherly Leader"
written by Bradley K. Martin
2) "Rogue Regime"
written by Jasper Becker
These two well-written books give an insight about the North Korean Government.
Fiction?
Try all the books written by Clive Cussler.
The hero is Dirk Pitt, with his sidekick Al Giordino. These are well-written.
2007-11-13 16:32:57
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answer #3
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answered by Living In Korea 7
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Go to Amazon.com and search
"Lost from Atlantis Book 1" - book 2 is coming out in the next month or two, and 3 is already written and in editing.
"Death by Murder David Lindsay" - you have to search that way for it to come up. There's a lot of sex and violence in it but it's good, not gratuitous.
and "Super Spaghetti."
They're free on Amazon's Kindle Unlimited, and you can Google how to get a free trial of that. And you can get a free Kindle app for your phone or just read them online.
2016-04-02 21:57:23
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answer #4
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answered by thedavecorp 6
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WATERSHIP DOWN by Richard Adams (the author uses bunnies to tell a tale of heroism, bravery, courage, and loyalty).
THE RIDDLE OF THE SANDS by Erskine Childers (set before WWI, the author tells a story of a sailor who takes his yacht to the marshes of Holland to deliver some boat supplies to his friend and gets involved in espionage against the German navy).
THE RULE OF FOUR by Ian Calder (set in Princeton University, a couple of college students solve an ancient academic puzzle using old maps, old books, and old information found in the college museums). Better than the Da Vinci Code.
AGENTS OF INNOCENCE by David Ignatius (required reading by CIA agents training in Langley Virginia 'the farm'). Book is about spys in 1970s Lebanon.
2007-11-13 13:08:43
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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I am a fan of the Twilight series myself, I would recommend The Clique series, Harry Potter series, and Animorphs books.
2007-11-13 12:58:55
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answer #6
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answered by MandyRox 2
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The Maximum Ride series by James Patterson. Begins with "Maximum Ride: The Angel Experiment." I find them to be highly entertaining.
Summary:
http://jamespatterson.com/books_maximumRide.html
Hope you enjoy!
(and if you want to travel outside of the fantasy realm - James Patterson writes other series that you can find on that site. They're good, too.)
2007-11-13 13:06:30
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answer #7
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answered by Dave 6
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The husband by Dane Koontz
2007-11-13 13:29:24
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answer #8
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answered by Green Sauce 7
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