MORE BOOKS HERE








CATEGORIES
Adult
Ancient
Articles
Biographies
Business
Children
Classics
Computers
Cooking
Economics
Fiction
History
Horror
Mind & Spirit
Mystery
New Additions
New Authors
Non Fiction
Occult
Philosophy
Poetry
Religion
Romance
Sci Fi
Third Reich
Tutorials
Videos


New Authors
Adesida, Dotun
Baraka, Ahmed
Binx, Eugene
Biswas, Rakesh
Brown, Dr. Glen
Chambers, Eric
Chambers, Lesley
Chappel, T. A.
Culling, Peter
Falit, Joseph E.
Fawcett, Shaun
Fleming, Suzanne
Gheorghiu, C.
Huchu, Tendai
Jacobsen, Heidi
Knapp, Artie
Kumar, G. Ram
Lay, Vicheka
Litt, Dr. Jerome Z.
Miller, Harley
Maffey, Laura
Maffey, Riccardo
Milazzo, Ronald
Minya, Dzimba
Neo
Okonkwo, I.E.
Patterson, R.J.
Rinaldi, Jacquie
Ridner, Melanie
Sharp, Ian
Spudich, Giulietta
Taylor, Roy
Thompson, Tantse
Turley, Keith
Watson, Rob
Williams, Keith
Williams, Sheona
Yarbrough, Alan

Printed Books
Authors A-E
Authors F-K
Authors L-P
Authors Q-Z
Doc Sidhe
by
Aaron Allston
The Philosophical Strangler
by
Eric Flint
The Apocalypse Troll
by
David Weber
Planets of Adventure
by
Murray Leinster
Fallen Angels
by
Larry Niven
Born to Run
by
Mercedes Lackey
The Secret Garden
by
Frances H. Burnett
The Certain Hour
by
James Branch Cabell
The Prophet
by
Kahlil Gibran
Pathological Lying
by
William Healy
Waifs and Strays
by
William Sidney Porter
The Imitation of Christ
by
Thomas A. Kempis




1
New eBooks

Here is a sample of the many titles that await you in our online library. New titles are being added daily and Globusz members can read them for free. Join our community of readers now and enjoy Globusz Publishing's complete selection of quality ebooks!



Cross the Stars

by David Drake
Drake captures the spirit of the Odessey and retells this classic myth in a delightful setting, every bit as strange and facinating to its readers as anything that Homer came up with.
The PBS character Wishbone, takes classic stories and applies them to modern life. Drake takes a classic myth and applies it to the future with wonderful results.
A. Rick Anderson



Bedlam Boyz

by Ellen Guon
When one of her friends is gunned down, Kayla uses her latent healing powers to heal her friend--and the gang member who shot him--and soon the city's gangs are eager to use her powers for evil.
This book is part of the Urban Fantasy series that Mercedes Lackey and others have written, including Summoned to Tourney, Knights of Ghosts and Shadows, Bedlam's Bard, Born to Run, and Wheels of Fire. This part of the series is more recent and up to date than the others which were written in the mid-90s.



A Hymn Before Battle

by John Ringo
Michael O'Shea, a fireplug of an iron-pumping ex-soldier, leaves game design behind to train and then lead power-armored infantry in a merciless battle against the equally merciless, centauroid Posleen for the sake of Earth's allies. Several subplots show Ringo's fondness for special ops types and marines, and his experience as a paratrooper shows in the way he handles military small-group politics and disciplinary problems. The subplots point up the potential grimness of Earth finding itself under siege, if not actually under assault. (Don't worry, that will probably come; this book has series written between all the lines.) The interstellar skulduggery is thick, and the final action sequence, occupying a third of the book, juxtaposes power armor, aliens, lasers, and leopard tanks, and is practically impossible not to read in one sitting. An exceedingly impressive first novel is what we have here. Standard military sf based on a standard premise--humans as the desperately needed warrior allies of alien pacifists--it may be, but it is executed with skill, verve, and wit.



The Cutting Room

by Robert Rosenberg
The author of Crimes of the City brings Israeli detective Avram Cohen to the United States to solve the murder of a Hollywood director friend found dead in his editing room. 12,500 first printing.



Far Edge of Darkness

by Linda Evans
Sibyl Johnson—a graduate student In classical archeology, just this side of her Ph.D., when an anachronism at her dig in Italy causes her career to take a sudden lurch—and suddenly she's a slave in the very society she was studying!
Charlie Flynn—a Miami cop, deep undercover on a Mafia sting operation stumbled onto something he shouldn't have seen, end now he's scheduled for a hit—in the Roman forum. Lagan McKee—once a commando, now a bum, he got caught in a Florida thunderstorm and suddenly he was in Alaska—five years after the storm struck. Now he's slated for a fatal visit to the dark side of Classical Rome.
Three people, all castaways in time, all victims of the same evil hand—all out for vengeance, on the Far Edge of Darkness.



Demon Blade

by Mark A. Garland & Charles G. McGraw
Frost, one of the world's great sorcerers, now possesses the Demon Blade, perhaps the most powerful (and dangerous) weapon ever created--but he doesn't want it. Trouble is, plenty of others do, so he must not let it go until he finds the Blade's rightful guardian. But to do that he must return home. And that means facing those who betrayed him in his youth, as well as those whom he betrayed. It means facing who and what he was, and what he has become.
He will arrive to find a land on the brink of war, his greatest enemy on the throne, himself the target of plots by lords and mages alike, and soon enough, family he didn't even know he had held ransom for the Demon Blade. Now he must choose among the least of four evils, and new, unimagined consequences he is only beginning to comprehend.



Sisters of Glass

by D.W.St.John
This oddly satisfying humorous fantasy usually achieves the zany and frequently the bizarre. In the city of New Sfinctre the professional strangler and amateur philosopher Greyboar and his agent and sidekick, Ignace, accept a contract they're unable to fulfill, but which leads to some amusing adventures. At their watering hole, the Sign of the Trough, the pair encounter a nearsighted swordswoman named Cat (actually Schrdinger's Cat, but she can't find Schrdinger) and learn that Gwendolyn, Greyboar's Amazonian sister (who's active in the literally underground dwarf-liberation movement), has an artistic lover named Benvenuti. After Benvenuti's disappearance, the duo have to spring Cat from prison, help Abbess Hildegard of the Sisters of Tranquility intimidate a fallen angel and harrow hell and several even worse places to get Benvenuti back. The author's inventiveness is unblushingly demanding of the reader passages in the journey to hell satirize (or more accurately, skewer or even impale) role-playing games, Dante, the Greek playwrights and the Norse sagas with ferocious accuracy and a complete lack of scruples. Good taste prevails most of the time, and there are a fair number of serious grace notes, such as the cult of Joe, the caveman who invented God (aka the Old Geister). The sexual content is higher, but otherwise Flint can stand comparison with at least early Terry Pratchett. Fans of Harry Turtledove's elaborate wordplay will also revel in this volume. (May)with David Drake, and for the novel 1632.



The Warslayer

by Rosemary Edghill
Rosemary Edghill's first professional sales were to the black & white comics of the late 1970s, so she can truthfully state on her resume that she once killed vampires for a living. She has worked as an SF editor for a major New York publisher, as a freelance book designer, as a typesetter, as an illustrator, as an anthologist, and as a professional book reviewer.
She is the author of novels, novellas, and short stories in just about every genre except Westerns. She has written technothrillers, Regency Romances, historical novels, Space Opera, high fantasy, media tie-ins, and horror.
"The Warslayer" is fast, funny, and tells a rousing story of mistaken identity, second chances, and for a woman who honestly believes in her own incompetence to find out she's wrong after all.



The Forlorn

by Dave Freer
The story follows three distinct threads - The street-thief boy with soul of a prince, the princess with the soul of a courtesan, the utterly terrible alien-raised shadow of a man with a tabula rasa soul. Appealing characters in very different ways. These three move at breakneck speed on a collision course in a sort of `medieval' world. It's a quest story across painted deserts, mountains and oceans.



Great Kings' War

by Roland Green and John F. Carr
Born to Run
John F. Carr and Roland Green take us back to the world of Lord Kalvan. Having saved his new nation of Hos-Hastigos from destruction only last year, Calvin Morrison (now Lord Kalvan) now finds a new campaigning season upon him. But, the House of Styphon is not about to see this new force put an end to their gunpowder wealth and authority. And now, Kalvan must prepare to meet an even greater threat, and once more use his knowledge of military history to save a seemingly impossible situation.



About Globusz | Code of Conduct | Privacy Policy | Mission Statement | Submission Guidelines | Mentor Registration | Message Board | Terms of Use