Who or what do you read when you have Kindle Unlimited?
Who are the authors you turn to when you have Kindle Unlimited? What are some of your recommendations for books or authors on KU?
Here are some of the main authors I read when I have it.
Sarina Dorie - She mainly writes fantasy mystery romances in an adult Harry Potter vein, and she also writes some science fiction. I started with her Womby's School for Wayward Witches series, which followed a young woman who starts teaching art in a magic school after learning she is the daughter of an infamous wicked witch. I've also read various sequels and prequels to this series, which follow other characters introduced in the series.
Charlie N. Holmberg - She writes fantasy books with romance in them. I started with The Paper Magician series, which used a materials based magic system. While these took place in a fantasy version of the real world, some of her novels take place in fantasy worlds, such as Star Mother and its sequel Star Father.
Amy Harmon - She writes romances that focus more on character development and not so much on sexuality. As a male reader, I hadn't read much in the way of romance until I had started reading the fantasy romance novels of Dorie and Holmberg. To try out more of a realistic romance novel, I read Harmon's Making Faces, a beauty and the beast type of story in which a girl falls in love a boy who comes back from war disfigured. I then read some more of her books. Some had supernatural elements. I recently read What the Wind Knows, in which an Irish-American woman went back in time to Ireland in the early 20th century and became a mother to her orphaned grandfather, who had himself raised her. I'm currently reading The Queen and the Cure, a sequel to The Bird and the Sword. Both are high fantasy novels set in a world in which some people have special powers.
Dennis E. Taylor - He is a retired computer programmer who writes science fiction novels. His best known series is the Bobiverse series, which is about a self-replicating A.I. that explores the galaxy with space probes. The A.I. is based on the mind of an engineer from the early 20th century named Bob, and each new A.I. has Bob's memories and personality but with some variation on the latter. I recently read his latest novel Roadkill, in which a man hits an invisible alien with his truck, and I recently read his first novel Outland, in which some college kids create a portal to another earth shortly before Yellowstone explodes. I liked how he had multiple characters with different skill sets and personalities that complemented each other and how I could easily keep track of who everyone was.
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