fantasy
-
The previous episode had an ominous ending — somewhere out there is a man-made device that could potentially destroy humankind. But that’s not something Aleksander and Deryn have to worry about at the moment as the Leviathan flies off to the Ottoman Empire.
-
At the end of the previous episode, Aleksander’s Stormwalker has been hit by a bomb. Are they going to get out of it unscathed? Let’s see!
-
The action has started to ramp up in the second episode, and with the Leviathan careening towards the Alps, it’s only going to get more intense!
-
We had a great start with the first episode of this anime adaptation of Scott Westerfeld’s Leviathan, so let’s go on right ahead and see where the show takes us!
-
Back when I still had a book blog, I really, really loved Scott Westerfeld’s Leviathan. My review of this book — and the other books that followed — are gone now, along with my blog, but this is still one of those series’ that I would happily recommend to other people. So imagine my surprise…
-
We got a kiss at the end of the fourth episode — a real one, not the dream one in episode three — so we’ll see how Tong deals with this in this fifth episode. Or will this somehow turn into a dream kiss?
-
At the end of the third episode, we saw who’s vamp in the house — Mark, who is doing the Twilight thing of still going to school despite being hundreds of years old. Let’s see what vampiric shenanigans he’s going to get into while in school!
-
At the end of the second episode, we saw that even Tong’s tears can help out Mark in times of need. Which made me ask the tantalizing question: Mark can drink something else that isn’t blood?
-
The first episode? So entertaining. It draws from a lot of properties that a lot of us may be familiar with but who cares? I really enjoyed how it maanged to still be so entertaining so let’s get into this second episode.
-
I’m back with the third and final episode of this audio erotica! So far, The Trials have been delivering when it comes to the erotica, which is what you’re paying for after all. I did have some gripes about the fantasy elements in my previous post about The Trials, but that’s more of a me…