No Clear Genre
This category is for books that do not fit clearly into a genre. Specifically, if there appears to be too many elements that destroy its effectiveness in any one or several marketable labels, eTLC decided to make this category.
Click on the link of a book to read its description.
No-Clear-Genre Books
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Belfast Girls (McCullough) is the story of three girls growing up into the new emerging post-conflict Belfast of money, drugs, high fashion and crime . . .
Clip (Wayne) is a Kafkaesque thriller, which implodes into haunting 21st century veracity.Read Sample Chapter here
The Turn of the Karmic Wheel (Brinkman) When the residents of Raleigh begin to hear music and voices that aren’t “there”, and to receive frightening messages from no discernable source, it soon becomes apparent that changes must - and will - be made . . .Read a sample chapter here.
In The Whole Truth (Murdoch) Jonathan Payne is a jaded bookseller at the end of a wasted life which has been spent in a dull north England seaside town. He could be an everyman, but seems to have missed the boat somewhere. He’s both distastefully pathetic and oddly sympathetic . . .Read a sample chapter here.
The Whore ... and her Mother (McCullough) Could the writings of the ancient Hebrew prophets be relevant to events taking place in the world today? These Hebrew prophets - Isaiah, Jeremiah, Habbakuk and the apostle John, in The Revelation - wrote extensively about a latter day city and empire which would dominate, exploit and corrupt . . .Read a sample chapter here.



