S.D. Crockett
Born in 1969, S D Crockett graduated from London University's, Royal Holloway and Bedford New College with a degree in Drama and Theatre Studies. She has lived in Russia, France, Turkey and Armenia and has worked as a trainee car mechanic, timber buyer, portrait painter and teacher.She is...
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Born in 1969, S D Crockett graduated from London University's, Royal Holloway and Bedford New College with a degree in Drama and Theatre Studies. She has lived in Russia, France, Turkey and Armenia and has worked as a trainee car mechanic, timber buyer, portrait painter and teacher.She is married to artist Timothy Shepard and has two children.Visit SD on: www.sdcrockett.com
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Birth date: January 01, 1969
S.D. Crockett's Books
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One Crow Alone is an incredible story about a girl who must overcome the impossible. Magda’s narration is so different from the typical YA post-apocalyptic story. She is facing certain death every day of her life, all by herself, but she is so strong. Magda is practical and focused. She does what s...
Wow I started this last night and I couldn't get 15 minutes into it. The way the author writes as if it was someone talking, but when they talk its slang instead of saying "with" its "wit" and so on. I found it extremely hard to read, I can understand useing that type of writeing for when a charac...
Check out this review on our blog!It really depresses me to give a book a negative review. However, this book depressed me as well as I read it, so After the Snow kind of deserves its negative review. Notice, my reasoning behind disliking this novel is not because of its monotonous nature. It's a lo...
PJV Quickie: My first thoughts when picking up this book for review, were, “this sounds like a snowy ‘Blood Red Road.’ I enjoyed ‘Blood Red Road’ so why not?” Wasn’t one of my genius moments. The narration style and poorly flushed out plot sent this one to the DNF pile.ReviewI should have learned my...
This book lies in the borderland between post-apocalyptic and dystopian, but it owes more to The Knife of Never Letting Go than it does to The Hunger Games. (I was also reminded of Blood Red Road, both because of the setting–they’re opposites!–and because of the narration.) It’s a skilful, troubling...