Fireball - Spicey, Hot Cinnamon eLiquid
Fireball eLiquid creates a new definition for cinnamon eJuice. Imagine the simmering, hot goodness of a cinnamon asteroid burning through space only to be captured by lab techs at VapeSafe and distilled into a bottle of Fireball eLiquid. If you like the flavor of spicey hot cinnamon candy and you enjoy the sensation of heavy vapor pouring out of your electronic cigarette, then you are in luck. We created Fireball just for you.
Fireball eLiquid by VapeSafe brings the spice back into spicey. As with all of the VapeSafe eLiquids, our mixtures are designed to produce nice, heavy vapors and the most succulent flavors.
Try Fireball eLiquid today!
Technology Information:
The 37th Hour

Product Type: Book
Product Price: $6.99
Manufacturer: Dell
Purchase
Description
In a suspense novel of astounding power and depth, Jodi Compton unleashes a haunting tale of secrets and betrayal...and of one woman's search for her missing husband that spirals into a dark journey strewn with bitter truths and damged lives. Here debut novelist Compton introduces an extraordinary character: Detective Sarah Pribek, a woman of strength, complexity, and instinct, a woman caught in an unimaginable nightmare...
The 37th Hour
On a chilly Minnesota morning, Sarah comes home to the house she shares with her husband and fellow cop, Michael Shiloh. Shiloh was supposed to be in Virginia, starting his training with the FBI. A seasoned missing-persons investigator, Sarah is used to anxious calls from wives and parents. She's used to the innocent explanations that resolve so many of her cases. But from the moment she learns that he never arrived at Quantico, she feels a terrible foreboding. Now, beneath the bed in which they make love, Sarah finds Shiloh's neatly packed bag. And in that instant the cop in her knows: Her husband has disappeared.
Suddenly Sarah finds herself at the beginning of the kind of investigation she has made so often. The kind that she and her ex-partner, Genevieve, solved routinely -- until a brutal crime stole Genevieve's daughter and ended her career. The kind that pries open family secrets and hidden lives. For Sarah this investigation will mean going back to the beginning, to Shiloh's religion-steeped childhood in Utah, the rift that separated him from his family -- and the one horrifying case that struck them both too close to home. As Sarah turns over more and more unknown ground in her husband's past, she sees her lover and friend change into a stranger before her eyes. And as she moves further down a trail of shocking surprises and bitter revelations, Sarah is about to discover that her worst fear -- that Shiloh is dead -- may be less painful than what she will learn next...
In a novel of runaway tension, Jodi Compton masterfully weaves together the quiet details of everyday life with the moments that can shatter them forever. At once a beguiling mystery and a powerful rumination on family, friendship, and loss, The 37th Hour is a thriller that will catch you off guard at every turn -- instantly compelling and utterly impossible to put down.
From the Hardcover edition.
Reviews
Rating: 5 / 5
Date: 2010-04-13
Summary: "A Stay Up All Night Nail-Biter"
The book opens with Minneapolis Sheriff's Detective Sarah Pribek, who specializes in finding missing persons, trying to talk a runaway from jumping from a bridge into the cold Mississippi River. The girl jumps, Sarah jumps in after and saves her. Sarah is one plucky gal.
Sarah's husband of two months, Mike Shiloh, has been accepted by the FBI and is about to leave for training at Quantico, but even though this is his last weekend before he has to go, he urges Sarah to comfort her friend and partner, who had been on leave as her fourteen-year-old daughter and been raped and murdered by a man who escaped prison on a technicality.
Sarah does as her husband asks and promises to be home in time to take him to the airport, but when she gets home, she finds that he's already left. She's angry that he'd leave without saying goodbye, but her anger switches to alarm when she gets a call from Quantico wondering where he is.
Now she finds herself investigating the disappearance of her own husband. She tracks down his family to see if she can find a reason for his vanishing act and as she learns more about his past, she sees the man she loves, the man she thought she'd known, turn into a stranger.
Ms. Compton has written a nail-biter that will keep you reading throughout the night. Her characters are real and flawed, the story is dark, sometimes violent with plenty of suspense. This was a mystery that I thoroughly enjoyed.
Rating: 1 / 5
Date: 2010-03-11
Summary: "The Cities - enough already"
I am way behind all of the other reviews, and I read this book roughly 6 years after everyone else, and thank heavens I did NOT buy it but borrowed it, I have read all of the bad reviews and they are right on, I would like to add just one more little tidbit in to the horrible writing style, did any one count the number of times she threw "the cities" into a sentence? Have I missed something in life here about "the cities" I mean really if she used the term once she used it 30 times at least, please tell me there was a point to this.... I gave it one star simply because it wouldn't allow me to leave it without...
Rating: 3 / 5
Date: 2009-09-03
Summary: "Not very exciting read"
After reading the description of the book, I was excited to read it. The book was way to slow and like other readers said, the middle of the book seemed like filler and then all of the sudden at the end everything comes together and there is no explanation on how it happened. This book was not good enough for me to recommend to anyone.
Rating: 5 / 5
Date: 2009-08-21
Summary: "A mystery for people who care about character"
I have a mixed relationship with mysteries. I enjoy them, but I've read so many that I barely have to read the middle on most mysteries. I start, read a chapter or two, roll my eyes, skip to the end, and discover, whoa, I was right, I know exactly who did the crime, and how, and why. It takes a real story to keep me reading.
In this book, I was maybe three chapters in, at most, when I knew the plot line. So I skipped to the end. And said, hmmm. And went back to where I left off. Not only did I not know the plot line, I didn't know the characters.
Yet with every word I read, they felt more and more real to me, more like people that I might I have met, known in real life, the kind of complex, hard to understand, mixed up people that reality is filled with and fiction is direly short of (at least if you avoid reading truly depressing books and mostly stick with genres that have happy endings.)
There's a moment at the end of the book when the heroine realizes that life--that people--are not what she expected, and that she herself, the "wide-open" girl, is not who she thought she was. I've had that moment in my life (although no murders came with it). I am really impressed with a genre book that can encompass that kind of reality and still be a darn good story. If I had a kindle, I'd download the next one immediately. As it is, I'm almost tempted to buy a kindle just so that if this ever happens again, I'm prepared.
Rating: 3 / 5
Date: 2009-06-05
Summary: "Damaged goods"
Recently promoted Detective Sarah Pribek is also a new wife. While she's known her husband Shiloh for five years, what she doesn't know about him probably exceeds what she does. Their marriage is only two months old when he disappears, after having encouraged her to make an overnight visit to her traumatized partner, Gen.
Naturally, Sara sets out to find her husband, and she hasn't many clues to follow. Bit by bit, it becomes evident that the murder of partner Gen's teenaged daughter, which happened in the recent past, is somehow connected to what happened to Shiloh.
The 37th Hour gets off to a strong, promising start, but fails to fulfill that promise with a slow middle and a weak, rather rushed conclusion. Threads raising questions about relationships, morals, revenge, and forgiveness wind up muddled and unresolved, and the book's final chapter leaves the reader hanging. A sequel seems likely, but author Compton would do well to strengthen her plotting skills before publishing again.
