Saturday, October 30, 2021

Final Update: Halloween Bingo 2021

I'm busy tonight and tomorrow, so I've got to call it early this year. I ended up reading 13 books this year and got that coveted bingo. I had such a blast playing and can't wait until next year!

Final card: 


Bingo Squares and books (links to my review) read for them


Raven Middle Square - The Ex Hex by Erin Sterling
Romantic Suspense - Blind Tiger by Sandra Brown





The full cover all picture, I'm so bummed I didn't get the owl and skeleton dude revealed.



Friday, October 29, 2021

Review: A Far Wilder Magic

A Far Wilder Magic A Far Wilder Magic by Allison Saft
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

3.3 stars 

I received this book for free in exchange for an honest review. This does not affect my opinion of the book or the content of my review. 

People say alchemy is many things. 

The hala is a magical beast that means different things to different religions but every year there is a hunt to kill it, for over a century the last remaining hala has avoided death. When Margaret Welty sees the white fox in the woods, she knows the hunt is coming to her village and envisions it as an opportunity to get her mother to finally stay home with her. It's been three months since her alchemist mother has returned home on her search for the hala, her mother thinks if she kills the hala and burns it, she will be able to create a philosophers stone, that will then give her the power to bring Margaret's dead brother back. 

What would it mean for a Sumic kid from the Fifth Ward and a Yu’adir girl from the countryside to win? It would mean nothing, and it would mean everything. It would—at least for one night, at least in this one nowhere town—force New Albion to reconsider what its heroes look like. To acknowledge its heritage, its identity, is not and was never homogenous. 

Weston Winters comes from the poorer fifth ward in the city and after his father dies, he's trying to step-up and provide for his mother and sisters. He wants to become a politician but as the child of immigrant parents, many avenues are shut to him, so he's trying to become an alchemist, as they can become politicians. However, he's been dismissed by alchemists, that will even take a boy of his religion, all over the city and his last hope is Evelyn Welty in the countryside. When her daughter is less than welcoming, he fights to change her mind as he sees this as his last hope. When she comes to him with the idea to enter the hala hunt together, he agrees as this could be the last chance for either of them to achieve their dreams. 

Clouds pass over the sun the moment she meets his gaze, the gold draining from her eyes as they narrow. Like this, she looks more wolf than girl— like some magic far wilder than alchemy runs through her. 

A Far Wilder Magic was a magical realism story told in third person present tense that heavily used allegory to explore religious and immigration tensions. Margaret and Weston are shunned, bullied, and disadvantaged because of their respective religions. Margaret tends to keep her head down and try not to garner the main perpetrator, the local rich boy Jamie, attention while Weston loses his temper more and wants to talk back. Margaret just wants her mother to come home and grasp some of the happy home she used to have while her brother was alive and before her father left and Weston wants to enter politics to make a difference in the world and change societal views and structure towards immigrants. They're both seventeen, why this is tagged as young adult, and their emotional struggles show that at times but any age group could pick this up and enjoy the messaging and world. 

Why should we let people like Jaime say what is and isn’t for us? 

The story gets told both from Margaret and Weston's point-of-view but the third person present tense takes a little getting used to. It gives it an introspective and daydreaming quality that fits the messaging and fantasy side of the story but the icing of style the author takes with descriptions, The next two days pass like honey drizzled from the tip of a spoon.,that can fit in fantasy, bogged me down in its continual usage as the momentum of the story dragged in the second half. The synopsis made me think that the hala hunt was going to play a bigger part in the story but while it's the catalyst to get Margaret and Weston together, the event doesn't actually happen until the very back-end of the book, 90%. I thought Margaret and Weston swirled around with their thoughts and feelings repetitively too many times, their angst is understandable but around the 60% mark, I needed the pace to pick-up and the hala hunt to start. 

Girls like her don’t get to dream. Girls like her get to survive. Most days, that’s enough. Today, she doesn’t think it is. 

The surrounding characters and world, the setting seems to be a magical realism 1920-ish, added to the richness of the messaging and world. There were characters that young adults could easily identify, the bully, the ally, the enabler, and they came with shades of gray to make them, at times empathetic but also challenging. Weston's family, his mother and sisters, helped to provide some of the heart of the story and also worked as a mirror for Margaret to hold up to her own relationship with her mother; what unconditional love and trust is really about. I thought, even though she is only seventeen, Margaret held onto the idea that giving her mother the hala would make her show her love and stay with her, for a little too long, another kind of dragged out thread that hurt the pace in the second half for me. 

All is One and One is All. At their core, they are all the same, all of them trying to survive. 

Margaret and Weston's romance was a slow burn with a sweet payoff and I thought their future, with the best coonhound Trouble, was believable. There were some pacing problems for me in the second half and while the overly descriptive style fit the fantasy vibes, it started to feed into the bogged down feel. The messaging with religious and immigration intolerance, along with power not being corrupt but who is wielding it, was ingrained into the story with thought and the character struggles with unconditional love and trust infused the emotion. The hala brought a sprinkling of horror/suspense chills, the world setting provided magical realism and fantasy, and Margaret and Weston gave us the angst and love.

Thursday, October 28, 2021

Reading Update: 20%

 



A rainy blustery day calls for magical realism and chicken noodle goodness. 

I love magical realism and what better time of the year for it :) 

The countdown to Halloween continues! 
ðŸ‘ŧ🍁ðŸŠĶ🎃


This was way too bland for me, added Cajun seasoning

Wednesday, October 27, 2021

Review: Nothing But Blackened Teeth

Nothing But Blackened Teeth Nothing But Blackened Teeth by Cassandra Khaw
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

3.5 stars 

I received this book for free in exchange for an honest review. This does not affect my opinion of the book or the content of my review. 

A long year spent making acquaintances with the demons inside you, each new day a fresh covenant. It does things to you. More specifically, it undoes things inside you. 

Cat and her four friends are staying at a Heian-era mansion in Japan. Nadia wanted to get married in a haunted house and this mansion is rumored to be resting on the bones of a bride who died waiting for her husband-to-be. The story goes, every year a young girl is freshly buried in the walls, or at least until the husband-to-be ghost finally comes home to reunite with his ghost bride. While the house seems to come alive, some of the true horror comes from the twisted relationships inside the friend circle. 

Suenomatsuyama nami mo koenamu. 

Told in first person pov from Cat, the first half sets the scene with shivering descriptions of the mansion and the emotional strife in the group. Cat is recovering from depression, Phillip seems to think it is because he broke up with her but readers privy to her internal thoughts, know there is more to it. Cat and Faiz used to date and this causes tension between Faiz's fiancee Nadia and Cat, especially since Cat told Faiz to just breakup with Nadia when they were going through a tough spell. Phillip, the rich all-American guy, had a fling with Nadia, that Faiz doesn't know about but senses, and the late-comer Lin, seems to only truly be friends with Cat. The passive-aggressiveness in the group flies fast and furious and I was left wondering why they were all still friends at all. 

Even if it was a house with rotting bones and a heart made out of a dead girl’s ghost, I’d give it everything it wanted just for scraps. Some unabridged attention, some love. Even if it was from a corpse with blackened teeth. 

At the mid-point, the group settles in to share ghost stories and with our characters and setting laid out, the spooky factor starts to ramp up. There's some House on Haunted Hill-ness with the question of is it the house making/influencing the characters or is it simply the ticking time bomb relationships that pushes them. There's a little more of a definite showing from the supernatural aspects in this story but I still thought the group's relationships played a part in actions. 

The ohaguro-bettari began to laugh before any of us could think to scream. 

The writing is stylistic, has more of a poetry flow with shorter sentences, and some of the language used and horror descriptions give it almost a guttural contemporary Poe feel. This was a novella and with the less page count, we miss some depth to the characters, especially Lin. Everything kind of flashes by too quickly before you can sink in or absorb characters, relationships, or the horror elements. As the leader, we get more of Cat and I liked the touching on how, in connection with her depression, she feeds off the attention, she perceived, she was getting from the house, even though it was negative; any attention is good attention thinking. I thought the epilogue was more of a puttering out than shoring up the story and gave this more of a small quick slice of life feel. This was perfect for an October night read and if you're looking for a quick, delivers on the spookiness and intriguing setting horror novella, this would be one to pick up.

Reading Update: 45%

 



A spooky read and a yummy Fall meal, I am living this last week in October ðŸĨ° 

A Heian-era mansion with the bones of a bride buried beneath, who wants you to join her. *shivers*


I loved this one!

Tuesday, October 26, 2021

Review: Anatomy: A Love Story

Anatomy: A Love Story Anatomy: A Love Story by Dana Schwartz
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I received this book for free in exchange for an honest review. This does not affect my opinion of the book or the content of my review. 

Stealing a body was against the law, but if they actually took any property from the grave, that would make it a felony. 

Hazel Sinnett comes from a wealthy family, is almost engaged to her cousin who is in line to become a viscount but she still dreams of becoming a surgeon. It's 1817 in Edinburgh, though, and Hazel is forced to dress as a boy when she finagles a way to attend classes at the Royal Edinburgh Anatomists’ Society, taught by the leading physician at the time, Dr. Beecham. Hazel has read and reread, Dr. Beecham's grandfather's medical treatise book and is excited to learn from him. 

And so Jack Currer became a resurrection man. 

Jack Currer has managed to survive on the streets by working at the local theater and making some needed side money by digging up freshly buried bodies and selling them to the Anatomists' Society for the students and doctors to learn from. When he helps a society girl sneak into a medical demonstration, neither realize how it will change their lives. 

The boy in the shadows looked up, and for a moment Hazel locked eyes with him, the hairs on the back of her neck standing at attention. 

Anatomy: A Love Story, was a Gothic toned story that also added in some mystery, suspense, paranormal, historical fiction, and romance. Hazel and Jack are both seventeen, so I can see their ages being the reason this is getting tagged as young adult but I can see this being enjoyed by adults maybe even more. The pace is gradual and while Hazel leads us, the story is more about the plot swirling around her and Jack than the actual characters themselves. I could see younger readers getting restless while older ones would sink in more. Readers who enjoy the series, Veronica Speedwell, Lady Sherlock, and Wrexford and Sloane, might want to check this out. This first book doesn't quite deliver the romance genre HEA but gives an ending that could easily lead to a series and I could see it falling into the essence of the other series mentioned, just with younger protagonists. 

“Gentlemen, I give you ethereum. Or, what I have taken to calling in the laboratory, the Scotsman’s dodge.” 

After her older brother died from Roman Fever (malaria), Hazel's mother slipped into depression and only cares about coddling and protecting the younger brother Percy. With her military father off guarding Napoleon, Hazel is pretty much left to her own devices. She occasionally goes out with her cousin Bernard, who shows flashes of possessiveness and is slowly trying to get Hazel to give up her dream of being a surgeon, nevertheless, Hazel realizes the importance of marrying him, having security. Hazel's focus on her quest to become a surgeon has her a bit naive at times, it feeds certain plots but this also makes it feel forced. There were times that it was obvious that the author was driving the plot, instead of a naturalness from the characters. All the threads involving the medicine of the day, ether being introduced, were intriguing and a little gory, adding to the Gothic tone and I liked how it tied into the mystery plot of people disappearing; is it a resurgence of Roman Fever or something more sinister. 

“And how much do you charge for something like that?” she asked. “A body.” 
“That depends. Are you in the market for one”? 
“That depends,” Hazel replied. “Do you make deliveries?” 

The romance doesn't really get going until around 50% and even then it's not the focus. Hazel and Jack start to spend more time together when Hazel gets discovered as a girl at the Society, enters into a deal with Dr. Beecham, and ends up paying Jack for bodies to study on. We get to know Hazel pretty well but Jack didn't feel as flushed out as there were other focuses in the story. These two were sweet together but their youth and circumstances keep the story from giving them too much of relationship development. The secondary characters were utilized well and if this does continue on into a series, I definitely want to see more of Jack's friend Munro and the Dr. Straine. 

It was easy to die in Edinburgh, but Jack had made it seventeen years because he knew how to survive. 

As I read an advanced reading copy, I don't want to give too much away but the ending does provide some revelations I saw coming and one that was a surprise and changed, if made into a series, where I thought it was going to go. This had a Gothic tone, some mystery, romance, and a twist of paranormal, I'd definitely pick up a second book to see where the plot takes the characters next.

Monday, October 25, 2021

Reading Update: 20%



The Monday of Halloween week calls for some Dark Academia reading and a glass of Halloween punch. 

🎃ðŸ‘ŧ 

A girl who wants to be a surgeon and a boy making his living as a resurrectionist, can't wait to dive in! 

Have a spooktastic week, everyone 😈 


I probably would just make an orange pop float next time and leave out orange juice

Sunday, October 24, 2021

Review: Blind Tiger

Blind Tiger Blind Tiger by Sandra Brown
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

3.5 stars 

I received this book for free in exchange for an honest review. This does not affect my opinion of the book or the content of my review. 

“You'll thank me later.” He produced a pistol from the pocket of his coat, put it beneath his chin, and pulled the trigger. 

It's 1920, Laurel's husband made it back from the war, at least physically, but there's little work to be had and they have a new baby to support. When he says he's found work with his father, they pack up and head out. Except the father wasn't expecting them and Laurel's husband commits suicide in front of her. Her father-in-law, Irv, offers her to stay with him but he lives in a shack a couple miles from town. He's the handyman of the town and that helps to persuade him to rent a house in town but Laurel knows they'll need to bring in more money. When Irv is forced to reveal his little moonshine business to Laurel, she plans to pair it with her bakery delivery and expand the business. 

She looked beyond him at the glow of the fire. “You camp out here?” 
“Damn, girl. Wha'd'ya think? I'm making whiskey.” 

Thatcher survived the war and is trying to make his way back to his mentor and the ranch he grew up on. When he has to jump from a train early to avoid some other hobos that didn't like losing their poker winnings to him, he comes upon a small shack. He's instantly drawn to Laurel but thinking she is married, just takes his drink of water and continues into town. There he gets accused of taking the town doctor's wife and has the whole town suspicious of him, except for the Sheriff. They can't pin the doctor's wife's disappearance on him, no matter how hard the doctor and the town mayor try to, and with news that his mentor has died, Thatcher gets roped into being deputized by the sheriff and the moonshine wars that are ramping up. 

“I hope it doesn't turn into a bloodbath, Bill. But a war between moonshiners isn't my fight, and I'm staying out of it.” 
The sheriff held his gaze for several seconds. “We'll see.” 

Blind Tiger was a slow burn of a suspense story that had a compelling moonshine plot during the time of Prohibition. The romance was a little weaker, I'm not sure I completely felt the deep connection between Laurel and Thatcher, they had an insta-lust/love vibe and it took to around 40% before the romance really got addressed and ramped up some. This is a story that takes time to build and mature, the last 20% is where the action takes place. Each side character is built with care and they all serve a purpose but that purpose is in service of the moonshine plot, you want to show up for that and less for the romance. 

He dropped his voice so she'd have to listen really close to his last part, because it was an ultimatum of his own. “But if you genuinely don't want me coming at you again, be careful you don't dare me.” 

The first half feels a little slow with the crafting of the setting, the town and the people's dynamic in it, the question of what happened to the doctor's wife, and the three competing moonshiners, the mayor and his smarmy partner Landry, the hillbilly Johnsons, and Laurel's building business. There's a little of Laurel and Thatcher starting to be on opposite sides as Thatcher gets roped in by the sheriff but, for the most part, it's all more about the building tension about to come to a head than actual on opposite sides between the two. The romance wasn't as captivating as the moonshine plot. I loved all the research details the author included, possible spies working for the Anti-Saloon League, talking about corn liquor and the process of how to make it, and even mentioning boll weevils and how they destroyed crops during this time, making people turn to moonshining even more. These additives and others set the time period and I felt the depression of the time and helped to put me in the setting. 

“Does this speakeasy have a name?” 
“Blind Tiger.” 

As I said, you'll want to prepare for a slow burn suspense, a beginning that takes its time crafting the setting and characters, less focus on the romance, but then an ending that ramps up the pace and delivers on all those building tensions. There's also a brutal rape scene that some might want to prepare for that happens to a secondary character and two surprising revelations that change some characters' profiles. The 1920s vibe, moonshine business details, and the ties and binds that threaded the characters together, made this a compelling read. I'll be on the lookout for more books in this time period.

Thursday, October 21, 2021

Reading Update: Page 1



Fall is definitely in the air in my neck of the woods, crisp air and pretty changing leaves 🍂🍁 
Fantastic book reading weather! Can't wait to get lost in the roaring '20s and a moonshine war.


Review: After the Night

After the Night After the Night by Sandra Marie
My rating: 2 of 5 stars

1.5 stars 

What if the love of her life had been in her office building this whole time? Dressing in accidental couples costumes could’ve been the universe throwing them a very obvious bone. 

This was a Kindle Freebie and I'm still not going to recommend it. Cassidy works in the billing department of a doctor's office and gets talked into going to the buildings Halloween party. She dresses as Princess Buttercup from Princess Bride and who does she end up meeting there? Why, the Dread Pirate Roberts, of course! They hit it off but because of eye contact issues, Cassidy is virtually blind by the time they are getting hot and heavy in the backseat of the car and when Westley's mask comes off she still doesn't see him. She ends up running away because she suddenly remembers that she is wearing “boob bags” to help fill out the dress and she ends up not knowing who Westley was. She did see a Flounder from The Little Mermaid tattoo on the guy's shoulder and knows Westley had green eyes. She then decides to date green eyed guys in the building. 

Westley was the new Dr. Jon Bateman and he knew it was Cassidy but thinks she is weirded out because he is older than her and could sort of be called her boss. When she starts dating different guys from the building, he really thinks she thought it was no big deal and just likes to fool around. He really liked her though, and when they have to go away for a conference, hopes they can rekindle the magic. 

This was a pretty quick read that was super light, the writing had some immaturity to it, and the story bounced around from embezzelment, to Cassidy's parent's love/hate relationship issues, and Jon and Cassidy falling in love from being together for only a couple hours. A lot of Marvel stuff thrown in because Cassidy is a big fan and some of Disney secondary characters talk because Jon has a bunch tattooed on his back. 

I showed up for the Halloween time setting and it delivered that with the Halloween party, a haunted maze, and then ending on Halloween night. There's some slapstick, goofy humor that didn't quite land with me and can't say I ever felt the depth in their feelings. The writing needs to be shored up but if looking for a Kindle Freebie with some Halloween in it, it does have that, with a random embezzlement plot.

Monday, October 18, 2021

Review: A Night's Tail

A Night's Tail A Night's Tail by Sofie Kelly
My rating: 2 of 5 stars

2.5 stars 

I received this book for free in exchange for an honest review. This does not affect my opinion of the book or the content of my review. 

This wasn’t my first dead body. 

A Night's Tale is the eleventh installment in the Magical Cats Mystery series that takes place in a small town called Mayville Heights in Minnesota. Our first person pov and who the series follows, is from Kathleen who is a Boston transplant working as a librarian. I haven't read the other books in the series and as a consequence, I struggled to keep the large amount of characters straight in my mind. I would say the first 20% of this was overly descriptive (Do we really need to know which side of a haircut everyone is on?) muses from Kathleen of her friends and the townspeople. If you're a frequent reader of the series, you would probably enjoy meeting up with everyone again but as a new reader, it was too many characters to juggle and details that clogged the story. 

Owen could become invisible at will. It had seemed so shocking the first time I’d realized what he could do, and now it was no big deal— for the most part. Hercules, on the other hand— or maybe that should be “paw”— could walk through walls. 

The series follows Kathleen but her two cats could arguably be the stars of the show. They were feral cats that Kathleen found on a Wisteria Hill and for the last three years, Kathleen has known about their magical abilities, which they apparently use to not only confuse unknowing humans by showing up in random spots but help Kathleen solve murder cases. As this is a cozy mystery series, there are a lot of murder cases in this town. I really wish the cats Owen and Hercules would have been utilized more, they're around in the story but the murder mystery plot doesn't really get rolling until almost the 60% mark and the cats come into the latter second half more and help. With a cover sporting cats and a series titled “Magical Cats”, I wanted them to have more of the spotlight. 

“We have to figure out who killed Lewis Wallace,” I said. “Mrr,” Hercules agreed. He put one white‑tipped paw on my hand . He was in. 

The murder takes place at 30% and it is of a character new to the town and who hasn't made a great impression, so the suspects are wide and varied, which is fun for a murder mystery. Kathleen is also dating a detective, their romance seems to be threaded throughout the series, so we get some helpful information from him on the murder thread. Kathleen's brother is in town with his band and staying with her and as one of his bandmates had an altercation with the victim and was with Kathleen when she came upon the body at the hotel, they're all close to the case. Kathleen decides to do her own investigation into the case to try and help keep her brother off the suspect list as he was the one who bought the peanut butter muffins that ended up sending the victim into anaphylactic shock and ruled the cause of death. 

“Most people are not all one thing,” she said. “You might want to keep that in mind.” 

Through Kathleen's investigations, the story revisits past characters and couples while giving some a little more background and setting up possible romances for future books in the series. As I said, I was new to the world, so some of this felt like filler to me and I wanted more of a focus on the cats helping out with the murder mystery. The mystery gets a little convoluted in it's red-herring travels but circles around to a plausible and credible set-up reasons for why the guilty did what they did. This is a cozy mystery, so except everything to be done and presented with more of a lighter touch than gritty. 

Just like that, I knew who had killed Lewis Wallace. 

The murder mystery accelerates at around 80% and Kathleen ends up solving the case. The last 10% has Kathleen deciding to let her detective boyfriend in on the magical abilities of her two cats because she doesn't want to lie to him anymore and he also happens to have a cat from Wisteria Hill and she's noticed that cat has some magical abilities too. He at first reacts the way one would think you would when told a cat can walk through walls but after seeing it for himself, gets a little hurt that Kathleen is just telling him now when they have been dating almost two years. The series will obvious continue with them working on their relationship and maybe bringing in his cat Micah to help with further investigations. Readers of the series will probably enjoy this more than I did as I couldn't quite keep up with the large cast of characters. The over descriptions of character looks in the beginning clogged the story for me and while there was some interesting tidbits of information (the Andrew Carnegie library tie-in), I thought the writer was a little too eager to include their random bits of research. If you like magical cats that help solve murder mysteries though, Owen and Hercules will steal your heart, if not your food.

Sunday, October 17, 2021

Reading Update: Page 1




Cozy mystery, fried mac & cheese balls, and Dr. Pepper meatballs. Happy Sunday! 

Getting some reading in before the MN Vikings game and can't wait to see how these kitties help solve the case.


Saturday, October 16, 2021

Review: Be Buried in the Rain

Be Buried in the Rain Be Buried in the Rain by Barbara Michaels
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

3.5 stars

“The sun that warmed our stooping backs and withered the weed uprooted— We shall not feel it again. We shall die in darkness, and be buried in the rain.” 

I read this for the TBRChallenge and Halloween Bingo, usually for TBRC, I talk about everything in the story but HB I try not to spoil too much in case a fellow player hasn't read it yet. I guess I'm saying, prepare for some small spoilers and some evading. 

Deadman’s Hollow, the kids called it. Said it was haunted. 

I didn't read the synopsis on the back of this, I saw it on the HB list of Southern Gothic recommends and trust my fellow HB players enough to just pick it up, so I went in with some wrong preconceptions. For some reason, Gothic automatically makes me think set in historical times, this takes place in the late '80s or early '90s (I'm 38, if you're Gen Z and thinking “That is historical!”, bah to you). The mausoleum on the cover also made me think Louisiana but the setting is the Tidewater area of Virginia. I was also ready for the story to have more of a focus on the ghostly or Gothic-y vibe, this was more centered on the characters. Sure, the beginning brings that creepy vibe with a man driving down a dark road at night and almost crashes as he swerves to avoid what later is found to be skeleton remains of an adult holding a baby. However, that moves to the side and we get more of a 'normal' vibe, with a granddaughter coming back to help take care of her granddmother who is laid up because of a stroke. It's a story that uses the characters to drive the story, instead of the story driving the characters. 

He didn’t lust after my maidenhood; he lusted after Maidenwood. (It shows you how young I was, that I could get a grim relish out of that poor pun.) I never really understood why he was convinced that the discovery that would make his career lay hidden under the tangled brush and weedy clay of my family’s land. Like all old houses, Maidenwood had its share of legends; the buried pirate treasure was only one of them. 

The story is told from Julie's point-of-view and she's a med student who gets called back to her ancestral home to help take care of her grandmother. When she was a pre-teen, she lived for four years with her grandmother and cousin Matt, who is now a Senator. Julie doesn't have a lot of memories from that time but it wasn't enjoyable for her. We get a good look at what kind of grandmother Martha was/is through Julie recalling when she brought home her boyfriend Alan, an archaeologist, and Martha prayed on Julie's insecurities (and Alan's, we later learn) of being ugly and not good enough. Alan's pushing desire to excavate Julie's land, it's been settled since pre-colonial and has rumors of a Blackbeard treasure on it, only adds to what Martha says about their relationship and Julie ends up breaking up with him. This shows the kind of power and sway Martha has over Julie and there was a great quote used in the story about how if you give someone a child before they are seven, they are theirs for life. Oof, what a quote to use and it honestly felt like the story was built around this idea. 

With pitiless accuracy she described my failings, physical and emotional. How could I possibly imagine that a man like Alan—handsome, sophisticated, worldly—could be interested in a callow, homely girl like me? Flat-chested, with lusterless stick-straight brown hair, and the Carr features—“so unfortunate on a woman”—and, of course, no charm whatsoever. 

So, Julie's back at Maidenwood and helping out the nurse Shirley there, there is also the Danners, the wife cooks and cleans and the husband is the handyman and also the one who found the bones. Julie has faint memories of them when she was there but Mr. Danner has found Jesus and is taciturn now, to say the least, and Mrs. Danner spends a lot of the time staring into space. There's also Julie's cousin Matt who flits in and out, he's trying to get power of attorney to run the estate, a Judge who is friends with Martha and visits occasionally, and then Alan. Yep, Julie's ex-boyfriend has been given permission to excavate some of the land, not by the house because Martha can't find out as she's violently opposed to the idea, and some of Alan's helpers on the dig. I was impressed with how just about all of the characters got their own, at least, little backgrounds. It at times gave a fuller view but at others was a bit too dissecting to the story. I did come mainly for some ghostly Gothic, so this disappointed at being distracted away could be a me thing. 

Don’t get me wrong. I am not noble—you must have realized that, after reading some of the admissions in these pages. 

There were two times of fourth wall breaking, this always kind of throws me and I thought the first time didn't fit but the second one, because it came at the end of the story, fit better. I just realized I'm not talking about the skeleton bones a lot and that is because of the more to the side they are, they are simultaneously the catalyst of the story and the background. The characterizations, how cousin Matt and the Danners are acting, Martha's deviousness, and Julie's traumatic memories coming back to her are the vehicle that carries the found skeleton thread; it leads to the revelations but isn't obvious about it. There's also some second chance romance between Julie and Alan. Alan's feelings follow the not obvious theme and his caring about Julie is read between the lines, which I'm a big fan of because I think it can sometimes hit harder; gruff people and their deep feelings gets me every time. 

I enjoyed this story, even though it didn't always give me what I picked it up for but more than made up for it with all the little character additives that created such deep characters. I didn't personally like the witch Martha but her characterization was amazing, the ability to have a character control a room with just an eye, whew. The whole Maydon's Hundred (tied into the history and treasure folklore of Julie's home) was a thread that I felt had too much focus. Some threads felt necessary but at the same time, I wanted them clipped. I don't know, while reading I wanted things to move along more but when I was finished with the whole story, I had a greater appreciation for them all. I also want to make sure I mention the dog, Elvis, loved him, lol. If you're looking for a story to sink into characterization, this would be a great pick-up. The last part broke the fourth wall but I really enjoyed the last lines.

Wednesday, October 13, 2021

#TBRChallenge: Oct. - Gothic




This #TBRChallenge is set-up by @SuperWendy (blog). Besides the theme months, this is a pretty relaxing challenge. On the third day of every month participants are encouraged to use the hashtag TBRChallenge and discuss the book they plucked from obscurity. I decided to make a personal rule that a book had to be in my TBR for at least 5 years.

Could October's theme be anything but something spooky? I love Gothics but have to read them sporadically otherwise they tend to samesies in my mind and blend together. Besides, how much running from castles in a storm can someone take? (This statement is made to try and cover my angsty loving heart, GIVE ME ALL THE RUNNING FROM CASTLES IN A STORM) 

I originally had The Master of Blacktower picked out for this but because the Gothic theme fits in with my Halloween Bingo and I have the square Southern Gothic, so I decided to switch my pick to Be Buried in the Rain by Barbara Michaels. A two for one! I can't remember ever reading a Barbara Michaels before, if I did it would have been in my teens, so I'm reading to experience the hype. My fellow Halloween Bingo players have been posting about her books for years, so she's been on my tbr for at least 10yrs. 

It's going to be rainy all day in my neck of the woods, so I'm going to snuggle in and enjoy some Gothic-y goodness. 


TBRChallenges: 








August - N/A

Tuesday, October 12, 2021

Review: Slewfoot: A Tale of Bewitchery

Slewfoot: A Tale of Bewitchery Slewfoot: A Tale of Bewitchery by Brom
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

2.7 stars 

I received this book for free in exchange for an honest review. This does not affect my opinion of the book or the content of my review. 

Sutton, Connecticut, March 1666 

At seventeen, Abitha's father sold her to the government to be shipped off to the colonies and become the bride of a Puritan man named Edward. For a girl who has a temper and has no problem spouting profanities, living in a Puritan society has been difficult. Even though he is ten years her senior, Abitha and her husband Edward get along and even are working at growing close to one another. Edward's brother Wallace, however, often tries to take advantage of Edward and this pits Abitha and Wallace against each other. When Wallace can't pay off a debt, he tries to take Edward's farm instead of losing his own and this sets off a tale of murder, spite, revenge, and fantasy and human devils trying to claim the land. 

“Angels must often do dark deeds in the name of the Lord.” 

Slewfoot was a story that combined fantasy horror with historical fiction. The colonial Puritan setting already provides it's own chills as their history in the 1600s is well known and with each charm Abitha makes for a fellow woman in the village, the tension creeps further in as you know how deadly this path could end up for her. I didn't expect the fantasy horror part to play such a large part, it sometimes felt like a separate story at times and wasn't until the last 20% that I thought those two components cohesively gelled. 

“Even the Devil does not wish to be the Devil. [...]” 

The fantasy horror part involves some inspiration from various pagan lore to create the “wildfolk” and their “father” who they wake up by luring a goat and then Edward into a pit and having father feed off their blood. As the goat was Abitha and Edward's, named Samson, this father goat beast becomes Samson. He's physically described to resemble a 1600s devil and this is what characters who see him call him but he's confused as to who , what, and why his purpose is. Samson dealing with his existential crisis provides a track for the author to explore nature vs human themes while Abitha's story fades to the background a little bit and she slowly gets put on a collision course to battle with Wallace. 

As at least cruelty was a thing that could be pointed out, confronted. But this belief, this absolute conviction that this evil they were doing was good, was God’s work— how, she wondered, how could such a dark conviction ever be overcome? 

With Abitha making charms for the other woman, we get some backstory that her mother was a “cunning woman”, a pagan healer, this works to bridge her to Samson as she works to convince herself that he isn't merely the devil but one of the gods, faefolk perhaps. At 40% the two sort of join forces as Samson helps her grow her crops to save her farm and she gives him a purpose other than murdering humans that are encroaching on the land. This upsets the wildfolk as they want to fully reclaim the land and the dichotomy of “good” nature vs “evil” humans gets played with as the wildfolk aren't altruistic and Abitha actually finds friends in a Reverend and his wife. 

The Devil has come for me! 

The middle, with Abitha and Samson, slowed down for me but at 60% we have the creeping witch hysteria finally come to fruition and the focus shifts to that horror as Samson exits the story for a while. The author does a great job of showing how spite and misogyny started the accusation against Abitha from Wallace and then how sweeping fear and cravenness fueled the townspeople. There's some torture scenes and then the last 20% brings together the witch hysteria historical fiction with the fantasy horror and I thought the two finally gelled together and created a murderous revenge celebration. 

“If it is a witch they want,” she hissed, “then a witch they shall have.” 

The beginning had a nice creeping tension feel to it, the middle slowed for me with the Samson fantasy thread not fully gelling with Abitha's historical fiction, but then the ending brought the two together to create some satisfying horror as the devil take their due. The epilogue will probably hit readers differently but I always enjoy a good happily ever after.

Monday, October 11, 2021

Reading Update: 30%

 



The spooky season is upon us! Well, me anyway 😈 

🧙‍♀️ðŸ§đðŸ‘ŧ🎃 

I'm a seasonal reader and ready for the hair on the back of my neck to stand up. I also love making themed goodies and people's reaction to these 'brimstone' dinner rolls was the best. 

Happy spooky season to all!


These were actually pretty easy to make. The crumbly top does get everywhere though, lol

Sunday, October 10, 2021

Not a Review, a 3 sentence rant: Kingdom of the Cursed

Kingdom of the Cursed Kingdom of the Cursed by Kerri Maniscalco
My rating: 2 of 5 stars

2.5 stars 

Not a review, a three sentence rant. 

Disappointed in this one because I was really looking forward to it because I enjoyed the first so much. 

Basically, tons of humping and pretty dresses. 
(Ok, there is some movement of story, 20% unscientific guess, but definitely a drawn out filler to make this a trilogy) 

Still interested in the core of the story but wish this hadn't been "moving from YA to NA, so to be sexy I'm going to constantly have them almost f*ucking".

Review: 30 Days of Night, Vol. 1

30 Days of Night, Vol. 1 30 Days of Night, Vol. 1 by Steve Niles
My rating: 2 of 5 stars

And, just like that, the undead stop laughing 

30 Days of Night is one of my favorite vampire horror movies, so when the Film at 11 Halloween Bingo square got called, I knew exactly what I wanted to read for it. It turned out to be that rare creature of the movie was better than the book (graphic novel) for me. 

I can't really review this without comparing it to the movie, I found the origin story to be very stark and more of an outline of the movie. Eben, Stella, Marlow, and a few of the others are all there and more or less match up with their movie characters. I will say, knowing the ending of the movie, which they kept original to the novel, made the beginning of the novel more poignant. However, I felt like the movie focused more on the humans and did a way better job of setting the tone and slowly bringing in that sense of horror and fear as the residents of Barlow, Alaska realize who is visiting their town. 

The vampires in the novel get more speaking lines and this “humanized” them more, which made them less scary to me. This is a series, so I can see how creating storylines for the vampires makes sense and why the focus was on them more. 

I did read this on Kindle, so maybe I didn't get the best effect of the drawings but I can't say I thought they were the greatest and added emotion to the story. The style came off as watercolor dark shadowy Monet, except with less clear humans instead of plant scenery. You can see the inspiration for the movie vampire looks from the renderings in the novel, though. 

Was a little disappointed because I thought the novel would dive deeper into the story, this is Vol. 1 in a series, so I guess I'd have to read on for that. I hate to say it, but choose movie instead of this.

Saturday, October 9, 2021

Review: Best Laid Wedding Plans

Best Laid Wedding Plans Best Laid Wedding Plans by Karen Booth
My rating: 2 of 5 stars

2.5 stars 

I received this book for free in exchange for an honest review. This does not affect my opinion of the book or the content of my review. 

She could be relatively anonymous here. That was all she really wanted---to be free. 

Second in the Moonlight Ridge series that follows the three adopted Holloway brothers, it's Grey's time to come back and help out with their father's resort. Still dealing with the emotional fallout from the car accident the three brothers were in fifteen years ago, Grey only comes back home a few times a year and likes his quiet predictable life in New York running his green architect company. He's clamped down on his emotions ever since the car accident and maintains his calm, if pessimistic outlook on life. When his brother asks him to help out with the wedding side of the resort, he's not looking forward to it, especially since the wedding planner seems to always be optimistic and full of sunshine. 

Something about being alone with Grey made her nervous, but excited. 

Dealing with the fallout of her ex-fiancee backing out of their wedding with only three days to spare three months ago and her Hollywood producer father being in the news for allegedly sexually harassing actresses, Autumn is determined to still keep a smile on her face and live in the moment. When the her bestfriend Molly, the manager at the Moonlight Ridge resort she's contracted to help host weddings at, says that Grey Holloway is going to help her, take some of the face time as the wedding part of the resort to try and stop the cancellations happening because of Autumn's notoriety, she's sad but understands. Grey's the grumpy brother but when she see's him doing shirtless push-ups on his front porch, she can't help but find herself attracted. 

Autumn challenged him, but when she did, it was just about getting to the heart of the matter. And with her, everything was simply more enjoyable. 

I would suggest reading book one (Homecoming Heartbreaker) in the series, the author does a great job summarizing the Holloway's and their issues but you'd miss a lot of the emotional components if you just started here. This works as a bridge book for the series, the mystery of who is embezzling money from the resort is continued, a lot to the side, but brings in a forensic accountant to help keep it in readers minds and move it a little farther along. The car accident that distanced the brothers wasn't as heavy an emotional component here, Grey talks about how he works to keep an even keel in his emotions and life so as not to cause damage, he blames himself for Mack losing control of the truck and Travis getting hurt enough to lose football scholarships. For the most part though, this was lighter and more breezy with Grey and Autumn being wary of one another at first, getting a bit flirty, and then fairly quickly hitting the sheets. 

She was allowing herself to fall and that wasn't a good idea. 

The ending with Autumn dealing with her father's issues affecting her own life felt like fairly emotionally heavy issues and I was a little disappointed in how fast and quick it ultimately got brushed away; felt like a opportunity to give some heft to the story. Grey's emotional journey, learning not to blame himself for the accident, felt like a lighter version of his brother Mack's from book one. These two were set-up to be grumpy and sunshine but they mostly gelled right away and only had a little angst at the end with Grey thinking over if he wanted to go back to New York or stay at the resort with his family. 

“What do you want for your birthday?” He huffed the question into her ear. 
“I want you to set my world on fire.” 

This is Harlequin Desire so a good amount of the second half involves sexual escapades (skinny dipping!) but this couple still felt like they could hold a conversation outside of the bedroom, too. The Holloway dad, Jameson, has his pov and I'm really enjoying the budding relationship between him and his former housekeeper, turned nurse, Giada. The forensic accountant is in the picture now and I'm curious to see if my guess as to who is embezzling the money is correct. The third brother Travis is about to come home and I'm looking forward to him finding his love and the three brothers healing their relationship.

Wednesday, October 6, 2021

Reading Update: Page 1



Not me sneaking in some hump day late lunch reading 😈 

Second in the Moonlight Ridge series, this time it's middle brother Grey that gets to tangle with wedding planner Autumn. 

Enjoy the rest of the week, everyone!



Review: They All Fall Down

They All Fall Down They All Fall Down by Rachel Howzell Hall
My rating: 1 of 5 stars

1.5 stars 

Best of an island is once you get there—you can’t go any further … you’ve come to the end of things. AGATHA CHRISTIE, AND THEN THERE WERE NONE 

This is supposed to be inspired by/reimagining of Agatha Christie's And Then There Were None, I've never read that book, so I can't speak to any of that. I can speak to my own likes and dislikes and I greatly disliked the style and structure of the writing and story. It's in first person pov, not my favorite but I can handle it, but what I couldn't handle was the stream of consciousness writing paired with an unreliable narrator. Both are styles and techniques that I struggle with, if you don't have the same dislike, your mileage would greatly vary and be better than mine with this book. 

We Have a Winner! 

Our pov character is Miriam and she is getting ready to take off to vacation on an island off Mexico, Mictlan Island. She won a vacation through her email and will be joining six other contestants on a reality tv show competition. The whole thing isn't quite clear and Miriam must not have watched as many horror movies as me because she doesn't see anything wrong with surprise free vacations to islands off Mexico. But, the author does set-up Miriam as a woman looking for an escape. It's murky in the beginning but Miriam is recently divorced (caught her husband cheating on her with their daughter's ballet teacher), just was found not guilty in a bullying case that involved a high school girl who was bullying her daughter, is an unreliable narrator to us, the reader, and in her own life, and has lost her job. Yeah, Miriam's life is a mess. 

A sick man. A country chick. A shaggy nurse. A cokehead cook. An uppity banker. And a mass shooter. My competition, ladies and gentlemen. 

We meet the other six contestants when she gets down to Mexico and they take the boat to the island that is 40miles away and has spotty wi-fi and phone service. The first 50% was all about getting Miriam to the island and introducing us to the characters but the stream of consciousness writing, Miriam having, quick, but annoying (to me, anyway), additive comments about their clothing or some such, her job was writing short fun copy for luxury items on second hand websites, made the first half feel chaotic and dragged out in pointlessness all at the same time. If you're looking for characters to like, root for, or even intriguing, I don't think you're going to find them here. The author even put in her acknowledgments that she wrote a story about awful people. I don't have a problem reading about awful characters but they all were that way and the story structure of personal dislikes didn't make up for it. 

Detective Giorgio Hurley had left me a voicemail: “Ms. Macy, hi. Just checking in with you. We need to talk, either at your home or here at the station. Sounds like there was some type of altercation last night? Sounds like folks were hurt, you included? Sounds like—” 

50% is when we get our first murder and from there on out its pretty fast paced, because of how slow the first half was, felt manic when bodies started dropping like flies. Miriam and the other six learn that the reality tv contest and lure of winning money was all a ruse and they were actually brought there by their lawyer. The lawyer got them all off on their cases but apparently had a come to Jesus moment on his deathbed and now wants to punish them for their crimes they committed that he got them off on. There's a diorama of the seven deadly sins in the house's foyer that they're staying on and as each person gets murdered, the statue of the sin that their crime corresponds with, disappears. It's a locked room mystery because of the island setting and with a storm keeping communication out to the outside world, they are on their own to survive. 

This is what you do: lie. Make up stories. Create something out of nothing. 

While the murders are going on, we have Miriam thinking about her own case, we get some flashbacks and reveals to what she did to the girl that was bullying her daughter but it's cloaked in Miriam's unreliable narrator, the constant alluding to her “cry wolf” personality, and at first she's taking Valium at a decent clip and drinking. There's some discussion of racism, Miriam being a black woman and the “angry black woman” stereotype but the author mostly (there's more social commentary on one of the other six who is a cop who killed a black man) stays away from higher social commentary as Miriam, yes, contorts instances in her own mind. There was also two components added in, the island being formerly owned by a notorious drug dealer and Miriam keeps seeing(?) the ghost of a young girl, that I guess are supposed to be red-herrings and add to mystery. All they did for me was help to the chaos feel of the story and how none of the ideas the author had seemed to be fully formed to gel together. 

I wanted her to lose. That’s all. To lose for once in her life. 

The last 80% was speedy and messy in giving the ending, at one point Miriam just takes a nap??? while on the run/hiding from a murderer. There's no one to cheer for or like in this, usually not a problem for me, but my personal dislikes and the messy storytelling structure made me not a fan of this. One thing I did like was that after someone was murdered, the next page had a newspaper clipping of their court case, what they were accused of and how they got off. I liked how their murders had a tie-ins with their crimes, a' la the movie Saw. As far as thriller, never felt on the edge of my seat, as far as mystery, meh-fairly easy to work out what is happening, and as far as ghost story, mostly a non-entity.

Tuesday, October 5, 2021

Review: The Duchess Hunt

The Duchess Hunt The Duchess Hunt by Lorraine Heath
My rating: 2 of 5 stars

2.5 stars 

I received this book for free in exchange for an honest review. This does not affect my opinion of the book or the content of my review. 

If there existed a more unpleasant task in the world than selecting the woman who was to marry the man you loved, Penelope Pettypeace certainly couldn’t imagine what it might be. 

For eight years Penelope has been secretary to Hugh Brinsley-Norton, ninth Duke of Kingsland, and while outwardly he has only been “Your Grace”, he's grown to be so much more. When the woman he was going to propose to (the first in the series) decides to follow her heart, Hugh is on the search again for a wife and decides this time to put it into Penelope's capable hands. Penelope is determined to find him a wife he can love, even though he claims not to have a heart, while keeping her own feelings hidden. 

Her respect for him knew no bounds, and her heart had followed. 

Second in the series, I had no problem jumping in here, the ground covered in the first is relayed fully. However, I did miss seeing Penelope and Hugh's friendship start and develop. When the reader comes into the story, they already have a solid friendship, Penelope knows she loves Hugh, and Hugh is just awakening to the fact that Penelope is more than just an essential part of his business life but of his heart, too. 

He viewed her as he might a man he respected, a man whose opinion he valued. And for her, who had never known any of that before him, it was an aphrodisiac. 

The beginning has a lot of Penelope alluding to some massive secret from her past that would destroy not only her reputation but Hugh's if it ever came out, her roadblock to thinking they could never be together. The reader isn't let in on it until around 80%, just a little before Hugh finds out, too. It felt a little stretched out for how long Penelope would bring it up as a harbinger for it to appear so late in the story and then have a fairly quick wrap-up. What made it feel even less, even though the secret does have weighty consequences, was that Hugh has his own secret and it honestly feels like it could be a bigger deal than Penelope's but his character never mentions it in thought or fear until it suddenly appears as a reason to get the two to travel together to Scotland. The plot points in this felt awkward to me for some reason, Penelope's bemoaned secret that doesn't show up until very end, Hugh's secret that was huge but barely shows in his character, and then Penelope being blackmailed and dealing with it as if the blackmail letter was meant for Hugh when this whole time she's been scared of her secret coming out. Heath's writing is always smooth and readable but there was some awkward fitting plot points in this for me. 

He’d taken her for granted, this woman who was such an important part of his days, who had begun to haunt his dreams. 

As I mentioned, I missed seeing Hugh growing to find Penelope indispensable to his life, this was more admitting that he already felt that way and Penelope already loves him when we come into the story. Around 60% they decide to meet each other needs, Hugh because this is the first step to admitting he loves Penelope and Penelope because she does love Hugh and at twenty-eight is ready to have all her needs met. Of course, this only brings them closer together and we have some ignoring denial from Hugh and Penelope saying she doesn't want to get married anyway because she'd lose all autonomy, even though she loves Hugh. These two were a nice couple but I wouldn't say the showing and telling of their emotions went beyond or even made it to memorable. 

Knight drew on his cheroot and blew out a series of smoke circles. “You might want to comb down your hair before going inside. You look as though you’ve been ravaged.” 
He felt as though he had been, inside and out, from the moment he’d stepped closer to her and she’d looked up at him with something akin to longing. 

Awkward fitting plot points, pretty sedate tone, and the faint praise of nice relationship between our main couple, made this into an ok read for me. Hugh's Chessmen friends and some debutantes we are given short intros through Penelope's interviewing for possible wives to Hugh, peak some interest for future books. This probably won't wow you but you won't be chucking it against the wall either.