Thursday, January 22, 2026

Review: One Burning Heart

One Burning Heart One Burning Heart by Elizabeth Kingston
My rating: 2 of 5 stars

My brain has been mush, so maybe my attitude colored my reading of this, but I wasn't the biggest fan. 

I buddy read this over on Storygraph and had a hard time getting through it. FMC decides MMC is like his father and decides to amp up her piousness as a point of walling him off and hiding her covert ops of protecting a priest who is being hunted for being a heretic. 

After six years of marriage, MMC decides to try and finger her and suddenly she's seeing him in a new light. I pretty much only liked chapter 8 and Lady Eluned, Will's mom. 

I really used up all my energy trying to eek convo on this in the Buddy Read , so sorry for this review lol There was way too much encompassing religious stuff in here for me. I don't know this felt like A Day in the Life Medieval fiction with a dash of romance to me. My brain and emotional state was just not about this.

View all my reviews

Review: Never Say Die

Never Say Die Never Say Die by Tess Gerritsen
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

2.5 stars 

"My mother's never accepted it. She needs a body to bury." 
General Kistner sighed. "Of course. The wives. It's always the wives. There were so many widows, one tends to forget." 
"She hasn't forgotten." 

Set in the shadow of Vietnam, FMC travels to Vietnam to discover what happened to, claimed KIA, father, for her mother who is dying from cancer. She's bitter against her father, feeling he put his love of flying and daredevilry ahead of his family. She meets the MMC, who works as a sort of bounty hunter for the government for remains of soldiers or find out if they decided to change identities and stay in Vietnam. When he hears her last name, he realizes one of his files is about her father, who might have been a traitor to USA and has a big bounty, so he decides to convince her that they should work together. 

They didn't exchange a word; just that look, that sad and knowing smile between women, was enough. 

I think this didn't age the best, there's a bunch of trying to work through and weigh the cost of the Vietnam War and CIA workings in Laos but there were sure were some cringe ways of speaking about the people of Vietnam and Laos here too. This leaned a little more towards the thriller mystery with the romance having that push/pull of I hate you/I want you. Grappling with the cost of war and how it's viewed/spoke of is always the most interesting part of the books for me.

Monday, January 5, 2026

2025 Favorites

 Happy New Year!

I managed to make my 100 books read in a year goal and for a total look at my reading, here is my GoodReads Year in Review

I think I'm going to have to retire the old format of my book awards and go with a slimmed down version, energy, where has it gone?! I was just going to do a Top Ten list but, because I'm me, I have to still include my favorite quotes and scenes from the year. 

As always, my Favorites nominees and winner can be published from any year and be from any genre, fiction or non. 

*Clicking on the book cover takes you to my review or GRs page if I didn't write one. 

Favorite Quote

A Tropical Rebel Get the Duke by Adriana Herrera











This was a woman of means, and yet in her letter to the clinic she’d indicated her inability to pay for her visit because she could not spend any money that could not be explained to her husband.

One of my favorite historical romance series of the last few years. I loved the acknowledging of we've fought these battles before and we've found ways to win vibes underlining messaging. 

A Place No Flowers Grow by Cheryl Cantafio 











she was defenseless in her love for him 
he made hand puppets in the shadows 
she made him feel weak in every limb 
we could make lovely little weirdos

A book in verse told in pantoum and quintain poem format, I loved the haunting journey this took me on. A Gothic tale about humans relationship with nature, this was different in all the good ways.

The Hidden Moon by Jeannie Lin











“I never thought you could possibly be mine, Wei-wei,” he said, his voice heavy. “I just wanted to ask.”

Screaming, crying, throwing up. The yearning in this! Look, I'm going to attempt to be normal about this book but just know that I could have 100 quotes here from this. I buddy read this, so my spiraling is already laid out if you want to see it all, link in review.

Sunday, January 4, 2026

2026 BookTempter’s TBR Challenge

 

2026 BookTempter’s 

TBR Challenge


January

1 - It's a classic task for a reason

Read the very last book to enter your TBR pile. TBRs come from the habit we have of not reading books because we put them off. You have my permission to indulge yourself.

Never Say Die by Tess Gerritsen






Stretch goal – Read a book that you’ve had in your TBR pile for more than 5 years

February

2 - Partners in Crime?

For the month of Valentines you can choose a book about a partnership be it friends, lovers or whatever combination comes to mind

Stretch Goal – ever read a book, get the sequel and then park the sequel for a rainy day? This month prepare for that day!

March

3 - First Bloom

As Spring arrives for this change I’d like to read a book that is the debut of an author. Who

knows this may become someone you’ll follow forever!

Strech Goal – Our TBR piles often have books by our favourite authors lingering because we think we aren’t yet deserving. Congratulations I say you are worthy!

April

4 - Side trips

For this month I’d like you look for a book that has been published by either an independent press or self published

Strech Goal – Read four short stories from an anthology or collection. Hey if you like it finish the whole thing!

May

5 - Freedom!

 You have my permission to finally pick the most tempting book in your TBR pile – no questions asked

Stretch Goal – You may pick a book purely at random - use whatever system you choose to pick this

June

6 - Equinoxes

Regardless of hemispheres you live in read book over 500 pages and

Stretch goal - read a book less than 150 pages

July

7 - A Ceasar Word Salad

Read a book with an empire – starting, ending or changing

Stretch Goal – we all have a series we have accidentally collected all the books for and not got round to it. You have until the end of the year to end this

August

8 - Schools Out!

Choose a book by an author who is not from the UK or USA

Strech Goal – Choose a book with a long journey in it

September

9 - Back to School

Treat yourself to a book that is not from your usual genre. Expand your minds!

Stretch Goal – Read a non-fiction book

October

10 - Fancy a Fright?

Read a spooky tale – you can choose cosy or downright chilling

Stretch Goal – As the harvest comes in find a book with a countryside setting in some way

November

11 - Short trips

Read four novellas in a month

Stretch Goal – Read something with a wintry setting

December

12 - It's for You!

Read a book you’ve been gifted – they wanted you to read this!

Stretch Goal – By now you’ve got the hang of this so just pick up a book from the pile and read it. You’ve got this

Reading Romance Bingo Challenge

  That's What I'm Talking About (Twimom227) 2026 Romance Reading Bingo Challenge

Joining this fun challenge again and still trying for that coveted Blackout Bingo!



*Clicking on book title takes you to my review


Published in 2026 - The Swan's Daughter:  A Possibly Doomed Love Story by Roshani Chokshi

Blind Date/Arranged Marriage - One Burning Heart by Elizabeth Kingston


TBRChallenge Master Post

 


Review: The Swan's Daughter: A Possibly Doomed Love Story

The Swan's Daughter: A Possibly Doomed Love Story The Swan's Daughter: A Possibly Doomed Love Story by Roshani Chokshi
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

I received this book for free, this does not affect my opinion of the book or the content of my review 

“Bad things befall those who consort with humans,” she had warned . “Even worse things befall those who love them.” 

Told in a fable, fairy tale, and folklore rich context, The Swan's Daughter was a fantasy about the hurts, pains, and joys of love. The story starts off in a fantasy land where Prava, a wizard, begins to fall in love with Araminta, a veritas swan. Not knowing that the backbone of his love is how he plans on using her, Araminta gives her heart to him, which gives him a key with her heart on it and control over her ability to switch from human to swan. Once a veritas' heart is given, it is said that if anything happens to their mate, they will die too, trapping Araminta fully. This has their marriage constantly pushing and pulling, with hatchlings eventually arriving. Their first six daughters all arrive with their necklaces given directly to their father while a late seventh born, Demezla, has her key buried in her heart. 

Demelza had no wings. And when she was raised out of her cracked eggshell, there was no key around her neck. It was locked deep, deep in her heart. And like any veritas swan, only one thing would summon it into being: Love. 

Demelza's childhood was full of love but of the service kind, particularly how she could be useful to her father. She wasn't the most beautiful and her swan song came out harsh to the ears, if still able to make the listener tell the truth, but works to learn all she can about the spell of immortality, what her father has been searching for all his life. This part was full of family dynamics and how love binds us, underlining discussions on unhealthy and healthy love. When Prava figures out the spell, Demelza has her first wake-up call at seeing her parents in an adult eye and sense of betrayal. With her mother's help, she escapes to Rathe Castle, a home her wizard father helped build but after the family realized how he was setting up to betray them, barred him from the premises, making it the only safe place for Demelza. 

Two individuals whose purpose outweighed their personhood.

Demelza arrives as numerous other young ladies do, there's to be a three part trial for the Prince Arris' hand in marriage. Arris comes from a family cursed to lose their hearts to the ones they love too. His ancestors have had their hearts cut-out by their partners as it leads to the partner having power. While the partners get the power, the now heartless ancestors become tress in a grove or some other nature specific entity. His parents have been the exception with his mother monthly “trying” to kill his father but never succeeding. Demelza doesn't want to give her identity in fear they'll kick her out because of who her father is, so she strikes a deal with the prince that she'll sing her song to get truth from the contestants in hopes they'll find his true love and protect him from someone just wanting to cut his heart out. 

There were many uncertainties that lay ahead, but there was much joy too, and in the pursuit of the latter, the former becomes easier to bear. 

As Demelza and Arris spend more time together, their relationship starts to deepen and form, binding the two in ways they never expected. This was great for showcasing all the ways love, between a couple, parents-child, siblings, and friends, can hurt and strengthen an individual and relationship. I most enjoyed how all the allegory deployed and fantasy setting and language, made this a story that all ages could enjoy and learn from. You'll recognize some shadows of well known fairy tales and folklore and get lost in the fantastical descriptions of beings and land as you'll feel for these characters that want to feel useful without being used and want to love and be loved safely.

Thursday, January 1, 2026

Review: Odyssey

Odyssey Odyssey by M.L. Fergus
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

2.5 stars 

I received this book for free, this does not affect my opinion of the book or the content of my review 

She'd gone from a freedom-hungry nobody playing dress-up to save an orphan she'd never met to a princess who now held the life of her kind, sweet, long-lost brother in her hands. 

Second in the Fractured Kingdom series, you'd definitely want to read Prophecy before jumping into this one as it picks up right where that one left off. Our main protagonists, Persephone and Azriel had been cornered by the evil Regent Mordesius in the castle. This was all after learning that Persephone was actually the long lost twin sister princess to the King Finnius. Trying to save their lives, Azriel comes up with a lie about knowing where the healing Pool of Genezig is and if Mordesius lets them go, he'll bring back some healing waters to prove it. Mordesius takes the bait, as he's obsessed with “curing” his deformed body and gives them one hundred days to find the Pool and come back, or he'll kill the king. Thus, sets off our Odyssey as Persephone, Azriel, and a revolving door of tag-along secondary characters travel the fantasy land of Glyndoria. 

“Marry the girl...find the pool...save the king...fulfill the prophecy. It all fits,” breathed Cairn, her eyes aglow with excitement. 

If you read my review of the first, you'll know I enjoyed the character dynamics and developing fantasy and politics worldbuilding, the four hundred pages here, ran too long for me. There was a healthy focus on delivering Mordesius' pov chapters and his reveling in his evilness became a lot to keep reading; numerous times torturing and calling a prisoner of his “cow”. I feel like so much of his story could have been cut, we know he's evil, we know what his goal is. The politics side was him trying to outplay a higher up Lord and maneuvering him and his daughter, that included the king, in a way that would ultimately lead him into power. He juggled some things in a believable way and others it was like, yeah, no surprise that turned out the way it did. 

She tried to believe that she would never again lay her cheek against his warm chest, would never again feel his strong arms around her, would never again feel him lying so close to her in the darkness. 

The romance between Persephone and Azriel did have some momentum, Azriel did some maneuvering of his own and we get a bit of forced proximity. Persephone kept true to character with, overly, fighting feelings and circumstances but as each new little adventure on their odyssey brought them closer together you could see their connect strengthening. This was still kept more in the YA category than adult with a firmly shut-door scene. I enjoyed the secondary characters, Rachel and the mysterious “dressed in homespun” man but others veered into over-the-top goofy annoying like the troll-ish leader. The ending gave us Persephone having to face one of her biggest fears, learning about her mother, a surprise move by a character, some sadness, and a kidnapping that will lead into more trials for our group in the third book. This read somewhat slower and dragged out for me but if you're more into longer adventure fantasy with YA vibe, you might enjoy more.

Thursday, December 18, 2025

TBRChallenge Review: Summer Games

Summer Games Summer Games by Elizabeth Lowell
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

2.5 stars 

This month's TBRChallenge theme was Celebrations!, fighting a cold, I reached into my garage sale book boxes and pulled out Summer Games. The 1984 LA Olympics count for celebrations I say! This book had a couple of reoccurring themes that just about drove me batty because of how hammered on they were. Our main male character Cord grew-up around horses and was a rodeo bronco buster before Vietnam called and he constantly is given a “shaman's” voice as he works to get our female main character's horse, Devlin's Waterloo, to trust him. If I had read this on an electronic device, I'd have done a count on how many times it was used, since I only had a paperback, you'll have to take my conservative estimate of one million times. There was also the discussion of coming in from the cold, the whole underlining women warm the hearth and home for the men coming in from cold of protecting and providing, the “queen” and “solider” analogy became a lot in it's repetitiveness. 

She was a fool to be interested in a man who was like her father, so involved in his work that he lived his life at the end of an electronic leash. She had left that world behind once. She would never enter it again, no matter the lure. 

At it's essence, Summer Games was a romantic suspense where retirement landing you in the soft thighs of a younger woman who also comes with a hot stallion sounds like a good idea and we're all destined to marry our fathers. Raine grew-up with a father that did super secret American government work and she hated how his family always came a distant second, he's never even seen her ride in her equestrian competitions. This has soured her on men of a certain cut of cloth, so when she's, literally, knocked out of her shoes by Cord, he has his work cut out for him. Cord came off a bit...intense. But I've never ran point on security for the Olympics, so who am I too judge? When Raine's looking over the course she'll run during the competition, he thinks she's a “Cuban or Lebanese commando” terrorist setting bombs. Their “meet-cute” has sparks flying and Cord instantly knowing he wants her while Raine only sees her father and tries to put up her walls. I say try because, lol, she be rubbing all up and down this man. 

But she was so warm in his arms, and he was so cold inside. 

The first half really focused on their romance and the pushing and pulling of their attraction with not wanting to get emotionally involved, Raine not wanting to get involved with a man she'll come second to and Cord knowing he lives too secretive and dangerous of a life. I went back and forth if I thought this was overwritten with remnants of purple prose or if we're losing the recipes. Example: He wanted to take Raine down to the golden grass and make love to her until nothing else was real, no past or future, no rights or wrongs, nothing but sunset sliding into night, a man and woman alone, two lovers turning and twining and blending intimately, two flames burning as one in a world of crimson silence. 
Purple prose-y, can see the cringe but “nothing but sunset sliding into night” and “burning as one in a world of crimson silence.”. We're using our words!! But maybe we already had made rent and needed to settle down. 

He wanted to seduce her in more than a merely physical way. He wanted her to trust him. 

The later second half finally gives us a focus on Raine's equestrian trials and you'll learn about dressage, cross country racing, and jumping, which was interesting and I didn't think textbook-ed it to eye-glazing. The suspense part about the notorious “Barracuda” assassin that was hovering on the edges also comes to the forefront, sort of, when Cord's constantly called away to “monitor” and do super secret DIA anti-terrorism stuff. I wish we had gotten more with Raine and her family, we get a few scenes with her father (guy plays the lips zipped spy well, give her more info!) so that more resolution could have been had there.

“And you're an expert on love?” she said, her voice hard and dry. 
“No,” he said softly. “I'm an expert on dying. On not loving. On being lonely. On looking at castles from the outside. On finding a woman worth having and then watching her bar the gate against me because I'm just a soldier, not a king.” 

After all are protected (any violence of this kind is completely off page) and Raine wins her Olympic medal but Cord disappears, she ends up on a ranch in Arizona until her HEA choppers in. The repeated term use of shaman, queen, and soldier was super tiring but the backstory of how Cord grew-up around horses (family of Mesteñeros ) was brilliant because of how it then linked and gave a thread to him helping and connecting with her through her stallion, which was her family for all intents and purposes. The women providing warmth and succor for warrior men theme was meh, Cord wasn't the cardboard cut-out alpha man, he had layers and it didn't feel like a treatise on the ideal, but meh. 

“I don't believe it anymore. Tomorrow will come for us. When it does, I want it to be right. I want to know that I didn't take you off-balance and more than a little afraid. I'm good at taking people that way. Too good. It's part of my job. But not you,” said Cord, his voice deep, a river running through moonlight and darkness down to a warm sea. “I want you in a very special way, Raine. I can wait one more day for that. I've already waited a lifetime.” 

What stood out the most for me, was the touching and caressing between these two (let me Bat signal – washes her hair scene), they weren't just slot A slot B fucking, which, please, bring back caressing. There were more than one purple prose remnant scenes like this: Shirtless, barefoot, Cord rode the screaming blood-bay whirlwind. The man's muscles bunched and gleamed in the bright moonlight even as the stallion's did, two powerful, supremely conditioned males fighting for dominance. 
Obviously can read a little goofball out of context but in this story and the contextual moment, it's also put a capital on that W-riting. So while I had fun with some of the scenery chewing going on here, I'm not sure I'd recommend for this to be one to go back and visit, but I'll give it up to the “I can wait one more day, I've already waited a lifetime” to it all.

Saturday, December 13, 2025

Review: The Sea Captain's Wife: A True Story of Mutiny, Love, and Adventure at the Bottom of the World

The Sea Captain's Wife: A True Story of Mutiny, Love, and Adventure at the Bottom of the World The Sea Captain's Wife: A True Story of Mutiny, Love, and Adventure at the Bottom of the World by Tilar J. Mazzeo
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

3.5 stars

I received this book for free, this does not affect my opinion of the book or the content of my review 

She is the captain’s wife and just nineteen: Mary Ann. 

The Sea Captain's Wife was an account of how Mary Ann Patten became the first recorded woman captain of a merchant ship. Footnotes abounding, the author clearly did through research, which some readers will appreciate and others might find their eyes glazing over at times as I felt some tangents tied-in and others a little spun-off. While we start off at the moment Mary Ann's husband, Joshua, collapses from illness on their sea voyage and she's about to have to take over, the story quickly goes back to give historical context to how these two have ended up where they are. 

We are on a dangerous journey. A journey in which wealthy shipowners pit young men against each other with the promise of riches, urging them on to reckless dangers, in the name of another man’s lucre. The year is 1856. 

The beginning delves into Mary Ann and Joshua's family trees, you'll get a lot of geographical, economical, and genealogy background to help give a good idea who these two might be and why they made the decisions they did. As Mary Ann and Joshua had ties in Maine and lived in Boston, the Old North Church and other landmarks make numerous appearances, helping to set the reader in the time and place. There's also delving into the US's economical context at the time, highlighting how important shipping was, discussion on how Matthew Maury changed the game, and the way the business was set-up, with backers, companies, and so forth, and how important having good captains were. The describing captains as the “rock stars and professional athletes” of the time, along with salaries put into today's context, along with going through a ship crew's hierarchy and politics helped to lay-out the atmosphere for when the story gets to the moment readers are probably looking for, when Mary Ann becomes captain. 

Never before had any woman been acclaimed captain of a merchant clipper. 

Around the halfway mark is when all the lead up pays off and we get Joshua becoming too ill and Mary Ann having to navigate Drake's Passage and fend off a mutiny from a disgruntled crew member. I was a little disappointed with what I was, mostly, reading the book for was such a little part of the overall story. Her time in charge was, factually a short time in her overall life story, but I felt somewhat bereft as that was what I went into this for. The journey she faced after, getting back to Boston, caring for Joshua, having a baby, and trying to secure enough funds to live on, all while having her legend grow through newspapers, was engrossing in a sedate way and sad in how the lack of medical advances at the time had her story ending far too soon. 

For nonfiction, this had a fair amount of conjecture in it, which is explained/discussed in the author's notes in the end; how documents/records weren't kept for middle-class, everyday people. I agree that these people's stories should still be told but when emotions and thoughts are more readily inferred, I get a little uneasy. This was a good read for looking at a moment in time where sea faring could make or break individuals and the US, you'll get a good look at two American families who Mary Ann and Joshua tied together and how Mary Ann gained the knowledge to be able to captain the clipper Neptune's Car and become the first recorded woman merchant captain.