Need a Gift for a Really Cool Kid?

If you are still struggling with figuring out the perfect gift for someone on your list, may I suggest a book? Or, better yet, a stack of books? Here is a quick round-up of some last minute books that would make great gifts. You can click on the covers for more information and ways to order. As always, support your local indie bookstore whenever possible.

Young children who love silly stories:

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For kids beginning their reading adventures:

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Side note-the Acorn and Branches series from Scholastic are really great for beginning readers. They have loads of pictures for text support and are very bright and colorful. The Ready-to-Read books are my favorites for leveled readers because they seem to be the truest to their reading level description. That was really wordy, but basically, the Pre-Reading and Level 1 are generally good for Kindergarten, Level 2 for 1st and 2nd grade, and so forth.

Kids who are more confident in their reading:

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Kids who LOVE Harry Potter by J.K. is a trash baby so let’s explore more authors:

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Kids who watched Enola Holmes and fell in love with mysteries:

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Need something more specific? Drop it in the comments and I’ll see what I can dig up for you!

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When No One is Watching by Alyssa Cole

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If I have learned anything in 2020, it’s that I end up reading and enjoying books that reflect current events, only dialed up 500%. I started the pandemic reading Wanderers by Chuck Wendig. Dug in deep with that one. Finally read Station Eleven by Emily St. John Mandel. Again, bring on the world destruction due to disease and government negligence. The Hollow Places by T. Kingfisher was all about a portal to an evil world lurking behind some drywall in a home. Doing a wee bit of construction here and nothing like constantly checking for portals to other worlds while building walls to freak out your husband. So of course I stayed up all night to read Alyssa Cole’s first thriller about an insidious force overtaking a neighborhood during a time when everyone has been asked to stay home as much as possible. Because why not give yourself nightmares over your own home not being safe during a time you’re not supposed to leave your home. 

This book is incredible. Sydney Green has returned to her childhood home in Brooklyn to nurse her wounds after a nasty divorce and to care for her ailing mother. What was once a tightly knit community of longtime residents and small businesses is quickly changing due to a housing boom caused by a new research facility opening in the area. What began as a trickle of new homeowners grows to a flood of very white, very wealthy faces buying out the current residents, most of whom are people of color. 

After taking a walking tour of her neighborhood, which Sydney is a near expert on, her anger and frustration over the white washing of history grows into the development of her own tour that will coincide with a neighborhood block party. While researching for the tour, Sydney comes across an unwanted research partner-her neighbor Theo. Theo’s wealthy girlfriend has begun to show her true colors as a racist, classist, garbage person, while Theo has grown to like the neighborhood and having grown up constantly moving and mostly poor, doesn’t have the same trash perspective. The more that Sydney visits with her elderly neighbors, the more she realizes how the neighborhood is changing in dark and dangerous ways. On top of all of this, Sydney is receiving increasingly harassing phone calls, pressuring her to sell her mother’s home. As Sydney and Theo’s friendship grows, the feeling around the neighborhood grows more and more sinister. 

Alyssa Cole is an incredible writer. This book has some of the best writing I’ve read this year and the twists got me every single time. There is not a single scene that doesn’t move the story forward. It’s so tightly written and fast paced that it’s very easy to get sucked in and stay up all night reading. I loved how much detail and history is included about the important Black residents of Sydney’s neighborhood. There are some great discussions about gentrification, redlining, and the white-washing of the local history. Sydney is my favorite type of character. She’s smart, has a complicated past, takes no shit from anyone, and is completely fearless. The way that Sydney puts Theo in his place, over and over again, was a beautiful thing. In Theo’s defense, I think he was trying his best with what knowledge he had, and was willing to listen and grow. Theo’s girlfriend, I don’t care what her name was, is a complete trash baby. As we see her more and more, Theo learns alongside us how racist and classist she is. Cole does an excellent job pointing out the ways that racism exists in subtle ways that are often overlooked by white people. Nothing’s held back. 

If you love thrillers, mysteries, and insightful looks at how society needs to do better, you’re going to love this book. Cole also writes romance novels, both historical and contemporary, and they are excellent. I really love her Loyal League series set during the Civil War. She’s also a great follow on Instagram as she lives on an island with her hot husband, kitties, and chickens. 

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The Twisted Ones by T. Kingfisher

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I have absolutely fallen in love with this author’s books. They are this fantastic blend of horror, humor, and incredibly relatable characters. I loved the Hollow Places and couldn’t wait to get my hands on The Twisted Ones.

In The Twisted Ones, Melissa, who always goes by Mouse, is asked by her ailing father to help get her recently deceased grandmother’s house read for sale. What seems like a simple task quickly becomes overwhelming when Mouse discovers her grandmother was actually a hoarder. Piles of junk weave in and out of newspaper towers and the stench of mice and insects nearly cause Mouse to walk away and forget about any potential money from the sale. But Mouse knows her dad’s health isn’t good enough to take on this task, so she does her best to get started. As Mouse spends time in town buying supplies and hanging out at a coffee shop for the wifi and great drinks, she finds that she isn’t the only person who believed her grandmother to a terrible, horrible person. Dislike of her grandmother was a common theme amongst her neighbors and it became more and more puzzling why her step-grandfather every married her.

While cleaning out her step-grandfather’s room, she discovered that Frederick Cotgrave was obsessed with the idea that his wife had stolen and hidden a green book that belonged to him. Uncovering a typewritten manuscript, Mouse discovers that Cotgrave was convinced that there were creatures that lived in the woods and they were out to get him.

Cotgrave wasn’t wrong. As Mouse investigates further into what she believes are delusions of an unwell man, Mouse discovers that there are places within the woods that lead to dark, and terrifying lands full of the Twisted Ones. After her beloved dog Bongo goes missing in the woods, Mouse must save him from whatever fate the Twisted Ones have planned for him.

SPOILER

The dog lives.

I love how T. Kingfisher is able to write a horrifying novel that is also hilarious. There is the perfect balance of both in the two novels I have read and it’s just so well done. Again, my favorite trope of a book within a book plays out. Cotgrave describes in his journal a manuscript he wrote based on his memory of the Green Book that was given to him by a friend. Within that book is a story of a young woman who discovers small creatures that live in the woods and the journeys they go on together. By trade, Mouse is an editor and the way that she picks apart Cotgrave’s writing was so funny juxtaposed against the horrors he described in his writing. As Mouse uncovers more and more about the Twisted Ones, and her experiences become more and more unworldly, she is still cleaning out her grandmother’s house and describing what a horrible person she had been while throwing out multiple microwaves. The humor is very dark, and I loved it.

Kingfisher is able to create horror stories that are so close to reality that the terror level goes up with each page. Like in The Hollow Places, the threat to Mouse and Bongo is very close to home. It’s literally in their backyard and can attack at any time. Mouse is in a new area without any friends or family close and knows that it’s incredibly unlikely that anyone would ever believe her story. She doesn’t know if she believes her story. And worst yet, her dog goes missing! This book is so stressful and engrossing that it was one sitting read for me. If you love horror that contains more suspense, mystery, and fear of the unknown, as opposed to blood, torture and gore, this is a great book for you.

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The Once and Future Witches by Alix E. Harrow

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This book is so good! I’m pretty sure I read the majority of it aloud to the Hubs and giggled through 90% of it. It’s so, so, so good. So good. It’s so good that I know that anything I have to say about it won’t do it justice so just know, it’s amazing.

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Ok, we have the three Eastwood sisters: Beatrice Belladonna, Agnes Amaranth, and James Juniper. It’s 1893 and the three of them grew up with a horribly abusive father who drove them apart, and because of many different events, they haven’t seen each other for over seven years. Agnes has been working her fingers to the bone at the cotton mill, keeping her head down, and trying to stay out of reach of the disgusting and grabby foremen. Beatrice has found a comfortable job as a university librarian and has lived a simple and quiet life on her own. After Juniper finds herself on the run from the law and wandering the city of New Salem, she discovers that her sisters have been in the city all this time, completely unaware of each other. The three of them are drawn together when Beatrice unknowingly recites a spell that creates a mystical connection between them and opens up the gateway to the magical library of Avalon, the center of all magical knowledge. Hurt and betrayed that her sisters left her alone with their abusive father while they began new lives, Agnes sets off to join the newly formed suffragist movement, but not to earn the right to vote. Agnes wants to bring back magic. 

That’s right-witches are real and Agnes and her sisters are all witches. With the help of women from all over New Salem, the three sisters set out to bring back the black tower of Avalon and restore magic to all women. 

I absolutely love alternate history, especially when it’s alternate history with magic. Magic is a known element in this version of New Salem and the men fear nothing more than a female witch. Men are allowed to practice magic but women are threatened with burning if they dare to cast any type of spell, even one as simple as making your hair look good. You can’t have a witch uprising without an evil witch hunter, and that part is played by Gideon Hill, a mysterious man of power that has a cult-like following in New Salem. This book also contains my absolute favorite catnip - books with hidden stories. The stories that were told to the girls by their grandmother held vital information disguised as fairy tales. As the story progresses, these hidden stories become a shared theme amongst many of the women who join forces with the sisters.

Of all the sisters, Juniper is my favorite. She is fearless, driven, and wants nothing more than to tear down the patriarchy. She runs headfirst into every situation and never backs down. Even though she feels her sisters betrayed her, she’s still willing to sacrifice herself to keep them safe. The relationship between the three sisters is very complicated. They all have their own secrets to protect, but they also have some serious misunderstandings about each other’s motivations. The sisters find support for their cause from women all over New Salem. I really enjoyed how it was such a diverse group of women, and a few men, who were so supportive in providing shelter, spells, ingredients, and moral support and there are some interesting ties to the history and lore of the underground railroad. 

This is another chunker of a book, coming in at over 500 pages in the hardcover version. My last few reads were all big books, but all moved very quickly and this one just flew by. In between many of the chapters, there are fairy tales from the sisters’ childhood that provide clues to the source of the witch’s magic and I loved seeing how they fit into the story. While the story itself is pretty grim, the women face torture and death if they are caught practicing magic, the book never feels bleak. If anything, Juniper’s drive to smash the patriarchy and her complete lack of regard for authority help to keep the tone lighter and it’s there are many parts that are downright hilarious. 

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I thoroughly enjoyed this book and I can’t wait to hear what others have to say about it. If you would like a copy for your own collection, or as a gift for the witchy book lover in your life, you can find ordering information here:



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Plain Bad Heroines by Emily M. Danforth

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I have been on a creepy book kick lately and I’ve been lucky to have read a string of excellent books. Plain Bad Heroines kicks it up even further by being a creepy book about a book. Actually, it’s a book about a movie being made that is based on a book all about an obsession with another book. 

I swear. 

So, in the early 1900’s, at the Brookhant’s School for Girls, two girls became obsessed with a memoir written by Mary MacLane. Their obsession led to not only their own tragic and horrific deaths, but the deaths of three more people tied to the school. A century later, the abandoned school is now the center of a novel written by the brilliant and precocious author, Merrit Emmons, who was only 16 at the time. Her novel about the young women obsessed with not only each other, but the writings of Mary MacLane, is going to be adapted into a gothic horror film. As production begins on the movie, tensions between Merrit and the two young movie stars rise and mysterious events put everyone in danger. 

This book is a chunker - the hardcover edition clocks in at 617 pages and there is a lot of story to be found in those pages. I’m not exaggerating on the book about a movie about a book about a book. A lot of story. The book is constantly changing. In one chapter, you will be reading about the brutal murder of a young woman decades in the past, and in the next, read about a romantic and chaotic first date between two enigmatic young women in the present. There are so many elements of a classic gothic horror. There’s the dark and dilapidated boarding school where young women are sent to become ladies, but really discover that women are great at kissing. There are tragic and mysterious deaths that could be explained away as male violence, or, a curse. Layered on top of our gothic horror story is a coming of age novel about a young actress who needs to break away from her mother and make her own way in Hollywood. But how do you keep your wits about you when it seems that a curse is following you, you’re possibly in love with your co-star, and you know that writer thinks you’re unqualified? Like I said, there’s a lot of story.

I absolutely loved the writing style in this book. It read like you were listening to one of your best friends tell their famous local legend, while sitting by a fire and enjoying a boozy cocktail. It’s very conversational and snarky, with such compelling and campy writing that you are instantly swept up in the soap opera feel of what is really, a quite tragic story. The book is it full of black and white illustrations of our young, plain, bad heroines in all their tragic glory and has some of the best footnotes ever included in a book. Many provide historical context, many are just the narrator being sarcastic and hilarious and I’m pretty sure I sent screenshots of at least 10 pages to my boss within the first 20 pages of reading the book.

The characters are very well developed and incredibly interesting. Merrit is very prickly and slightly obnoxious while Harper Harper, yes that’s her name, is a glamorous and gorgeous chameleon of a character. To me, Harper was the hardest to figure out. Was she just an excellent actress and we never saw the real woman within? Was she just such a quick thinker that she could turn the acting on and off? She’s a puzzle. Meanwhile, Audrey is in a little bit over her head but really wants to make it as an actress and is far stronger than she believes. All three women are smart, interesting, and driven. They’re also all gorgeous, queer, and know that there is something going on at Brookhants. 

This book checked off a lot of my reader wheelhouse boxes-there’s a creepy school full of rich girls and their rich girl problems. It’s fast paced and the multiple timelines slowly reveal all the deliciously creepy scariness that follows everyone involved with Mary MacLane’s book. The characters are interesting and compelling and I was quickly invested in everyone’s survival. This book is also incredibly fun. It never takes itself too seriously, is very campy, and was an absolute delight to get lost in. I highly, highly recommend this for anyone who loves gothic horror, star crossed lovers, and a ton of snark. 

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Vampires Never Get Old Edited by Zoraida Córdova and Natalie C. Parker

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Zoraida Córdova and Natalie C. Parker have put together a stellar list of authors for this young adult anthology centered around vampires. In fact, this collection is so well done, even the verso page has a curse for anyone who dares steal this book. A curse. On the verso page. Chef's kiss.

Included in this anthology are some of the most influential YA authors: Tessa Gratton, Rebecca Roanhorse, Julie Murphy, Heidi Heilig, Samira Ahmed, Kayla Whaley, Zoraida Córdova, Natalie C. Parker, Laura Ruby, Mark Oshiro, Dhonielle Clayton, and Victoria Schwab. A few of these authors were new to me-I'm still working on upping my YA reading-but many were authors on my favorites list. If you love to learn more about authors and what influences their writing, I highly recommend the podcast Vampires Never Get Old: The Podcast. Each episode is an interview with one of the authors about the vampires books and movies that they love and influenced their writing. It's really, really good.

I have grown to love anthologies for their exposure to new-to-me authors and the way short story collections allow you to dip in and out form a book without guilt. Only have a few minutes? You can fit in one story and come back for more later. It's really hard to pick a favorite story from this collection, they are all so well done. This collection is as far from your typical collection as you can get-you will not find any white, straight, cis-gendered, buff men here. There's vampires of all skin colors, body sizes, sexual identities, and physical abilities. At the end of each story, Córdova and Parker include historical context and notes on the tropes found in the story.

This collection is a wonderful reimagining of the vampire myth and the variety of stories guarantees there's something for everyone.

Some fun t.v. news-"First Kill" by Victoria Schwab is going to be adapted!

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The Hollow Places by T. Kingfisher

The Hollow Places by T. Kingfisher

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This is one weird, weird novel. It’s so weird. It’s so wonderfully, chillingly, horrifyingly weird. 

I loved it.

After her divorce, Kara moves into her Uncle’s place to help run his eccentric museum. The Glory to God Museum of Natural Wonders, Curiosities, and Taxidermy is full of just that-lots and lots of taxidermy and curiosities. To keep her busy, Kara spends her days updating the museum's catalog of exhibits and helping customers in the gift shop. When her uncle suffers a knee injury, Kara is left to run the museum on her own. After a long day, Kara notices a hole in the drywall. Irritated that a customer damaged the wall and didn’t tell anyone, Kara asks her neighbor Simon to help her patch it up. Instead of a simple fix, the two discover an impossible hallway behind the wall that extends beyond the building’s dimensions. 

At the end of the mysterious hallway? A portal to a different dimension. That’s right, an entire world exists within the walls of the museum. Kara and Simon enter the mysterious world and discover a vast expanse of land that can’t possibly exist. Cryptic messages are found from former explorers within structures that seem like storm shelters but appear to be portals to other worlds. The more Kara and Simon explore, the more deadly and terrifying the world becomes. 

Readers, this book is amazing. Absolutely engrossing and thrilling. This is another one to add to my “Read In One Sitting” list because I just had to know what was happening next. T. Kingfisher crafted an impossible world that at the surface seems beautiful with it’s miles of willow trees, but is actually a horrifyingly deadly place full of nightmares. 

Kara and Simon are great characters. They are both completely relatable and their reactions to everything that was being thrown at them felt incredibly real. Kara is licking her wounds after her divorce and her devastation is quickly forgotten as soon as she discovers the other world. Slight spoiler, her ex calls her after she has a harrowing experience with the other world and her being truly pissed off that he is inconveniencing her with a phone was just great to watch. There is no romance between Kara and Simon, they’re just great friends. The two of them have a great dynamic between them and their mutual freakouts and fierce protectiveness of each other made for a great read. 

The Glory to God Museum and Natural Wonders, Curiosities, and Taxidermy is a character itself. I loved the descriptions of the different animals and the displays. The museum receives random donations from all over the world and Kara’s descriptions of some of the boxes were just hilarious. Uncle Earl also owns the coffee shop next door where Simon works, or the building at least, and the fact that they pay rent in coffee? Gotta love a small town. 

This is my favorite type of horror novel-an almost quiet, constant, tense and horrifying monster that you never really see. You can feel how scared Kara and Simon are but they hold that sense of disbelief because these events shouldn’t be happening. The unexplained horrors found within the willows are revealed slowly and deliberately creating a constant tension. I needed a muscle relaxer after this one-my shoulders were pretty damn tight.

I loved this one, truly, truly loved it. I haven’t read Kingfisher’s other book The Twisted Ones yet but it’s already on hold at the Library. If you’re looking for a creepy book that still has some lightness to it, definitely give this one a try.

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Silver in the Wood and Drowned Country by Emily Tesh

The Greenhollow Duology

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I had seen a lot of buzz around Emily Tesh’s latest novella, Drowned Country, and never once did it click in that it’s the second book in The Greenhollow Duology. So, much to my dismay, I had to wait for book one to come from the Library before I could dig into it, but the wait was more than worth it. 

Both books in this series are novellas so it’s pretty hard to discuss them without major spoilers. In Silver in the Wood, we are introduced to Tobias Finch who has a deep connection to Greenhollow Wood. He protects the woods from harm and in return, the wood provides him shelter. Living in the woods for centuries, he has seen many landowners come and go but none have captured his interest like Henry Silver. Silver, young, intelligent, and fascinated by the lore surrounding the wood is even more interested in the giant man living in the woods. When a dark force returns to the woods and places Silver in danger, Finch must confront dark secrets from his past to save him. 

Drowned Country continues the story of the Greenhollow Wood and delves deeper into its secrets and history. We also get to know Silver’s mother better and she is a powerhouse of a woman! 

Both of these novellas are just wonderful. I love Tesh’s writing style. The stories feel very dreamlike and are incredibly atmospheric. You can feel the trees moving in the wind and the vines growing around the cabin. There are dryads, nymphs, and other woodland creatures that live in the woods and the way the woods will move and shift to protect Tobias was magical. Tobias is a quiet man, used to his own company and that of the wood. He is able to communicate with the wood and has a close relationship with the dryad Bramble who is very clear on her feelings towards Henry and his presence in her woods. Henry is the complete opposite of Tobias. Talkative, inquisitive, and brash, he turns absolutely adorable in the presence of Tobias. He is also obsessed with his study of folklore and is always writing notes in one of his many notebooks. The lore surrounding the wood was fascinating and I love how each book gave us insight into the history and magic of the forest. 

They are both very quick reads and incredibly delightful. It takes real skill to create such an atmospheric and magical world in so few pages and Tesh pulls it off beautifully. 

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Empire of Wild by Cherie Dimaline

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This is such an engrossing novel that I read it in one afternoon. Dimaline is a masterful storyteller, combining horror, supernatural elements, mystery, and legend into a dark tale of love, loyalty and family.

After a heated argument with his wife Joan, Victor walks into the woods to calm down. Nearly a year later, Victor still hasn’t come back. After countless hours of searching, Joan still isn’t ready to give up on him, even with her family pushing her to move on. After a hard night of drinking, Joan finds herself drawn to a revival tent set up at the local Walmart and is shocked to see her husband leading the service. But when Joan confronts him, he doesn’t recognize her and believes she is still drunk from the night before. As Victor, now Reverend Eugene Wolff, tries to convince her she’s mistaken, Joan loses consciousness and awakens to a disturbing man who tells her her husband is dead. After being taken away by paramedics and spending the night in a hospital, Joan wakes up to a flurry of messages from her family. A wolf has attacked and killed her grandmother. As the community searches for the wolf, Joan seeks comfort from a family friend, Ajean. Loud mouthed and swearing like a sailor, Ajean is an expert in the history of their community and is convinced that it wasn’t a wolf that attacked Mere, it was a rogarou. She also believes that Victor is still inside the Reverend and Joan is the only one who can remind him of who he is. Armed with the teachings of Ajean and with help from her twelve year-old nephew Zeus, Joan sets out to track down the church who has captured her husband. 

Reading more Indigenous authors has been a priority this year. Dimaline explores the history of the Métis people, their strength, and the stories they pass on from generation to generation. I was especially interested in the way she explores the effects of the Christian religion manipulating the local politics and economy. The traveling church is blatantly using its services to sow discord between the white settler population and the native people over land rights. 

The rogarou myth was new to me. A rogarou can enter the body of someone who betrays a person they love. The rogarou myth was used to frighten children into behaving and was a warning to rebellious teenagers to watch themselves after dark. When Joan went to Ajean for help with her husband, Ajean offered up some less than conventional-to white girl me-about how to save her husband. And Joan just goes along with it, placing her trust in Ajean without much question. I’ve read a few other books lately that take place outside of white America and it’s always so interesting to see young people follow the orders of their elders without question. There isn’t that hubris that the young people know better and there isn’t any question about the elder’s judgement.

There is a great scene where Joan has a less than pleasant interaction with a white guy at a bar and the way that she puts racism in its place-amazing. Empire of Wild gives us an unflinching view of the impacts of racism, colonialism, and the stereotypes inflicted upon Indigenous peoples. 

This book was a great read. The story moved quickly and the characters felt real and true. If you like horror that’s on the less bloody side-this is a good pick for you.

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The Ancestor by Danielle Trussoni

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I found this book through a list of gothic fiction, and sorry, I don’t remember who posted it. I have been on a kick of dark, spooky books about creepy houses that exude a feeling of oppression. Mexican Gothic, The Nesting, The Whisper Man have all been recent creepy house reads. The Ancestor checks all those boxes. It’s creepy, disturbing, uncanny, and just outside the realm of possibility that makes you wonder for days later if it’s possible it’s true…

Bert Monte never thought she would find herself the last surviving heir to an Italian Noble family. Bert never knew she had enough family to begin to form that illusion. Shortly before Christmas, alone and estranged from her husband Luca, Bert finds herself holding an envelope that will change her life forever. But, the letter is in Italian which means Bert will need help from her husband’s Italian grandmother to translate. If discovering her family came from noble blood was shocking enough, discovering they were fiercely despised is even more so. 

Now Bert finds a family lawyer at her doorstep informing her of the private plane waiting to take her to her family’s estate in the mountains of Italy. Bert and Luca decide to take the chance that it’s all legit and maybe, just maybe, this could be a fresh start for them. What begins as a glamorous and enchanting vacation quickly turns into a nightmare as Bert is separated from Luca and finds herself stranded at the estate with no way out. 

Within the crumbling walls of the estate, Bert finds a great-aunt by marriage Dolores and a handful of loyal servants struggling to maintain a dark and dreary mansion. It’s through Dolores that Bert discovers the darkest secret of her family’s heritage. Her great-grandmother is alive and it’s Bert’s duty to keep her safe. 

It’s from here that Bert discovers the legends from the village of Nevenero about a monster that roamed the woods hunting for children and stranded hikers. Along with the estate’s secretary, Bert discovers a trove of diaries that tell the tale of her family’s history, their dangerous past, and the threat they pose to those around them.

It’s so very hard to discuss this book without giving away spoilers so know this-it’s a dark and chilling story that fills you with an overwhelming sense of “wrongness.” This family went to a lot of trouble to cover up the existence of Vita, Bert’s great-grandmother, and her entire story is fascinating. The mansion-more like a castle-is full of antiques, unused rooms, winding staircases, and a labyrinth of hallways. It’s also full of family history in the form of diaries and personal papers. Any estate that can hire a private librarian has some major secrets to keep hidden. The staff members also felt like they were compelled somehow to stay loyal to the family. They know what’s going on and for some reason, they stay in that dark and dreary place and it doesn’t feel like it was by choice. It also plays the line of only feeling like it’s one tick off from reality so maybe there’s a possibility that something like this could be true? Maybe? 

I really enjoyed this book. It was one that I devoured during my days of being laid up with my faulty knee and it definitely helped take my mind off the pain. 

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Cemetery Boys by Aiden Thomas (Copy)

Available Now

I have seen this book everywhere and for good reason-it’s a perfect book. Just perfect. If you are someone who is remotely interested in a young adult paranormal romance, you must pick this up. Now. Go get it. 

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Yadriel believes with all his heart that Lady Death will see him for what he truly is: a brujo. When his father refuses to listen to Yadriel and bans him from participating in his quinces ceremony, he knows the only way to prove himself is by performing in his own ceremony. With the help of his best friend and cousin Maritza, Yadriel defies all expectations and receives the blessing of Lady Death. When his cousin Miguel goes missing, the community begins a search for him but they are quickly overcome with the feeling of his death. Yadriel knows that he can help by summoning Miguel’s spirit and solving the mystery of his death but when Yadriel performs the ritual, he summons a ghost...the ghost of the high school bad boy Julian. 

Now, Yadriel must hide the existence of Julian’s ghost from his brujx family, no small feat, solve the mystery of both Julian and Miguel’s death, and prove himself to his father. I mean, no big deal right?

This is a fantastic book! I loved every page, every word. Yadriel is such a wonderfully written character. He is determined to live his life as his true self-a boy who wants to become a brujo. His mother was the understanding parent who accepted his transition but he still has his father and grandmother who struggle to see him as a boy and use his real name, not his dead name. The connection between Maritza and Yadriel is so pure and accepting. They are cousins, family, best friends, and completely honest with each other. Aiden Thomas gives readers an honest and frank look at the life of a trans teen and all of the ways their identity dictates everyday decisions. There is a scene where Julian finds out that Yadriel hasn’t used the boys’ bathroom at school because he’s afraid and it just broke my heart. Julian’s presence has a significant impact on Yadriel. He is openly gay and quite blunt about Yadriel’s interactions with his family and their treatment of Yadriel. Julian questions his loyalty to a family that is holding him back from becoming a brujo because he is trans and the two have conversations that provide incredible insight into Yadriel’s life.

The descriptions of the family’s belief system were rich and detailed. I love magic in all its forms and learned so much about Yadriel’s history and culture. The tight knit community and the closeness of the family members creating such an elaborate set of festivities to honor their dead was fascinating and beautiful. Be prepared for some incredible descriptions of food-I was starving the entire time I read this!

The story takes place on a very quick timeline-they must find Miguel’s killer and release Julian’s spirit before Dia de Muertos. I love YA that has a tight timeline the characters have to follow but still have to go to school. I love it. This urgency is really felt in the development of Yadriel and Julian’s relationship. What do you do when you fall in love with a ghost who only has a few days to remain on earth? It’s pretty incredible Readers. 

This book checks a lot of boxes: found family, family friendships, magic, history, culture, romance, coming of age, and so much more. Best part-this is a debut! I can’t wait to find out what wonderful novels Thomas has in store for us next. 


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If you would like to add this amazing story to your collection, you can find ordering information here:

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Cemetery Boys by Aiden Thomas (Copy)

Available Now

I have seen this book everywhere and for good reason-it’s a perfect book. Just perfect. If you are someone who is remotely interested in a young adult paranormal romance, you must pick this up. Now. Go get it. 

Support Independent Bookstores - Visit IndieBound.org

Yadriel believes with all his heart that Lady Death will see him for what he truly is: a brujo. When his father refuses to listen to Yadriel and bans him from participating in his quinces ceremony, he knows the only way to prove himself is by performing in his own ceremony. With the help of his best friend and cousin Maritza, Yadriel defies all expectations and receives the blessing of Lady Death. When his cousin Miguel goes missing, the community begins a search for him but they are quickly overcome with the feeling of his death. Yadriel knows that he can help by summoning Miguel’s spirit and solving the mystery of his death but when Yadriel performs the ritual, he summons a ghost...the ghost of the high school bad boy Julian. 

Now, Yadriel must hide the existence of Julian’s ghost from his brujx family, no small feat, solve the mystery of both Julian and Miguel’s death, and prove himself to his father. I mean, no big deal right?

This is a fantastic book! I loved every page, every word. Yadriel is such a wonderfully written character. He is determined to live his life as his true self-a boy who wants to become a brujo. His mother was the understanding parent who accepted his transition but he still has his father and grandmother who struggle to see him as a boy and use his real name, not his dead name. The connection between Maritza and Yadriel is so pure and accepting. They are cousins, family, best friends, and completely honest with each other. Aiden Thomas gives readers an honest and frank look at the life of a trans teen and all of the ways their identity dictates everyday decisions. There is a scene where Julian finds out that Yadriel hasn’t used the boys’ bathroom at school because he’s afraid and it just broke my heart. Julian’s presence has a significant impact on Yadriel. He is openly gay and quite blunt about Yadriel’s interactions with his family and their treatment of Yadriel. Julian questions his loyalty to a family that is holding him back from becoming a brujo because he is trans and the two have conversations that provide incredible insight into Yadriel’s life.

The descriptions of the family’s belief system were rich and detailed. I love magic in all its forms and learned so much about Yadriel’s history and culture. The tight knit community and the closeness of the family members creating such an elaborate set of festivities to honor their dead was fascinating and beautiful. Be prepared for some incredible descriptions of food-I was starving the entire time I read this!

The story takes place on a very quick timeline-they must find Miguel’s killer and release Julian’s spirit before Dia de Muertos. I love YA that has a tight timeline the characters have to follow but still have to go to school. I love it. This urgency is really felt in the development of Yadriel and Julian’s relationship. What do you do when you fall in love with a ghost who only has a few days to remain on earth? It’s pretty incredible Readers. 

This book checks a lot of boxes: found family, family friendships, magic, history, culture, romance, coming of age, and so much more. Best part-this is a debut! I can’t wait to find out what wonderful novels Thomas has in store for us next. 


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Into the Drowning Deep by Mira Grant

Available Now

I’m late to the game on this one.

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I have been slowly adding in more authors to my auto-read list and Mira Grant, a.k.a. Seanan McGuire, is one of them. Writing as Grant, we know going in that we are in for a chilling and horrifying exploration of humans and their connection to the world. I loved the Newsflesh series where we are shown that no matter how many good people there are in the world, the selfish and greedy still manage to ruin it for all. And, unfortunately, it’s usually the greedy and selfish that are in power. In Into the Drowning Deep, human curiosity and hubris will lead a group of scientists to uncover one of the greatest mysteries of the sea.

Mermaids are real. 

They’re not nice. 

Not at all.

Seven years ago, Anne Stewart was working as a reporter on a mockumentary film crew that was exploring the Mariana Trench. Hired by Imagine Entertainment, the crew included scientists, actors, camera crews and the standard crew for the ship and those on board never really intended to come across anything scarier than the already documented sharks and fish. When the ship was finally found adrift, the entire crew was gone and all that was left behind was shocking and unexplainable footage of creatures attacking the crew. Experts tried to write off the footage as fancy camera work and a stunt by Imagine Entertainment, but the crew was never found and no bodies were ever recorded. Determined to discover the truth behind her sister’s disappearance, Victoria “Tory” Stewart jumped at the chance to join the crew of the Melusine and continue their mission of searching the Mariana Trench for the monsters that killed her sister. 

Now, the crew is more prepared to battle the dangerous creatures that took the lives of the Atargatis crew. Big game hunters and security guards have joined the scientists and camera crews and the ship is equipped with far more defensive features than the Atargatis. But this wouldn’t be a horror novel without every step of their plan going horribly wrong. 

This book has the perfect balance of non-stop action and deep character development. All of the characters are interesting and it’s a very diverse cast. We have characters who are queer without it being their defining feature, characters with disabilities who are given vital roles on the crew, and I believe an equal amount of female scientists as male. It’s a pretty large cast of characters but Grant is such a talented writer that by the end, each character feels as equally fleshed out as the next and vital to the story. 

This book is incredibly tense. You know at some point the mermaids are going to make contact but there are so many twists and turns, it’s hard to predict when it will happen. Several of the crew seem to have ulterior motives for being on the expedition making them very unpredictable. There are also problems with the ship’s security measures that no one really wants to share and what’s up with the scary tanks in the science lab? Many of the main characters are scientists and were really good about getting caught up in their work and becoming oblivious to their surroundings. That ego can get in the way of safety measures. Just saying. 

On top of all the wonderful characters, tense atmosphere, and bloody action, there’s also a bit of romance and some really great supportive friendships. The mermaids are wonderfully imagined creatures and I really enjoyed Grant’s take on them. I’m really hoping that there will be more books after this-I think the ending left it open for a sequel. 

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I really enjoyed this book and highly recommend it for anyone that isn’t squeamish or minds having nightmares for a while. 

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Blog Tour! The Mirror Man by Jane Gilmartin

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Reader friends! It is with great pleasure that today I get to share a thrilling new novel from Jane Gilmartin. What begins as a straight forward science fiction thriller quickly becomes a deep exploration of what it means to be a human in our world.


The Mirror Man cover - FINAL.jpg
 

The offer is too tempting: be part of a scientific breakthrough, step out of his life for a year, and be paid hugely for it. When ViGen Pharmaceuticals asks Jeremiah to be part of an illegal cloning experiment, he sees it as a break from an existence he feels disconnected from. No one will know he’s been replaced—not the son who ignores him, not his increasingly distant wife—since a revolutionary drug called Meld can transfer his consciousness and memories to his copy.

From a luxurious apartment, he watches the clone navigate his day-to-day life. But soon Jeremiah discovers that examining himself from an outsider’s perspective isn’t what he thought it would be, and he watches in horror as “his” life spirals out of control. ViGen needs the experiment to succeed—they won’t call it off, and are prepared to remove any obstacle. With his family in danger, Jeremiah needs to finally find the courage to face himself head-on.

Intrigued? Want to read more? I just happen to have an excerpt for you!

The Mirror Man by Jane Gilmartin


Charles Scott glared down at him with a glint in his green eyes that felt like a warning, and Jeremiah replayed in his head the man’s ambiguous threat during their first meeting several weeks before.

“You now know as much about this project as anyone else involved,” he’d said. “It wouldn’t do to have too many people walking around with this kind of information. Our investors have a tendency to get nervous.”

Although Scott had quickly followed that remark with the matter of Jeremiah’s substantial compensation, there was no mistaking the implication: the moment he’d been told about the cloning project Jeremiah was already in. That first meet¬ing hadn’t been an invitation so much as an orientation, and the contract he’d later signed had been a formality, at best. And the entire thing had done nothing but gain momentum from that moment on.

Dr. Pike continued to affix the wires to Jeremiah’s head. Jer¬emiah focused on the man’s gleaming black hair and the deep brown of his sure, professional hands, and he struggled to remember the allure of the $10 million payout he’d get at the end of the whole thing. That kind of money could fix a lot of prob¬lems. It would change things. The prospect of that fortune had been enough to make him turn away from principles he thought were unshakable. Every man has his price, he supposed.

Somewhere in the back of his mind he also acknowledged the real temptation of a twelve-month sabbatical from his own life. It had seduced him every bit as much as the money had. Maybe more. Between a job that had already begun to make him question his own morals, and a marriage that felt increas¬ingly more like a lie, stress was eating him alive. And into his lap fell a chance to just walk away from all of it—without con¬sequence and without blame. A free pass. He could simply walk away without anyone even knowing he was gone. There isn’t a man alive, he told himself, who would have refused. Despite the ethical question, despite that human cloning was illegal the world over, it would have tempted anyone.

Dr. Pike injected the clone with Meld and then turned word¬lessly to Jeremiah with the second syringe poised above his left shoulder.

Jeremiah closed his eyes and rolled up his sleeve.

After the initial stab of the needle, he felt nothing. Which is not to say he didn’t feel anything; he literally felt nothing. Sec¬onds after the injection, he became aware of a total emptiness, like a towering black wave that threatened to sink him into an immeasurable void. The experience was unlike anything he’d ever known. He imagined an astronaut suddenly untethered from his ship, floating helplessly into unending darkness. With¬out thinking, he immediately felt his body recoil. His mind screamed against it.

I’m dying!

From impossibly far away, he heard Dr. Pike say something about a heart rate and felt the slight pressure of a hand on his shoulder. He couldn’t see anything of the hospital room any¬more. He was drowning in the blackness. His chest felt suddenly constricted. He fought just to find his breath.

“This is all perfectly normal, Mr. Adams. You have nothing to worry about. Concentrate on the sound of my voice. Nod if you can hear me.”

With considerable effort, Jeremiah managed what he hoped was a nod of his head. He was suddenly gripped by the alarm¬ing certainty that if he couldn’t communicate somehow, he’d be lost—swept away forever.

“Good. Good. Listen to my voice. It will keep you grounded.” Pike still sounded far away, but Jeremiah nodded again and strug¬gled to focus. “What you are experiencing is to be expected. Do you remember when you took the Meld with Dr. Young? Do you remember the way you could feel her thoughts for the first few minutes?”

He nodded. It had been an unnerving thing to perceive her consciousness mixing with his like that. Flashes from her mind—odd, alien things like the feel of a blister on the back of her right heel, the familiar gleam in the eye of an old man he’d never seen—had swirled into the very structure of his own mind and fought for a place to settle. He had railed against that, too, and she had grounded him by flashing a penlight in his face, mak¬ing him focus on that while the Meld took effect. Afterward, once he had sunk in, it had been easier.

“This is no different than what you experienced then,” Pike said. “This time, though, you are connected to an empty mind. There’s nothing there. But the more you resist, the longer this will take. You need to relax, Mr. Adams. Give in to it.”

Jeremiah nodded again and then shook his head with as much grit as he could muster. How does one give in to this? He didn’t think he could do it.

“Once your thoughts begin transferring into the mind of the clone it will be easier for you,” Pike urged. “Focus on a memory, as I suggested. Something vivid. It will help to fill that void you’re experiencing now. It will give you something to hang on to.”

Without the benefit of his full faculties, Jeremiah had little choice but to grab the last thing he’d been thinking about—his initial conversation with Charles Scott, the day all of this began.

He’d been surprised when he’d received an invitation to lunch from ViMed’s head of Engineering. The man was an icon in the science world, and although he’d quoted him a hundred times for the company, Jeremiah had never actually met him. He’d been intrigued enough to accept the invitation, especially when Scott had told him it involved a “proposition that could make him a very wealthy man.”

Flashes of that encounter and snatches of conversation now flitted through his mind like so many fireflies. He fought to catch them.

“We’ve been watching you, Mr. Adams.”

“All we ask is one year of your life. Isn’t that worth $10 million?”

“We can do this. The science exists. And with Meld, the clone will even share your thought patterns… Your own mother won’t know the difference.”

“This is sanctioned by powerful people—we have millions in secret federal backing. There are billions more in eventual funding… There’s no need to be so suspicious, Mr. Adams.”

From somewhere far away, Jeremiah heard Dr. Pike repeating his name. He had been so engulfed in his efforts to hold on to the memory that he’d almost forgotten where he was. As soon as he realized it, the void loomed again in his mind.

“Mr. Adams,” Pike said, “you’ve got to listen to me. The clone cannot pick up on any memory of the experiment. What you’re thinking about is not going to help. You need to think about something else, some memory that won’t be filtered. His mind is still empty.”

Jeremiah panicked. He couldn’t think. And now that he wasn’t focused on anything, the blackness began to take over again, creeping closer and threatening to swallow him. He fought for breath.

“Relax, Mr. Adams,” Pike said. “Think about your job here at ViMed. Remember something the clone can actually use. Something he’ll need to know.”

He felt a dull jab at his shoulder.

“This should help. I’ve given you a mild sedative. Take a few deep breaths. Concentrate on your breathing.”

With everything in him, Jeremiah tried to turn his mind away from the void that seemed to be all around him. He inhaled deeply and tried to focus on the rise of his own chest. Exhaled, and he felt his chest fall.

“Very good, Mr. Adams. Very good. Pulse is returning to normal. Deep breaths. Now, think about a typical day at work. Something ordinary and mundane.”

Inhale. Exhale. After a moment, Jeremiah began to relax and, as the sedative took hold, he found he could let his mind wan¬der without the frantic thought that he’d never get it back. An oddly comforting fog seemed to expand in front of him, push¬ing the blackness away slightly, and Jeremiah retreated into it.

He began to think about the morning of the Meld fiasco—the day the New Jersey housewife had killed herself. The press had been circling. He’d arrived at his office with a terse man¬date from his superiors to “get these fuckers off our back” and no idea how to accomplish that. It hadn’t been lost on him that not a single soul seemed bothered enough to stop and feel sorry about it, and he’d taken a quick moment behind his office door to offer silent condolences. It wasn’t thirty seconds before some¬one had come knocking, pushing him to get something done.

Weeks before, he’d heard talk of Meld being used to detect brain activity in a sixteen-year-old football player who had been comatose for nearly six months. Time to cash in. He tracked down the doctor somewhere in Delaware and the man started gushing about Meld, calling it “magical,” “a godsend” and “the most important medical advance of a generation.”

“After so many weeks,” he said, “the parents were hopeless.”

Meld was a last resort before pulling the plug, and it gave them the first clear signs of neural activity in the boy.

“Not only was he aware and awake in there, but he was cog¬nizant of everything that was going on around him—including the fact that his parents were losing hope. He even heard them talking about funeral arrangements at one point. The kid was scared, terrified. He was begging for his life in there. That’s what I saw when I took the Meld with him. Meld absolutely saved his life. There is no doubt in my mind.”

Jeremiah had almost smiled. It was pure gold. A few hours later, the story was in the hands of every major news outlet, and that doctor was spending his fifteen minutes of fame touting Meld as “a medical miracle.”

Jeremiah focused on that now. Maybe Meld did have some silver lining, after all, he thought. Maybe it was miraculous.

Jane Gilmartin credit Kerry Brett.jpg

Jane Gilmartin has been a news reporter and editor for several small-town weekly papers and enjoyed a brief but exciting stint as a rock music journalist. A bucket list review just before she turned 50 set her on the path to fiction writing. Also checked off that list: an accidental singing career, attending a Star Trek convention, and getting a hug from David Bowie. She lives in her hometown of Hingham, Massachusetts.


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Thanks to Netgalley and MIRA for the opportunity to read and review this title. All opinions and mistakes are my own.

Black Sun by Rebecca Roanhorse

Available October 6, 2020

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Black Sun is an absorbing new novel set in a magical world inspired by ancient civilizations. Told from multiple points of view, we are thrown into the world of a future god, a ship's captain, and a man intent on seeing their paths cross.

Ever since his birth, Serapio was raised to believe he would one day ascend to become a god. Enduring painful rituals and life of intense training, Serapio begins the next phase of his journey with the help of the strong and fierce Xiala, a Teek sailing captain. Using her unique gifts, she is tasked with providing him safe passage to Tova, a Holy City, in time for the winter solstice. Along the way, we learn of the complex societies that make up a beautiful and richly developed world.

Roanhorse has created an incredible world for her characters. The descriptions of the Sky Made clans and the Sun Priest and their religions was beautiful. The attention to detail on the expansive world filled with incredible cities, diverse people with extraordinary gifts, and the ability to live in harmony with the animals that were closest to their clans. Full of political intrigue, spectacular world building and complex characters, Black Sun sets a new standard for fantasy.

This book is amazing! Absolutely amazing. It's the start of a new series so it ends a pretty hefty cliff hanger but it's worth it. Roanhorse's writing is so detailed and rich that you can picture every home built into the cliffs, the ship on the sea, and the crowded city streets. The beginning of this story is really rough but it shapes so much of Serapio's character and explains the deeply held beliefs of his mother.  The weaving together of this complex society with their different clans and beliefs was masterful. I was just as invested in learning more about the clans and their beliefs as I was about the political machinations going on behind the scenes. Xiala was an equally intriguing character. Her people, the Teek, have a beautiful story of their creation that I can't wait to hear more about in future books. Xiala has a special ability that allows her to guide the ship safely and swiftly across the sea that causes her crews to be both highly suspicious and in awe of her.  Both Serapio and Xiala are outsiders-she has been banished from her homeland and he has lived his whole life with little interaction from others outside of his tutors. Both are feared for their differences and ostracized for it. Another interesting and important character is Okoa, the son of a high ranking clan matron. Choosing to live his life at the military training school instead of fulfilling more political duties puts him at odds with his family and when his mother dies, the guilt is nearly overwhelming.

The politics that weave these three characters together are intense. Strict protocols that guide religious officials combined with the impending winter solstice create for a tense and urgent atmosphere. There are some great discussions about the different social classes and what is and isn't allowed within them. The darker side of the priesthood comes to light through discussions of poverty, the denial of education, and how placing people in debt creates a cycle that will always leave people in forced subjugation and vulnerability.

This book is a lot. There is a ton of action, lots of characters, and a whole world to learn and I loved every single page. There were even a few parts that I knew what way over my heard and I didn't care because I was so invested in keeping my favorite characters alive. It's an incredible ride from start to finish and I can't wait to read more books set in this glorious world.

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Thank you to Netgalley and Saga Press for the opportunity to read and review this title.  All opinions and mistakes are my own.

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The Midnight Bargain by C. L. Polk

Available October 13, 2020

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This is so good! So, so good.

Set in a world where magic is studied and practiced, The Midnight Bargain introduces us to a secret world of women who defy social standards to become powerful sorceresses.

The Bargaining Season is just beginning and instead of focusing on pursuing a powerful marriage, Beatrice Clayborn is on the hunt for grimoires. When her latest find lands in the hands of the wealthy and regal Ysbeta Lavan instead of her own, Beatrice knows that she must use any means to get the book back. When the two women eventually discover they are pursuing the same goals, they work together to increase their magical skills and avoid the marriage mart as much as possible. What Beatrice isn't expecting to find, is an ally in Ysbeta's brother Ianthe. In Llanandari, Ysbeta's and Ianthe's home country, women are trained in sorcery and treated more as equals to men than they are in Beatrice's home of Chasland. As the three become close friends, Beatrice makes her case for equality and Ianthe slowly begins to realize why his sister and Beatrice are so resistant to marriage and the dreaded magic-dampening warding collars they will be forced to wear until they have left their childbearing years. Set amid glittering ballrooms, extravagant picnics, and acres of silken ballgowns, The Midnight Bargain is a gorgeous story of friendship, romance, and bringing the patriarchy to it's knees.

I absolutely loved this book! I read it in a single sitting and was thrilled to discover that it's the first in a new series. Polk has set her characters in a world similar to Regency England but with magic as a known element. It is filled with young women being used as bargaining chips to create powerful alliances through marriage but without any benefits to the women. Beatrice discovers that her father's business losses are far greater than she was led to believe and her marriage is crucial to saving her family's finances. Instead of listening to Beatrice's astute business advice, she is criticized for discussing "men's business" and is reminded repeatedly, that she is a silly woman and no one will ever listen to her. What her family doesn't know is that she has been pursuing sorcery to increase her chances of becoming her father's business partner instead of being forced into a world where she will be forced to wear a warding collar and do nothing but bear children. Beatrice is a really interesting character. She is both a powerful sorceress and intelligent, but so focused on her goals that she doesn't notice much of what goes on around her. She often comes off as naïve, but she is incredibly driven.

Beatrice and Ysbeta develop a close and powerful friendship throughout the book. They both have the same goal-become a sorceress and avoid marriage, but for different reasons. Ysbeta is used to freedom and has seen her own mother become incredibly powerful in society and create the family great wealth. But if she agrees to the marriage of a wealthy Chasland man, she will loose all of her rights, property, and power she has worked so hard to obtain. Beatrice truly loves magic and wants to learn all she can. She truly believes that there must be a way to solve the problem of spirits overtaking the unborn children of a sorceress. Beatrice also really has a head for business and as a wife, no one will ever take her seriously. The way these two take on smashing the patriarchy is a beautiful thing to behold.

As the two friends are working on their schemes, they are forced into following the social calendar of the Bargaining Season. This book is teeming with balls, dinners, charity picnics and dress fittings. Beatrice is constantly reminded how important it is that she move the family up the social ladder and her younger sister is always quick to point out the expense the family has gone to make Beatrice alluring to a wealthy man. Beatrice is constantly reminded what high society thinks of her social climbing family-and she's quick to put some arrogant men in their place. It's great.

I truly loved this book and I am so excited that there will be more books! This book has a great ending and really sets up book two to be really exciting.

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Thank you to Netgalley and Erewhon Books for the opportunity to read and review this title. All opinions and mistakes are my own. This post contains affiliate links and I earn from qualifying purchases.

Over the Woodward Wall by A. Deborah Baker

Available Now

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Around the time that Seanan McGuire won the Locus Award for her amazing novel Middlegame, I was able to scoop it up on a great ebook deal and fell in love with the story of Roger and Dodger. Combining alchemy, secret organizations, and a powerful friendship, Middlegame is a complex and action filled story with an absolutely explosive ending. If you haven't had the pleasure of reading this one, I highly, highly recommend you read it before picking up Over the Woodward Wall.

Now, why all the fuss about Middlegame? The alchemical lore found throughout Middlegame is told through the children's book series about an impossible city in the Up-and-Under found in the book Over the Woodward Wall. We know from Middlegame that A. Deborah Baker was a powerful alchemist who used the books to slowly influence readers into believing the principles required for bringing the Doctrine into the world. Roger and Dodger both grew up reading the books and slowly begin to see the connections between their story and that of Zib and Avery.

Readers-it's the book from the book! I love a book from a book.

In Over the Woodward Wall, we learn the full story of how Avery and Zib meet, through a strange series of events, and discover a large wall that mysteriously appears in their neighborhood. Avery and Zib can't be more different in their views on the wall what course of action they should pursue. As the two children cross the wall and enter the land of the Up-and-Under, they meet unlikely creatures and hear tales of a Queen of Wands who will give the children the ending of their story's adventure and return them home. Finding the Impossible City via the improbable road is far more challenging than the children expect and their very different ways of thinking and solving puzzles often puts them at odds. But the children discover they have a connection and a shared goal and sometimes, that is the most important thing you need in an unlikely adventure.

I loved this story. It's such a fast paced adventure packed with interesting characters. Avery and Zib felt incredibly real and had genuine reactions to every obstacle and puzzle. I'm a big fan of the book within a book and after reading this, went back and reread Middlegame to find all the connections between the two stories. The Up-and-Under felt like a twisted combination of the worlds found in The Wizard of Oz and Wonderland. There were talking owls, a Crow Girl, and a deep understanding that everything made sense to everyone except for Avery and Zib.

Over the Woodward Wall is another excellent book from Seanan McGuire and is a must read for those who enjoyed Middlegame.

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Thank you to Netgalley and Tor for the opportunity to read and review this title. All opinions and mistakes are my own. This post contains affiliate links and I earn from qualifying purchases.

 

The Midnight Library by Matt Haig

Content warning for suicide, partner abuse, pet death and parent death.

Available September 29, 2020

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What would you do if you had the opportunity to change your life? If you could go back in time and make different decisions about your life’s choices? Would you do it? When Nora makes the decision that life is too hard to continue living, she ends up in the Midnight Library. With the help of her former childhood librarian Mrs. Elm, Nora is given the opportunity to change the choices she regrets and live out different lives. But is another life worth living? How do simple choices make such drastic changes to our lives? With her time running short, Nora must choose between a life in the real world, or entering the afterlife. 

The Midnight Library is an interesting take on time travel. Nora has many regrets in her life from letting down friends and family, to not standing up for herself as often as she should. It’s through this lens that Nora tries many different takes on her life from living in different parts of the world, drastically different careers, to marrying different people. It is only when she finds true happiness will she stay within one of her new lives and yet, even when she feels happy “enough,” Nora finds herself slipping back to the Library in search of trying a new life. 

Nora is a complicated character written with a lot of depth. Dealing with anxiety has caused her to give up on dreams that seemed too overwhelming, even when she was excelling. Wanting to please others left her unable to see her own unhappiness and left her feeling unfilled. Even when Nora finds herself living a life free of anxiety, she finds herself conflicted about the choices made in that life and unhappy. As Nora travels to more and more of her other lives, she becomes increasingly confused about what she wants instead of more focused. 

I loved the character of Mrs. Elm. She was a wonderfully grumpy librarian who was both a real figure in Nora’s life, and her guide in the Midnight Library. The entire concept of the Library was what drew me to this book. To envision your life as countless different stories all inspired by each individual decision is fascinating. Now a book of regrets, that I can do without. 

The Midnight Library is a unique and intriguing story that captivated me from the very first page. 

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Thank you to Netgalley and the Publisher for the opportunity to read and review this title. All opinions and mistakes are my own.