New Releases for June 9, 2020

Happy Tuesday!

The world is on fire. I’m sorry. I hope you and everyone you love is safe and healthy. It seems so silly to be excited about new books when so many are hurting but I have always found books to be the best way to expand my worldview and to broaden my understanding of other people’s life experiences and cultures. I believe books are powerful and necessary. Maybe this is the week to find a new author, a new genre, or a new bookstore to support.

Happy Reading


For the Kids:

For Grown-ups:


I tried to double check release dates, I apologize if I missed any. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.

The Madwoman and the Roomba by Sandra Tsing Loh

Available June 2, 2020

Adulting is hard. We all say it. We brag about doing laundry and putting it away the same day. Sometimes, the same week. But there is something to it. Not everyone is completely prepared for being an adult. The list of our responsibilities is endless and no matter how hard we try, we still screw up the things that seem so simple.

I was immediately drawn to this book for it's title. As a proud owner of a robotic vacuum, and well aware of it's pitfalls, think dog poo, I had to know what was going to happen when you paired said vacuum with a madwoman. Sandra Tsing Loh has turned 55 and is discovering that your age plays no part on your ability to adult. Parenting, careers, homeownership, friendships, and bills are still just as challenging at 55 as they are at 35. Raising an emotional teenager is always difficult, being 55 doesn't give you the magical ability to read their minds and figure out what they are truly trying to communicate. You can also be a little jealous of your friends who can magically plan flawless vacations, drive nicer cards, and get their kids into the best schools.

Loh holds nothing back in her essays on life, love, children and friendship in this hilarious and engaging collection. I was able to find something in each essay to connect to even though I couldn't be further away from a California living author and professor.

If you love glimpses into other's lives, this is a delightful collection covering everything from comic book conventions to finding your inner goddess.

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

If you would like a copy for yourself, you can find one here:

More from Sandra Tsing Loh:

Similar titles:

As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.

New Releases for June 2, 2020

Happy Tuesday!

We’ve made it to June! For us, school is out and the weather is warming up. We’re still a bit restricted on what we can do but luckily for us, our local independent bookstores are opening up which is always good news. I’m sure you’ve all noticed by now that I only link to Amazon. There are reasons, but the most important one is that honestly, it gives you all the details you need to pass on to your indie if that’s how you want to buy. We didn’t have a bookstore within 45 miles for years around here and it was my only buying choice. But enough of that, let’s get to the books!


For the kids:


For Grown-ups:

As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.

New Releases for May 26, 2020

Happy Tuesday!

I hope you all had a relaxing and refreshing long weekend…well, it’s been one loooong weekend around here since March. Anyways. It’s New Book Day! Here’s a round up of books releasing today. Click on the covers for more information about each title.

Happy Reading!


For the Kids:

For the Adults:

As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.

Middlegame by Seanan McGuire

Available Now

Have you read a book so good that you feel empty once it’s done? That feeling of knowing the next book you read won’t measure up and you’ll be disappointed? That’s how I felt after reading Middlegame. It combines so many of my favorite elements that it was like it was written just for me.

Middlegame follows two siblings, separated at birth who eventually find each other in an extremely unexpected way. Roger and his twin sister Dodger aren’t normal children. They were created by the alchemist James Reed and his twisted assistant Leigh Barrow to bring about the physical manifestation of the Doctrine and have complete control over all things. But when Roger and Dodger first meet, they have no idea of their origins or their shared destiny. They believe they are just two seven year-old children who have the uncanny ability to communicate telepathically from across the country.

As the two grow older, they grow closer then have a complete falling out, only to randomly meet again in college. As they uncover more about their past and their future destiny, they find they are nothing more than pawns to a centuries old society dedicated to discovering the secrets of alchemy. With the help of an unlikely ally, the twins must use their combined powers to save themselves, and possibly, the entire world.

This book is so good! It’s so, so, so good. Characters with mysterious origins and powers, the extent of they don’t even know because they don’t know to try, and an arcane society of alchemists? How do you get better than that? McGuire has an ability to craft worlds that are so well developed and feel so real that they let you fall into them and lose yourself for hours at a time. The story keeps up a quick pace, even with the time jumps and focus on the twin’s childhood, without feeling rushed. One of my favorite parts about the story is the book within the book. The founder of this crazy scheme to harness the Doctrine wrote a series of children’s books describing the entire alchemical process. Aspects of the book are referenced frequently throughout the story and I was really hoping it would be a real series, and guess what? It’s a fictional series that is going to be published by McGuire this fall under the name A. Deborah Baker-the alchemist from Middlegame! I’m so excited to get my hands on it and find all the references to it that were found in Middlegame.

Middlegame focuses on the twin’s feeling and development just as much as the action. Roger and Dodger may be twins with great power, but that doesn’t change how lonely and difficult it can be when you grow up smarter than everyone around your. Dodger has an incredibly difficult childhood, even with loving parents, and her loneliness and feelings of not belonging cause her to turn to self-harm. Roger, while having more friends and grew up pretty popular, doesn’t have any deep relationships with anyone. He could weave together a reality with the power of his words but can’t find a meaningful relationship with a partner. Unlimited power doesn’t equal unlimited happiness. Absolutely fascinating.

If you would like a copy for yourself, you can find one here:




More from Seanan McGuire, and her other author name, Mira Grant:

As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.

New Releases for May 19, 2020

Happy Tuesday!

Things are starting to go back, a little tiny bit, to normal around here. Online learning is done, a plan to reopen the Library is taking shape, and I have to follow a real schedule next week. Lots of changes going on, including release dates for new books. At the time of making this, this list was still set to release today but last minute changes still happen. Click on the covers for more information about each title.

Happy Reading!

New for Adults:

.

A Few for the Kids:



As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.

Hollywood Park by Mikel Jollett

Available May 26, 2020

If you are looking for a riveting and gut wrenching memoir, this book is it. Mikel Jollett recounts his childhood growing up as part of a cult, his family's escape, and the turbulent years leading to his adulthood. Told with unflinching honesty, it is both a gripping tale of survival and a heartbreaking story of abuse and neglect.

Mikel Jollett spent his early years a child of Synanon. When his mother became disenchanted at the group's dark turn, she took her two boys and hid with other escaped cult members. After a family friend was brutally assaulted in broad daylight, Mikel and his mother and brother escape again to a new location, out of reach of Synanon. But life was still incredibly difficult. Mikel grew up with an aggressive older brother and a narcissist of a mother. After his father comes back into his life, Mikel and his brother bounce back and forth between the two dramatically different homes. One, controlling and emotionally abusive, and the other, with more freedom and acceptance.

Jollett goes into detail about his family's struggles with substance abuse, emotional abuse, and the effect poverty had on shaping his life. The courage it takes to not only seek help for these struggles, but to share them with the world is extraordinary. Jollett's writing is powerful in it's simplicity. The straightforward way that he describes traumatic experiences from his childhood is almost jarring.

Incredibly powerful and emotional, Hollywood Park is a gripping tale of family, love, and acceptance. If you enjoyed Educated by Tara Westover, definitely give this one a look.

Interested in a copy of Hollywood Park for yourself, you can grab one here:

Mikel Jollett is a member of the indie band The Airborne Toxic Event. You can find their latest album here:

Similar titles:

 

Thank you to Celadon Books for the advanced copy of this book. All opinions and mistakes are my own. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.

A Blade so Black by L. L. McKinney

Available Now

Reader Friends, I screwed up. Again. I had access to a smoking good sale last fall and bought a copy of A Blade so Black because the cover was gorgeous and it sounded amazing.

And then it sat on my YA shelf, looking gorgeous, until this month.

Why do I always wait so long to read these amazing books? The world may never know.

A Blade so Black is an action packed, modern retelling of Alice in Wonderland. Alice is 17, I think, attends high school, has an extremely tight knit group of friends, and slays Nightmares in Wonderland by night. Slays with swords and daggers. This is by far the most badass retelling of Alice in Wonderland I've ever read. Now, even though Alice has become a tough Dreamwalker, aka Nightmare killer, she still has an equally tough single mother who is incredibly protective of Alice. For good reason-Alice's father passed away leaving her a single mother and an innocent high school girl named Brionne was shot down by the police near their neighborhood. Mama is justifiably stressed.

I really loved how McKinney gives us a look at how complex being the hero can be. Alice is juggling friends, homework, house chores, and saving the universe. She's also ruining her clothes and shoes without an endless Tony Stark budget to replace them. And those friends of hers? Time runs differently when she crosses over to Wonderland which means she is always looking like a flake and missing out on plans. Sometimes, the most important plans get missed.

The world-building is incredible. It was so much fun to read how McKinney reimagines Lewis Carroll's original world. Classic characters come to life in new and exciting ways, and far more inclusive ways. Alice is a gorgeous, cosplaying black girl with a head full of smarts and the Mad Hatter? A hottie who trains her and runs a pub with Maddi, or that sleepy, slightly drunk critter from the original book. Tweedle Dee and Tweedle Dum? Hottie Russian twins. Lots of hotness in this book.

Overall, this book was just what I was needing: an action packed adventure with amazing characters. I loved this retelling and I can't wait to see what happens in the next book because this one had one heck of a cliffhanger!

If you would like a copy for yourself, you can grab one here:

More from L. L. McKinney:

Similar titles:

As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases. Also, remember any mistakes and opinions are always my own, even if I bought the book with my own money and just read it last night.

The Mystwick School of Musicraft by Jessica Khoury

Available Now

361 pages

978-1-328-62563-2

If you have a Harry Potter fan in your life, they will love this book! Set in a magical school, students learn how to conduct spells using musical instruments. Literally playing songs to make trees grow and clouds to rain. I love it!

Amelia Jones has one goal: be admitted to the prestigious Mystwick School of Musicraft, the same school her mother attended. But Amelia’s grandmother doesn’t want her to have anything to do with magic, magic that may have caused her daughter’s death. Growing up without parents has been extremely hard on Amelia and she uses that grief to focus on her magic and being the best flute player the school has ever seen.

After a disastrous audition, Amelia is convinced she will never attend the elite magical school, but a last minute acceptance letter is her dream come true. Like any school, magical or not, making new friends can be tricky and trying to make new friends in such a competitive environment is nearly impossible. When Amelia finds herself at odds with her roommate, she doesn’t hold out any hope for a fun and exciting school year. A mysterious force appears to want Amelia to fail and the truth about her admittance nearly causes Amelia to be expelled. Amelia must use all of her gifts, and some help from higher powers, to make it through the school year, and save the school.

This is such a fun book! Mystwick really focuses on Amelia’s struggles to fit in at an elite school and find her true self. Her mother was a powerful musician and Amelia is constantly comparing herself to a mother she has never met and has set impossible goals for herself. Jessica Khoury has a created a story that shows the different ways that grief can affect children and the pressure that can be unknowingly placed on them.

Mystwick is full of fun school hijinks and pranks. There’s secret societies, impossible teachers, classes on mountain tops, and friendships that survive through thick and thin. Not going to lie, I bought this book for my Library based on the cover and title, and I’m so glad I did. It’s a really fun magical adventure that any middle grade reader will love.

If you would like a copy for yourself, you can find one here:

More from Jessica Khoury (Middle Grade):

Similar Titles:

Close Up by Amanda Quick

Available Now

Book 4 of the Burning Cove series

I have a longtime relationship with the author that goes by so many names: Amanda Quick, Jayne Ann Krentz, and Jayne Castle. When I learned I was pregnant with my son, I was already off for the summer and took “resting” to a whole new level. I started at the beginning of the Jayne Ann Krentz shelf at the Library and worked my way, one to two books per day, through the Library’s entire collection. When I exhausted that section, I found her other pen names and worked my way through them. When I discovered that she did three book arcs throughout all three pen names, I had to start those over and read them as trilogies. I have an entire shelf in my private library dedicated to signed copies I ordered from Seattle bookstores. She doesn’t know it, but I love her.

I know exactly what I’m getting when I pick up one of her books and this book did not disappoint.

Close Up by Amanda Quick is the fourth installment in the Burning Cove series. Vivian Brazier is a talented photographer with dreams of becoming a famous art photographer. When her wealthy family cuts financial ties with her after walking away from a respectable and lucrative marriage proposal, Vivian is forced to take portrait appointments and crime scene photos to pay the bills. The mysterious Dagger Killer is on the loose and Vivian's crime scene photos provide insight to the local police force but also place Vivian in grave danger. When a private investigator named Nick Sundridge, and his gentle giant of a dog Rex, show up on her doorstep and declare her life is in danger, Vivian is not only shocked, but also not really surprised. With some reassurances from a police detective, Vivian and Nick work together to expose the threat against at Vivian and also, to expose the attraction between them.

I'm a longtime reader of Amanda Quick and have enjoyed all of the different story lines that are woven together to create the Arcane Society world. In Close Up, Quick provides us more clues to the range of psychical gifts found in certain people and the their connections to different members of the Society. Devoted readers of Quick, and her other pseudonyms, will not be disappointed in this high stakes adventure full of 1930's glamour, set in the highbrow world of the arts.

Interested in your own copy? You can get yours here:




More in the Burning Cove series:



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





New Releases for May 5, 2020

Happy Tuesday!

Hello all! It's your weekly reminder that today is Tuesday. I promise, it's Tuesday. Books are still releasing, the sun is shining, it's time to start the garden, so all is as ok as it can be right now. This week, we have a new Amanda Quick which I was very excited about, new Katherine Applegate, and more great new books. As of the creation of this post, all titles were still scheduled to release today but always check the dates in the links for the most up to date information. You can find out more about each title by clicking on the covers.

For the Kids:

For the Adults:

As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.