The Space Between Worlds by Micaiah Johnson

Available August 4, 2020

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This book was fascinating! Set in a future where we have discovered the existence of the multiverse, a group of scientists and explorers travel between the worlds documenting the similarities and differences between the worlds. Scientists quickly discovered that people could only travel to alternate worlds where their alternate has died. Within the 380 worlds that scientists can travel to, Cara has died on 373 of them, making her the perfect traverser. Those who grow up privileged in one world, tend to live privileged lives amongst all the alternate worlds. The same goes for the poor and impoverished, making poor people of color perfect for the program. 

Cara has worked hard to establish her place within the city. She is on the path to citizenship, has an apartment, and is willing to work double shifts, even when it threatens her health. Her handler Dell keeps her at arm’s length, no matter how much flirting Cara throws her way. 

It’s during a standard data pull on an alternate world that Cara realizes she’s been sent to a world where she still lives. Violating protocol, she struggles to stay alive long enough for someone to rescue her and allow Cara to further investigate the world. Meeting her doppelganger is a mind-bending experience and leads to Cara having to reckon with her deepest and darkest secrets. Secrets so big, they could tear her world apart. 

This book was so good! It’s such a tightly written story that too much discussion will lead to spoilers. I loved the world-building and the way that Cara has to balance between two very different societies. Her family lives out in the desert where many of the poor live, and where Cara never felt like she fit in. But, Cara doesn’t feel like she belongs within the wealthy, walled city either. She has to change her language, her wardrobe, the way she holds herself when she is around her family. When she returns to the city, she has to again change her persona to match societal expectations. Neither persona feels real to Cara and that duality plagues her throughout the book.  

The relationship between Dell and Cara is fraught with high emotions and cold responses. Dell, her handler and woman of her dreams, is way out of her league and Cara is constantly flirting and teasing her, almost she can’t help herself. Dell never responds in kind, in fact, she acts almost insulted everytime Cara flirts with her. Their relationship was fascinating to watch develop over the course of the story. 

I loved how fast paced this story was. It’s a deeply woven story-there’s government conspiracies, corruption, societal unrest, personal secrets, and a slow burn romance. Cara has to constantly decide how her past and alternate selves will shape her future, all while trying to figure out who the person she wants to be now. The fact that Cara knows how her other selves have died on other worlds-what a weight to carry. The writing is just fantastic and I thoroughly enjoyed reading this. 

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

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New Releases for July 28, 2020

Happy Tuesday!

It’s Deal With The Devil Day!!! There’s more books out today, but I’m most excited about Kit Rocha’s newest release. I read it months ago and it’s pub date got bumped back to due to the pandemic so I have been waiting forever to share this with you. Well, I’ll share it Thursday. Today is all about the new releases for today. Click on the covers for more information and this post does contain affiliate links.


For the Kids:

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For the Adults:

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The Inheritors by Asako Serizawa

Available July 14, 2020

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The Inheritors is a beautifully written collection of connected short stories centered around a family through multiple generations and countries. Told from multiple perspectives, each with a distinct voice and style, The Inheritors is a fascinating look at how our actions can have an impact on future generations. Much of the book centers around the second World War and its effect on not only the citizens of Japan, but on the Koreans who were forced to work there by the Japanese. Family, love, grief and patriotism are all examined throughout the collection and some stories are more difficult emotionally than others. 

The story titled Flight was particularly impactful. Ayumi is sharing her memories, those she still has, of growing up and her first visit to America in 1911. The power of discovering a tomato for the first time. How her second tomato was discovered during her second pregnancy and the fear of Americans animosity towards people from Asia. Interspersed with her memories of raising her children and her marriage, are the ways her mind is betraying her. Names leave her first. She differentiates her daughters by their features, not their names. She doesn’t have those anymore. Ayumi recalls the difficulty of living in a country where you aren’t wanted. How she wasn’t able to communicate with her family back home because it could cause suspicion with the American government. The struggle to raise a family during the Depression. All the while, we are reminded that in the present, she doesn’t remember her children or their names. 

Many tears friends, many tears. 

Allegiance gives us Masaharu, a man who follows his wife to work and doesn’t understand why she’s working around so many soldiers. Their son is missing and the distance between them grows every day. In the next story, we hear her side of the story. As an old woman, she allows herself to be interviewed about her life during the war and how she was forced into acting as a “comfort woman.” The horrors that those women endured. The writing styles are drastically different between the two stories, creating a more powerful narrative. 

This was a fascinating collection of short stories and I highly recommend it. 

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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. This post contains affiliate links and I earn from qualifying purchases.

The Safe Place by Anna Downes

Available July 14, 2020

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Emily’s life is a complete mess. Her acting career stalled before it even began, she’s estranged from her parents and just lost her job. Even worse? She called her mother for rent money only to realize she missed her birthday. Again. When her former boss Scott Denny offers her the job of a lifetime, she jumps on it. Working as a personal assistant to Nina, Scott’s beautiful and mysterious wife, seems like a dream job. She quickly finds herself spending her mornings helping to restore the French mansion and sprawling grounds and her afternoons drinking wine and lazing around the pool with Nina and her daughter Aurelia.

As the weeks go on, Emily realizes there is more to the family than she first believed. Aurelia’s mysterious health conditions leave Nina in constant fear. Nina is extremely private and doesn’t want Emily in the family mansion. Scott never seems to want to be around his family. Emily begins to see the cracks in their perfect image and uncovers a dangerous secret that will threaten her very life.

The Safe Place is a fast paced psychological thriller that excels at making Emily her own worst enemy. Her life is a complete hot mess. She can’t keep a job or remember her lines at acting auditions. She can never budget properly and is always short on rent money. Her strained relationship with her parents is further stressed when she makes the biggest mistake-calling her mother for money on her mother’s birthday. Her parents just want her to get her life together and Emily just doesn’t seem capable of it. She’s never really been around kids or worked as a personal assistant before she takes the job with the Denny family so it’s understandable how she misses so many warning signs. She’s immediately caught up in their wealth and beautiful property that the lavish lifestyle overshadows how odd it is that two women, with no construction or design experience, are renovating a large mansion.

Anna Downes crafted a tightly woven story full of twists and turns where the tension amongst the characters is a character itself. We know something is wrong, and Emily feels it too. Putting your finger on what is wrong is what makes for such an engaging and interesting read.

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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. This post contains affiliate inks. Purchasing through the links means I earn from qualifying purchases.







New Releases for July 14, 2020

Happy Tuesday!

What a difference a week makes! I think publishers pushed back every publication date to last week so today, the new releases aren’t as overwhelming. Click on the covers for more information about the book, pricing, and ordering information.


For Kids:

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For the Adults:

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The Bright Lands by John Fram 

Available July 7, 2020

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Buckle up! This is a wild one!

When Joel Whitley’s younger brother leaves him a cryptic text message, he knows it’s time to return home. The hometown that drove him away with it’s bigotry and small mindedness. Bentley, Texas loves it’s football and it’s players are town royalty. Bentley also loves it’s secrets. When Joel’s brother goes missing, he knows there is more going on than his brother running away. Trying to find an ally in Bentley is a complication that Joel doesn’t know if he can handle. Friends from his past have to reckon with their own tragic memories of a similar disappearance and the police seem oddly uninterested in taking any clues seriously. As Joel comes closer to understanding what happened to his brother, a dark and deadly force threatens to tear apart the entire community.  

The Bright Lands is full of twists and turns and small town secrets. It’s a chilling look at the effects of hero worship and allowing young men to get away with horrific behavior solely because their athletic ability provides others with joy. Full of complicated characters, The Bright Lands shows us what happens when everyone has a secret to protect and the lengths they’ll go to protect themselves. 

This has been described as Friday Night Lights meets Supernatural, and while I don’t think it’s quite like that, it’s close. There is a truly dark and threatening force at work in the novel but it’s hard to compare the bigger threat-a supernatural force or unrestrained bigotry and homophobia. Both drive people to shun and kill people for no reason other than to spread hate. How much influence that dark force had over the actions of the characters will be up to you to decide. John Fram crafted a tightly woven tale where every character is important to the overall story. Everyone’s actions will either lead you to the finish or throw you off course. There are just so many, many secrets and each one unravels to create a more complex story. It’s wild, but incredibly entertaining. 

There is a real focus on Joel’s feelings towards his family and the responsibility he feels towards his brother Dylan. We find out pretty early on that Joel was pretty much run out of town and goes to be successful in college and start a high paying and high power career. He basically thumbs his nose at everyone as he parties, does drugs, and spends oodles of money. Throughout this ten years, he doesn’t really every come home or call, or plain have a relationship with his brother so when he receives that cryptic text, he realizes he needs to be a better brother. Unfortunately for book reasons, that doing better looks much different than he planned on. The author really dives into Joel’s feeling of responsibility, even though Joel is his brother, not his parent. I found it a really interesting look at personal responsibility and how that responsibility can go both ways. Joel left town for his own physical and emotional safety and he deserves a happy life and was always under the assumption that Dylan has parents to care for him. That can be true while also stating that he could have picked up the phone a bit more often.

Also, I have mixed feelings about the big reveal of the Bright Lands. It felt really over the top and I hate reading about attacks on children so a lot of it was pretty hard to read. That said, it explains so much of the town’s behavior towards the football team, the high ranking town officials and community members, and also, the overall sense that no one ever says what they actually mean in this town. I wish it had been a small college town? Couldn’t everyone be a little older? But the ages of the kids is important for other reasons so it’s all complicated. It’s just complicated.

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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. This post contains affiliate links.  I earn from qualifying purchases.


Trail of Lightning by Rebecca Roanhorse

This July 4th seems so different from previous years’. Maybe it’s the pandemic. Maybe it’s people waking up to thte effects of white supremacy. Maybe it’s the constant dread of “what did he say today.” Whatever it is, it’s another day that seems off. I’m lucky. Through sheer luck I was born white in this country. I have an easy life full of farm babies and a healthy kid. I’m grateful for this county but I acknowledge how much it did wrong. So, at this point you’re acknowledging I’m not a writer. I know. All I ask, is take some time and think about things that make you uncomfortable and start reading more books by people who are not white. Here’s one of my favorites. It blends mythology with a post-climate apocalypse.
Stay safe, stay healthy, happy reading.

It’s been 26 hours since vacation officially started.   The Kid and I took the pugs on a very slow meandering stroll through the woods, went out to lunch, and I devoured the most badass monster slaying story.

Trail of Lightning by Rebecca Roanhorse is the grown-up Buffy* I’ve been dying to read.  When Maggie Hoskie was a child, she survived a horrific attack that awakened her clan powers.  Faster, stronger, and more deadly than any human, she hunts the monsters that roam what is left of the Navajo lands, now known as the Dinétah, after a climate apocalypse.  But it’s not just monsters that wander the earth, so do gods and beings with power.

Drug out of self-imposed seclusion to help rescue a child who was taken by a monster, Maggie  finds more than just a simple case of search and rescue. Seeking out help from her dear friend and local Medicine Man Grandpa Tah, leads to the discovery of deadly witchcraft and a new partner, his grandson Kai Arviso.  Together, they work to find the one responsible for the deadly monsters and confront Maggie’s past in order to survive.

Maybe.  No promises on that one.

This is an amazing book.  Maggie is tough and impressive even without her clan powers-but the clan powers are amazing.  The balance of old myths and legends blending with post apocalyptic droughts and magic is just perfect.  I don’t want to live in that world-Hell. No. But I want to read all of it. Coyote the Trickster is here creating chaos.  There is a magical/mystical dance hall that shows up in the desert on it’s own schedule and is a popular place for all special beings.  Kai puts some silver paint on Maggie’s eyes which allows her to see what everyone looks like without their illusions-I would love to see that on screen or in a graphic novel version.  It’s an amazing part of the book. Many of the people have some animal characteristics-like the Feather People have feathers and the Big Deer People have huge antlers on their heads. The club itself is like the Tardis where space seems to change to fit what is inside and going underground still gives you a view of the sky.  

Maggie has a lot to overcome throughout the book.  Not just the horrible attack that awakens her powers and takes away her family, but also being apprenticed by a demigod during some very formative years and her whole identity being questioned then later on in life.  There are also a lot of relationships that shift and change and with all of her trust issues, it’s a rough ride.

I really enjoyed this book.  Luckily, there is a sneak peek at Book #2 in the back so there will be more.  

Trail of Lightning, by Rebecca Roanhorse is available now.

You can get your copy, and help support the site, here:

*Side note:  We're re-watching the entire Buffy the Vampire Slayer series and wow is that problematic!*

New Releases for June 30, 2020

Happy Tuesday!

We made it to a new week so let’s celebrate with new books! There are some pretty spectacular titles out this week. My favorite is Mexican Gothic-grab this one up if you like dark, damp, Gothic thrillers. It was amazing. There’s new romance from Sarah MacLean and Joanna Shupe as well as a wealth of other books. Click on the covers for more information about the title and ordering options.

Happy Reading!

For the Kids:

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For Non-Kids:

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Shadow Blade by Seressia Glass

Available Now

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I found this book while scrolling through Twitter and I’m not going to lie, an author who not only includes a cover, description, and a buy link will almost always get my money. This was a smoking good deal, and one I wasn’t going to pass up. I’ve been in the mood for a good magical adventure full of secret organizations, demigods, and some serious smooching.

Kira Solomon has been a part of Gilead ever since a childhood tragedy left her orphaned. Unable to touch anyone without draining off their life force, Kira uses her extrasense gifts to fight the Shadow and help preserve the balance between Light and Shadow as a Shadowchaser. A highly trained and deadly fighter, Kira spends her days as an antiquities specialist, cataloging and preserving magical artifacts. When a close friend and business associate suddenly dies, Kira knows the ancient dagger they had recently discussed is at the heart of her friend’s killing.

Khefar, a four thousand year-old immortal warrior is the owner of the mysterious dagger and desperately wants it back. Khefar has been cursed to wander the mortal world until he saves the lives of enough mortals to allow him to finally rest with his family in the Field of Reeds. Discovering he has to save the life of Kira really throws him. She’s more likely to kill him than listen to him and with her life constantly in danger, it makes his job of protecting her extremely difficult.

But work together they do because a deadly Avatar is determined to possess the dagger and allow Chaos to take over the world.

I loved this book! The writing is fantastic with that perfect blend of character development and action-filled fight scenes. The best part, it includes my all-time favorite trope: He’s the only one she can touch! Only him! She can’t touch anyone without draining the literal life out of them, except for Khefar. It’s done so well. So well. I really loved the world Seressia Glass creates with the different demons and enemies, but it all set in modern day Atlanta. I’m a sucker for mystical artifacts, especially when they take the form of a four thousand year-old immortal. And a magic dagger, that was cool too. Anansi makes an appearance as Khefar’s sidekick/guide and his strategically told stories play an important part in the mission.

This is the first in a series, so if you loved it as much as I did, there’s more! I also picked up her book Seducing the Jackal that was published as a Harlequin Nocturne title and it was really good. I love shifters and this had both shifters and a witch. And more ancient Egypt. I’ll tell you more about that one later.

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Full disclosure: The links to IndieBound didn’t provide a direct ordering option, and it seemed weird to send you there for these. They are readily available from Amazon and the Harlequin titles can be purchased directly through Harlequin as ebooks for only $2.99. When you purchase through the links, I earn from qualifying purchases as an Amazon Associate. Ordering from Harlequin just makes me happy that you bought a new book!