The Crooked Little Pieces Vol. 2: Life Doesn’t Get Easier for Sisters Isabel and Anneliese

The Crooked Little Pieces Vol. 2 by Sophia Lambton continues to follow the lives of two sisters, Isabel and Anneliese, whose lives have been marked by war and other unfortunate events that have befallen them.Isabel is still facing domestic violence while Anneliese remains in a deep state of denial over her sister’s condition despite advice… Continue reading The Crooked Little Pieces Vol. 2: Life Doesn’t Get Easier for Sisters Isabel and Anneliese

The Crooked Little Pieces is truly “a television drama. Novelised.”

The Crooked Little Pieces book cover

The Crooked Little Pieces by Sophia Lambton is a story revolving around two sisters. Or rather, it is a story about these two sisters. We follow musical prodigy Isabel and her twin, inquisitive but quiet Annelise, as they grow and mature and experience a whole lot of drama and circumstances. We start off slow, being… Continue reading The Crooked Little Pieces is truly “a television drama. Novelised.”

The Ghost Woods has the thrill, the horror, the mystery all-in-one

The first C.J. Cooke book I’d ever read was The Lighthouse Witches. It was described as a “Gothic thriller”, which I believe is a genre I rarely, if ever, read. It enchanted me completely, and pulled me out of a reading slump (for a brief amount of time before I fell back into it, but… Continue reading The Ghost Woods has the thrill, the horror, the mystery all-in-one

The Queen of Dirt Island Continues Strange Flowers’ Theme of Love

After reading Donal Ryan's Strange Flowers, I was pleasantly surprised by how he had managed to present everyday life and drama in such a gripping way, making things seem more "bigger", more important than was expected. In a way, that's the truth about life. (I was about to write something but started confusing myself. It… Continue reading The Queen of Dirt Island Continues Strange Flowers’ Theme of Love

Welcome to Hotel Magnifique, Where Wonders Await and Mysteries Lurk… What Will It Hold for You?

Part of Hotel Magnifique's cover, which features an illustration of a hotel on a black background flanked with peacock feathers.

Hotel Magnifique by Emily J. Taylor is a YA fantasy that showcases the story of Jani, a spirited young lady, determined to make a better life for her sister Zosa and herself from their life of patched clothes and struggling to make enough to ensure they won’t get kicked out from their rented residence. So,… Continue reading Welcome to Hotel Magnifique, Where Wonders Await and Mysteries Lurk… What Will It Hold for You?

Complex Character and Challenging the Norm in The Secret Lives of Church Ladies

A lady looks at the right at the book title 'The Secret Lives of Church Ladies'

There is homophobia, violence, sexual content, and other issues mentioned in this book that may be triggering for some readers. Careful you go looking for something, you just might find it. The Secret Lives of Church Ladies is a debut short story collection by Deesha Philyaw. The book features nine stories about black ladies, young… Continue reading Complex Character and Challenging the Norm in The Secret Lives of Church Ladies

The Lighthouse Witches Made Me Relive My Days of Finishing Books in A Day or Two

A part from The Lighthouse Witches cover, showing an illustrated lighthouse on a black backdrop and wave or leaf-like patterns around it.

I'm convinced that I have had a lot of luck with Netgalley titles, leading me to discover the likes of Feathertide and The Tea Dragon Tapestry where my love for reading is rejuvenated and everything seems right in the world (even if it could be just a small slice of time). Reading C.J. Cooke's The… Continue reading The Lighthouse Witches Made Me Relive My Days of Finishing Books in A Day or Two

Revisiting Ransom Riggs’ Miss Peregrine’s Peculiar Children: Updated Thoughts, Significantly More Positive Than Before

Part of Library of Souls' book cover, where a sullen boy is seated on a pillar with wings sprouting out of his back.

Reading any Young Adult book back when Suzanne Collins's The Hunger Games started the trend meant that half of the time I consciously and subconsciously compared the other YA books to the trilogy that was finally receiving its well-deserved attention and praise. This did not bode well for the other YA series that may or… Continue reading Revisiting Ransom Riggs’ Miss Peregrine’s Peculiar Children: Updated Thoughts, Significantly More Positive Than Before

The Good, the Bad, and All the Light We Cannot See

Part of the cover of Anthony Doerr's All the Light We Cannot See. Only the words "Light We Cannot See" can be seen, with the image of a boy running towards the alley, his back towards us.

I read All the Light We Cannot See by Anthony Doerr when it was still very frequently seen in the shelves of bookshops, right in the Popular Fiction or Great Deals! section. At the time, I was enticed by the title, the cover, the description, and the bountiful praise for this book online. The book… Continue reading The Good, the Bad, and All the Light We Cannot See

Good Omens: Armageddon, The Antichrist, and An Ineffable Duo

Good Omens is fairly well known, especially after the Amazon TV adaptation starring David Tennant and Michael Sheen. The novel by Terry Pratchett and Neil Gaiman, published back in the year 1990, still holds up to this day with its many charms. If, it happens, that you don't know what the book is about, here… Continue reading Good Omens: Armageddon, The Antichrist, and An Ineffable Duo