Saturday, March 30, 2024

Currently Reading #8 [17 - 30 March 2024]

Currently Reading

- Godkiller by Hannah Kaner (23%)
- Ink, Iron, & Glass by Gwendolyn Clare (00%)
- The 1619 Project by Nikole Hannah-Jones (32%)

* * *
Yearly Goal
16/100
* * *

So this last two weeks involved me finishing several books, including two eARCs that I've since posted the reviews of. I've been approved for another eARC, and put in requests for two. There's one I really really want. It's a sapphic, tarot-themed book coming out on my birthday whose title is literally my life-path card. How could I not want this? Was there any real chance for me?

I'm proud of myself for finally knocking It off my damn list. I have been reading that book since November. NOVEMBER. I cannot believe it took me so long. Normally I can knock out books of that size in a month or less. I was even reading it across all three formats just to make it go faster and it still took me forever and a half. Ugh. I did like it, and I've put up my review for it on StoryGraph and the blog to be seen tonight or tomorrow. I refuse to be bested again. 

The Orilium Spring Equinox readathon starts on Monday, so be ready to see the three books I'm currently reading paused for now. Just til I can get through the prompt list. My PC is a second-year Star Whisperer and a third-year Godseer. I'm so proud of him for actually making it each year. I think...after he finishes up his Star Whisperer training, I'm going to bring back my other character. He was going to be Spellsword. Or I will stick in my comfort area and build an all new character (still Iltirian because I love their lore) and have him be a Storyweaver. I'm undecided....We'll see as the time draws nearer. 

I have selected my books for the OSE, and all but one of them is available through the CloudLibrary system my local uses for their ebooks and audiobooks. I think I'll try to aim for print as much as I can, and suppliment with the digital copies when I'm out and about. I wonder if I can borrow all six of them at once or if there's some kind of limit? Who knows. I'll work on it other ways until then!!

I will close this for now, because I'm about to head out for the day, but....HAPPY READING.

First Quarter Review [March 2024]

As is the standard these days, I plan to do a full quarter review at the end of each quarter in 2024 [March 31, June 30, September 30, and December 31] to hold myself slightly more accountable for what I'm doing. With that said, let us get on with the review~

January was a good reading month. I got through nine books total and was on track with my 2024 goal. I enjoyed most of the books that I read and it wasn't actually all that terrible of a month to get through them. I think I had a bit of a start that would make me over-proud of myself and kind of fall into failure. I was reading and writing at an unusually high pace for me. It couldn't last. 

And it didn't. By the time February rolled around, I found myself in an sort of soft slump? That's the best way I could think of it. I wasn't necessarily in a slump. Yet I also wasn't reading as voraciously as I normally do. It was odd. I read precisely one book in February. Absolutely destroying the lead I had on my goal. I ended up just starting tons and not reading much. 

Then March hit and I finished six books over the course of like two weeks. I am still nine books behind on my goal. I knocked two ARCs and one huge tome from the list of Currently Reading books, which made me so happy. I also started another budy read with FenrirArcher on StoryGraph, which I am like a third of her percentage. I have to get to it. Found a copy through the library that I am now reading on my phone while I'm out. 


Hopefully the next quarter goes better than the last! Happy reading, y'all!

Tuesday, March 26, 2024

April 2024 To Be Read

It is that time of year again. The Orilium Magical Readathon: Spring Equinox! I can't believe how long it's been. My sweet 'spooky bog witch' is now an apprentice Godseer and novice Star Whisperer. Hopefully by the end of August, he will be an adept Godseer and an apprentice Star Whisperer. 
I am half considering, once he fully matriculates as a Master Star Whisperer (2025), bringing my old Spellsword back. I will need a new character no matter what. 

Anyway! This is a TBR, not a blog post! Let's get on with it!!

1: Art of Illusion - Read a book with "play" or "game" in the title: The Traitor's Game by Jennifer A. Nielsen

2: Astronomy - Read a book chosen from recommendations for your zodiac: The Cloisters by Katy Hayes

3: Conjuration - Spin a color wheel and read a book based on the color [cyan]: Jackaby by William Ritter.

4: Demonology - Read a book you didn't pay for: Stone Blind by Natalie Haynes

5: Inscription - Write three titles on pieces of paper and select one: This Body's Not Big Enough for the Both of Us by Edgar Cantero

6: Lore - [INTERRUPTED: SEE FILE]

7: Psionics & Divination - Make a book predictions bingo board: The Last Heir to the Blackwood Library by Hester Fox



I have been looking for these available digitally via Amazon, which all were expensive. So far though, I have found every single one through my library's app. I'll work my way through that way! Granted,  one of them is only available via audio, but that's okay. It's short enough that I should be able to fly right through it while doing other things. Now I'll just have to decide if I want to read in order, or if I want to be random about it.....

Saturday, March 23, 2024

March 2024 Wrap Up

I've read 6 books in March. It's definitely better than February with its lowly 1 book.

1: A Botanical Daughter by Noah Medlock - It was interesting. I loved the way the plot was written. All I could think the entire time I read it, was "If Victor had a thing for botany." I don't feel bad at all for what happened to Mallory or to Connie's dad. They both deserved what they got. Worth the read for sure!!

2: IT by Stephen King - Four months! I think that's the quickest I've ever read a 1000+ page book. I have forgotten most of it now, and I have no idea why I highlighted a passage. The whole idea of what It actually was was really impressive. I think there's only one other book of his that has a similar idea of something coming from "outside" of our reality. I liked it. Now I can watch the movies.

3: The Myth of June by A.B. Daniels-Annachi - An eARC I got of a book being re-released in March. I don't know how to feel about this one. On the one hand, I did like it's portrayal of the various Greek gods as perfectly fallible individuals, which was true, but on the other I didn't like how almost oblivious June sometimes was. The whole thing could have been avoided if she just asked questions. I am trying to decide if it's meant to be YA or Adult, and I don't know. 

4: The Black Crow Flies by L.B. Perdan - One of the KU books I grabbed. I saw an ad on BookTok about the sequel to it, Rise of the White Owl, and I wanted to read that one. So I figured I should start with the first book in the series. It's rather good. I liked the way it was written and all the tension between Blaze and Catrice. She is a 'hero' to her people simply by being alive and he is falling for the enemy.

5: Butcher & Blackbird by Brynne Weaver - I'm entirely sure I wasn't supposed to be amused by this book, but I definitely was. As I reached each of the various trigger warning locations within the book, and guessing if they were the right thing and seeing how close I am (I must say, I did like the "questionable use of a mummified corpse"). I could have done without the gratuitous sex scenes, but that's just a me thing. Overall, it was pretty good. 

6: Crown of Feathers by Nikki Pau Preto - This was an interesting read. I liked the take on magic and how it worked in the world. The connection people have to animals and how they used their magic really could tell you a lot about them. I liked getting the story from different perspectives, though I did keep thinking poor Sev was actually in his mid-late twenties instead of being eighteen. He kind of came off as much older than he was. I think I saw the hint of a romance to happen with him and another character in Heart of Flames that I cannot wait to see about. 

7: Godkiller by Hannah Kaner - I adored this one. Easily the only 5/5 I've read in March. I loved how absolutely cynical Kissen was. She'd been let down by people and gods too many times and had trust in no one but herself, Yatho, and Telle. She didn't take anyone at face value and formed her own opinions. I liked how we watch her grow attached to people and learn what's really going on in the background. I loved her relationship with the noble heir and the god that is attached to them. I'm really curious to see if in the next book, he does get a shrine and we find out his memories. It's going to bother me until I know. I like men like Elogast, owning up to their mistakes and trying to rectify it, even at great cost. 

Friday, March 22, 2024

March 2024 Book Haul

I have acquired 7 books this month through various means, be it Amazon, BN, Pango, FLFs or whatever other thing I may have done. 

1: A Fate Inked in Blood by Danielle L. Jensen - I saw this one on the list and I knew I had to have it. It looked absolutely beautiful and while it doesn't have the metallic sky blue sprayed edges like the BN edition has (easily fixable, I know how to do that myself), I am still so looking forward to reading this. It's about a shield maiden who ends up having to fight for her life to keep herself and her land safe. Sounds good!

2: Kokoro by Natsume Sōseki - I have no clue what this is about other than its translated Japanese fiction that has been praised as one of the better novels of its time and it cost me an incredible...fifty cents. That's literally all I know and I'm fine with that. I don't want to know more. I can tell you that from my limited knowledge of Japanese, "kokoro" means "heart"....? 

3: Godkiller by Hannah Kaner - I saw it while we were at Target picking up stuff for dinner and couldn't pass it up. I know very little about this. Gods are outlawed and people kill them as a profession? I think. Someone is tasked with killing a god and kind of can't because that would mean killing the human attached to the god. So they go to the gods for help? I have no idea. I'm gonna buddy read it with my friend and we'll see what I think about it. 

4: Stone Blind by Natalie Hayes - A Medusa retelling. I love reading the stories of Medusa. I believe this one follows her after she is cursed/blessed by Athena and is struggling. She ends up meeting someone who cannot see her? I don't actually remember.

5: Letters to Half Moon Street by Sarah Wallace - I don't know anything else other than it's a historical queer romance between two men. That's all I wanna know. I'm down for the surprise of it all. It has a stunning cover and was cheap/free. Why not give it a try and see if I like it?

6: The Myth of June by A.B. Daniels-Annachi - I received an eARC of this from the author in return for a fair and honest review. I have no memory of joining the ARC team, but that's not a current me problem. You can see my review here

7: Don't Let the Forest In by C.G. Drews - I don't even remember what this is about. It's a YA Horror novel about a forest and that's literally all I know. I will likely not be getting to it until October. It's a spooky book, and I'm gonna save it. 

8: Beloved by Toni Morrison - Found it at the FLF in my local chuch. I've been into tales relating to the struggles of slavery recently and when I saw this in perfect condition, I had to get it. It looks good and I have never read anything by this author. I am greatly looking forward to it. 

9: Heart of Flames by Nikki Pau Preto - I bought this one after finishing the first book (Crown of Feathers). I adored the first book, and I found this one (and the finale, Wings of Shadow) available for $5 each from PangoBooks which means naturally I have to buy them. Somewhere in the synopsis or possibly tags, I saw the phrase LGBT+ and while I have half an idea, I want to know. I love it and I cannot wait to get into it. 

10: Wings of Shadow by Nikki Pau Preto - It is the final volume and it was on PangoBooks for only $5. Naturally I was not about to pass it up. Who would? Turns out it's also a first edition (as is Heart of Flames) which makes me even happier. This is the conclusion to Veronyka's story and I am very much looking forward to reading it. I cannot wait.

Saturday, March 16, 2024

Review: The Myth of June by A.B. Daniels-Annachi

When Juniper Georgian's father gazed into the face of divinity without flinching, the last Titan God, Typhon, took it upon himself to offer lifelong protection to the newborn girl.

Years later, with Typhon away and June now a grown woman, she is viciously attacked by someone she thought she could trust - resulting in yet another God stepping in with a gift of their own.

Blessed with extraordinary power, June is thrown into a battle against one of the most powerful gods in existence. Through her fight for justice, she will have to uncover deep secrets that her father has withheld, and take on the terrifying monsters and angry immortals that she'd always believed to be a myth.

Will she be able to stop a war of the gods before it begins? Or will all fall to Chaos?

* * *

I went into this book sort of blind, yes, pun entirely intended. I got an email from A.B. Daniels-Annachi thanking me for signing up for the ARC team. Which I have absolutely no recollection of doing. I downloaded the book to my Kindle and got to reading. 

I don't quite know how I feel about the history of the Greek pantheon being like, the primary deities of this alternate universe not being explored more. I would love to know why and how that universe evolved be pantheistic versus the majority monotheistic one we have in our current reality (I say this as a Hellenistic Pagan, I do see the irony). I want to know more. 

I couldn't tell what age-range this book was meant to be for. It's set in 1926 at the start, but it has what felt like anachronisms all throughout it. The writing was kind of juvenile for the themes that were going on. There was a lot that happened that made me wonder how dense the characters actually were. June is generally one of the most intelligently oblivious people I've ever read from the perspective of. I understand that this is a retelling of Medusa. I didn't care for it. It seemed forced in a lot of places where the plot kind of ran out before the scene was done. They would run into the wall of having the characters clearly needing to do more, but not really having anything to do. 

The initial part of the description apparently happens off-screen? We never even get to see it happen. It's talked about, kind of, but we never see it happen, which bugged the hell out of me. I don't think I'll ever reread this or really recommend it to anyone....

* * *

This book will be re-released on March 26, 2024.

Thursday, March 7, 2024

Currently Reading #7 [03 - 16 March 2024]

Currently Reading

Butcher & Blackbird by Brynne Weaver [43%]
The 1619 Project by Nikole Hannah-Jones [08%]
- The Myth of June by A.B. Danies-Annachi [69%]
The Black Crow Flies by L.B. Perdan [29%]
Crown of Feathers by Nikki Pau Preto [32%]

* * *
Yearly Reading Goal
12/72
* * *

Welcome back to a new blog post~

I did it! Only took me exactly 4 months, but I finally read IT all the way through. Finished it at 10:45pm on March 6th. 4 months to the day since I started it (November 6th, 2023). It took me forever, but I did it. I'm also beating February's reading wrap already. By just one book, but it's still more than I read in February. I'm at exactly TWO books for March. One of them being the stupidly long book. I'm excited though. I cannot wait to get more into the books that I'm already reading. 

Haven't read very much else this week. I did get approved for a new eARC of a rerelease of the first book in a series that's coming out in like...two weeks. The book, The Myth of June, from the Violents series by A.B. Daniels-Annachi, looked really fun and is being rereleased on March 26, 2024. I am almost 10% in now and it's a really interesting read. I wonder where it's going? I've come across one grammatical error so far, but other than that, it's not bad. 

I apparently did it again. I don't even realize half the time when I forget to put up a blog post, even though I have an ALARM set that goes off every single Saturday at 12:00. What is wrong with me?! Anyway. I picked up a few books in the last two weeks, finished none at all, and then started like three more? I don't recall exactly. Something like that. who knows. Anyway! Hopefully I can actually keep up and tell you everything between tomorrow and the....23rd? I think that's right. 

Happy reading~

Saturday, March 2, 2024

Review: A Botanical Daughter by Noah Medlock

I would like to begin by thanking the staff at NetGalley and Titan Books for providing me with a copy of this book in return for my fair and honest review. Let us hope I don't let you down. 

* * *

Mexican Gothic meets The Lie Tree by way of Oscar Wilde and Mary Shelley in this delightfully witty horror debut.

A captivating tale of two Victorian gentlemen hiding their relationship away in a botanical garden who embark on a Frankenstein-style experiment with unexpected consequences.

It is an unusual thing, to live in a botanical garden. But Simon and Gregor are an unusual pair of gentlemen. Hidden away in their glass sanctuary from the disapproving tattle of Victorian London, they are free to follow their own interests without interference. For Simon, this means long hours in the dark basement workshop, working his taxidermical art. Gregor’s business is exotic plants – lucrative, but harmless enough. Until his latest acquisition, a strange fungus which shows signs of intellect beyond any plant he’s seen, inspires him to attempt a true intelligent life from plant matter.

Driven by the glory he’ll earn from the Royal Horticultural Society for such an achievement, Gregor ignores the flaws in his that intelligence cannot be controlled; that plants cannot be reasoned with; and that the only way his plant-beast will flourish is if he uses a recently deceased corpse for the substrate.

The experiment – or Chloe, as she is named – outstrips even Gregor’s expectations, entangling their strange household. But as Gregor’s experiment flourishes, he wilts under the cost of keeping it hidden from jealous eyes. The mycelium grows apace in this sultry greenhouse. But who is cultivating whom?

Told with wit and warmth, this is an extraordinary tale of family, fungus and more than a dash of bloody revenge from an exciting new voice in queer horror.

* * *

I wasn't sure exactly what to expect going into this book. I was pleasantly surprised. We are introduced first to Gregor and Simon. They are a duo who have been living in this greenhouse for presumably a few years now. Long enough that the people are accustomed to their strange behavior. I loved the idea of them knowing each others' proclivities well enough to have set up places where they could explore those talents and curiosities in peace. 

Then the weirdness happens. Gregor gets this box from Sumatra. He knows what is supposed to be in the box. It's something he's ordered, but it goes all kinds of strange. I never once thought I'd be down to read about a mycellium that can think for itself. At least, in the most rudimentary of ways. The mycellium (a sort of squishy goo mushroom) was caring for a plant. It would make sure the thing was kept in the ideal conditions for its growth. I loved that. The mushroom knew what to do. 

Gregor gets the brilliant idea while watching this mycellium, to build a sort of mobile lattice. That's the best way I can think to describe it. He talks about it with Simon. I didn't like that Gregor weaponized their relationship to force Simon's hand. The way that he twisted his love for his actual boyfriend so that he could get what he wanted made me angry. No one should behave that way. You don't threaten someone that you'll divulge something that will get you both arrested and possibly killed just to get what you want. 

Past that grossness, it was an interesting story. I was hooked from page one. I loved how every time something traumatic would happen, Simon would make a physical representation of the emotional response so he wouldn't have to feel it himself. Something he didn't want to think about? A brain in a jar. Something he didn't want to remember seeing? A barber's cup full of preserved eyeballs. It was so bizarrely just....Simon, that I couldn't help enjoying it. 

I eventually gave this book a 4.5/5 stars. I took off the last half a star because I didn't care, again, for how Gregor treated Simon like a possession or how just absolutely batshit he went during the whole creation of Chloe, their Botanical Daughter. It was bad. I adored Chloe and Jenny and their relationship as things were discovered between them and things sort of progressed. That's the best I can describe it? 

The resolution was worth the read. I liked how they learned and grew throughout and what eventually became of everything as they did so. 

I will definitely be keeping my eye out for more books by Noah Medlock!!

* * *

This book will be available from retailers on March 19, 2024.

March 2024 To-Be-Read

I will admit it, my (current) March To-Be-Read is literally just my currently reading. I didn't finish ANYTHING from the original post and now I'm just gonna copy it back out again~ Enjoy my crazy...


Print

1: IT by Stephen King - I actually only need to read about 350-ish pages of this to be done. I'm just now on 801/1153. I'm 100% confident that if I buckle down I can get it done. If I get myself to read ~50 pages per day, that's only a week. I can do this. I am enjoying the story so far. It's interesting how these kids just instinctively know it's on them to fight it and that they won't be ready for years. I can't wait to read the resolution (and before anyone asks, no, I've never seen any of the movies). 

2: The 1619 Project by Nikole Hannah-Jones - As I mentioned in my blog earlier, I got this book after listening to a really good sermon given at my church. I was enthralled throughout the entire sermon and afterward had to get my hands on a copy of the book. It is quite dense and it will take quite a bit of focus to actually read and understand what's being talked about, but I am looking forward to learning more about the history of the country I live in and what it did to people it did not consider to even be human. 

3: Butcher & Blackbird by Brynne Weaver - This one was all over BookTok, BookTube, Bookstagram, and Threads. You couldn't (and in the case of some apps still can't) be on too long without seeing it. I grabbed it in February's Book of the Month and am currently quite enjoying it and cannot wait to continue and see how it goes. If I like it, I'll get the sequel, if I don't like it it will go on my Pango store


Digital

4: A Botanical Daughter by Noah Medlock - This one is an eARC I got through NetGalley that just looked absolutely deranged and wonderful. It's about a couple who lives in this old greenhouse. One is a botanist and the other is a taxidermist. Together they build a 'mobile plant bed' for some rather inquisitive mycelium? It is like if Dr. Frankenstein was into botany and I'm living for it. This particular book will be available through Amazon and other booksellers on March 19, 2024.

5: The Black Crow Flies by L.B. Perdan - Apparently I waited to long between goes of reading this and had to reborrow it from KU. I am enjoying the story so far. I forget exactly what the synopsis is, but we are following a girl who's father was the last Prophet of a religion that is now outlawed? Her city was destroyed, forcing her and her mother on the run. Now she works to spread the word of the Prophets throughout the kingdom and is wanted for it. She ends up banding together with the enemy (friends to enemies to lovers?) who she used to be friends with in order to move from one place to another. It is weird and I like it. 


Audio

6: Crown of Feathers by Nikki Pau Preto - A girl, Veronyka, gives up everything she knows in order to join a band of Phoenix riders. I started this after realizing the book that I had originally picked is meant to be a full year of study and kind of requires the print edition along with it, which I don't own. This book is pretty good so far. I love how she is willing to do just about anything to get what she wants. Even if it means betraying what she was taught. Veronyka is very headstrong and I am liking it. I hope to get it done in March. 

Currently Reading #6 [25 February to 02 March 2024]

Currently Reading

IT by Stephen King [69%]
Butcher & Blackbird by Brynne Weaver [39%]
- The 1619 Project by Nikole Hannah-Jones [03%]
A Botanical Daughter by Noah Medlock [48%]
The Black Crow Flies by L.B. Perdan [29%]
Crown of Feathers by Nikki Pau Preto [32%]

* * *
Yearly Reading Goal
10/72
* * *

February was the worst reading month so far. I am aware we've only had two. But come on! In January I read 9/6 books. In February, it was 1/6? That was just tragic if you ask me. I am planning on trying to do better in March. Goal is 6 [8] to at least catch up to where I should be. According to SG, I'm only 2 books behind schedule. If I can get through 2 of the ones that are still on my Currently Reading, then I can make it to caught up. 

I mentioned going to Barnes, but I never mentioned my original reason why I went! I attend a Unitarian Universalist congregation in the next town over from me, and we have a diverse range of speakers during our 'sermon' on all kinds of topics. The previous week to the blog post I put up was on #StayWoke, which I thought was brilliant. The speaker, a Mr. Arthur Breese, kept mentioning a book called The 1619 Project edited by Nikole Hannah-Jones, and he quoted from it a few times. After the service (or possibly during, I don't remember), I downloaded a sample of the book from Amazon. I loved what I read and when my friends told me they were planning a trip adventure shopping I had to tag along. I found the last copy my local Barnes & Noble had. It's a little beat up, but I'm okay with that. I'm annotating it as I read, which I think everyone reading nonfiction should do. Annotate all of your books if that's what you'd like! (I know resellers will be clutching their pearls, but I'd rather actually purchase an annotated book over a pristine one. I like knowing what other people thought was important). It's good so far, even though I'm only on page 19.

Um...nothing else particularly exciting occured. I picked up A Fate Inked in Blood by Danielle L. Jensen for my Book of the Month in March. I'm not sure which of the categories it falls into yet between Fantasy-Romance, Romantic-Fantasy, or Romantasy, but we will find out when it arrives. It looked interesting and was Norse inspired, I think? I don't actually recall. The cover is pretty enough. I am curious about how I will feel about it now that I'm seemingly getting more into romantic plots.

I will see you all next week, if I remember, for an update~

HAPPY READING!!

February 2024 Book Unhaul

So in February I ended up unhauling a single book. I am never expecting this to be particularly long, but you never know with me. Perhaps March will have more? Or none at all. There's really no telling with me. 

1: Throne of Glass by Sarah J. Maas - I had already read it and I wasn't terribly impressed by the content. I know people will tell me to hold out that it gets better in later books, but I'm sorry, the whole point of the first book is to hook the reader. If I don't care enough to continue reading after the first one....I'm absolutely not waiting until volume 3-4 for it to get any better. Then not that long ago, I read the Tweet or whatever it was where she just randomly throws in mourning the loss of an innocent girl into a plug for her latest book and when called out on it, instead of taking down the post, she just leaves it for people to be like "Well then..." yeah, no. I don't want that on my bookshelves. She's out. 

February 2024 Wrap Up

Yeah, February is possibly going to be my weakeset month of the year. I only managed 1 book. I'm not sure if it's because I was just that tired from work or if I was in a pseudo-slump? Either way I will try to do better in March. 

1: Nettle & Bone by T. Kingfisher - This was good. I have no clue what genre it's supposed to be in, but I liked it. Definitely a 4.5/5 stars from me. I loved how determined Marra was to help Kania, especially after she couldn't help Damia. I loved how slow they were at first to pick up on clues that were given to them. Marra is the kind of person you definitely want on your side with her dogged determination to see something through to the end, even being willing to sacrifice herself for her family. I loved it. I am definitely going to add more T. Kingfisher books to my reading list. 

February 2024 Book Haul

Trying (and likely enough failing) to keep my book buying DOWN this month. January was bananas...even though I think I only paid for two of the books, I still don't want to add nearly that many to my To Be Read lists in February!!

With that said, I acquired 15 books in February!

1: Butcher & Blackbird by Brynne Weaver - I grabbed it as an addition on the February book box from Book of the Month. It looked interesting, serial killers that specialize in killing serial killers? Come on. That sounds fantastic. And I've heard it's supposed to be a romantic comedy of sorts. I don't know how that will mesh with the thriller/murdery aspect of it, but damn am I looking forward to that. I cannot wait to dive in and find out for myself what all the hype is about.

2: The Fury by Alex Michaelides - I have the other two books by this author (I've read The Silent Patient and it was really good), so when I saw this one up there I had to have it. I know it's some kind of a thriller that takes place on an island. I've read books of a similar stroke in the past, and I am quite curious about the plotline and how it will develop from there. I am quite curious and cannot wait to read it. 

3: Roman Conquests: Gaul by Michael Sage - I grabbed this one for research on a novel idea that I have. The basic culture/time period is the Gallic one before Caesar invaded an annexed it onto the Roman Empire. I will be starting it as soon as I am actually ready to research the book itself. For now though, it's enough that I have it. I will definitely be keeping you all updated for that!

4: Ink & Incarnation by many authors - This one is an anthology of YA lit that looked interesting and I've been meaning to read more of these anyway. I want to read one per day. Like at night before I go to bed. Hopefully this will help me get more into that! 

5: Medusa: Rise of a Goddess by H. Dean Fisher - I am a huge Greek Mythology nerd and I've been looking into more books on Medusa. She got shafted. Let's be real. People don't tell her whole story usually and I saw this available in the Little Free Library at my church, so I had to have it. I did return with one the next week I was there. It looks interesting, if not a little juvenile. I'm still quite interested in the book. 

6: The Common Heart ed. by Netanel Miles-Perez - I have always been interested in learning more about various religions and the way people practice them. This was very intriguing being a bunch of essays by various religious practitioners and how they all connected to each other. It looks interesting and I'm very much looking forward to reading. 

7: King of the Rising by Kacen Callender - The sequel to Queen of the Conquered. I read that probably two or three years ago, whenever it first came out, and I've just now purchased the second volume. I will likely enough need to read the first one again because it's been way too long since I've read it and this one throws you right into the action with no recap. I've been meaning to buy it for a while, but new and exciting books have always caught my attention first.

8: The 1619 Project by Nikole Hannah-Jones - I attend a very lovely Unitarian Universalist church in Dallas, PA. The week of the 18th, we had a lovely speaker who talked about staying 'woke' and he made mention several times of this book and said a few quotes from it. I sent myself a sample from Amazon and I kind of did the magic disappearing act while I was reading it and thus had to go get myself a print copy of it. I have already started it and I cannot wait to continue and learn more. 

9: The Prison Healer by Lynette Noni - I have heard a lot about this one and it sequels. I saw it (usually I only see volumes 2 & 3) and I just had to grab it. I have no idea what it's about and I am so excited for it. It says for fantasy lovers on the cover and I'm hoping that it's true. 

10: To Shape a Dragon's Breath by Moniquill Blackgoose - I've also seen this one floating around the internet and since finishing Angeline Boulley's book, I'm curious about more indigenous folks in books as the main character. I'm curious about it and what I'll find in the pages. This one is on my tentative March 2024 TBR. It looks beautiful and I am so super intrigued by it. 

11: The Jasmine Throne by Tasha Suri - I have no excuse. I just wanted it. I've been seeing it (and it's sequel (The Oleander Sword?) all over TikTok/YouTube under LGBTQIA+ recs. So when I saw it I was like why not? It's by my favorite publisher of all time...so I am confident that I'm going to love it. It's got giant typesetting, so like this will be something. 

12: A Tempest of Tea by Hafsah Faizal - It's pretty? I've seen it not that long ago and I knew I needed it. They had exactly one copy at my local BN. What's a bookworm to do? I had to get it while I was there. That way I could be sure I had it. It looks stunning and the plot, from what I can tell, is going to be amazing. I cannot wait to read it. It will be a top contender in the April 2024 TBR. 

13: Stars of Chaos #1 by priest - I've been seeing this all over the danmei world, and I'm curious. I want to know. I have no clue what it's about. I don't know any of the characters. I know literally nothing about this book other than the cover is pretty and its about gay Chinese boys. That's all I can say. I grabbed it because they finally had a copy in stock at my local BN. 

14: A Duet of Darkness and Dreams by L.H. Blake - I pre-ordered this. It's the sequel to A Song of Sin and Salvation, which is very much Eddie x Chrissy. I think this one is very much like Billy x Nancy and that amuses me to no end, so I must know what's going on here. I want to find out more and love the color scheme compared to the first book. I'm hoping there is a third volume that's got Steve (and is purple?). One can only hope. 

15: I'd tell you about it, but it's a Wednesday book and I fully support the SMP marketing boycott, which I'm not even sure is still happening? But for now at least, I will continue.