Sunday, July 14, 2024

Best and Worst of 2024...So Far.

I saw this the other day on BookTube, and I wanted to participate. So! I will bring you all my top best and worst books so far I've read in 2024. I'm thinking maybe three of each. 
With that in mind, let's begin!.

BEST

1. Godkiller by Hannah Kaner - I loved this book. It was well written and you immediately felt bad for this woman, who was basically sacrificed to two different gods as a child. There is so much intrigue that you have to follow along with which made it just so much better. I loved the whole plot of people maybe not being who you think they are. I can't wait to get to Sunbringer to maybe learn who Skedi really is. (5/5)

2. Nettle & Bone by T. Kingfisher - So this girl who doesn't want to be married anyway, is sent off to a convent where she learns some things and her response is to go and help her sisters. I loved the story telling of it and how it was like a lot of fairytales. Worth the read and got me definitely more interested in T. Kingfisher's work. (5/5)

3. Butcher & Blackbird by Brynne Weaver - What even is this book? I read the list of trigger warnings and immediately had to know more. I flew right through it. I liked the interplay between them as they go on all these adventures together and even though I'm not a romance person, I appreciated the romantic conclusion to the novel and the ending was superb. The spicy scenes were well written and I definitely rated this book highly. (4.75/5)


WORST

1. Return of the Shadows by Donald L. Marino - This book was absolute garbage. I wish it had been longer, and made more sense. I couldn't really follow along with whatever was happening that was supposed to be a plot. It wasn't. Characters were misnamed or described as someone else. Places just didn't exist all of the sudden or they moved to the opposite side of the map. I heard the author got picked up by a bigger publisher, I hope these books get properly edited and printed in a way that reads much better. (1/5)

2. The Cloisters by Katy Hays - People looking for old cards, but they already have them and they are just giving their poor assistants the run-around. I disliked it so much, I never even left a review. A definite disappointment. (2.5/5)

3. The Myth of June by A.B. Daniels-Annachi - Could have been so much better. There is this whole alternate world and nothing was explored in a way I would have thought. The gods are real and behaved pretty much like they do in this world. I didn't much care for how only the stereotypes of some gods were used. Not my cup of tea at all. (2.5/5)

Friday, July 12, 2024

Currently Reading #16 [7 - 27 July 2024]

Currently Reading

Fall by Neal Stephenson [15%]
- Libertie by Kaitlyn Greenidge [2%]
- In the Days Before by Renee Shantel [33%]
- Malediction's Embrace by Candace Morris [2%]
- For Whom the Bell Tolls by Ernest Hemingway [1%]
- Powerless by Lauren Roberts [1%]
- A Journey of the Heart by Brenda Bennings [2%]


***
Yearly Goal
44/100
***

I am doing better for my reading goal. Only six books to get to halfway. I think I can manage that between July and August....I would only need to read ten books per month for the rest of the year to catch up on my goal. Actually, wait. Twelve. Twelve books per month. There's five months left and I have sixty remaining to hit my goal. At least three of them are going to be ARCs that I'm reading due in September and October. And of the non-ARC reads? Yeah most of those are 500+ page monstrosities with tiny typesetting. 

Got home from work the other day, to see this bubble mailer on the table. With my name on it. I have absolutely no idea what it is or where it came from. I look at the package and am like "Huh, interesting. Did I order something from Pango or Etsy and forget about it?" Nope. I open the package and find to my surprise, the book that I had been asked if I'd like to read in preparation for a next volume in the series to be released some time between the fourth quarter of 2024 and the first of 2025. I had forgotten all about it. 

Then the Threads/Instagram book club I'm in decided their first book for the club: 494-page Powerless by Lauren Roberts. Partly my own fault. Every single "hot" romance/romantasy/fantsy they were picking I had already read and I'm not a rereader. Until they got to Powerless, which I am curious about. So onto the Currently Reading it went. Now my list went from 3 books, to 7. I am thinking of moving Libertie back to Want to Read just to help take the number down. I'm undecided, though. Who would have thought that I'd be back up to my ungodly number of books being read again in the middle of the year?!

Found some new books to add to my Want to Buy/Wishlist. They look so interesting. Historical fantasy based on Indian mythology. It looks beautiful and well written and just fits right into my idea of what a proper fantasy should be (no hate to the ones that like it, but romance should be secondary at absolute best). I was not looking for any more reads, but hey, it is what it is!

I think that will be all for now. I'm gonna dive into this huge books that I'm supposed to be reading. Between the Book Club pick and the ARCs...I have a lot of reading to do!!



Happy reading! See you next time!

Currently Reading #15 [1 - 6 July 2024]

Currently Reading

Camp Zero by Michelle Min Sterling [44%] 
Fall by Neal Stephenson [11%]
Who the Hell is Pansy O'Hara? by Jenny Bond & Chris Sheedy [37%]
Under the Udala Trees by Chinelo Okparanta [73%]

***
Yearly Goal
40/100
***

Well that's a fun start to my literary week. Opened my email to find one from an author with a 'gift just for you' that had the link to a BookFunnel download. I do not remember applying for this, but it looks good and is just up my street as they say. I'm a hardcore fan of Fantasy, especially epic high fantasy, and this involves beings that are greater than gods and very Norse sounding names for people. Going to put it right up high on my TBR behind Lord of Eternal Night by Ben Alderson, which I do want to finish. Perhaps once I'm done with the computer work for the day, that's what I'll do, I'll read that. 

And now the other one has come through. Formatting is a bit fucked, but that's because it's a .pdf and not an .epub. It's cool. I'll figure it out. Today is a really good reading day anyway. Thunderstorms and whatnot. I got my Starlight candle from Mia Bella going (every time I even think it, the TS song gets running in my head). It smells amazing. Perhaps I'll make myself a cup of rose tea and settle in to read for the rest of the afternoon....

That book I got at random ended up deleted because it had two entirely different authors and two different series' orders so I just couldn't do it. I refused to even participate in something where there was no telling what was first or who wrote it. I'd rather eat sand, if we're being honest. It kind of gives me the ick when there is all kinds of chaos going on. Nope. Not doing it. 

I've placed the smallest order yet on BookOutlet! 5 books, $38 and change. I didn't look at the actual cents portion of it. I can more than afford it. Got at least one sequel and two-four books that I have had my eye on for a while. Especially A Fragile Enchantment which just looked absolutely amazing and I have been curious about it for quite some time. From what I gather, the main character can bind emotions into her stitching and she does this for people. The cover is also gorgeous and I needed to add it to my collection. That is all. 

I realized on the 4th of July, that I have FIFTY (50) unread Book of the Month selections. Like, nearly a book a week's worth. I can't believe I've let it get that bad. So, what I'm going to do is this: I set up a picker wheel with the names of all the unread books I have. I'm going to spin the wheel and pick one to read. Once I finish it, I will spin the wheel again until l get myself down...hopefully it doesn't take forever. 

July 2024 Book Haul

I know myself better than to assume I won't buy more books than I read in any month. It is just something I have come terms with. That said, so far I have amassed 9 new books in July.


1. The God of the Woods by Liz Moore - Takes place back in 1975 in a camp where a camper goes missing. A wealthy camper. Daughter of the owners. I'm curious how it's going to play out. It looks brilliant and like one of those psychological thrillers I'm going to absolutely adore. 

2. Leather & Lark by Brynne Weaver - Do I really need to talk about it? I grabbed Butcher & Blackbird as an add-on a few months ago and read it quickly. The second I saw the sequel available through the same group so it would match my copy of B&B? I had to jump on it. I think this one follows Rowan's brother, Lachlann and I'm blanking on the FMC's name, but her best friend Lark. Looked good. Cannot wait for it to get here. 

3. The Name Bearer by Natalia Hernandez - I kept seeing a little trailer for it on TikTok and people talking about it. I don't know how I'm going to feel about it, but then I saw it available on KU and had to get it. If I like it, I'll definitely buy a copy. It does look really good. I'm hoping I like it. The synopsis was something about a person who has to get the name of the royal heir from flowers being told that the kid she's supposed to be naming....isn't the heir. That the actual prince (I think it was a prince) is lost somewhere else and she now has to go find him. 

4. Daughter of Fire by Sofia Robleda - I dunno. Kindle First Reads. Looked interesting so I grabbed it. I have absolutely no memory of what it's about. Another Kindle book that I'm hoping to get to sooner rather than later. 

5. The Merciless Ones by Namina Forna - I've read the first book and liked it well enough to look for the next in the series. I found it on BookOutlet fairly cheap and now I'm going to try to move it up higher on the TBR. I'm curious to continue on and find out what's going to happen next.

6. SMP.

7. Castles in Their Bones by Laura Sebastian - I saw it recommended one time on a booktube video and I cannot remember who recommended it or why, but it was like $5 so I thought, why not? I have no idea what it's about or how long it will take. I know it's the first in the series and that the cover is pretty. 

8. SMP #2 

9. Blood Like Fate by Liselle Sambury - I've read the first one a while ago, and I saw this one come up as available in a matching hard cover. I cannot wait to see (and I might have to reread the first one to catch up on what is going on in this series). 

10. Dungeon Queen by Karpov Kinrade & Liv Chatham - No idea. Picked it up through KU (probably?) and I have no memory of why I wanted it....however, we will read it and let you know....?

11. How to Write Your First Novel by M.L. Ronn - I am an aspiring author and I like to read a nonfictions related to the craft. This one is an audiobook I picked up with one of my credits to see just how I will like it. I have no idea really, we will figure things out together!

July 2024 Wrap Up

I let myself be all free-flow in July and as such, have read 9 books~


1. Run, Rabbit, Run by Juniper Hartmann - I have read two copies of this book so far, and neither are the finished. I was one of the lucky people chosen to both beta read it and read one of the eARCs of this book. I loved the story telling of it, you can find my full review here

2. Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation #4 by Mo Xiang Tong Xiu - Oh my lord! I had somewhat forgotten the time frame this book takes place during and was certainly very surprised. We pick up with the characters as they discuss the outcome of the Sunshot Campaign and where to go from there. Set mostly in the past, it continues to explore just what led up to Wei Wuxian's reputation when he is resurrected by Mo Xuanyu. I won't comment further beyond warning you that this is where the very first spicy scene in the series takes place, in the end of the book. I love how even though he is treated like garbage by everyone else for shit he cannot control, Wei Wuxian continues to have only their best interests at heart and tries to convince them that what they are doing is wrong. 

3. Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation #5 by Mo Xiang Tong Xiu - I spent way too much of this book going "Are you an IDIOT?!" Once even out loud. We have fully returned to the present and have begun the conclusion to the story. I love how even missing some of the information, Wei Wuxian & Lan Wangji were still able to put together what happened fairly easily and quickly. Do not go in unprepared. The final eight short stories have a lot of spice. One is damn near just porn. I loved the conclusion and how everything was resolved. Now to read Heaven Official's Blessing.

4. Lord of Eternal Night by Ben Alderson - This book was intriguing. It's a Beauty and the Beast retelling only Belle is a boy. Raised to kill the beast and finally end the curse, he has been sent as the final "Claim" to the castle on the edge of Darkmourn. I loved how immediately they were hostile to one another. They constantly got themselves at odds with each other. The biggest plot device I saw that I loved was th idea of who is the real beast and who is the victim? Marius was nothing but kindhearted to everyone he came in contact with. He went out of his way to help where he could and made sure everything was comfortable for Jak, even though he didn't have to. He and Jak both knew the outcome of Jak's stay. I think the way he ended it was beautiful and I am looking forward to reading more. 

5. Camp Zero by Michelle Min Sterling - This was a very strange book. We follow three groups of people as they figure out life up in northern Canada. The heat in the United States has become nearly unliveable. One of my favorite things was how we had no idea when everything was happening in relation to the groups. All we know is one group is when oil was just being stopped and the other long after it was outlawed. Very good read. I'd love to know what comes next. We get so much interconnected information about people. I loved how Ms. Sterling kept the actual connection between the Blooms and White Alice separate until the very end. And the actual way she revealed it was brilliant. I loved the read, but I am also perturbed by how...accurate...it is becoming? Can't help but wonder what the world will look like when we actually reach the year in the novel. We are already at unprecedented heatwaves. What happens next?

6. Under the Udala Trees by Chinelo Okparanta - I liked the idea of this one, but not the execution. It didn't keep me nearly as engaged as I was hoping. It follows someone as they are forced to basically live a lie for most of their life. The book is set during the Nigerian civil war and follows two girls as they bond. I can't really recall much. It was okay. Definitely didn't like how the main character pretty much forced herself into the closet for her whole life because the threat of death was all too real. Probably not going to reread. 

7. Who the Hell is Pansy O'Hara? by Jenny Bond and Chris Sheedy - I feel like the subtitle of this may be misleading. I did learn about the lives of a few famous authors, but not much about their actual books which what I was expecting. Definitely did not learn enough for me to even remotely consider recommending to anyone. I had hoped it would go over the novels themselves, but no. Rather disappointing read. 

8. Can't Spell Treason Without Tea by Rebecca Thorne - I really enjoyed this book. We follow these people who are fairly powerful within their own countries as they navigate life in a neutral place. Here Reyna and Kianthe can just exist without worrying. Of course their pasts eventually catch up to them and they have to at least partially step back into the roles they used to have. I enjoyed the story and how we just get this slice of life. They want the simple life, but have to work hard for it. I can't wait to see how some of the plot with the queendom works out and the dragons. 

9. Powerless by Lauren Roberts - The animosity!! I read this one fairly quickly. I adored the animosity just immediately between Paedyn and Kai. It stands to reason that she didn't recognize him at first when they were in Loot and she was doing her thing. He also seemed to have no idea what Loot was actually like or he wouldn't have behaved the way he did. I didn't like the repetition of reasoning. Like, I got it the first five times, you don't need to tell me five more. The reveals throughout of who did what and how they were all connected was great. I'm looking forward to Powerful and Reckless