Book Review: Godkiller

I am so upset about this stupid book. The first in Hannah Kaner’s Fallen Gods series, Godkiller is maddening to read. I was reading it for a book club (and none of us are surprised), so when I struggled from the near-beginning with the writing, I kept going to see if I really had to…

What to Read in May 2025

Let’s just jump straight into my summer reads recommendations. Which I will add to in the coming months as I make my way through ARCs and see what shows up on the shelves. I’ve already read a few of this summer’s releases and there are four that I am going to recommend. My most emphatic…

First Line: Mother-Daughter Murder Night

Mother-Daughter Murder Night has a great first line. But technically it’s the prologue. And when you combine it with the first line of chapter 1, even better. “Beth knew she couldn’t leave for work until she dealt with the dead body on the beach” Mother-Daughter Murder Night, Nina Simon (Prologue) “Three hundred miles south, Lana…

Books That Caught My Eye, Spring 2025

Working in a bookshop has taken my book-noticing to a new level. I already “noticed” books all the time when I was in bookstores, when I was listening to podcasts, when I was attending book events or looking through magazines and fliers… Believe it or not, it has intensified. So, I thought that now and…

Series Review: Love’s Academic

I have not had this much fun reading a book(s) in a long time. And it’s not like I haven’t had some fun reading some books lately, it’s just that the Love’s Academic series by India Holton is the most fun. Victorian England, fantasy, science, romance, and Indiana Jones, but over-the-top on all counts. I…

Gift Ideas for Retirement and Birth

…assuming that the retiree is a book nerd. Most of the people around me these days are. And if you walk into the bookshop where I work, I am going to assume your friend or family member is a book nerd of the sort we usually get at the shop (unless you tell me otherwise,…

Writer in the Wild: Mobile Bookshop

I work in a bookshop now. (They call that a bookseller.) I told you before but there’s no telling where you’ve joined this blog or how often you read it. I freaking love my job. Not only do I get to touch and smell and hug books while on the job, but it happens to…

Picture Book Review: Hot Dog

I have been reading at least one picture book per month, this year. I love picture books. I sometimes feel like that’s cheating, to read a children’s book, but there is no cheating. I am making this up. I read Doug Salati’s Hot Dog because it won the Caldecott and Ezra Jack Keats awards a…

What to Read in March 2025

In the past year I have read a few Irish books that I loved. Let’s throw those out there for suggested St. Patty’s Day reading: What are we looking forward to in March? Besides St. Patty’s Day and Fat Tuesday (because of paczkis)? Oh, and the year to finally begin for reals and stop being…

What to Read in February 2025

February is short and it has Valentines Day. I like to pull out a new romance to read in February. It can be contemporary, it can be a classic, it can be cross-genre. Here are some books I have read in previous years that I would recommend: I noticed that I have read a lot…

Book Review: Scythe

Scythe by Neal Shusterman is book one of the Arc of a Scythe trilogy, one of four (almost five) books in the Scythedom, but because I won’t be reading the second or third for some time, I am going to review this one now. You can’t have missed seeing this book around, especially if you…

What to Read in January 2025

I really don’t know what to tell you to read for the beginning of 2025 from the books I’ve already read. I have yet to read a real winner from my list of best New Years books, and I have already told you my favorite reads from 2024. Perhaps I should reiterate them. Best reads…

Best Books of 2024

I was going to wait until the beginning of 2025 to post about the supposed best books of 2024, but it seems that by then I will have missed some sort of train. So here we go. Hugs to all those books yet to emerge as a favorite, in the next four weeks or so.…

Book Review: City of Ghosts

This is a cute and spooky read for upper elementary and middle grades readers. It’s an easy read and is pretty pitch-perfect for the intended audience. For an adult reader, it’s a bit thin on the ground. But still cute. And still full of thoughtful thoughts and kid-problems. And hopefully the premise is intriguing, because…

Book Review: Giovanni’s Room

I can’t get away from references to James Baldwin. It seems he is a writer’s writer. And, unless there was a short story or essay somewhere along the line, I have never read him. Until now. I started with Giovanni’s Room simply because we were reading it for book club. Perhaps I should have read…

What to Read in November (2024)

As far as Thanksgiving reading recommendations go, I have nothing different to recommend from last year. My favorite Thanksgiving-esque book is Home Cooking: A Writer in the Kitchen, by Laurie Colwin. It doubles as a cookbook, at least a little. And many of the recipes are perfect for this time of year. Beyond that, I…

Book Review: North Woods

I loved reading North Woods. Not everybody at book club did. There were even DNFs. I suppose it’s not an easy book and it is rather literary. But I thought it was exciting, very beautiful in its prose, unique, and well-executed. I will be looking into Daniel Mason’s other books and waiting for the next…