Monthly Archives: January 2023

Destroy Me by Tahereh Mafi

Destroy Me by Tahereh Mafi

The first novella in the Shatter Me series, Destroy Me takes place right at the end of Shatter Me. It’s from Warner’s point of view. I never thought I could feel sorry for Warner, but getting inside his head and seeing what he’s dealing with made him a much more sympathetic character. Warner’s voice is quite different from Juliette’s. I highly recommend reading this novella after completing Shatter Me. It really completes that part of the story.

5 (out of 5) Stars
Books Read in 2023: 15
Pages Read in 2023: 5024

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Filed under Dystopian, Reason: Buddy Read, Reason: I Like the Series, Young Adult

An American Princess by Annejet van der Zijl and translated by Michele Hutchison

An American Princess by Annejet van der Zijl and translated by Michele Hutchison

Allene Tew was a fascinating woman who lived back in the early 1900s. She was wealthy, but met with lots of tragedy in her life. She was married five times, once to a prince making her one of the first Americans to become an actual princess. This book tells the story of her live in an engaging way. Many biographies are dry and often boring, but this one was interesting right from the start. I recommend this book to people who enjoy biographies.

4 (out of 5) Stars
Books Read in 2023: 14
Pages Read in 2023: 4891

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Filed under Biography, Reason: B&N Book Challenge, Reason: Flourish & Blotts Reading Challenge, Reason: LitHub Bingo

Beyond the Wand by Tom Felton

Beyond the Wand by Tom Felton

Beyond the Wand starts with Tom Felton’s family and early commercial and movie work and ends with his time in rehab and entry into stage work. In between is all the Harry Potter awesomeness a fan could ever want. Several chapters are devoted to single actors he worked with on the films and anecdotes about them. He’s pretty open about things including his substance abuse and mental health challenges. It reads fast and is very entertaining. This is a must-read for Harry Potter fans.

5 (out of 5) Stars
Books Read in 2023: 13
Pages Read in 2023: 4656

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Filed under Memoir, Reason: B&N Book Challenge, Reason: Flourish & Blotts Reading Challenge, Reason: Grim Readers, Reason: I Like the Author

Madly, Deeply by Alan Rickman

Madly, Deeply by Alan Rickman

I have loved Alan Rickman for a long time but I love him more now after reading his diaries. He was a perfectionist with an incredible wit. His diaries were bullet journals which makes me incredibly happy since I am a bullet journaler. Sometimes it’s difficult/odd to read this book just because it is difficult/odd to read any bullet journal. The samples of a few pages are included and are covered in beautiful artwork. How anyone deciphered his handwriting, though, I have no idea! I highly recommend this book to any fans of Alan Rickman.

5 (out of 5) Stars
Books Read in 2023: 12
Pages Read in 2023: 4351

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Filed under Memoir, Reason: Flourish & Blotts Reading Challenge, Reason: Grim Readers

Shatter Me by Tahereh Mafi

Shatter Me by Tahereh Mafi

From the first page I was completely sucked in to Shatter Me. I usually read multiple books at once but barely could put this one down so the others had to wait. The writing style is amazing. It’s told in first person point of view and it really feels like you truly know Juliette. I don’t know what took me so long to read this book (I’ve been meaning to for years). I’ll be finishing the series over the next few weeks for sure (and then maybe everything else the author has ever written, too). I highly recommend this book to anyone who enjoys young adult dystopian.

5 (out of 5) Stars
Books Read in 2023: 11
Pages Read in 2023: 3882

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Filed under Dystopian, Reason: B&N Book Challenge, Reason: Buddy Read, Reason: Flourish & Blotts Reading Challenge, Young Adult

Happy Doomsday by David Sosnowski

Happy Doomsday by David Sosnowski

Happy Doomsday started out so great. Rotating between three people who would ultimately end up together with crazy stuff happening in between, the writing is very good and the story sucks you right in. But then it just kind of lost itself. It’s like the author just didn’t know where to go or what to do. The last quarter wasn’t great which was a disappointment after the first three-quarters being excellent. It’s not a bad book, especially if you enjoy young adult dystopian, but it’s not at all a must read.

3 (out of 5) Stars
Books Read in 2023: 10
Pages Read in 2023: 3554

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Filed under Dystopian, Reason: B&N Book Challenge, Reason: Flourish & Blotts Reading Challenge, Reason: Grim Readers, Reason: LitHub Bingo, Young Adult

The Bitter Taste of Betrayal by CeeCee James

The Bitter Taste of Betrayal by CeeCee James

The Bitter Taste of Betrayal is a pleasant cozy mystery. The story is engaging. I’m not sure how she figured out where the (not) dead guy was being held. That was kind of sudden, but if you just go with it and don’t think too hard it’s fine. There are a lot of characters, some who are important but not mentioned for long periods of time so you have to try to remember who is meant when they pop back up. Overall, it’s a nice bit of brain candy. I recommend The Bitter Taste of Betrayal to anyone who enjoys cozy mysteries.

4 (out of 5) Stars
Books Read in 2023: 6
Pages Read in 2023: 1988

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Filed under Cozy Mystery, Reason: B&N Book Challenge, Reason: Flourish & Blotts Reading Challenge, Reason: Grim Readers, Reason: LitHub Bingo

Never Ever Getting Back Together by Sophie Gonzales

Never Ever Getting Back Together by Sophie Gonzales

The premise was great and it started strong, but in the end Never Ever Getting Back Together was just bad. It’s meant to be a light, brain candy sort of book with a sweet f/f romance, but there were too many things that bothered me about it to allow it to be very enjoyable.

The idea of a Bachelor-type reality TV show with all the competitors exes and the winner rekindling their romance with one lucky ex has excellent potential. Once I realized the guy was only 20 and his six exes were 18 to early twenties the whole thing just became silly. I realize the ages are to make it YA, but it’s just not something that lends itself to being a YA book precisely because of the ages. Also, he supposedly dated some of these girls for long periods of time, and these are not his only exes (in fact it’s insinuated there are MANY more) so the timeline just doesn’t work out for him to be only 20.

Maya was really mean to Skye at first (since it’s intended to be enemies to lovers, though that changeover was completely anticlimactic, just a sort of oh, it was a misunderstanding sort of thing, and happened very early on). Because of this, three of the other girls joined Skye in hating Maya. Once Skye started liking Maya the girls continued to hate Maya. This makes no sense. They would definitely not have been so loyal to someone they just met that they continue to hate the girl she only used to hate.

Jordy was really the only well-written character with his own voice, completely fleshed out. He had depth and made you really hate him and his slimy narcissism, The explanation of how he was royal adjacent was not totally explained and had some contradictions, though.

Maya and Skye may as well have been the same character. Aside from Maya liberally using four-letter words, they sounded identical. This presented a problem because the chapters switched point of view between them regularly. Sometimes it was nearly impossible to tell who was narrating until the other one’s name was written.

There are several things that were completely unrealistic, but the worst was when Skye cut off all her hair. None of the girls even commented on it. There is no way a bunch of girls would not comment on someone suddenly going from long hair to a pixie cut. Jordy barely reacted when he saw her. It was just sort of a he raised his eyebrows sort of thing. He had just told her how much he liked her long hair so him not saying anything about her cutting her hair in response to that just seems strange.

The girls tended to be incredibly immature, well beyond what I’d expect of people their ages. They acted more like 14-year-olds most of the time. Especially when Skye threw an incredible hissy fit at the end. Her behavior was out of character and rather insufferable. Maya’s obsession with getting back at Jordy for cheating on her two years before also seemed rather ridiculous, tiring, and very immature.

The formatting on the Kindle version is terrible. There are a few random scene change stars right in the middle of sentences. Conversations are written in paragraph blocks and because attributions aren’t always properly given, sometimes what seems to be one character speaking is actually two. There are also many random spaces right in the middle of paragraphs. Along with the generally poor writing, the formatting made it rather annoying to read.

I had high hopes for Never Ever Getting Back Together so it was disappointing that I ended up disliking it so much. Sure, there are good moments, but they are almost completely overshadowed. This is one book to just not bother with for sure.

2 (out of 5) Stars
Books Read in 2023: 5
Pages Read in 2023: 1736

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Filed under Reason: Flourish & Blotts Reading Challenge, Reason: Grim Readers, Romance, Young Adult

The Midnight Library by Matt Haig

The Midnight Library by Matt Haig

The Midnight Library is very thought provoking. While I figured out rather early on what Nora’s ideal life would be, it was still an enjoyable read getting there. The story draws you in and with the very short chapters I found myself saying “just one more chapter” over and over. I recommend this book to anyone who has ever had a single regret and thought “what if.”

5 (out of 5) Stars
Books Read in 2023: 4
Pages Read in 2023: 1351

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Filed under Reason: B&N Book Challenge, Reason: Flourish & Blotts Reading Challenge, Reason: Grim Readers, Science Fiction

Pandora Gets Jealous by Carolyn Hennesy

Pandora Gets Jealous by Carolyn Hennesy

Based on the Pandora’s Box myth, young Pandora accidentally opens the box with all the ills of the world and she (along with her two friends and her dog) must go and collect them and put them back in the box. Pandora Gets Jealous is the first in the series. It’s a very cute book, and often quite funny. The main characters are well rounded and have distinct voices and personalities. I found it to be quite enjoyable, and a quick read. It’s one that can be used as a family read aloud or given to kids to read on their own with no concerns. I highly recommend this book to anyone who enjoys Greek mythology.

5 (out of 5) Stars
Books Read in 2023: 3
Pages Read in 2023: 1063

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Filed under Middle Grades, Reason: B&N Book Challenge, Reason: Flourish & Blotts Reading Challenge, Reason: Grim Readers, Reason: LitHub Bingo, Reason: We Be Book'N