Category: Fiction

  • Payback’s a Witch review

    I have been wondering what exactly new adult is, so I figure I would pick up something that I think is supposed to be classified as new adult. And yes, I did forget that all new adult is romance. Sigh.

    The book follow Emmy as she returns home after being away and having a whole new life in Chicago. Upon her return, her magic returns and she takes her place as the next in the Harlow line, one of the four lines of founding witch families for their town. But when she returns, we learn that her and two of the other families have had bad relationships and rough break ups with a guy from the fourth. And the three of the four families are about to compete to claim the mantle of whose family gets the power and prosperity in town, with Emmy being the impartial arbiter of it all.

    The romance is, thankfully for me, not too intrusive and can be skimmed. Emmy has other traits and an arc outside of being in a relationship where she is trying to figure out if leaving the small town she loved to escape the trappings of her family name which she hated is really worth the city life she has built for herself. While they really try to make the romance a pivotal deciding factor in it, it really did feel more like it was a choice that was made for herself and the relationship was a bonus. I appreciate that.

    I don’t think this is actually new adult, though. At one point they broke down everything Emmy had done since leaving and she’s close to 30.1 The writing, the voice, and the choices the characters made make me think they are all in their early twenties at most. And no one has weddings or kids? You’re all conspiring to get revenge on the guy who wronged you—and one of them was wronged nearly a decade ago! These characters feel way too young.

    There was a sex scene, though, so I guess it might have been new adult.

    Anyway, it was overall an enjoyable read. It reads better if you imagine they are all in their early twenties and still have the energy to spend on the premise, though. Or maybe that’s just what romance is like.

    1. Early on they also mention that it’s been 9 years since high school, but I seem to have glazed over that part. []
  • A Spindle Splintered review

    We all know I have a thing for fairy tale reimaginings. So naturally, I eventually had to check this out. And I knew I had heard of this author before, so I thought this might be a good time to check them out. I had, of course, forgotten that I already had!

    The book follows Zinnia, a young woman turning 21, which will be the year she dies due to a rare condition. She is obsessed with Sleeping Beauty to the point that her best friend finds her a spindle to prick her finger on right on her birthday, which sends her into a fairy tale world where she meets another Sleeping Beauty and has the opportunity to help her escape her fate.

    Do not think too hard about this book. Do not think too hard about anything in this book or it will fall apart. The moving between worlds, the cell phones never losing power or connection, everything about the climax, why Zinnia’s illness has no impact on her whatsoever until it is dramatically relevant, do not think about anything to do with the mechanics because it does not make sense. And for me and reading it in this moment, that is okay.

    It is a very light, very quick read. Zinnia may be the lead, but Primrose is the only character with a real arc and it was interesting to see her change from damsel to desperate to downtrodden as she kept going after glimmers of hope. Ultimately you always knew that all the characters were going to have a happy ending, the narrative is just a little too peppy to imply anything else, so it ended up being a very relaxing read.

    If you’re looking for something that’s low stress and low stakes, but still have that implication that maybe something bad might happen because it is ultimately a story about women who are terminal, but know that absolutely nothing bad will happen to anyone you care about and everyone will get a happy ending, this might be for you.

  • Vengeful review

    It’s not often that I actually go ahead and read the second book in a series, but I did really like Vicious so I figured I might as well check out the sequel! Also, it was available from the library and I needed a read.

    We pick up with Victor who, spoiler, is not actually dead. He is occasionally still dying, though, for a moment or two at random intervals and he needs to find a way to stop that. There’s also the story of Marcella, who is looking to take over the mob, and a secret organization that is looking to police and detain EOs to keep them from being a problem to society.

    There is just a lot of stuff that happens in this book and I found that I didn’t ultimately care that much about any of the plotlines. There was just too much happening all over the place and I really only cared about Victor. He ultimately ends up feeling like a background character for most of the book, though, and that’s a little disappointing.

    There was also a large focus on Eli at one point that I found not necessary. I already know he’s a psychopath. I didn’t need an explanation or more emphasis on that fact. I was good.

    Ultimately, the book just had too many storylines happening all at once and I did not get into most of them. As a result, it was a fine way to pass the time, but I never really fell into it like I did the first one. Pass for me, but it might be okay for you.

  • Dead Steam II review

    One thing I love about doing author events is getting the chance to check out new and local talent. et the editor of this at one of the Pulp Literature events and I’ve been anxious to finally get a moment to check it out!

    This is an anthology of a particular subgenre I’m not familiar with: Deadpunk. As near as I can figure, it’s got a Victorian gothic feel but with more of an emphasis on the horror elements. The stories range from vampires to werewolves to ghosts to people simply losing their minds, each of them with a slightly different take on the tone.

    I’ll admit, I liked the ones with a bit more humour and levity, but I suspect that’s just because my life is a bit chaotic right now. There was such a variety in here that I can see myself going back into it again and again, picking out particular stories to satisfy particular itches that I need to scratch.

    Overall, highly recommend! It was a lot of fun and there’s something in here to satisfy all of your horror needs.

  • An Elderly Lady Must not be Crossed review

    You know how sometimes you see a title and you just have to know more? Look at that title. Look at the embroidered skulls. I couldn’t not check it out.

    The story follows Maud, a little old lady who reminisces on her life and the many times she has encountered death, both as the one to cause it and as the one to… well, almost cause it. She is very deliberately sweet and uses her old age as a way to deter people from suspicion, but with the story told from her eyes, you can see just how cool and calculating she is in throwing people off of her trail and getting her kind of justice. Or, at least, to make her life a little easier.

    I really enjoyed Maud! She was delightfully calculating and careful not to let her façade drop, and she was lovely to watch while she rationalized and put her plans into action. The framing device of a present day Maud avoiding an investigation by leaving the country was a little awkward, since it doesn’t feel like the arc ever finished so much as it stopped. The flashbacks to her history had more complete narratives, but the framing device was less so.

    This is also the not as good second book in the series, which means I now have to check out the first one at some point.

    Overall, it was a lot of fun! I’d definitely say check it out for some light, murderous reading.

  • Exposed review

    I am starting to think I should just make a goal to only read books that I either get directly from indie authors or that I pick up from the library for the year. It’s certainly expanding my reading and I’m checking out a lot more interesting titles this way. Including a lot more Canadian content!

    Exposed follows Raven, a young woman in Vancouver, BC, who is about to be old enough to leave the crime ring that she’s grown up in. She starts to realize that her exit is not going to be as easy as she thinks, and must enlist the help of some new friends to try and get herself free of the leader of the group of car jacking teens who likely has plans for her once she ages out of his current operation.

    The book is quick to a fault, not quite giving us as much time with some of the characters that I’d have liked. There was the crush from school, the small group that helped her get out and take down her crime ring family, and the people in her criminal private life. For a book this short, there’s just too many characters to feel like you get to know anyone besides Raven in the end.

    It does also read a bit like someone who has visited Vancouver as opposed to someone who lives here, but that might just be because it was written before I spent a lot of time downtown. Some of the specifics threw me off and didn’t seem to reflect the city as I knew it.

    Still, it’s a fun and quick read! It’s an interesting idea and I do like Vancouver in stories. I wish there were more of it, and will definitely look into more of her stuff if I find it.

  • I Killed Zoe Spanos review

    Let’s get back to some fiction and back to the long list of books I have randomly bookmarked in the library! Today’s selection is a mystery thriller that had a podcast angle that I’m pretty sure I picked out because I was in a true crime phase.

    The book mostly follows Anna, a babysitter in Herron Mills who bears a striking resemblance to a missing girl named Zoe Spanos. Though she is there to turn over a new leaf, her resemblance to Zoe is affecting her and everyone around her until the day they find her body and Anna confesses to the murder of this girl she has never met. At the same time, we follow Martina, a girl with a true crime podcast specifically about Zoe Spanos and her quest to find the truth on behalf of her best friend and Zoe’s younger sister.

    I honestly would not categorize this as a mystery and would not recommend going in with the expectation of figuring out what happens before they reveal it. Clues aren’t left so much as they are revealed at the time of the twist that they cause. The truth of the cause of death and motive isn’t even revealed until the epilogue, so it will be very frustrating if you’re going in with the intent of solving it.

    It is an interesting story, but I did find Anna’s memory and her spiraling moments where she is having memory issues to happen more in line with when the story needed it to happen as opposed to being an actual character trait. I also didn’t find that the podcast element really added anything to the story, though that may be more because I didn’t think the way that they showed a podcast in writing to be as engaging as an actual podcast and that it lost something in the translation.

    Overall, though, it was an interesting read. I thought it was a fine read, not one I would go back to but one that I was entertained by while I was there.