Category: Reviews

  • Delicious Monsters review

    Delicious Monsters review

    You know, I’m starting to get more into horror. I didn’t used to seek it out that much, but I’ve been really enjoying these spooky reads lately. Even if not everything about these books is hitting for me.

    We follow Daisy, a young woman who moves to a mansion that her mother inherited. Daisy can see ghosts and the house draws them in, but doesn’t appear to be devouring them as it should. Slowly, Daisy learns that the house has developed a taste for the living, and her mother turning it into an AirBnB is giving it an ongoing supply. But the house hides dark family secrets that Daisy’s tight lipped mother has never hinted at and until that past is uncovered, the house will continue to take things from the people who stay inside.

    And there’s a B-plot in the “present” that honestly you can skip. It follows Brittany, a Youtuber investigating a mystery without ever stating what the mystery is (Because it would have been a spoiler) and uncovering information in interviews that Daisy uncovers on her own anyway. The information doesn’t even typically match up to what’s going on in the Daisy storyline either, just that the character is being introduced. Her last two chapters are actually relevant, but that’s honestly it.

    The pacing is also pretty slow. The first half of the book is dominated by Daisy pining over the college student who was dating her that dumped her because his friends found out how young she was, and the book gets a lot better when she’s more entrenched in the mystery of the house. The things that the house does and how the house evolves as a character is pretty fun and almost makes up for how convoluted the reveals ended up being.

    Overall, it’s not bad but it could have been shorter and tighter. There were a lot of things that felt unnecessary, and it took a while to get to the point. The mystery was less of a mystery and the book outright refusing information, but it has a fun atmosphere and the world was a lot of fun.

  • The Pursuit of Perfect review

    The Pursuit of Perfect review

    After the last book, I figured I could use a bit of an easier read, so back to something non-fiction! On top of that, back into the well trodden field of self improvement books, because no matter how many times I read one I hate, they are simply the easiest ones to get through when I need to give my brain a break while also really wanting to read something.

    The hypothesis of the book is essentially that to live optimally is better than to live perfectly. Failure helps to build resilience and allows you to better appreciate accomplishments, as well as giving yourself a better chance to explore the world and your interests. A lot of the book is about how becoming more comfortable with failure will help you to become happier because failure is a natural part of how we learn and grow. Also the idea that striving perfection will not lead to happiness because once you accomplish perfection, the goal posts will move so that you can never really achieve it. Or you achieve it, and then what?

    I surprisingly liked the ideas in the book, though know that if I read it a few years ago I would have absolutely hated this. It can come across as antagonistic to people who are perfectionists, but reading it where I’m at now I see it more as trying to pass along advice to a past self. While I don’t agree with everything in the book and I think there are a few areas where there’s a lack of understanding of what’s practically happening in the world, the ideas are overall good.

    I think my biggest issue with the book is the order of the three sections. It starts with the examples, then moves into the theory, and finishes off with the practical applications. Theory really should have been first.

    Surprisingly, I liked it. Some good points, and some things to consider in the end that I think were very interesting. There’s also a few exercises that I think could be useful to people who are starting out on that journey to break out of perfectionism.

  • Project Hail Mary review

    Project Hail Mary review

    I don’t read many sci-fi books in general anymore, so I don’t remember what made me put this on my list. Maybe an urge to expand what I’m reading. Maybe wanting to recapture my sci-fi phase from high school. Maybe just trying to challenge myself while my brain is not doing well. Who knows!

    We follow a man who wakes up in a spaceship who is slowly remembering who he is and what he’s doing there. Ryland Grace is on a mission to save the earth from a strange space bacteria that is eating the sun, but he is alone because the two trained coworkers have died as they traveled to a distant star that appears to be immune to what is currently devouring our sun. Once there, he meets an alien on the same quest and they work together to find a way to save both of their planets.

    While amnesia feels like a trope that has been overdone and is used to create some cheap tension, I actually really liked the way it was used here. The slow reveal of information being used as a means of moving the story forward in the present was probably the most interesting use of it that I can remember reading. Even though the final reveal at the end was ultimately not surprising after spending the book with Ryland, I still appreciated how it all came together.

    One of the nicer things for me for this book is that there is a lot of science that I did not need to pay a lot of attention to. My brain is still bad, so having places where I could clearly take that mental break and come back later was amazing. There’s a lot of sections where Ryland and Rocky, the alien that he encounters in space, are going back and forth theorizing and hypothesizing where the journey to get to the conclusion can be interesting, but ultimately understanding is not necessary for understanding the book.

    Overall, I really enjoyed the book! The pacing is quick and it was an interesting look at how even though humanity as a whole might be questionable, humans as individuals can be fantastic. There’s a nice feeling of peace at the end of it that I can take away. And also Rocky was just… I loved Rocky. Fantastic spider alien.

  • Minique review

    Minique review

    You know, I had forgotten why I avoided some genres. I thought that my aversion to Canadian literature was from just having to analyze it at schoool throughout the years, but as it turns out that wasn’t the only reason.

    The book follows Minique, a young girl growing up in Montreal in the 1600s. She and her friends move through life day by day as Minique grows to dislike the current system where she is meant to grow up and lose her power to the men around her. The church teaches women to be complacent, but there are still women around who hold their own businesses and power. Anne is one such woman, and Minique eventually goes to her to learn what she knows, before eventually deciding to become a witch in the woods, away from the town who dislikes her.

    I did not finish this book. The first two thirds is essentially an autobiography of Minique as she grows up to learn to detest men and the place they put women in society, while not actually experiencing hardships as a result of being female. It is very slow and has events that simply happen without much of a narrative string through it, just the story of a girl growing up and the hardships of New France.

    Also, the very Canadian writing habit of inserting random French that is unexplained throughout the text because it is set in Quebec. At least, that’s what I’ve noticed a lot of in similar books growing up.

    At two thirds of the way through, the book shifts completely. The pace picks up and Minique, who had never expressed interest in anyone previously, meets a man who she thinks is a garbage person and becomes so lustful for him that it’s mostly just her thinking about sex or having sex with him. I got bored very quickly and put it down.

    Ultimately, I can’t recommend it. But hey, if you think it sounds interesting, or you want to only read the part of it that sounds like your thing, go for it.

  • None of This is True review

    None of This is True review

    In a change of pace, this is a book that my dad lent me! We don’t typically read the same kinds of book, so I wasn’t sure, but also I’ve been doing a lot of reading things I’m not familiar with or that I wouldn’t normally picked up, so thought it was worth at least giving it a shot!

    We follow two women: Alix and Josie. They were both born on the same day in the same hospital, but who grew up to have very different lives. Alix is a podcaster looking for a new project and Josie, who she meets randomly on her birthday, has a story she wants to tell. But as Josie tells her story, she becomes obsessed with Josie, and the people in her life warn Alix that there’s something very off about her.

    The framing device of the book is as a Netflix documentary, which actually worked really well for me. It doesn’t hit you over the head with exposition in the way these kinds of devices often do, it was more used as an opportunity to add in extra and biased perspectives on the story that gives more context to what’s currently happening in the story.

    I am also a sucker for an unreliable narrator, and seeing the perspectives of Alix and Josie play off of one another was a lot of fun. Alix feels like someone at a turning point, and watching as Josie devolves into what she is at the end, watching as she justifies everything in her life, it’s lovely. Not that everything is clear by the end, but I like that kind of thing.

    Overall, really enjoyed this one! It was fun, unexpected, and also something that I ended up having a really good time with. Check it out if you’re looking for a thriller.

  • Book Eaters review

    Book Eaters review

    This is a book I would have expected me to put on the holds list from ages ago. I have been staring at this cover for months, trying to remember what it was about and refusing to look up the synopsis because it felt like cheating. And I’m not mad about going into it as blind as I did!

    We follow Devon, a young Book Eater woman. Through her past, we see that Book Eaters are a dying breed of supernatural creatures that look human but eat books if they are lucky, or eat minds if they are not. Those that devour minds instead, they are consigned to being essentially attack dogs to maintain the order that the Book Eaters have created, where women are sent to assigned marriages to create new children who they will never be allowed to see again once they are weened. In the present, we see Devon trying desperately to find a way to keep her mind eater son alive and out of the life she was raised in, knowing what awaits him there.

    It’s a complicated premise that was a bit difficult to grasp at first, but the way the story works out it did end up clear by the end how the world worked. This is a really great way to have a lot of exposition without it feeling like an info dump. I do wish I had been eased into the world a little more slowly at times, but ultimately it ended up being well paced and gave me everything I needed to know at the time, even if I wanted to know more.

    I really enjoyed the story, as well as the characters as they unraveled throughout the story. A woman in a seemingly impossible situation trying to do what’s best for her son, and the people who both help and harm her along the way. The world and worldbuilding is genuinely interesting, even if the themes get pretty depressing as you find out more about how Devon is being screwed over by the society she’s been born into.

    Overall, definitely check it out if you’re looking for something a little darker and you can’t decide whether you want something more historical or more modern. It will give you both, from princesses in castles to a high stakes coup to free yourself of the trappings of all of that.

  • Top 5 reads of 2023

    Top 5 reads of 2023

    Another year and a lot of really interesting reads! Picking up random books from the library really has led me to reading a lot of things I might have never picked up and also to some new favourites. Of everything I read this year, here are the top 5 favourites that I still think about in no particular order!

    • I Feed her to The Beast and the Beast is Me review

      I Feed her to The Beast and the Beast is Me review

      These titles are getting really long. I think we need to start just allowing authors to reuse titles from a while ago, or let titles enter the public domain or […]

    • The Hike review

      The Hike review

      I almost didn’t get to read this one, even though I’ve had it on hold for ages. Brain has been having a lot of issues lately and the health has […]

    • Thistlefoot review

      Thistlefoot review

      It’s slow, but I’m getting back to all the books! Something about not having a massive physical TBR waiting for me has made me forget that I still have a […]

    • Stella Ryman and the Fairmont Manor Mysteries review

      Stella Ryman and the Fairmont Manor Mysteries review

      I have been staring at this book at every Pulp Lit event for ages and I have finally gotten around to reading it! It looked like it was going to […]

    • How to be Everything review

      How to be Everything review

      I’ve gotten a bunch of book recommendations lately, and they all seem to be in a very familiar theme. Apparently I give off the vibe of someone who likes to […]

  • Other Birds review

    Other Birds review

    I love getting these books that I’ve had on hold for ages. I have no memory of what made me put the book on hold, no idea what I’m walking into, only that the wait list was over 20 people and it’s taken months for it to finally get to me. Did I look at the summary to see what I was getting into? Of course not!

    The story follows the inhabitants of the Dellawisp, an apartment complex on the infamous Mallow Island. Zoey, the young girl with the invisible bird is moving into her late mother’s suite to start over and hears the untimely demise of one of her neighbours. Slowly, we meet the inhabitants of the Dellawisp (4 of them? This is a really small place) and start to see the secrets they are hiding and the pasts that they cannot let go of.

    This felt like a strange reading experience in that it felt like a book that I would grow to hate as soon as my English teacher tried to make me find the author’s intended meanings. The subject matter dipped into prostitution, sexual assault, drug use, and child abuse among other things, but the tone stayed squarely in that new girl in town trying to win the county fair pie contest range. It was like the tone was trying to make the subject matter more tame for a younger audience.

    The story itself was fine. I do think it would have been stronger if the perspectives of the ghosts were cut as one didn’t add anything to the narrative and the other actively made it worse. The jumping between characters means the focus keeps changing and, though it’s all connected by the themes of loss and grief and moving on by finding your new chosen family, it did feel meandering.

    Overall, not bad, but not one that’s particularly memorable. It’s pretty quick and not a bad use of time, but there are a lot of books I’ve liked more lately.

  • I Feed her to The Beast and the Beast is Me review

    I Feed her to The Beast and the Beast is Me review

    These titles are getting really long. I think we need to start just allowing authors to reuse titles from a while ago, or let titles enter the public domain or something. Just a thought I’ve been having a lot lately as I see titles get longer and longer. Anyway.

    This book follows Laure, a young ballerina entering the world of professional ballet from her ballet academy in Paris, and the only black woman among her classmates. Despite being the best of her classmates, she still has to struggle tooth and nail because especially in ballet it’s not only talent that gets you far. When the luckiest ballerina in the industry shares her secrets with Laure and invites her to make a deal with the river of blood, Laure discovers a power that she never thought possible and one that she will sacrifice everything for.

    This book was a fantastic read. I loved the depictions of dance, the ballet world, and the people who made a deal with a demon in order to accomplish their goals. Some of the characters do feel a bit one note and cartoonish at times, but I wasn’t ultimately bothered by it. Also, while Laure is not necessarily a likable person, she is a wonderful character with a strong voice that I could feel in every part of the narration. I was not supposed to be her, I was meant to listen to her.

    Admittedly, it does drag a little in the second half and there’s some romance elements that threaten to overtake the narrative at times, but they didn’t get in the way too much. Those parts were easy for me to skim and I missed nothing in doing so.

    Overall, I loved this read. It was a lot of fun, and as a former ballerina1 I found a lot of things very relatable. If you don’t mind a character that may not be morally pure and who has the drive to get exactly what she wants by any means necessary, definitely check it out!

    1. In first and second grade, anyway, but it also pertains to all the other kinds of dance I did []
  • St. Valentine, St. Abigail, St. Brigid review

    St. Valentine, St. Abigail, St. Brigid review

    My health has been pretty all over the place as has my ability to stay focused on a book without some complications. I stumbled across a short story from Tor (Always a good time) that my brain could finally handle!

    We follow Theresa, a young girl who was given away by her birth mother in exchange for something from a woman who can make your needs happen and who speaks to the bees. She grows up calling this magical woman Mama, and helps her with the people who come asking for help while also attending school with a girl who she grows infatuated with, and who she will risk everything to help.

    It’s a really good short, and one written in that delightful magical realism style where the magic is matter of fact but also very ethereal. Theresa is an interesting lead, one who has lived a mostly sheltered and seemingly directionless life without wanting much more than the attention of one girl from school. And when she gets it, things fall apart very quickly.

    Overall, it was a lot of fun. It’s also available in full for free on Tor’s site, so do check it out when you have the chance!