Serena’s Review: “Anathema”

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Book: “Anathema” by Keri Lake

Publishing Info: Bloom Books, September 2025

Where Did I Get this Book: ARC from the publisher!

Where Can You Get this Book: WorldCat.org | Amazon | IndieBound

Book Description: Only the banished know what lies beyond the woods …

There are whispers about what lurks in Witch Knell—the forest where sinners go to die. The villagers call it The Eating Woods because what’s taken is never given back. Only those who’ve lost their senses would dare to go near it.

Or the banished.

Maevyth Bronwick knows better than to breach the misty labyrinth of trees, but a tragic turn of events compels her beyond the archway of bones, to a boundary no mortal has crossed before. One that cloaks a dark and fantastical world that’s as dangerous as it is alluring.

It’s there that he dwells, the cursed lord of Eidolon. The one tasked to keep her hidden from the magehood that seeks to crucify her in the name of an arcane prophesy. Zevander Rydainn, known to his prey as The Scorpion, is the coldest, most calculated assassin in all of Aethyria and he’d sooner toss his feisty ward to a pack of vicious fyredrakes than keep her safe.

If only he could.

Maevyth’s blood is the key to breaking his despised curse and vanquishing the slumbering evil in Witch Knell. Unfortunately for Lord Rydainn, fate has other plans for the irresistible little enchantress. And his growing obsession with her threatens to destroy everything.

Including himself.

Review: This was one of those frustrating reads where I could see so much potential and, at times, was truly enjoying my reading experience! However, it was also one of those odd experiences where the phrase “less is more” comes strongly to mind.

To start with the good things, to say that this book has a vibe is an understatement. Gloom, dread, and gothic darkness permeate every scene, leaving readers with no escape from the heavy atmosphere of the book. On one hand, this can feel as heavy as it sounds, making the reading experience one that may require breaks instead of long reading sessions. But on the other hand, this strong sense of atmosphere fully drew me in, with truly lovely turns of phrase and descriptions sprinkled throughout (even if the topics of said descriptions were in themselves still quite dark).

I also liked the two main characters. With romances and romantasy novels, I often struggle to fully enjoy stories where the POV is split between the hero and the heroine. All told, I often find that I’d rather imagine the MMC’s perspective than hear it myself (too often authors make the mistake of writing men who simply lust after the heroine throughout their entire chapter, and I find this more off-putting than anything else). But in many ways, I think this book more closely aligns with a dark fantasy novel than with dark romantasy, as the romance is almost an afterthought throughout much of the story. This being the case, much of the focus of both characters’ POVs was more centered around their own arcs and story progression. They each had clear motivations of their own, focused on their various loved ones and goals. Of the two, I think I even preferred Zevander’s (hate the name though) story more, as much of his narrative was the driver behind the larger plot.

However, for all of these positives, this was one of those books where you truly felt its length. It’s a long novel, and at no point was I convinced that that page length was justified for the story we are given. From a pacing standpoint, the two main characters don’t even truly interact until nearly the middle point of the entire book, several hundred pages into the story! While they were both strong on their own, it did leave the book feeling as if it has a massive prologue tacked on before the true action picked up.

Further, while I liked the dark atmosphere, I also felt like this book was falling into what I call the “Ava Reid problem.” That is, there were many points, particularly in the first third of the book, where I felt like the author was including dark themes and scenes purely for shock value. Sure, these scenes were written in a compelling manner and were, indeed, shocking. But then the story would continue, and I would realize that that dark element was never really going to be touched on again or didn’t actually progress the story in any way. It was just darkness for darkness’ sake.

The combination of these two problems, an overly long page count and the inclusion of darker elements seemingly only in pursuit of shocking the readers, ultimately overcame my enjoyment in other areas. Frustratingly, both problems could be solved at once with some careful editing and paring down of some of these unnecessary scenes. In this way, the pacing would be fixed, the page length would feel appropriate for the story we have in the end, and the dark scenes would hit more forcibly, since they would be reduced to the ones that actually progress the story forward.

I’m curious to see what happens in the series going forward, but I will be cautious picking up the next book. A tome of this length is a commitment, and I’ll now be a bit wary going into the next that any exorbitant page length is truly deserved. That said, if you’ve enjoyed this author in the past or love dark fantasy stories, this might still be worth checking out! The writing is strong and the characters interesting. Just set aside plenty of time for it, I guess!

Rating 7: While there was a lot of promise here, I felt like the interesting story and good characters were buried under unnecessary shock content and slow pacing.

Reader’s Advisory:

“Anathema” can be found on these Goodreads lists: Original Stories . . . a Breath of Fresh Air and Magic, Adventure, Romance

Kate’s Review: “The Dead Husband Cookbook”

This post may contain affiliate links for books we recommend.  Read the full disclosure here.

Book: “The Dead Husband Cookbook” by Danielle Valentine

Publishing Info: Sourcebooks Landmark, August 2025

Where Did I Get This Book: The library!

Where You Can Get This Book: WorldCat.org | Amazon| Indiebound

Book Description: She has the recipe for the perfect murder

Maria Capello is a celebrity chef like no other. A household name, an inspiration, an icon. Her dozens of cookbooks and weekly television show, broadcast from her beautiful Italian-style kitchen, not to mention her line of bestselling supermarket sauces. And of course there’s her history. Once just the timid wife of famous chef Damien Capello, she stepped into the spotlight after Damien’s mysterious disappearance twenty years before. An event she’s never spoken about publicly until now, when it is announced that she is looking for a publisher for her memoirs.

Why is Maria willing to finally break her silence? Why does she turn down seven-figure offers from large publishing houses and sign up with a small press? And why does she do so on the condition that it is edited by Thea Woods? Thea is a lifelong fan but has never met Maria and can’t figure it out, plus she had been planning to hand in her notice that very day. But when she is invited to Maria’s remote farm to work on the manuscript, she can’t resist. After all, she may finally learn whether the rumours are that Maria killed Damien for his recipes and the legendary ‘secret ingredient’

Review: I was kicking myself when I realized that I completely missed an opportunity to read “The Dead Husband Cookbook” by Danielle Valentine in time for the publication date. In part due to the fact that I really enjoyed Valentine’s previous book “Delicate Condition”. But also due to the fact that the premise of a celebrity chef being rumored to have murdered her husband, and potentially spilling all of the T regarding it to a desperate and ambitious editor. Oh, and the implied cannibalism. Because who doesn’t love a weird and twisted cannibal story? But I did eventually get it from the library, and when I started it I had a hard time putting it down, even in the whirlwind of the holiday season! Because “The Dead Husband Cookbook” is compulsive and incredibly addictive, and maybe I’m a weirdo for saying it, but also made me a little hungry…

Is this spoilery? Maybe. Maybe not. I’ll never tell. (source)

The premise is pretty straightforward. Thea Woods is a talented editor, but has found herself on thin ice at her publishing house due to the part she played in a pretty huge scandal that rocked the publishing world. She’s convinced she’s gong to be fired, but is shocked when she is instead requested to be the editor for the memoir of celebrity chef and powerhouse Maria Capello, who rocketed to stardom after her chef husband went missing and she followed in and improved upon his footsteps (and has been hounded by rumors and conspiracies of the role she played in the whole debacle). Thea jumps at the chance, desperate to close this deal in spite of the fact she has to go to Maria’s estate by herself and is soon drawn into weird shenanigans. The mystery at hand (did Maria murder her husband? Why did she insist upon Thea as her editor? Just what is happening at the estate?) is told through Thea’s perspective, as well as chapters from Maria’s memoir as she hands them to Thea bit by bit, and I thought that the structure was tense and intriguing, with both Thea AND Maria acting as unreliable narrators with secrets to hide and a lot to lose. The pacing is fast, there are some genuinely interesting and surprising twists, and I found myself shocked more often than not as I read through. I also really like that I found myself going back and forth in my head about whether or not Maria did, in fact, murder her husband, and I like having to really question the foundation and bare bones of a mystery like this.

But I also really liked the way that Valentine tackles themes of motherhood, the expectations of being a wife, and the way that married women and mothers have to constantly deal with frustrating expectations when it comes to how they can ‘have it all’. Whether it’s Thea who loves her child but feels like her husband doesn’t really understand the true challenges of being a mother and having a full time job, or Maria who had her own aspirations and dreams and ambitions but had to set them aside for her less talented (and caddish) husband, you find sympathy for two women who are both making terrible decisions and, in Maria’s case, possibly committing horrific acts. Valentine touched on similar issues in “Delicate Condition”, and while this one didn’t have the same level of oomph that that one had, it still had my blood boiling at times, whether it was because Thea’s husband was crumbling under the pressure of parenthood after one solitary night, or because Maria’s husband was complaining that she isn’t really fun anymore now that she’s a wife and mother while he’s running a business that she dreamed of. Feminine rage abound, and Valentine captures it quite well once again.

Oh, and yes, there are some really tasty sounding recipes in this book. I was absolutely tickled that Valentine threw in a lot of Italian dishes with some snappy/sarcastic names, and while I’m not a talented enough cook to know if they sounded like they were going to be amazing, I was, nonetheless, very interested in giving at least a few of them a whirl. The only Italian dish that I really know how to do is lasanga, but now I have some ideas to potentially try my hand at…

“The Dead Husband Cookbook” is another fun and suspenseful mystery from Danielle Valentine! I’m sorry I missed it on the first go around, and I will definitely be more in tune with what Valentine comes out with in the future!

Rating 8: A twisty mystery, a lot of righteous indignation about marriage and relationships, and some pretty fun recipes combine to make another enjoyable thriller from Danielle Valentine!

Reader’s Advisory:

“The Dead Husband’s Cookbook” is included on the Goodreads list “Food-Related Fiction”.

Not Just Books: December 2025


While we do love us some books, believe it not, we do have a life outside of reading. So to highlight our other pop culture interests, on the last Monday of each month, we each will highlight three other “happenings” from the last month. Big events on favorite TV shows, new movies we’ve watched, old movies we’ve “discovered,” etc. Pretty much whatever we found of particular interest outside of the book world during the last month. Share your own favorite things in the comments!

Serena’s Picks

Video Game: “It Takes Two”

My husband and I have taken a very twisted journey through the three co-op games released by this company. We started with the prison break one, decided to skip/miss the one that actually won “Game of the Year” and then played the most recent entry, “Split Fiction,” this last spring. So here we are, finally getting to that acclaimed middle entry. It’s definitely been a fun ride! At this point, I think I mildly prefer “Split Fiction,” but part of that could come down to the fact that I can’t get past the fact that I feel like these two people are just terrible parents! There’s an entire mission where they destroy their kid’s favorite toy to make them cry! The game definitely is self-aware and leans into it all, so that makes it fun in the end. Plus, I’m sure it will end well. But either way, it’s definitely a blast as a couch co-op which is the most important part!

Movie: “Earth Girls are Easy”

You have Kate to thank (blame??) for this one! After the annual cooking making party, we all get together to watch some random movie. And this year Kate introduced us all to the absolute madness that is this movie, a real-life, actually exists movie that probably 99% of population has never heard of but that features a ridiculous cast of young up-and-comers, including Jeff Goldblum and Jim Carey. It’s too weird to even describe, but I’ll just say that not only does it include numerous shirtless-Golblum scenes, but it’s also a musical complete with plenty of singing and dancing. And, of course, said up-and-coming actors all dressed up as colorful, hairy aliens…so…yeah.

TV Show: “The Office: Superfan Episodes”

It’s probably been about 5-6 years or so since my last re-watch of this series and lo and behold! When I pulled it up the other day to play in the background while wrapping presents, I discovered that they had released new versions that extend the episodes by ten minutes or so! While I can definitely see why some of this was cut in favor of a more streamlined episode composed of the best parts, there are still some real treasures hidden in these deleted scenes. Grumpy, drunken Oscar during the Booze Cruise particularly stands out! I definitely recommend it if you’re hankering for a re-watch and have a “more the merrier” approach to things!

Kate’s Picks

Film: “Wicked: For Good”

It was my birthday at the very end of November, and my husband took me to dinner and then to see “Wicked: For Good”. Which was really the best present I could have asked for! As I mentioned when “Part One” came out, I was obsessed with “Wicked” in college, and still love the play and the characters, music, and themes. In the second movie, we have Elphaba on the run being demonized by the Wizard and Oz, while Glinda is working as his propaganda mouthpiece… And they both desperately miss each other. And while “For Good”, which adapts Act Two of the musical, has some of the same pitfalls of the source material (theater kids know that Act Two is a lot weaker than Act One), as long as you have good performers for Elphaba and Glinda it’s still going to resonate and succeed. And Cynthia Erivo and Ariana Grande are such performers, Grande especially here (as Act Two has always been Glinda’s arc). I laughed, I cried, prevented myself from singing along lest Alamo Drafthouse kick me the hell out. And now I love that the film adaptation of one of my very favorite musicals is complete, fully intending to do a double feature when I watch going forward.

TV Show: “Heated Rivalry”

Yes, I’m on the “Heated Rivalry” train, call me predictable, that’s fine. It’s soapy, it’s sweet, it’s steamy, it’s emotional, and I’m really enjoying it (I haven’t finished it yet, I’m HOPING to get the last few eps in with David while he’s in town so I’m holding off). For those unaware, it follows two hockey players on rival teams, Shane (for Canada) and Ilya (for Russia) who are both rising stars in their own right, and who have a rivalry narrative building around them because they are both incredibly talented. But they also happen to be deeply attracted to each other, falling head over heels in a sports culture that may not understand their relationship. It’s also based on a book series, that became SO popular due to the show that the printed copies of the book basically ran out, leading to a scramble and a lack of books right at the fever pitch of the show. I THEORETICALLY have a copy on the way from a local bookstore thanks to Bookshop.org, but we will see how that shakes out. Regardless, it’s been an addictive watch.

Video Game: “Stardew Valley”

I KNOW, I KNOW. I have highlighted this game so many times here, but I’m back into a hyperfixation cycle of it at the moment, and I’m going to highlight it again. I’m still farming (this time really focusing on artisanal goods like jam and cheese), I’m still pursuing friendships and love (my farmer this time is romancing Haley, and that has been more rewarding than I anticipated actually!), and I’m enjoying building up my skills, my friendships, and strategizing when to get more animals and when to try and fix up the community center. Look, we have what is probably going to be a LONG time to wait for ConcernedApe’s new game “The Haunted Chocolatier” so if I want more super cozy and chill gameplay with thoughtful and familiar storytelling (familiar is key), this is where I’m going to be focusing my needs for the foreseeable future. And I’m also helping my daughter play her own game now, which is so adorable.

Serena’s Favorite Reads of 2025: Picks 5-1

This post may contain affiliate links for books we recommend.  Read the full disclosure here.

Another a year, another almost impossible task trying to each choose our Top 10 Reads of the year! For me, the word “favorite” is an important part of this list. As I go through the last year’s worth of reading, I often found that some books would strike particular chords within me more deeply than others, even if, quality-wise, another book might be stronger. Of course, this just makes it all that much harder to put them in any order. But here it goes! Today I’m going to countdown my favorites reads, five through 1. And since it’s the end of the reading year, don’t forget to enter our “12 Days of Christmas Giveaway!” on Instagram!

5. “The Jasad Crown” by Sara Hashem

“The Jasad Crown” Review

I’m going to do my typical, rather cheaty thing at the end of this post where I include a bunch of runners up to this list. Most of these are sequels in series where I included the first book in a previous “Top 10” list and wanted to keep this list open to new entries, rather than just re-highlighting the same books again and again. However, I did want to include one sequel, and this is the one that really stood out this year! I loved everything about this duology: the complicated fantasy world, the action-packed adventure, and, most of all, the romance which was given the proper time and attention to be fleshed out in a believable way, something that I think is incredibly rare to find in the modern romantasy genre. If you enjoy romantasy and want a book where the author trusts her readers to stick with a story beyond just the romantic plotline, this one is for you!

4. “The Raven Scholar” by Antonia Hodgson

“The Raven Scholar” Review

Here’s another one that took me completely by surprise. I’ll be honest, this one wasn’t even on my radar until I saw that it was going to be featured in a book box. I’m so glad that I didn’t miss it! On its face, this is another magical competition book with an unlikely female hero. But it was so much more than that! I loved the detailed politics and religion of this world. And, what’s more, I loved the detailed mystery plotline, something that you rarely find in epic fantasy! What’s more, the main character was excellent and there was a sweet, if very secondary, second chance romance included. It’s definitely a door-stopper of a book, but one well worth its page count!

3. “Wild Reverence” by Rebecca Ross

“Wild Reverence” Review

It’s no surprise to find Rebecca Ross on a list like this for me! I’ve loved so many books by her that it’s almost a given that I’ll enjoy whatever she comes out with next as well. However, this one stood out to me. While I enjoyed the “Divine Rivals” duology, it wasn’t my favorite of Ross’s books up to this point. Instead, I have preferred her adult fantasy series. So this was really a perfect marriage for me! More of the “Divine Rivals” world, but packaged in a stand-alone adult fantasy novel! What’s more, this was set in the extreme past of that original duology, so while readers of “Divine Rivals” may make extra connections, this one is definitely approachable on its own! I highly recommend it!

2. “The Second Death of Locke” by V. L. Bovalino

“The Second Death of Locke” Review

Almost all of my favorite books include some element of romance (though I definitely fall strongly in the “fantasy romance” category vs. “romantasy” as far as my preferences go). But this one probably stands out as having one of the more central romances to the story and boy, did I love it! This will be the book I will point to as an example of true yearning and slow-burn tension for quite some time, I think. I’ll pass on the possessive alphas, the “touch her and die” machismo, and the shadow daddies. No, give me the focused, committed, “never takes his eyes off her” devotion of this romantic hero any day! This book proves that you don’t need to add ridiculous levels of contrived angst to still have a tension-filled romance! Definitely check it out if you want a fresh approach to romantic fantasy!

1.) “The Everlasting” by Alix E. Harrow

“The Everlasting” Review

I’m sure this will be showing up on many people’s “Top 10” lists; it’s just that good! This was one of those cases where I cracked it open and was immediately a bit wary as the story was being told in second person. But I had faith in Harrow’s abilities, and that faith was returned tenfold! This was a beautiful, heart-wrenching tale of history, storytelling, and the power of love. Add in a powerful lady knight and a twisty, time travel based plot, and you have a whopper of a book! I highly recommend this for pretty much any fantasy fan! D

So, there we have it, my top reads for the year! Now it’s time to cheat and include some honorable mentions that didn’t make the list. As I said above, some of these I would have included but for the fact that I listed another book in the series last year, so I didn’t want the list to get repetitive. Others were just shy of making the cut on their own, but still well worth a shout out! Here they are:

“A Drop of Corruption” Review

“Red Tempest Brother” Review

“The Liar’s Knot” Review

“The Things Gods Break” Review

“Emily Wilde’s Compendium of Lost Tales” Review

What were some of your favorite reads of 2024?

Kate’s Favorite Reads of 2025: Picks 5-1

Another a year, another almost impossible task trying to each choose our Top 10 Reads of the year! Like past years I won’t be including re-reads, sometimes my opinion of a book could change and evolve after I had read it, so some surprises may be up near the top, as well as perhaps a book or two that didn’t make my reviews on here initially due to genre limitations. But here they are, ready for a countdown! And since it’s the end of the reading year, don’t forget to enter our “Twelve Days of Christmas Giveaway”! Today I’m going to countdown my favorite reads, five to one.

5. “Bat Eater and Other Names for Cora Zeng” by Kylie Lee Baker

“Bat Eater and Other Names for Cora Zeng” Review

I had read some of Kylie Lee Baker’s YA fiction before I picked up “Bat Eater and Other Names for Cora Zeng”, so she wasn’t an unfamiliar author to me. But I was completely blown away by this book, in part because it was so incredibly creepy. But also because I felt like it captured so much of the reality of the trauma of the COVID-19 pandemic in its early days, as well as the horrors of racism perpetrated against Asian Americans during that time, especially the violence against Asian American women. Cora is a great protagonist, and the mystery of the hungry ghost following her (who may also be the ghost of her murdered sister) was unsettling and eerie, and sometimes downright nightmare fuel. I am very excited to see what Baker does next (and luckily for me she has a new horror novel coming out in 2026, so stay tuned for that!).

4. “Atmosphere” by Taylor Jenkins Reid

Well it was bound to happen! Sometimes a Top Read of the year for me comes outside of my usual genres, and this time it was Taylor Jenkins Reid’s new historical fiction novel “Atmosphere”! I love Jenkins Reid’s books in general, but I think that this one is my favorite (CRAZY that it could dethrone “Malibu Rising”, but here we are!). This one follows NASA’s Space Program in the 80s when they were just starting to let women into the fold, and we follow two lady astronauts who have big dreams of going to space, not only dealing with the boys club that is NASA, but also dealing with their feelings for each other. It left me sobbing, like so many of Jenkins Reid’s books do.

3. “The Mean Ones” by Tatiana Schlote-Bonne

“The Mean Ones” Review

I am always so excited to discover a new must read author, and that totally happened with Tatiana Schlote-Bonne due to her folk horror/feminine rage horror novel “The Mean Ones”! I had been dying to get this book at ALA and it was one of my greatest finds there, and when I read it I was completely enthralled. There’s backwoods horror! There are unreliable narrator beats! There are complicated/straight up toxic female friendships! All of these things are sure to get my attention, and “The Mean Ones” went pedal to the metal and didn’t let up until it was good and ready to.

2. “Not Quite Dead Yet” by Holly Jackson

“Not Quite Dead Yet” Review

I loved Holly Jackson’s “Good Girls Guide to Murder” books, and when I found out that she was going to take on an adult novel I was very interested to see what that was going to look like. I got “Not Quite Dead Yet” from NetGalley and planned to read it on and off during our trip to Philadelphia, but then ended up just tearing through it, totally invested and also crying on and off. The idea of a woman named Jet having to solve her inevitable murder due to a head wound caused by a mystery person was so interesting, but then I fell in love with Jet and it became all the more devastating. The mystery is sound, the characters are great, and it was just so damn good I knew at the time that it was making my top three of the year. If you were wondering if Jackson could make the jump from YA to adult fiction, “Not Quite Dead Yet” proves that not only could she do it, she excelled at it.

and 1. “King Sorrow” by Joe Hill

“King Sorrow” Review

It had been so long since Joe Hill had written a full length novel, and not only was I looking forward to his return to form, I was looking forward to a horror novel about a dragon!!! And my God, this book completely and fully blew me away. It’s almost one thousand pages but I still managed to read it in a few days because I just couldn’t put it down. Hill has not only created an amazing dragon, but also some fantastic lore, unforgettable characters, INCREDIBLE tension, and a story about friendship, greed, power, and sacrifice. I so loved this book. Joe Hill continues to leave me amazed and in awe of his vision and his storytelling. It was well worth the wait.

That’s it for my favorite reads of 2025! What were some of yours this year?

Serena’s Favorite Reads of 2025: Picks 10-6

This post may contain affiliate links for books we recommend.  Read the full disclosure here.

Another a year, another almost impossible task trying to each choose our Top 10 Reads of the year! For me, the word “favorite” is an important part of this list. As I go through the last year’s worth of reading, I often found that some books would strike particular chords within me more deeply than others, even if, quality-wise, another book might be stronger. Of course, this just makes it all that much harder to put them in any order. But here it goes! Today I’m going to countdown my favorites reads, ten to six. And since it’s the end of the reading year, don’t forget to enter our “12 Days of Christmas Giveaway!” on Instagram!

10. “Shield of Sparrows” by Devney Perry

“Shield of Sparrows” Review

This one took me completely by surprise! I was vaguely familiar with Devney Perry as a contemporary romance author, but as I don’t read much in that genre, I hadn’t checked out any of her books previously. I was also in a pretty big slump with romantasy and feeling like there was nothing new to be found under that particular genre’s sun. Well, lo and behold, this book arrived to prove that there was still fun and quality to be found in romantasy, without sacrificing plot, world-building, or believable characterization! Sure, there were some familiar aspects with the way the love story progressed, but the overall creativity, especially with the magic and creatures of this world, easily carried this one for me. The only real downside was the massive cliffhanger the book ended on…

9. “A Master of Djinn” by P. Djeli Clark

“A Master of Djinn” Review

Believe it or not, I had an ARC copy of this book languishing on my TBR shelf for literally years, acquired from an ALA convention many years ago. And it took a book club prompt to get me to finally get around to it. And more fool me, because I absolutely loved this one! It was pretty much everything I love about several genres all mashed together. We had an intriguing historical setting, a sharp-as-a-tack detective solving a complicated mystery, and a magical reimagining of the world, complete with magical agencies that must oversee crimes that take place in this general arena. I also listened to the audiobook version of this story, and I highly recommend this format of the book for any readers who have access to it! The narrator does a great job capturing the accents and overall feeling of this world!

8. “Upon a Starlit Tide” by Kell Woods

“Upon a Starlit Tide” Review

I love situations like what happened with this book. I had read one other book by this author, After the Forest, and didn’t particularly care for it at all. But I wanted to give the author a second chance, and what do you know? I loved this one enough that it made its way onto my Top 10 list! There was a lot to like about this one, including the creative approach to a fairytale retelling where Woods reinterpreted and mashed together both Cinderella and The Little Mermaid. What’s more, I appreciated the tongue-in-cheek approach she took to the traditional love triangle, sorts of characters that often are included, and the general way these romances seem to always play out. Not so here! If you’re wanting a fairytale fantasy that doesn’t simply follow the expected beats, then this one is definitely for you!

Book: “The Thirteenth Child” by Erin A. Craig

“The Thirteenth Child” Review

Another fairytale fantasy makes the list (what can I say, I have a favorite subgenre). This one is more of an original fairytale, and I loved so much about it! For one thing, Craig deftly balances some incredibly dark and difficult themes alongside some truly funny moments and a sweet, if more reserved, romantic subplot. This was one of those great reading experiences where I blew through the book in only a few days, but spent quite a bit of time thinking about it later. The story doesn’t shy away from the true moral grayness and impossibility behind choices of who lives and who dies, the greater good or individual worth. It also had a surprising dash of true creepiness at times, so definitely check it out if you like darker fairytales!

6. “The House Saphir” by Marissa Meyer

“The House Saphir” Review

I don’t think I have any fairytale fantasies in my next set of five! It just happened that all three ended up here next to each other! Marissa Meyer is known as one of the greats for fairytale re-tellings, so it’s no surprise that her latest book made its way onto this list! This was a retelling/reimagining of “Bluebeard,” one of the lesser-retold fairytales, and I loved what she did with it! The story technically takes place after the events of the original tale, but I loved how she wove together both the new narrative and the older story. The main character is excellent, flawed but witty, and the romantic subplot was lovely! Definitely check this one out if you enjoy fairytale fantasies!

So that’s ten through six. Next time I will give a countdown of my top five. What have been some of your favorite reads of 2024?

Kate’s Favorite Reads of 2025: Picks 10-6

Another a year, another almost impossible task trying to each choose our Top 10 Reads of the year! Like past years I won’t be including re-reads, sometimes my opinion of a book could change and evolve after I had read it, so some surprises may be up near the top, as well as perhaps a book or two that didn’t make my reviews on here initially due to genre limitations. But here they are, ready for a countdown! And since it’s the end of the reading year, don’t forget to enter our “Twelve Days of Christmas Giveaway”! Today I’m going to countdown my favorite reads, ten to six.

10. “Dark Sisters” by Kristi DeMeester

“Dark Sisters” Review

This one eeked in at the very last minute, but I had to have it on the list because it so thoroughly entranced me and kept me on the edge of my seat. This witch story that takes on patriarchal religion, misogyny, and generational trauma has a lot of feminine rage, a compelling family line, and a super creepy community that leans into their conservative Christianity while demonizing an entity known as the Dark Sisters that they say brings disease to the women in the town. Kristi DeMeester is a solid voice in horror and this one was a winner!

9. “The Scammer” by Tiffany D. Jackson

“The Scammer” Review

It had been a bit since I’d read an addictive YA thriller from Jackson, and we once again get a ripped from the headlines story that not only snares the reader into its web (cults after all!), it also focuses on the way that psychopaths can manipulate people around them to do their bidding and to keep them under their thumbs. Jackson also touches on the fact that marginalized groups that have been the victims of those in power can have their own unique susceptibility to lies and conspiracies because they have been victimized, harmed, and lied to so many times. I really enjoy everything by Jackson and this one was a great thriller.

8. “Everyone Is Lying To You” by Jo Piazza

“Everyone Is Lying To You” Review

My morbid fascination with tradwife propaganda combined with a fun murder mystery and made this super fun and twisty read that had been on my ‘must read list’ ever since I heard about it. Because while the actual tradwife to alt right pipeline scares the crap out of me, I LOVE a good murder mystery that has some witty and biting social commentary. Piazza knows her stuff and I got a good deal of her references, and her scathing critique of the hypocrisies of these influencers (and some of the creepier husbands) was really fun to read.

7. “The Possession of Alba Díaz” by Isabel Cañas

“The Possession of Alba Díaz” Review

Isabel Cañas is one of my favorite horror authors writing at the moment (we actually just read “The Hacienda” for book club so watch out for that review in January!), and “The Possession of Alba Díaz is quite possibly my favorite of her works. I say this as someone who doesn’t generally go for possession stories unless they have some great deconstructions or subversions of the sub-genre, and that’s obviously because this one does all of that really effectively. Mostly because there are bigger threats to Alba Díaz than the demon that is possessing her… Like colonialism and the Inquisition. Throw in a heady romance and you have a winning horror novel for me!

6. “The Buffalo Hunter Hunter” by Stephen Graham Jones

“The Buffalo Hunter Hunter” Review

It’s always a joy to read Stephen Graham Jones’s horror novels, as he brings in a focus on Indigenous culture as well as a true literary flair to his stories that really elevate them, and “Buffalo Hunter Hunter” is another superb tale of terror. I love the way that he weaves an epistolary tale, as well as one that is steeped in folk lore and history, with unreliable narrators and unexpected beats. And a very intriguing vampire! I found this take on vampirism on conjunction with a take down of Manifest Destiny to be especially harrowing, and as we peeled back layer after layer the real life horrors of American violence towards Indigenous People became far more scary than any vampire Jones could throw at the reader. Which is certainly by design. God I love Stephen Graham Jones’s works.

So that’s ten through six. Next time I will give a countdown of my top five. What have been some of your favorite reads of 2025?

12 Days of Christmas Giveaway!

Happy holidays fellow book lovers! And in honor of this time of year when presents  giving is everything, we’re hosting our annual “12 Days of Christmas” Giveaway. But, tricky us, it’s actually two giveaways, each one comprised of six books from our preferred genres. Read on to see what books are included in each prize package and details for entering to win!

Details:

Two winners will be selected, one to win “Serena’s Prize Package” and one to win “Kate’s Prize Package.” Make sure to include which one you are entering to win in your comment!

TO ENTER:

  • Like our Instagram post
  • Follow us on Instagram @thelibraryladies
  • Comment by sharing what your favorite book of the year has been and which prize package you would like to win
  • Tag one friend in your comment

TERMS:

To qualify, entrants must be US or Canadian residents and be 18 years of age or older. The contest ends at 11:59 pm Central Time, January 3, 2026. Void where prohibited. Not associated with Instagram or its affiliates, nor are they responsible for this giveaway. The winner will be drawn randomly from the qualified entries and contacted as a direct message on Instagram.

Good luck, and thanks for entering.

Serena’s Prize Package

“The Fallen and the Kiss of Dusk” by Carissa Broadbent (Review)

“Written on the Dark” by Guy Gavriel Kay (Review)

“A House with Good Bones” by T. Kingfisher (Review)

“The Beasts We Bury” by D. L. Taylor (Review)

“Forestborn” by Elayne Audrey Becker (Review)

“A Dance of Lies” by Brittney Arena (Review)

Kate’s Prize Package

“The Brood” by Rachel Baum (Review)

“The Place Where They Buried Your Heart” by Christina Henry (Review)

“The Undoing of Violet Claybourne” by Emily Critchley (Review)

“The Captive” by Kit Burgoyne (Review)

“The Bloom At Night” by Trang Thahn Tran (Review)

“The Mad Wife” by Meagan Church (Review)

Serena’s Review: “An Arcane Inheritance”

This post may contain affiliate links for books we recommend.  Read the full disclosure here.

Book: “An Arcane Inheritance” by Kamilah Cole

Publishing Info:  Sourcebooks, December 2025

Where Did I Get this Book: ARC from the publihser!

Where Can You Get this Book: WorldCat.org | Amazon | IndieBound

Book Description: Warren University has stood amongst the ivy elite for centuries, built on the bones―and forbidden magic―of its most prized BIPOC students…hiding the rot of a secret society that will do anything to keep their own powers burning bright. No matter who they must sacrifice along the way.

Ellory Morgan is determined to prove that she belongs at Warren University, an ivy league school whose history is deeply linked to occult rumors and dark secrets. But as she settles into her Freshman year, something about the ornate buildings and shadowy paths feels strangely…familiar. And, with every passing day, that sense of déjà vu grows increasingly sinister.

Despite all logic, despite all reason, despite all the rules of reality, Ellory knows one thing to be true: she has been here before. And if she can’t convince brooding legacy student Hudson Graves to help her remember a past that seems determined to slip through her fingers as if by some insidious magic…this time, she may lose herself for good.

Review: There are a few subgenres of fantasy that I doubt I’ll ever get entirely sick of, and dark academia is one of those! While cozy fantasy is a struggle more often than not, the dark, gloomy, slightly mysterious vibe of dark academia and gothic fantasies is always up my alley.

To start with the positives, this one definitely struck the right chords on that note. The entire tone of this book was perfect, with a lovely balance of darkness, mystery, and the elevated language that one expects to find from any book that rubs elbows with a term like “academia.” It definitely delivers on all the expectations readers will have for it, based on the book summary above. That said, the book doesn’t deliver anything more than you would expect, and that’s where it began to fall flat.

From the progression of the plot, to the character archetypes of our two main leads, to their romance, to the final twists and turns toward the end of the book, nothing really struck me by surprise or asked me to stop and think more deeply about any of it. I pretty much just read the book, and then…was done. One of the things I often enjoy about dark academia is the treatment of fantastical themes or abilities through a more serious lens, often combining philosophy and critique with these more magical elements. But here, any of the themes explored were done in ways that felt overly familiar and almost derivative at times. Nothing new was added to any of these conversations, and I found myself with the urge to skim more often than I had hoped.

As for the characters, they, too, were just fine. Readers should be aware that the romance plays a more central role in the story than, perhaps, the blurb suggests. This can be a positive or a negative, of course. I enjoy romantic subplots, so by and large I was fine with the scales tipping more towards the love story than towards the plot. However, the romance itself also felt very expected, following all of the story beats I have come to expect from the enemies-to-lovers, academic rivals love story. Again, it wasn’t bad, but it also didn’t draw me in particularly. By the end, when the action picks up and the romance comes to a head, I found myself not caring as much as I imagine I should have about the future for these two characters.

I feel like I’ve written an entire review and said very little. But ultimately, that’s kind of how I felt about this book. It’s a full-length novel that seemed to have very little new to say or contribute to an already packed subgenre. I do think that the writing itself was strong, so I’ll definitely be checking out whatever this author has next in store, but this one, sadly, won’t stick with me for long.

Rating 7: I enjoyed the overall writing style and the dark academia vibes; however, the stories and characters felt overly familiar, leaving me a bit cold in the end.

Reader’s Advisory:

“An Arcane Inheritance” can be found on these Goodreads lists: Black Fantasy and 2026 Debuts.

Kate’s Review: “Hark the Herald Angels Scream”

This post may contain affiliate links for books we recommend.  Read the full disclosure here.

Book: “Hark the Herald Angels Scream” by Christopher Golden (Ed.)

Publishing Info: Anchor, October 2018

Where Did I Get This Book: The library!

Where You Can Get This Book: WorldCat.org | Amazon| Indiebound

Book Description: That there is darkness at the heart of the Yuletide season should not surprise. Charles Dickens’ A Christmas Carol is filled with scenes that are unsettling. Marley untying the bandage that holds his jaws together. The hideous children–Want and Ignorance–beneath the robe of the Ghost of Christmas Yet to Come. The heavy ledgers Marley drags by his chains. In the finest versions of this story, the best parts are the terrifying parts.
Bestselling author and editor Christopher Golden shares his love for Christmas horror stories with this anthology of all-new short fiction from some of the most talented and original writers of horror today
.

Review: I have sort of made it a tradition to try and read and review some kind of holiday horror in the days leading up to the Solstice/Christmas here on the blog, and I actually had a harder time finding something this year. Unlike the previous two years we didn’t have a brand new collection of holiday horror tales (at least none I could find), so I went back to 2018 with the anthology “Hark the Herald Angels Scream”, edited by Christopher Golden. I do like Golden’s books for the most part, and the collection does boast a good deal of pretty fun horror authors. I settled into it, getting into the Christmas spirit in a spooky kind of way! And it was a pretty okay read, all things considered. One that definitely got me in the spirit.

Footage of me getting into said spirit. (source)

You guys no doubt know the drill, but here it is again. I will review in detail my three favorite stories in the collection, and then review the collection as a whole.

“Absinthe and Angels” by Kelley Armstrong: I love it when a short stories collection starts off with a bang, and did it ever with this first tale in the anthology. Michael and Ava are spending a solitary Christmas Eve in an isolated cabin, miles from any other person, hoping to have peace and quiet and to read Dickens over drinks. But then a group of mummers knock on the door, singing carols and demanding food and wine. And they aren’t so willing to leave without getting what they want. The building dread and uncanny weirdness of the Christmas Eve visitors was deeply unsettling, feeling like we were on the brink of an home invasion or something worse, and I really liked the creepiness. It’s a great way to start us off!

“It’s A Wonderful Knife” by Christopher Golden: Christopher Golden contributed a story to the collection and it was definitely a fun one that didn’t HAVE to be Christmas-y, but benefited from it because of a puntastic title. A young woman named Cassie has the opportunity to not only attend an elite Hollywood Christmas party, she also has the chance to tour a strange collection of Hollywood artifacts owned by a powerful (and predatory) producer. In this collection is a strange knife… This was a cathartic and satisfying read, with scummy Hollywood predators getting some comeuppance along with some nostalgic Hollywood factoids. Not super scary, but definitely very wicked and gratifying.

“Hiking Through” by Michael Koryta: This was probably my favorite story of the lot, because man oh man does it hit so many sub-genres and tropes that I love. A young man hiking the Appalachian trail in Maine during the winter hears story around the campfire with fellow hikers of a strange woman who may be a witch. I mean come on. I love a witch story, I really like wilderness horror, and the winter setting in Appalachia made it all the more weird and eerie. I also loved the way that it flowed, feeling both incredibly tense but also somewhat lackadaisical. And the final line? WOW.

There were a couple other stand outs (I was laughing out loud repeatedly at the story “Good Deeds” by Jeff Strand because it just EVISCERATES that stupid “Christmas Shoes” song, which I have hated forever), but there were also a few that really didn’t work for me. I also kind of found a repetitive theme of children coming to harm, which just felt a bit repetitive as time went on. This whole ‘it’s the most wonderful time of year that children look forward to, so let’s make children suffer’ vibe just kind of felt unoriginal every time it happened, and I feel like you can do more to subvert a favorite children’s holiday than by just doing child death and injury.

But that said, if you are looking for some Christmas horror tales as we inch closer and closer to the big day, “Hark the Herald Angels Scream” is a pretty good place to start! The ones I liked I really liked.

Rating 7: There are some really fun holiday horror tales here, as well as some middling ones, but there is almost certainly something for every kind of horror fan in these pages.

Reader’s Advisory:

“Hark the Herald Angels Scream” is included on the Goodreads lists “Creepy Christmas”, and “Holiday Horror Books”.