Serena’s Review: “Entwined”

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Book: “Entwined” by H.M. Long

Publishing Info: Titan Books, March 2926

Where Did I Get this Book: Netgalley!

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

Book Description: Ottilie Rushforth hides from the mighty Sorcerer’s Guild as secretary to a has-been detective. She is Entwined – threads of magic run beneath her skin, and the Guild would trap her in service.

But Ottilie has a plan to escape the Guild forever with her estranged fiancé, the enigmatic poet, soldier and smuggler Lewis Illing. All she must do is track down a mysterious artefact, claim the bounty, and leave the city forever. But Ottilie’s sisters – Pretoria, a quick-witted sorceress and thief recently emerged from exile, and Madge, a guild mage to the core, appear to make equally unwelcome offers. A new life at the cost of everything she has ever wanted, or prestige and safety in a gilded cage.

With her life on the line, Ottilie must track down the artifact in a city torn apart by prejudice and violence, and choose between the two sides of herself – the fugitive and the Entwined.

Review: H.M. Long is a “must-read” author for me at this point, so I went into this book with high hopes. And, mostly, it lived up to those expectations. It’s perhaps not my favorite of her books, but all the important points are there, and I had a fun time reading it.

To start with the positives, Long’s writing is solid, as always. She has an excellent way of instantly creating a connection between her characters and the reader. Even more impressive, all three series I’ve read from her have included deep lore making up her worlds, and she manages to slowly, clearly convey this information to the reader as the story progresses without info-dumping or overwhelming the plot.

Here, I really enjoyed the magic system and the complicated nature of magic users within this society. Long slowly reveals the long history of this world, where power has shifted, and with it, opinions on the “otherness” of those with abilities. Many of the themes of this book revolve around rebellion, bigotry, and the fear of those who are different. Honestly, I was pretty surprised by how dark this went in regard to these themes. This is a dangerous world, with only limited options available to those born with magic—often quite tragic in their own right. If they stray beyond these strict lines, more than cruel words or looks await them. Death is a very real possibility.

Beyond that, I thought the magic itself was so interesting. There were several creative magical abilities that I don’t think I’ve ever come across before, such as the ability to paint away memories or emotions into a piece of art. So odd! And yet, one of the more deeply painful threads of the story. I also really liked the way the magic presented on people’s bodies, each ability tied to a specific time of day that would reveal these “threads” on their skin. In this way, Long neatly sidestepped a common problem with books with this basic premise. I’ve read a bunch of fantasy novels where magic users are persecuted, and the question always is: why don’t they just… not use their magic in front of people? It often seems as if it would be quite easy to go unnoticed in these other stories. But here, the characters have to go to great lengths to disguise themselves and be aware of the time of day. However, their magic is also at its most potent at this time, introducing a nice conflict to their management of this problem.

I also really liked the main character. She starts off very focused on her own plans to escape her circumstances, regardless of anything else. As the story progresses, we learn more about her childhood and early years and what made her the way she is now. However, as the story continues, her arc is one of coming to terms with the reality of living in this dark, painful world and questioning whether running is even a viable option.

However, while I liked the primary story and the buildup to what is coming next, the book did struggle a bit in the pacing. There were a handful of story beats that began to feel like a “rinse and repeat” situation. For example, I can count numerous times where Ottilie was captured, had to escape, and then was on the run before this all happened once again. Toward the final third of the book, when this all happened once again, I did find it a bit tiring.

But, like I said, I was invested enough in this intriguing world and magic system, and in Ottilie herself, to be excited to see where the story goes from here. The romance, such that there is, is a very secondary element, so I think it’s important that readers don’t go into this expecting any sort of romantasy situation. There is an interesting subplot to be found there, and I’m curious to see how it will play out going forward. But the central relationships of the book rest solidly on the shoulders of Ottilie and her two sisters.

Overall, I definitely enjoyed this one! Like I said, it’s probably not my favorite of Long’s books, but it was a fun time for sure, and I’m always happy to find an original-feeling world and magic system in adult fantasy. Definitely recommend this one for similar fans!

Rating 8: While the pacing was a bit wobbly at times with repeated plot points, I really enjoyed the writing, world-building, and main character! Excited to check out the second book!

Reader’s Advisory:

“Entwined” can be found on these Goodreads lists: 2026 Romance Duets and Victorian Fantasy.

Kate’s Review: “Ducks”

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Book: “Ducks: Two Years in the Oil Sands” by Kate Beaton

Publishing Info: Drawn and Quarterly, September 2022

Where Did I Get This Book: The library!

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

Book Description: Before there was Kate Beaton, New York Times bestselling cartoonist of Hark A Vagrant fame, there was Katie Beaton of the Cape Breton Beatons, specifically Mabou, a tight-knit seaside community where the lobster is as abundant as beaches, fiddles, and Gaelic folk songs. After university, Beaton heads out west to take advantage of Alberta’s oil rush, part of the long tradition of East Coasters who seek gainful employment elsewhere when they can’t find it in the homeland they love so much. With the singular goal of paying off her student loans, what the journey will actually cost Beaton will be far more than she anticipates.

Arriving in Fort McMurray, Beaton finds work in the lucrative camps owned and operated by the world’s largest oil companies. Being one of the few women among thousands of men, the culture shock is palpable. It does not hit home until she moves to a spartan, isolated worksite for higher pay. She encounters the harsh reality of life in the oil sands where trauma is an everyday occurrence yet never discussed. Her wounds may never heal.

Beaton’s natural cartooning prowess is on full display as she draws colossal machinery and mammoth vehicles set against a sublime Albertan backdrop of wildlife, Northern Lights, and Rocky Mountains. Her first full-length graphic narrative, Ducks: Two Years in the Oil Sands is an untold story of Canada: a country that prides itself on its egalitarian ethos and natural beauty while simultaneously exploiting both the riches of its land and the humanity of its people.

Review: In February I ended up going to see “Les Miserables” with my husband and some friends, and as I always do when seeing “Les Mis” I mentioned to the group my favorite “Hark, a Vagrant!” comic set that has Javert at the forefront. There’s just something about him burning down the Life Café in “Rent” that just tickles me. One of my friends mentioned Beaton’s graphic memoir “Ducks: Two Years in the Oil Sands”, saying that he really enjoyed it and that I should check it out. I had intended to do so back when it first came out a few years ago, but for whatever reason I didn’t get around to it, but made a note to head to the library and get it as soon as I could. And shortly thereafter I had it in hand and was ready to dive in, not totally sure what to expect but certain it would be something different from the whimsical cartoons I’ve known Beaton for over the years. And I have to say, my friend was right, it was very good.

“Ducks” is the story of Kate Beaton’s time after college where, worried about a lack of financial opportunities in her home of Cape Breton Island and the looming student loans post college, she took a job in the oil sands in Fort McMurray, Alberta, knowing the pay would be higher and the time to getting out of debt would be faster. While she isn’t prepared at all for what the oil sands will be like, she has to adjust to a huge change in her life, with jarring experiences, harsh conditions, and an experience unlike anything she’s had until this point. I found her story to be incredibly poignant and sobering, as while she finds connection and does seem to find her groove, she has to deal with cold management, misogynistic male co-workers (made all the worse due to a huge lack of other women, making her even more of a target), and grueling yet monotonous work. Throw in the bleakness of the way the beauty of the natural world around her is being stripped down and exploited for oil profits and we have an unflinching account of climate destruction that also brings financial opportunities to so many who are in desperate need of it. I don’t know that much about Canada and its history with oil and natural resources, but I felt like I learned a fair amount from this book in a way that was very accessible.

What I really loved the most about this memoir is that Beaton is very measured and thoughtful when telling her story, and is able to acknowledge the nuances of the oil sands and her time there while also examining and holding multiple truths. It’s true that the oil sands provided financial opportunities that she was having a hard time achieving elsewhere after her education was through and her student loans were looming, but it’s also true that she had some horrific experiences with misogyny, gross comments, and even sexual assault that went unacknowledged and without justice. She does a good job of showing the terrible men that she worked with there who objectified and wounded her, but also shows the good people there who did their best and supported her. She acknowledges the horrible climate and environmental harms that these oil sands bring to Alberta, with chemical spills, higher cancer rates, and nasty day to day symptoms, while showing the great beauty of being out in that part of the world and in the nature surrounding it. She shows the gross men and doesn’t excuse their vile behaviors and the sometimes all too unfortunate ways they would turn to drugs to get through their shifts, but also acknowledges how hard it can be for the workers who are so isolated from greater society that regression is almost unpreventable. She also takes great care to address the way that these oil sands affect Indigenous communities, be it how it can infect their water and affect their environment, or the way that Indigenous women can be so vulnerable to violence from the people who work there. It’s all very heavy and the themes are difficult, but the conversations surrounding it are necessary and I appreciate how she was able to parse out all of the nuance that comes with it.

And the art is what I would expect from Beaton, while also capturing some really well done emotional beats and some lovely depictions of the place that was such a pivotal moment in her life.

(source)

“Ducks” is a fantastic and personal graphic memoir that I highly recommend. I learned so much about a very specific aspect of Canada that leaks into greater realities, and I thought it was simply sublime.

Rating 9: A deeply personal and nuanced graphic memoir that tells a story of financial opportunity that comes with a cost, climate destruction, and Canada itself, “Ducks: Two Years in the Oil Sands” was informative, interesting, and emotional.

Reader’s Advisory:

“Ducks” is included on the Goodreads lists “Graphic Memoirs”, and “Oh, Canada!”.

Serena’s Review: “Across the Vanishing Sky”

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Book: “Across the Vanishing Sky” by Catherine Cowles

Publishing Info: Bloom Books, March 2026

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

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

Book Description: Braedyn Winslow never expected to return to Starlight Grove—the town that took everything from her. Not after her best friend, the one who’d sacrificed so much for her, vanished without a trace. But with a young son to raise and a past that won’t stay buried, Brae is back…and determined to uncover the truth.

She just didn’t count on the brooding, reclusive mountain man living next door.

Dex Archer is the stuff of local legend—silent, rugged, and surrounded by whispers of his and his brothers’ violent father. But Brae sees through the scowl and his parentage to the man beneath: fiercely loyal, unexpectedly kind…and just dangerous enough to protect her when someone starts warning her off her search.

The closer she gets to the truth, the harder it is to stay away from Dex. And as things get more perilous, Brae realizes the only person she can rely on is the one man who swore never to trust again.

Only someone isn’t happy that Brae has been digging, and they’ll do anything to stop her. But Dex? He’ll do anything to save her, even slip back into the dark…

Review: I went into this not having read the previous series that it’s a spinoff of (I think?) or anything by this author at all. But since reading Devney Perry’s Shield of Sparrows last year, I went back and read some of her contemporary romance novels and really enjoyed them. Thus, with my interest in this genre restoked, I was happy to check this one out when the publisher sent an ARC my way.

First off, I can tell why this author is popular. Her writing is the kind that I would call supremely “readable.” Everything flows easily, and she quickly sets up the characters, stakes, and a steady pace that is maintained throughout. Even when there isn’t a ton of actual action on the page, the story still felt like it was constantly progressing, and I made my way through this entire book fairly quickly and easily. There were, perhaps, a few too many modern slang terms/modes of speaking that did throw me off a bit. But I know that this is purely a subjective dislike on my part, and as the book is a contemporary work, I guess I can’t complain, objectively, about using language like this—even if it does throw me out of a book to some extent.

Oddly, I ended up enjoying the mystery/thriller portions of this book more than the romance. As I was reading, I kept flipping pages mostly to find out what had happened to her best friend and to find out how the current thriller situation would resolve. That being the case, I was less invested in the romance itself. Partly, I think this has to do with the strength of the mystery, but I also think it speaks to some weakness in the romance itself. Neither of these characters is bad or anything, but it felt like their connection happened incredibly quickly, especially given the tense circumstances that would, rightly, direct most people’s attention elsewhere from romantic entanglements.

Overall, this was a fun read, but just an okay romance novel. I’m definitely curious to check out other books by this author to see if the love stories might work better in those. But if you enjoy this author and you want to check out a contemporary romance with a solid mystery/thriller subplot, then this one might be for you!

Rating 7: While I enjoyed the mystery aspects of this book, the romance developed too quickly for me to feel truly invested in it.

Reader’s Advisory:

“Across the Vanishing Sky” can be found on these Goodreads lists: 2026 Adult Romance Releases and 2026 – Contemporary Romance (1st in Series).

Kate’s Review: “Turn Off the Light”

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Book: “Turn Off the Light” by Jacquie Walters

Publishing Info: Mulholland Books, March 2026

Where Did I Get This Book: I received a finished copy from the publicist

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

Book Description: Two women living centuries apart are bound by the same dark secret in this haunting novel that “upends everything you think you know about ghost stories” (Jennifer McMahon, author of The Winter People).

The Devil enters through doors left open…

On the isolated Eastern Shore of Virginia, Edith is a healer, a woman of knowledge—and a woman watched. Shadows move where they shouldn’t. Whispers creep through the dark. Terrified she has opened her home to the Devil, Edith makes a desperate choice.

Claire doesn’t believe in ghosts—until she returns home to care for her dying father and finds her childhood house… listening. As one sleepless night bleeds into the next, she becomes convinced something is stirring beneath the floorboards. Something that has waited a long time to rise.

Is the house haunted? What compels this lurking darkness? As the danger mounts, Edith and Claire will discover they’ll need each other to survive. But they are separated by four hundred years. And time is running out for them both.

Review: Thank you to Little Brown and Company for sending me a copy of this novel!

I so enjoyed Jacquie Walters’s horror novel “Dearest”. It was a tense and evocative about motherhood and generational trauma, and it was done in a way that felt organic and earnest while also being very creepy. So I was absolutely interested in checking out her newest horror/supernatural thriller novel “Turn Off the Light”. It sounded like a haunted house story as well as a story about women dealing with difficult shit even without a haunted house to gaul them, and I was definitely in.

We have two narratives that we follow in this book. The first is in the modern day and follows Claire, a single mother returning to her childhood home to see her ailing father who is dying of dementia. Claire has avoided home for awhile, as she still has lingering trauma and sadness about the disappearance of her oldest sister Gabby, and the absence has caused a coldness between her and other sister Tilly who has been left with husband Peter to care for their dad. Claire feels like something strange is lurking in the home, and her worry grows as weird things start happening. The other narrative follows Edith, a woman living in the same house but during Puritan times, who works as a healer and medicine woman, but who starts to feel a weird presence in the house, which starts to feed into her anxieties about how her community, including her husband, sees her and her practices that she has kept mostly stifled due to fears of witchcraft. While I usually have a strong and clear preference for one narrative over another in these kinds of stories, I actually ended up liking both of them pretty evenly in this one. Claire’s life was engaging because of the family tension and the unsaid sadness within her family with her lost sister and sick father, and Edith’s story sucked me in because I am ALWAYS going to be into stories of healer women being viewed with suspicion because of Puritanical zealotry. I also thought that both women were pretty well fleshed out, and that they had complexities that made them all the more interesting to follow.

In terms of the horror/supernatural and thriller elements, this one did have a fair amount of suspenseful beats as both Claire and Edith think they are living through a haunting in the house that they both inhabit, centuries apart. I loved the slow burn of weird incidents in both timelines, which seem to be escalating but always feel just a little bit odd so that it wasn’t totally clear as to what was going on. I had a pretty good feeling I could track where things were going, and while I was basically right it still was interesting to see where Walters was taking the reader. I don’t want to spoil anything so will remain vague, but it went in directions that may be a little unexpected and did so in a way that made me feel like it was pulled off. It’s just very creative and I liked taking the journey and all of the tension that came with it.

“Turn Off the Light” is another fun novel from Jacquie Walters! I definitely recommend it for horror fans who like to think a bit outside the box of what a haunted house is.

Rating 8: A creative historical and supernatural thriller that jumps through time, “Turn Off the Light” had some solid twists, a lot of suspense, and two narratives that complemented each other quite well.

Reader’s Advisory:

“Turn Off the Light” is on the Goodreads list “Horror Releases Coming in 2026”.

Highlights: March 2026

In theory, March is the beginning of spring, but here in Minnesota, we are not fooled. The odd snowstorm could still easily come blowing through. But at the same time, we’ve also seen some lovely warmer days, even back in February! Spring is a tease, first and foremost. But while the weather is unreliable, books never are. So here are a few we’re looking forward to this month!

Serena’s Picks

Book: “Entwined” by H. M. Long

Publication Date: March 10, 2026

Why I’m Interested: Long has quickly become one of my “must read” authors, so I was incredibly excited to see that she was coming out with another book so shortly after finishing up her previous trilogy last summer! And this time the story moves to a fantastical version of the Gilded Age, which sounds absolutely fantastic. That cover alone would have drawn me in, but I’m very excited to see what new world and magic system Long will dream up next! Her books always have excellent lore, and can’t wait to see what’s in store next!

Book: “This Kingdom Will Not Kill Me” by Ilona Andrews

Publication Date: March 31, 2026

Why I’m Interested: I’m so excited for this one! I really loved Andrews’ “Kate Daniels” series, but somehow, even knowing I enjoyed that so much, I’ve never actually checked out anything else by this author. And while I do enjoy a good urban fantasy, third world fantasy is my true fave, so I’m so excited to see her now tackling a portal fantasy story like this! I’ve been burned on this concept a lot recently (the main character suddenly waking up in the pages of their favorite novel), but Andrews is such a solid writer that I have high hopes that this one will break the trend!

Book: “Daughter of Crows” by Mark Lawrence

Publication Date: March 24, 2026

Why I’m Interested: Somehow I haven’t yet read a book by this author, though he is well-loved by many fantasy readers. So I was excited to see that he was releasing the first book in a new series this spring, the perfect entry point for a new reader. I will say, I’ve about read my fill of deadly magical schools, but as this author is so widely regarded, I trust that he will have something new to bring to the table. At the very least, I love the idea of a book that sees the Furies come to the forefront of its lore!

Kate’s Picks

Book: “Turn Off The Light” by Jacquie Walters

Publication Date: March 3, 2026

Why I’m Interested: I really liked Walters’s previous book “Dearest” so I jumped at the chance at getting to read her new ghost story “Turn Off the Light”. And this one sounds like it could be a little bit time travel-y as well, which is interesting? Two women living at different times in the same strange house experience terrifying things, and perhaps have to reach out to each other over time and space to figure out what’s going on. It sounds creative and compelling and I am very curious to see how it all shakes out!

Book: “You Did Nothing Wrong” by C.G. Drews

Publication Date: March 17, 2026

Why I’m Interested: Another haunted house story! This time involves a single mother named Elodie remarrying and starting a new beginning in a brand new home. Except that her son Jude, who is autistic, starts to complain of the renovations on the house, saying that it’s hurting the structure, and Elodie’s own secrets and darkness from the past starts to creep up. It sounds really suspenseful, though I’m pretty sure I’m going to have to steel myself for this one as a mother to a child who is presumed to be autistic. But it sounds compelling enough that I’m willing to give it a go!

Book: “The Curse of Hester Gardens” by Tamika Thompson

Publication Date: March 31, 2026

Why I’m Interested: I have enjoyed stories by Tamika Thompson in the past and the premise of this book was REALLY interesting to me. Because what if a haunted place wasn’t just a single house, but a community in general? And what if that ties into current social issues like racism, gun violence, red lining, and poverty? A Black family living in the Hester Gardens housing projects has experienced tragedy and loss. Mother Nona is hoping that her sons can escape the cyclical violence and desperation that contributed to her oldest son’s death. But while she has high hopes, strange things start happening that can’t be explained. This is one I’m REALLY excited for this year.

What books are you looking forward to this month? Let us know in the comments!