Kate’s Review: “This Wretched Valley”


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Book: “This Wretched Valley” by Jenny Kiefer

Publishing Info: Quirk Books, January 2024

Where Did I Get This Book: I own it.

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

Book Description: Four ambitious climbers hike into the Kentucky wilderness. Seven months later, three mangled bodies are discovered. Were their deaths simple accidents or the result of something more sinister? This nail-biting, bone-chilling survival horror novel is inspired by the infamous Dyatlov Pass incident, and is perfect for fans of Alma Katsu and Showtime’s Yellowjackets.

This is going to be Dylan’s big break. Her friend Clay, a geology student, has discovered an untouched cliff face in the Kentucky wilderness, and she is going to be the first person to climb it. Together with Clay, his research assistant Sylvia, and Dylan’s boyfriend Luke, she is going to document her achievement on Instagram and finally cement her place as the next rising star in rock climbing

Seven months later, three bodies are discovered in the trees just off the highway. All are in various states of decay: one body a stark, white skeleton; the second emptied of its organs; and the third a mutilated corpse with the tongue, eyes, ears, and fingers removed. But Dylan is still missing. Followers of her Instagram account report seeing disturbing livestreams, and some even claim to have caught glimpses of her vanishing into the thick woods, but no trace of her—dead or alive—has been discovered

Were the climbers murdered? Did they succumb to cannibalism? Or are their impossible bodies the work of an even more sinister force? Is Dylan still alive, and does she hold the answers? 

This page-turning debut will have you racing towards the inevitable conclusion.

Review: It’s been a bit since I’ve read a balls to the wall survival/wilderness horror story, which is a shame because I legitimately love this trope and sub-genre with every fiber of my being. “The Blair Witch Project” is my favorite horror movie of all time, and there are plenty of other movies and books and just real life moments of having to survive in a terrifying wilderness that deeply resonate with me. Because of this, I was SUPER interested in reading “This Wretched Valley” by Jenny Kiefer, a debut horror novel that has a team of researchers and climbers going into the wilds of Kentucky for a project, and then are surrounded and tormented and picked off by a mysterious force that dwells within it. Like holy SHIT this is SO MY KINDA THING!

(source)

As far as survival horror goes, this book really checks a lot of boxes for me. As stated above, I love this sub-genre, and this one has so many hints of “The Blair Witch Project” and “The Descent” throughout its DNA that I was absolutely amped. And yes, lots of harkening to the Dyatlov Pass Incident, though I do tend to fall in the ‘it was probably some kind of avalanche’ camp in that regard. Anyway, as our group of campers/researchers/climbers go deep into a mysterious valley in the Kentucky wilderness in hopes of researching the geology of this pristine rock face that has seemingly just appeared out of nowhere. Our scientists are grad student Clay and his research assistant Sylvia, and our climbers are aspiring influencer Dylan and her boyfriend Luke and their dog. So we already have a group that is going in with a greater purpose of differing degrees of fame in mind, and when weird stuff turns to dangerous stuff turns to nightmarish stuff, the paranoia, terror, and desperation starts to tear them all apart. The idea of being lost in the wilderness scares the living daylights out of me, and Kiefer captures that fear and ratchets it up as our group can’t seem to find their way out, as people get hurt, tempers flare, and they all start seeing things that shouldn’t be there, and shouldn’t be possible. Were this a slow burn lost in the wilderness without supernatural elements it would be terrifying on its own, but then the supernatural stuff does enter into it and it is SO well described and SO damn scary. This is one of the gorier horror novels I’ve read as of late, and Kiefer doesn’t hold back so much when it comes to the violence and the visceral imagery. I was both tearing through the pages to find out what happened, but also having to set it down occasionally because of a particularly gross or super messed up moment.

I did have a couple of issues with the book, however. The first is that while I absolutely appreciate Kiefer wanting to keep things a but unknown in terms of what exactly is going on, I think that, interestingly enough, we get into the same pitfall that “Blair Witch” (the requel from a few years ago) fell into. That is, there is SO MUCH WEIRD STUFF going on, but none of it gets even a hint at an explanation. I don’t need full explanations as to everything that is going on in a story like this, on the contrary I generally LIKE ambiguity because sometimes that makes a scary story that much scarier. But this ambiguity didn’t feel focused, and just brushes upon multiple different potential culprits. Nothing is really explained or even hinted at as to what is causing this, and it feels less narratively satisfying and more haphazard and indecisive. The other issue is more to do with the marketing of this book and not with the story itself. The description of the novel mentions that Dylan’s body wasn’t found, and her followers are reporting weird lives from her social media and weird sightings from people in the area, making it sound like this plays a large(ish?) role in the story at hand. In reality, it doesn’t really. I went in thinking there would be some really fun found media themes, but there wasn’t a lot, and that was disappointing. Again, that’s less to do with Kiefer’s story itself and a marketing issue.

So some good things, some not as good things, but overall I did find “This Wretched Valley” to be very disturbing and to be very engrossing. Survival and wilderness horror fans will find a lot to love, and maybe people who are more comfortable with not knowing much about cause in a horror tale will be able to look past the things I had a more difficult time with. I will definitely be looking into more books from Jenny Kiefer in the future!

Rating 7: A gory and deeply disturbing survival horror story that was a page turner, but sometimes a bit too ambiguous for my tastes in some ways, and didn’t really deliver what the description was promising.

Reader’s Advisory:

“This Wretched Valley” isn’t on many Goodreads lists as of now, but it would fit in on “Best Wilderness Horror Stories”.

Serena’s Review: “The Familiar”

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Book: “The Familiar” by Leigh Bardugo

Publishing Info: Flatiron Books, April 2024

Where Did I Get this Book: Edelweiss+

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

Book Description: In a shabby house, on a shabby street, in the new capital of Madrid, Luzia Cotado uses scraps of magic to get through her days of endless toil as a scullion. But when her scheming mistress discovers the lump of a servant cowering in the kitchen is actually hiding a talent for little miracles, she demands Luzia use those gifts to better the family’s social position.

What begins as simple amusement for the bored nobility takes a perilous turn when Luzia garners the notice of Antonio Pérez, the disgraced secretary to Spain’s king. Still reeling from the defeat of his armada, the king is desperate for any advantage in the war against England’s heretic queen—and Pérez will stop at nothing to regain the king’s favor.

Determined to seize this one chance to better her fortunes, Luzia plunges into a world of seers and alchemists, holy men and hucksters, where the line between magic, science, and fraud is never certain. But as her notoriety grows, so does the danger that her Jewish blood will doom her to the Inquisition’s wrath. She will have to use every bit of her wit and will to survive—even if that means enlisting the help of Guillén Santangel, an embittered immortal familiar whose own secrets could prove deadly for them both.

Review: I’ve had a mixed past reading Leigh Bardugo’s books. I started out really enjoying the first book in her original Grisha trilogy, “Shadow and Bone.” But then I disliked the way the love triangle was handled so much that I was pretty much hate-reading the series by the time I got to the final book. Sure, I liked the ending, but I was pretty put off by the entire experience. Then, however, I picked up the “Six of Crows” duology and absolutely loved it! On top of that, while I haven’t read “Ninth House,” Kate gave it a 10 in her review a few years ago. Sooo, when I saw this book coming out, I thought now was the time to revisit her work. It helps that this book is disconnected from the Grishaverse entirely and was set in a place and time period that I’ve rarely seen tackled in fantasy fiction. And now that I’m finished…well, consider me converted! If this is what Bardugo is producing currently, I’m all in!

There is so much to love about this book that I barely know where to start! But let’s start with something I’m always on the look out for when reading books like this: how well does it blend genres? Here, Bardugo is not only writing a fantasy story, but she’s attempting to blend it into a real time and place in our own world. With that comes a lot of challenges, but when done right, like here, it can be the best of both world. And while Luzia’s magic and the magical competition she finds herself entrenched within drive much of the plot of the story, I think it’s truly the historical setting that breathes life into this book.

This story is rich with all of the intricate details that one looks for from a historical fiction book: the lush descriptions of fashion and architecture, the political maneuvering driving a country’s leaders, the cultural norms and restrictions placed on its people. And central to it all, Luzia’s precarious place in a culture that demonizes “unholy” magic as well as her own Jewish heritage. All of this and more is woven in so neatly alongside fantastical events that it truly begins to feel believable that this was simply a lost element of the historical record. In this way, it very much reminded me of reads like “The Golem and the Jinni” where the historical setting and commentary felt as if they played a more primary role to its fantasy elements.

I also really enjoyed the characters, but especially Luzia herself. She’s a fully formed, complicated character with all of the joys and struggles that come alongside that. Early in the story, numerous characters warn her about the dangers of her own ambitions, and I was truly impressed by the delicate manner in which this was handled. Restricted to a life as a scullery maid, Luzia’s dreams of basic comforts, safety, and the recognition and appreciation of her power are all understandable, especially to the modern reader. She’s never demonized for wanting more. That said, the book never loses sight of the time period and place during which it is taken place. There are no easy solutions to the realities of the world around her; no magical wand-waving that can re-form the world into one where Luzia’s dreams of her future can be easily made true. This is not a story of revolution or grand sweeting changes to a real-world historical time line. Instead, it is a careful exploration of the very real lives that people, especially women, lead. That said, it’s not all doom and gloom.

Woven throughout the story was one of my favorite slow-burn romances that I’ve read in quite some time. Like Luzia, Santangel is a complicated, imperfect being. His story is slowly revealed over the course of the book, and we learn of the backstory that lead him to be who he is now and understand the choices he makes. For much of the book, I was truly concerned about how this love story was going to be resolved, given the restrictions on his character. But, like everything else, this all fell neatly in line by the end of the book, leaving us with a bittersweet, but satisfying ending. And for those concerned, I’d say it veers closer to the “sweet” than the “bitter.” Take from that what you will.

The fantasy elements were also fantastic. It starts off slowly, but the story eventually builds to full-scale, action-packed magical scenes. Honestly, I was kind of surprised by just how far into the fantasy aspect the book leaned at certain points. There were some truly suspenseful scenes, and I enjoyed the way Luzia’s magic was used. There were enough restrictions on what she could do that there was sufficient tension and conflict building throughout the story, but there was also a sense of whimsy, that anything could be possible if it could be dreamed.

Truly, I can’t say enough good things about this book. The writing was incredibly sharp, the character work was deep and complicated, and there was an excellent balance between the increasing danger and stakes of Luzia’s situation and the sweet, slow-burn romance building between her and Santangel. Fans of Bardugo’s work are sure to love this one, and I would also highly recommend it to any fantasy readers, especially those who enjoy historical fiction, as well.

Rating 10: A masterpiece of historical fantasy fiction, with “The Familiar” Bardugo has proven once again why she’s one of the most exciting authors writing in the genre today.

Reader’s Advisory:

“The Familiar” can be found on these Goodreads lists: Jewish Fantasy Genre and Historical Fiction With a Dash of Magic.

Kate’s Review: “The Darkness Rises”

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Book: “The Darkness Rises” by Stacy Stokes

Publishing Info: Viking Books for Young Readers, April 2024

Where Did I Get This Book: I received an eARC from the publisher.

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

Book Description: A gripping speculative thriller perfect for fans of Lauren Oliver and Ginny Myers Sain, about one girl with the power to see death before it happens–and the terrible consequences she faces when saving someone goes wrong.

SOMEONE WANTS REVENGE

Whitney knows what death looks like. Since she was seven, she’s seen it hover over strangers’ heads in dark, rippling clouds. Sometimes she can save people from the darkness. Sometimes she can’t. But she’s never questioned if she should try. Until the unthinkable happens—and a person she saves becomes the perpetrator of a horrific school shooting.

Now Whitney will do anything to escape the memory of last year’s tragedy and the guilt that gnaws at her for her role in it. Even if that means quitting dance—the thing she loves most—and hiding her ability from her family and friends. But most importantly, no one can know what really happened last year.

Then Whitney finds an ominous message in her locker and realizes someone knows her secret. As the threats pile up, one thing becomes clear—someone wants payback for what she did. And if she’s going to survive the year, she must track down whoever is after her before it’s too late.

Review: Thank you to Kaye Publicity Inc. for sending me an eARC of this book!

I will forever and always be a complete sucker for a supernatural tale that involves a psychic character who is trying to cope with their powers. That has been my absolute jam for a VERY long time, and therefore if any book has a hint of that and ends up in my radar, I’m going to be on board. So it’s no surprise that I was totally in when “The Darkness Rises” by Stacy Stokes ended up in my mailbox. A teenage girl dealing with a psychic gift which has led to uncertainty and guilt, and has led to a mysterious stalker going after her for the perceived part she played in a tragedy. OH, YES PLEASE.

As a supernatural thriller, this very much falls into the category of Young Adult in a number of ways. Our main character, Whitney, is a teenager, and she has pretty expected teenage problems (a scummy ex boyfriend, an ex friend who has become an antagonistic rival, a strained relationship with her mother, the list goes on), but is also someone who can predict a person’s death due to being able to see a dark cloud over their heads that no one else is privy to. She struggles to keep this to herself, as she wants to help people, but it has bitten her in the ass a number of times. In more mundane ways it has made her seem weird and creepy when she tells someone to go to the doctor or not to drive a certain way, only to find an illness or to narrowly miss a car accident. But in the biggest way, she once stopped the school weirdo from jumping off a building… and a few days later he brought a gun to the school football game and opened fire, killing eight and wounding many others. When someone starts hinting that they know her secret, and that they are going to expose her, or worse. The mystery was pretty easy to figure out from the get go, and while I liked Whitney and liked how complex she was, her detective work, as well as some side plots involving her nemesis and a new boy at school that she has feelings for, were in a lot of ways pretty well worn territory for the young adult age group. This isn’t a bad thing by any means, and it works for the audience at hand. It just means that it wasn’t doing much outside of the box in the thrills department.

But there is absolutely something that elevated “The Darkness Rises” from what could have been a run of the mill YA thriller, and that was the frank and realistic way that Stokes tackled the topic of gun violence in schools and how the trauma reverberates through everyone who is touched by it. While we have a clear conflict of Whitney feeling guilty for saving the shooter from suicide in the days before his rampage, we also have the conflict of how Whitney feels like she should have done more in the moment once it was clear what was happening, and her survivor guilt is couched in with the guilt of saving him as if doing so made the shooting and all the deaths her fault. At first I was thinking ‘oh come on, Whitney, he’s the one who pulled the trigger, he’s the one who killed these people’, but thinking about it, I imagine that trauma, survivor’s guilt, and grief would probably twist one’s perceptions in this way, even if you take the supernatural elements out. I liked that Stokes was able to address these themes without sounded like she was checking boxes of necessary things to say, and that it felt natural and flowed well, and grounded in the harsh realities of gun violence in this country. And as an author’s note she had a good section about resources, statistics, and facts about school shootings and gun control measures. I really appreciated the way she approached it as a plot point.

“The Darkness Rises” is a speculative thriller that makes darker subject matter easy to parse through without diluting it. Fans of YA Thrillers absolutely should check it out.

Rating 7: A pretty typical YA thriller is elevated with a stark and intense take on gun violence.

Reader’s Advisory:

“The Darkness Rises” isn’t on any Goodreads lists as of yet, but it would fit in on “Psychic Heroes in Mysteries and Thrillers”.

Book Club Review: “The Cabinets of Barnaby Mayne”

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We are part of a group of librarian friends who have had an ongoing book club running for the last several years. Each “season” (we’re nerds) we pick a theme and each of us chooses a book within that theme for us all to read. Our current theme is Centuries, where we were given a random century and had to pick a book based during that time period.  For this blog, we will post a joint review of each book we read for book club. We’ll also post the next book coming up in book club. So feel free to read along with us or use our book selections and questions in your own book club!

Book: “The Cabinets of Barnaby Mayne” by Elsa Hart

Publishing Info: Minotaur Books, August 2020

Where Did We Get This Book: The library!

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

Century: 18th

Book Description: London, 1703. In a time when the old approaches to science coexist with the new, one elite community attempts to understand the world by collecting its wonders. Sir Barnaby Mayne, the most formidable of these collectors, has devoted his life to filling his cabinets. While the curious-minded vie for invitations to study the rare stones, bones, books, and artifacts he has amassed, some visitors come with a darker purpose.

For Cecily Kay, it is a passion for plants that brings her to the Mayne house. The only puzzle she expects to encounter is how to locate the specimens she needs within Sir Barnaby’s crowded cabinets. But when her host is stabbed to death, Cecily finds the confession of the supposed killer unconvincing. She pays attention to details—years of practice have taught her that the smallest particulars can distinguish a harmless herb from a deadly one—and in the case of Sir Barnaby’s murder, there are too many inconsistencies for her to ignore.

To discover the truth, Cecily must enter the world of the collectors, a realm where intellect is distorted by obsession and greed. As her pursuit of answers brings her closer to a killer, she risks being given a final resting place amid the bones that wait, silent and still, in ‘THE CABINETS OF BARNABY MAYNE’.

Kate’s Thoughts

When I worked at the Science Museum of Minnesota, my main gallery was known as the Collections Gallery, which was kind of a mish mash of items on display that didn’t really fit in anywhere else in the museum. We had artifacts from around the world, a few taxidermied animals, some rocks and minerals and sands on display, some items from quack medical practices, and a literal mummy. I loved working in this gallery and a few of my best friends were people who worked there with me. So with my affection for this kind of collection oddity made me very interested in reading “The Cabinets of Barnaby Mayne”, as the idea of a weird collector with a bunch of cabinets filled with random stuff is very much my wheelhouse.

Well, sadly this book didn’t really gel with me. I am not sure what went wrong, as the collection of oddities is great, I love a historical mystery, and I am always game to read a story in a time period I’m not as familiar with (early 1700s? I can’t think of any other books off the top of my head that I have read that are set during that time frame). I am pretty certain that it is just a matter of Your Mileage May Vary, or just not being in the right mind space, but combining some of the more ‘in time period’ language and the cast of suspects all being pretty similar and not very interesting to me, I wasn’t as enthralled with this book. I did like the banter between Cecily and her friend Meacan, and having two women being the main investigators was also enjoyable. But I think that the mystery itself just didn’t catch my attention too well.

If you like cozy mysteries and you like period pieces that perhaps aren’t as covered as much in the genre, this could be a good fit for you! It just didn’t do much for me.

Serena’s Thoughts

I’m much more the sort of reader who would go for this sort of book than Kate, so it’s probably not a surprise that I enjoyed it a bit more. That said, I also didn’t enjoy it as much as I wanted to, so we have a bit of a mixed bag review headed your way. On one hand, I’m very into historical mysteries like this and there were a lot of aspects of this novel that felt fresh when compared to other entries in this subgenre. For example, while I’ve read a million and one Victorian or Regency period historical mysteries, I haven’t read one set in the early 1700s before. That being the case, I enjoyed the exploration of this tenuous point in history in which much of natural science was still very recent and felt almost as mystical as magic itself. I also enjoyed the two main characters, and this was another point in this book’s favor. Not only have the previous books I’ve read that are similar to this all feature a man/woman duo (often with romantic tension of some sort), but here we had two women who were simply friends and nothing more. It was nice to see a different kind of relationship put at the forefront, and like Kate, I enjoyed the interactions between these two the most of anything during my reading experience.

That said, I also agree with some of her criticisms. Like any good mystery, there were a whole host of potential suspects. The problem was that many of them began to run together in my mind, feeling indistinct from each other and each struggling to capture my attention. I also felt that the pacing of the mystery itself was a bit off. More than once, the plot seemed to offer up convenient answers right away to whatever questions our heroines were currently struggling to answer. It felt less like they were solving a mystery and more like they were simply following a very clear breadcrumb trail to its inevitable conclusion.

Overall, I thought this book was ok. It delivers on the core concepts that readers of this subgenre are often looking for, and even brings in a few new areas of interest. However, nothing really rose to the top for me as I read. The heroines, the villains, the mystery itself: serviceable, but not necessarily very memorable.

Kate’s Rating 5: I liked the concept of an oddity collection and I liked exploring this time period, but for whatever reason this one didn’t really click with me.

Serena’s Rating 7: With some interesting new concepts, this will likely appeal to historical mystery readers, though I do think their is room for growth with regards to characterization and the pacing of the mystery itself.

Book Club Questions

  1. This book takes place in the English countryside in the early 1700s. Did the setting feel authentic to you?
  2. What were your thoughts on the portrayals of a society that is just starting to delve into the scientific process?
  3. Did Cecily’s motivation to solve the murder of Barnaby Maybe seem plausible?
  4. Did you like Meacan as a foil to Cecily?
  5. What were your thoughts on the motivations revealed by various players for their various actions throughout the story? How about the motivations of the murderer?
  6. What did you think of Alice’s character?
  7. Do you buy into the Agatha Christie comparisons to this novel? Do you agree or disagree?

Reader’s Advisory

“The Cabinets of Barnaby Mayne” is included on the Goodreads list “Historical Mystery 2020”.

Next Book Club Pick: “The Witch of Blackbird Pond” by Elizabeth George Speare

Kate’s Review: “The Reappearance of Rachel Price”

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Book: “The Reappearance of Rachel Price” by Holly Jackson

Publishing Info: Delacorte Press, April 2024

Where Did I Get This Book: I received an eARC from NetGalley.

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

Book Description: Lights. Camera. Lies.

18-year-old Bel has lived her whole life in the shadow of her mom’s mysterious disappearance. Sixteen years ago, Rachel Price vanished and young Bel was the only witness, but she has no memory of it. Rachel is gone, long presumed dead, and Bel wishes everyone would just move on.

But the case is dragged up from the past when the Price family agree to a true crime documentary. Bel can’t wait for filming to end, for life to go back to normal. And then the impossible happens. Rachel Price reappears, and life will never be normal again.

Rachel has an unbelievable story about what happened to her. Unbelievable, because Bel isn’t sure it’s real. If Rachel is lying, then where has she been all this time? And – could she be dangerous? With the cameras still rolling, Bel must uncover the truth about her mother, and find out why Rachel Price really came back from the dead . . .

From world-renowned author Holly Jackson comes a mind-blowing masterpiece about one girl’s search for the truth, and the terror in finding out who your family really is.

Review: Thank you to NetGalley for providing me with an eARC of this novel!

Holly Jackson is one of my must read authors, as I absolutely adored her “Good Girl’s Guide to Murder” series (note to self, pick up the novella based in that universe, it’s been on your shelf for far too long!). I also enjoyed her other standalone novel “Five Survive”. So I was, of course, super eager to get my mitts on her newest YA thriller “The Reappearance of Rachel Price”. NetGalley came through, and it’s no surprise that I read the book in about two sittings. Yep, we have another addictive thriller from Jackson on our hands!

Our cast of characters has a few to chew on, led by Bel, teenager whose mother Rachel Price disappeared sixteen years ago, and who has lived with her father Charlie and tried to cope with the feeling of loss and, in some ways, abandonment. Bel is not a likable character, but I imagine that it absolutely reflects the trauma and loss she has been dealing with ever since Rachel disappeared. And not only that, but being defined as the daughter of a notorious missing woman, and all the baggage that comes with it. So while she wasn’t exactly likable, I really did like her, and thought that she was a totally different voice from some of Jackson’s previous characters, and a convincing one at that. I liked how she interacted with those around her, whether it’s her fierce devotion to her family (especially her cousin Carter), or her flirtatious and snarky relationship with Ash, a young man on the camera crew of the documentary, or even her relationship with the newly re-appeared Rachel, as Bel refuses to accept that Rachel is just back and that is that. Her hostility towards her mother is very in character, but it also makes for a compelling reliability issue; after all, Bel feels a HUGE sense of abandonment and resentment towards Rachel (as until she reappeared it was unclear as to if she had just left or met with foul play), so it’s hard to know if her observations of potentially odd behavior are clouded by this. Rachel is also a fascinating character, as you are only seeing her through Bel’s perspective, and it’s hard to gauge what her deal is. Is it really Rachel Price who has returned? If it is her, is she telling the truth about her whereabouts, and if she is, why are there things that it seems like she’s hiding? I liked the weird cat and mouse dynamic that Bel and Rachel have in this book, as it makes the suspense that much higher. And I also have to shout out Ash, the quirky camera assistant whom Bel takes a shine to. He’s a goofy and kind ray of sunshine when she is an abrasive ball of resentment, and their dynamic is pretty cute.

As for the mystery elements, Jackson really knows how to keep her readers guessing. I have a terrible habit of trying to figure out the twists in any book that I’m reading instead of just going along for the ride, but in “The Reappearance of Rachel Price”, I found myself trying to guess and never quite getting it right. At first, when the documentary crew starts to film and we are learning about Bel and Rachel and the rest of the family, we find out that Bel thinks Rachel just ditched her, while the community thinks that Charlie had something to do with her disappearance (even though he was exonerated by a jury), so when Rachel reappears, and seems to be hiding things, we get a whole new level of mystery. She lays the puzzle pieces throughout the narrative and has enough misdirection throughout that for me the answer was just out of reach, and I while I was somewhat on the right track I was still surprised by elements of it. She also builds up the suspense in a very well paced way, and I found myself questioning and getting nervous in the same ways that Bel was as the story progressed. And while one of the final pieces and explanations/solutions didn’t QUITE fall into place for me and felt a little too easy (I won’t be spoiling it however), one small stumble is easily forgiven because everything else was so earned and meticulously planned for. I love a tightened up thriller that seems to cover everything, it makes it all the more satisfying once you reach the end.

“The Reappearance of Rachel Price” is another triumph from Holly Jackson! She is a powerhouse in Young Adult Thrillers, and I am already very much looking forward to whatever she comes up with next. I can hardly wait.

Rating 8: A suspenseful mystery with some really well done twists, “The Reappearance of Rachel Price” is another great thriller from Holly Jackson!

Reader’s Advisory:

“The Reappearance of Rachel Price” is included on the Goodreads list “2024’s Most Awaited Books”.

Serena’s Review: “Empire of Shadows”

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Book: “Empire of Shadows” by Jacquelyn Benson

Publishing Info: Crimson Fox Publishing, April 2024

Where Did I Get this Book: Netgalley

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

Book Description: One trifling little arrest shouldn’t have cost Ellie Mallory her job, but it’s only the latest in a line of injustices facing any educated woman with archaeological ambitions.

When Ellie stumbles across the map to a mysterious ancient city, she knows she’s holding her chance to revolutionize Pre-Colombian history. There’s just one teensy complication. A ruthless villain wants it, and Ellie is all that stands in his way.

To race him to the ruins—and avoid being violently disposed of—she needs the help of maverick surveyor Adam Bates, a snake-wrangling rogue who can’t seem to keep his dratted shirt on.

But there’s more than Ellie’s scholarly reputation (and life) on the line. Her enemies aren’t just looters. They’re after an arcane secret rumored to lie in the heart of the ruins, a mythical artifact with a power that could shake the world.

Between stealing trousers, plummeting over waterfalls, and trying not to fall in love with her machete-wielding partner, will Ellie be able to stop the oracle of a lost empire from falling into the wrong hands?

Empire of Shadows is the first book in Jacquelyn Benson’s smart, swashbuckling Raiders of the Arcana series. Read it now and dive into a rip-roaring historical fantasy adventure perfect for fans of Romancing the Stone and The Mummy.

Review: After the letdown that was “What the River Knows,” especially after learning that book had been hyped as a read-alike for “The Mummy,” I’ve found myself with a hankering to truly find a book that meets that bill. But while in the past this urge would typically draw me back towards whatever book comes next in the Amelia Peabody list, I strayed upon this book when perusing NetGalley and low and behold! There was “The Mummy” right there in the promotional material! And, luckily for me, this one more closely hit the mark, if not quite perfectly.

There are a few core pieces that I think readers are looking for when they pick up a book like this: action-packed adventure, a healthy dose of comedy, and a sweet, slow burn love story. This book delivers on all fronts! I will say that the book does take a bit to really get going, but when it does, boy, does it move. I think from a structure point, the book might have been better served if it had started a bit more forward in the story with some of Ellie’s backstory about how she came to be where she was being told through flashbacks. As it stands, it takes several chapters and a fairly significant chunk of text to get to the real meat of the story. I think the character work and overall comedic tone of the writing is strong enough to carry readers through, but I’ll admit to a temptation to skip ahead to the part where she finally gets to South America and meets Adam.

But like I said, once they team up and get started on their adventure, the pacing really moves. There are plenty of side adventures and mini action-packed set pieces that sweep the reader through the book, never knowing what will come next. There was also a good balance of action driven from the environment through which they’re travelling as well as from the villains of the story that they are racing from and against. On the last point, I was surprised with some of the directions the story took with this regard. There was a mid-point switch in the book that definitely took me by surprise, but I think worked very well to change up the structure of the story.

And, of course, I very much enjoyed both Ellie and Adam as characters. Again, I think Ellie’s backstory could have been given to us in a different manner, but I still liked what we got from her: a woman who is dissatisfied with the choices in front of her and, fairly recklessly but bravely, decides to take things into her own hands at last. Adam’s story is more subtle, but I also enjoyed some of the details of his own history and the way his life up to this point impacted his choices and priorities after meeting Ellie. I also really enjoyed their sweet, slow-burn romance. There are a few obstacles here and there, but this definitely falls on the cozy side of the genre, and I really loved it.

Overall, this was a thrilling adventure, and I loved every minute of it! I think it truly will appeal to fans of “The Mummy” and other romantic adventures of its ilk. Just make sure to give it a shot for the duration of the slightly slow start.

Rating 8: With adventure around every river bend and a swoon-worthy slow-burn romance at its heart, this book is sure to please readers looking for a “The Mummy” read-alike!

Reader’s Advisory:

“Empire of Shadows” isn’t on any Goodreads lists but it should be on “The Mummy” Inspired Books.

Kate’s Review: “The Monstrous Misses Mai”

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Book: “The Monstrous Misses Mai” by Van Hoang

Publishing Info: 47North, April 2024

Where Did I Get This Book: I received an ARC from the publisher.

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

Book Description: A determined young woman in 1950s Los Angeles walks a darker city than she ever imagined in a spellbinding novel about the power to make dreams come true―whatever the sacrifice.

Los Angeles brims with opportunity in 1959―though not for aspiring fashion designer Cordelia Mai Yin, the first-generation child of Vietnamese immigrants, who finds the city unkind to outsiders and as dispirited as her own family. When Cordi rents a cheap loft in an old apartment building, she quickly warms to kindred souls Tessa, Audrey, and Silly. They also want better things and have pasts they’d rather forget. That they all share the same middle name makes their friendship seem like destiny.

As supportive as they are of each other, it’s a struggle just to eke out a living, let alone hope to see their wishes for success come true. Until an ever-present and uncannily charming acquaintance of the landlord’s offers a solution to their problems. He promises to fulfill their every dream. All it takes is a little magic. And a small sacrifice.

As one surprisingly effective spell leads to another, their wishes get bigger. But so does the price they must pay. Amid the damaged seams of her life so far, Cordi must realize her own power in order to rip free, without losing everything she’s worked so hard to achieve.

Review: Thank you to 47North for sending me an ARC of this novel!

I love it when I am surprised by book mail in any form, but love it even more when I am surprised by book mail that I already had my eye on. This happened to me with “The Monstrous Misses Mai” by Van Hoang, as I had seen it on my various social media feeds as well as NetGalley, but hadn’t yet taken the plunge to try and get my hands on it. So when it arrived in my mailbox unprompted, I was pretty excited to see it! Between the cover and the idea of women making a magical bargain that they perhaps won’t be able to cash, the entire concept really intrigued me.

The strongest point of this book was our protagonist Cordi Mai Yin, a young Vietnamese American woman who has found herself on her own and estranged from her strict family in 1959 Los Angeles. She moves into an apartment with three other Asian American women, Tessa, Audrey, and Silly, who all also have the middle name of Mai, which feels like fate. As they all struggle due to their class, race, and gender, they meet a mysterious man who claims he can help them make their wishes come true with magic and a sacrifice. We see the story and trajectory of this decision through Cordi’s eyes, who is so desperate to succeed away from her family and as a fashion designer, and whose meek nature is bolstered through the success after the ritual. I liked Cordi a lot, as I found her complexity believable and sympathetic, and she was explored and fleshed out enough that I was invested in what happened to her as well as totally convinced of her choices and storyline beats. Her anxiety about making it on her own after being so dependent on a less than supportive family, mixed with the constant racism and misogyny she has to face in her day to day life, are also laid out in a convincing and realistic way.

The magical system in this book, known as lura, is a well thought out idea that was vague enough to be flexible but felt unique in enough ways that it didn’t feel run of the mill. I felt like there was a lot of “The Craft” in it, with four powerless women coming together to find their power, only to realize that it may have more consequences than they can actually fathom. While this is probably a solidly dark fantasy story, there are also some pretty nasty body horror elements that come from the lura spells taking their toll, with fingernails falling out, or hair shedding in clumps, or even just some gross transformational stuff that made the story have some definite horror elements. I also quite enjoyed the metaphors at hand with various luraists who have accrued power through indirect means, but still feel entitled to the lavish (if not hard to keep up) lifestyles that they have in front of them, and how that doesn’t necessarily apply to four Asian American women who have societal roadblocks due to racism and misogyny.

Overall, I enjoyed “The Monstrous Misses Mai”! It scratched all my dark fantasy and historical fiction itches, and I will certainly be seeing what Van Hoang brings next!

Rating 8: An engrossing dark fantasy with elements of body horror, “The Monstrous Misses Mai” has a bite, both in mythos and in metaphor.

Reader’s Advisory:

“The Monstrous Misses Mai” isn’t on any Goodreads lists as of now, but it would fit in on “Coven Book Club”.

Serena’s Review: “Funny Story”

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Book: “Funny Story” by Emily Henry

Publishing Info: Berkley, April 2024

Where Did I Get this Book: Edelweiss+

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

Book Description: Daphne always loved the way her fiancé Peter told their story. How they met (on a blustery day), fell in love (over an errant hat), and moved back to his lakeside hometown to begin their life together. He really was good at telling it…right up until the moment he realized he was actually in love with his childhood best friend Petra.

Which is how Daphne begins her new story: Stranded in beautiful Waning Bay, Michigan, without friends or family but with a dream job as a children’s librarian (that barely pays the bills), and proposing to be roommates with the only person who could possibly understand her predicament: Petra’s ex, Miles Nowak.

Scruffy and chaotic—with a penchant for taking solace in the sounds of heart break love ballads—Miles is exactly the opposite of practical, buttoned up Daphne, whose coworkers know so little about her they have a running bet that she’s either FBI or in witness protection. The roommates mainly avoid one another, until one day, while drowning their sorrows, they form a tenuous friendship and a plan. If said plan also involves posting deliberately misleading photos of their summer adventures together, well, who could blame them?

But it’s all just for show, of course, because there’s no way Daphne would actually start her new chapter by falling in love with her ex-fiancé’s new fiancée’s ex…right?

Review: I really don’t read contemporary romance other than my two exceptions: Emily Henry’s books and now, more and more, Ali Hazelwood’s books (though here we’ve had the best case scenario where she’s also written a paranormal romance!). But Henry was my first love as far as the genre goes, so I always schedule in time to review her new books when I see them coming out. Let’s dive in!

First of all, I would like to congratulate Emily Henry on her wise decision to make her heroine a children’s librarian. There is no better way to make yourself more beloved in librarians’ eyes (a profession that notably buys a lot of books both personally and professionally) than to write a character who works for libraries or in other ways goes on and on about how great libraries are. That said, I don’t think this is a cynical move by authors either. It’s not hard to imagine that most authors grew up with a love of reading, and often libraries play a central role in that development, and thus hold a lot of nostalgic power for adult writers.

All of that to say, beyond the central romance plot line, I loved reading about Daphne’s experience as a children’s librarian. I also appreciated that her profession was worked centrally into the story, and not just as another “character trait” that is just loosely draped on her shoulders but never shown. Indeed, the long work of putting together a large community event at her library serves as a time piece by which the rest of the book is measured. There were also some very cute moments where Daphne’s friends and love interest come to her storytimes and are all duly impressed. *sigh* Every children’s librarian’s dream: adults to appreciate the work that goes into storytime!

But, all of that aside, most readers will be picking this one up for the romance, not the library side plot. And, of course, Henry delivers with flying colors! I loved this take on fake dating (very different from her previous foray into this trope with “Happy Place”) as well as the forced proximity aspect of the story. All of the cute and satisfying scenes that readers often expect from these tropes play out in adorable, and yet still fresh-feeling, ways. However, I think the real strength to not only the romance but the book itself comes in the exploration of how these two characters are attempting to re-build their lives after their ex’s cheat on them with each other. It’s a kind of ridiculous concept at its core, and yet Henry tackles it all with such a careful and sincere manner that the reader can’t help but buy in totally. I also really enjoyed how much this re-building was seen on an individual level for both Daphne and Miles, beyond their coming together as a couple. It was nice to see them both grappling with their own life choices that lead them to where they were, rather than simply using a new relationship as a band-aid to not deal with the previous one.

I also appreciated the way that Petra and Peter were dealt with. They only make brief appearances here and there, but their presence was felt strongly through much of the narrative. But instead of taking the easy way out and writing them each as soulless villains, Henry was more realistic in their portrayal. They aren’t given a pass on their more despicable moments, but by the end of the novel, the reader, alongside Daphne and Miles, comes to view them more with pity as the rather broken people they are, than as horrible beings who would just hurt their loved ones for fun.

And, of course, I very much enjoyed Daphne and Miles and their romance. It builds up nicely, and I also felt that the necessary third act conflict felt believable and in line with both of their characters (rather than shoed-in for necessity’s sake, as you so often see in romance stories). I will say, that while I loved Miles, he probably wasn’t my favorite of Henry’s romantic leads. But this is just a personal preference thing for sure. He is often described as a bit of a “golden retriever” of a man, and as much as he’s lovable, I tend to gravitate towards the more serious romantic heroes, if given my druthers.

This was another solid romance from Emily Henry. It delivers in all of the areas I’ve come to expect from her, and I’m sure it will please all of her many fans as well as any new contemporary romance readers who pick it up!

Rating 9: Sweet, heart-wrenching, and achingly romantic, Henry proves once again why she’s the GOAT of contemporary romance!

Reader’s Advisory:

“Funny Story” can be found on this (and many others just like it) Goodreads list: 2024 Contemporary Romance Releases

Kate’s Review: “The Black Girl Survives In This One”

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Book: “The Black Girl Survives in This One” by Desiree S. Evans (Ed.) & Saraciea J. Fennell (Ed.)

Publishing Info: Flatiron Books, April 2024

Where Did I Get This Book: I received an eARC from NetGalley.

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

Book Description: Be warned, dear reader: The Black girls survive in this one.

Celebrating a new generation of bestselling and acclaimed Black writers, The Black Girl Survives in This One makes space for Black girls in horror. Fifteen chilling and thought-provoking stories place Black girls front and center as heroes and survivors who slay monsters, battle spirits, and face down death. Prepare to be terrified and left breathless by the pieces in this anthology.

The bestselling and acclaimed authors include Erin E. Adams, Monica Brashears, Charlotte Nicole Davis, Desiree S. Evans, Saraciea J. Fennell, Zakiya Dalila Harris, Daka Hermon, Justina Ireland, L. L. McKinney, Brittney Morris, Maritza & Maika Moulite, Eden Royce, and Vincent Tirado, with a foreword by Tananarive Due.

Review: Thank you to NetGalley for providing me with an eARC of this short stories collection!

2023 was the year of the Short Stories collection for me, as I tackled so many anthologies and had a pretty good time doing so. I think I can safely retire my previous disclaimers about me not being super into short story collections, as lately they have been working pretty well for me. Because of this, I had no hesitation when requesting “The Black Girl Survives in This One”, a YA horror anthology edited by Desiree S. Evans and Saraciea J. Fennell. I’m always looking for more diverse voices in my genres, and seeing a collection that showcases some well known Black YA horror authors was pretty neat. I was lucky enough to have my request granted, and once I dove in I found a pretty fun horror anthology.

As I am wont to do for short stories collections, I will pick my favorite three stories to spotlight, and then I will talk about the collection as a whole.

“Ghost Light” by Erin E. Adams: As a former theater kid who did both acting AND tech work (Saturday mornings were usually spent at the auditorium building and painting sets in high school), I knew that “Ghost Light” was going to be a favorite from the jump. Janine, a stage manager with ambitions and drive is running a show of “Macbeth”, and after a performance she is left behind to tend to the theater. While working, she meets up with the resident ghost. And that ghost is up to no good. This one was probably one of the less traditionally scary stories in the collection, as Janine is dealing more with a poltergeist and having to duke it out with her, but I really loved the action, and I really loved the way that Adams worked theater superstitions regarding ghost lights and The Scottish Play into this story. It made me all nostalgic for my theater days as a teenager.

“The Brides of Devil’s Bayou” by Desiree S. Evans: This was one of the stories that wove in dark historical themes with the horror elements, and it was my favorite to do so. Aja is a college freshman who has returned to her childhood home in the Louisiana Bayous, who has been haunted by a supposed family curse that takes the eldest daughters down the family line on their nineteenth birthdays. With her birthday approaching, Aja wants to confront her fears and prove to herself once and for all that it’s not real. But then she starts seeing visions of the ancestors who were lost, and wonders if the demon is coming for her after all. I am always a huge sucker for family curse and prophecy stories, but what I really enjoyed about this one is that Evans creates the lore around a female ancestor who was so desperate to escape slavery she makes a pact to sacrifice people down the family line. It makes for an added layer of tragedy and injustice, as well as a really solid metaphor for the familial and generational trauma Aja’s family has suffered because of slavery in America. It’s powerful (and scary) stuff.

“The Skittering Thing” by Monica Brashears: I think this was my favorite story in the collection, and for me it was definitely the scariest. Friends Sunny and Charlotte accept the invitation of their new classmate Ray to sleepover at her house. When the family brings up playing a game they call “Skitter”, which is a blackout version of hide and seek, Sunny and Charlotte find themselves in a dark house playing a weird game. And it may not be one of the new family members that is on the hunt in the dark. This was was so uneasy and so unsettling, the tension building higher and higher until it reaches a weird and disturbing conclusion. I really loved this one.

As a full collection, it was a bit more of a hit or miss endeavor for me. I think that part of this is that this is, at its heart, a YA collection, and while the authors are all talented story tellers and are really hitting the nail on the head when it comes to audience and message, young adult horror and I have a complicated relationship due to the fact I’m not the target audience. What I mean by that is that it always feels like YA has a tendency to feel a need to really spell things out for their readers, and it can sometimes feel hamfisted for me. But as noted, I’m not the target audience, and this kind of writing choice could very well go over better with a teenage reader than it does me.

“The Black Girl Lives in This One” is a fun collection that showcases some great authors. If you have teenage horror fans in your life, especially Black girls who may be sick of a lack of representation in the genre, this is the book to check out!

Rating 7: A solid horror collection written by and about Black women who will not be stopped, “The Black Girls Survives in This One” is scary and empowering.

Reader’s Advisory:

“The Black Girl Survives in This One” is included on the Goodreads lists “2024 Books by Black Authors”, and “Horror to Look Forward to in 2024”.

Highlights: April 2024

We may never have really gotten the snow of a real winter, we definitely had the short days, with darkness setting in as early as 4:30. Too early! But now, joy of joys, the time change has happened we now have an entire extra hour of daylight by which to read every evening. And, of course, we have more than enough books to get to! Here are a few we’re looking forward to this month!

Serena’s Picks

Book: “The Familiar” by Leigh Bardugo

Publication Date: April 9, 2024

Why I’m Interested: It seems like if you’re a fantasy reader, you’re required to be interested in this book! But, of course, there’s pretty good reason for that. Bardugo is probably one of the biggest superstar fantasy authors to be writing today, and it’s incredibly exciting whenever she announces a new book. Even more so when it’s one seemingly very out of her wheelhouse from what she’s written before. Here we have an adult historical fantasy novel that takes place during the Inquisition in Spain, a story that follows a chambermaid whose “small miracles” draw the eyes of powerful patrons. I, and pretty much every other fantasy reviewer out there, will be posting my thoughts on this one soon!

Book: “The Hemlock Queen” by Hannah Whitten

Publication Date: April 9, 2024

Why I’m Interested: I’ve really enjoyed everything I’ve read by Hannah Whitten, and the first book in this duology was no exception! Indeed, it went above and beyond and proved to be one of those rare books where I wasn’t completely turned off by the love triangle at the heart. With betrayals, new kings, and the power of the long-dead gods ever-growing, this books has a lot of ground to cover after the events of the last. This is also one of those rare sequels where I’m really not sure where the story is even going in the long run; but I can’t wait to find out!

Book: “A Letter to the Luminous Deep” by Sylvie Cathrall

Publication Date: April 24, 2024

Why I’m Interested: After reading and loving the two “Emily Wilde” books over the last few years, I’m seriously reconsidering my previously-held belief that I don’t really like epistolary stories. With that in mind, this book, billed as a similar read to “Emily Wilde,” that features to academics piecing together what happened to their respective siblings by perusing their letters, suddenly sounded much more interesting! I also am intrigued by the underwater setting and a world made up largely of oceans. Doesn’t hurt that I think the cover is lovely as well!

Kate’s Picks

Book: “Immortal Pleasures” by V. Castro

Publication Date: April 16, 2024

Why I’m Interested: I am a pretty big V. Castro fan, as I find her horror stories to be compelling and intriguing twists on expected themes. So I am, of course, amped as hell to read her take on a vampire tale. And not just any vampire tale, but one that makes La Malinche, the Nahua woman who acted as a translator for Cortés during the Spanish massacre of the Aztecs. After her death, La Malinche is reborn as immortal Malinalli, whose new power drives her around the world to reclaim artifacts stolen from her people. And while in Ireland she starts to explore a more sensual side of herself when she meets two mortal men. This has the potential to be insane in a good way, and given that the cover is just SCREAMING Salma Hayek in “From Dusk Til Dawn” I’m even more on board.

Book: “First Light” by Liz Kerin

Publication Date: April 23, 2024

Why I’m Interested: Another vampire book? Sure, why not!! Especially because this is the follow up to one of my favorite reads last year, “Night’s Edge”, where a young woman had to deal with taking care of her vampiric mother and all the codependence and baggage that came with it. After the events of that book, Mia, set in her grief, has decided that it’s time to track down and take revenge on the man who turned her mother into a vampire. Her need for vengeance is driving her, but the closer she gets to those she hunts, the more she starts to wonder if perhaps she herself is being hunted. I loved Mia in the previous book and couldn’t wait to see how her story was going to keep going, and now it’s finally time to find out.

Book: “Against the Darkness” by Kendare Blake

Publication Date: April 9, 2024

Why I’m Interested: Another vampire story?! AND another highly anticipated sequel?! This month clearly has a theme, and we are now coming to the end of the “In Every Generation” series, where Kendare Blake has written a follow up to “Buffy The Vampire Slayer” with a new slayer, new scoobies, and familiar faces. And while I’m not ready to say goodbye, I have been waiting for this. Frankie Rosenberg and her friends have been holding things together in Sunnydale, with her being a slayer witch as they hope that Buffy and the other slayers will find their way back from a parallel dimension. But with The Darkness starting to take over, friendships fracturing, and her mother Willow starting to fall into old disturbing patterns, Frankie may have to rely on herself to stop a new Hellmouth from taking over. Will Frankie save the day? Will Willow be able to stave off the dark magic? WILL SPIKE AND BUFFY BE REUNITED?!?! I guess we will have to see. I can’t wait.

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