Serena’s Review: “Murder at Midnight”

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Book: “Murder at Midnight” by Katharine Schellman

Publishing Info: Crooked Lane Books, September 2023

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

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

Previously Reviewed: “The Body in the Garden” and “Silence in the Library” and “Death at the Manor”

Book Description: Perfect for fans of Deanna Raybourn and Ashley Weaver, when a body is found shot to death after an unexpected snowstorm, Lily Adler quickly realizes that some people will stop at nothing to bury their secrets this holiday season.

Regency widow Lily Adler is looking forward to returning to Hertfordshire to spend time with the family of her late husband. She is also excited that Captain Jack Hartley, her friend and confidante, will be visiting his own family after a long voyage at sea. With winter quickly approaching, Lily is most excited at the prospect of a relaxing and enjoyable Christmastide season away from the schemes and secrets she witnessed daily in London.

At a neighborhood ball, she soon becomes reacquainted with a friend of her late husband, Peter Coleridge, a wealthy man who not only manages Irish investments, but also a fund that most of the locals of Hertfordshire take part in. There, she also learns Jack’s sister, Amelia, is the subject of much of the neighborhood gossip—although Amelia refuses to explain if there is any truth to it. For a brief moment, Lily wonders if she ever really left London.

When a snowstorm forces several guests, including both the Adlers and the Hartleys, to stay the night, Lily quickly deduces that all is not well this holiday season. In the morning, a maid discovers the body of a guest in the poultry yard, shot to death—and he is the same man that is scandalously linked to Amelia.

Lily accepts the offer to assist in the investigation, but will she find more than what she bargained for the more she digs? Or will she herself be buried deep within the snow?

Review: Time for another historical mystery review! At this point, I’m really only up-to-date with this series and Sherry Thomas’s “Charlotte Holmes” series. There’s just not enough time in the day to get to all of the books I want, and, unfortunately when push comes to shove, I’ll often prioritize SFF over historical fiction and mysteries. But I do seem to be able to manage to keep up with these two series. I was particularly interested in this latest Lily Adler book due to the fact that while I had enjoyed all of the books up to that point, I had real problems with the latest one. So in my mind, the quality of this latest book would be really telling for my continued enjoyment of the series! And I’m happy to report that while we may not have recaptured the highs of the first book or two, this one is a solid entry in the series and enough of a return to form to ensure my continued reading of these books.

There was a lot to like in this new Lily Adler book. For one thing, I really love this style of mystery, where a large group of suspects (and victims!) are trapped in a location together and must solve a murder. The format allows for a large cast of characters, tons of red herrings that are believable, and much emphasis placed on interpersonal relationships, something that I always focus on in my reading. I also enjoyed the exploration of the group dynamic, which we see done expertly here. As Lily and her companions go longer and longer trapped together in this house, we see the breakdown of conventions and norms, the reduction of individuals to their more basic instincts, and the tendency for people to circle the wagons and “other” anyone who doesn’t fit within strict definitions of right and wrong. For her part, Lily Adler sweeps through these tensions with grace and a practical eye for how these dynamics can relate to guilt and innocence, misplaced fear or rightfully felt concern to hide one’s involvement in a crime. I also really enjoyed the fact that while I was able to piece together some clues to the mystery, there were many other twists and turns that I didn’t spot coming!

I also really enjoyed the continued interpersonal and romantic dynamics. In the previous book, a new love interest was introduced, and while I didn’t have any issues with this character on his own, I was already firmly in the corner of Lily and Jack. So of course I was beyond pleased when Jack himself returned in this book and played a fairly central role. But I also was surprised by how much I enjoyed the continued exploration of Lily’s relationship with this other suitor. The relationship took a few surprising turns, and I was impressed by the way the author used this relationship to highlight the true choices that women faced in this time, even when partnered to a good man by every definition.

I also really enjoyed meeting some new characters, notably Jack’s younger sister Amelia who plays a central role in this story. We also get some POV chapters from her, which I very much enjoyed. Fans of the series are sure to enjoy this one!

Rating 8: All in all, this was an excellent entry in the series. I was glad to see the return of fan favorite characters, and was pleased to see an improvement in the mystery itself.

Reader’s Advisory:

“Murder at Midnight” can be found on this Goodreads list: Historical Mystery 2023

Kate’s Review: “What Kind of Mother”


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Read the full disclosure here.

Book: “What Kind of Mother” by Clay McLeod Chapman

Publishing Info: Quirk Books, September 2023

Where Did I Get This Book: I received an ARC at ALAAC23

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

Book Description: After striking out on her own as a teen mom, Madi Price is forced to return to her hometown of Brandywine, Virginia, with her seventeen-year-old daughter. With nothing to her name, she scrapes together a living as a palm reader at the local farmers market.

It’s there that she connects with old high school flame Henry McCabe, now a reclusive local fisherman whose infant son, Skyler, went missing five years ago. Everyone in town is sure Skyler is dead, but when Madi reads Henry’s palm, she’s haunted by strange and disturbing visions that suggest otherwise. As she follows the thread of these visions, Madi discovers a terrifying nightmare waiting at the center of the labyrinth—and it’s coming for everyone she holds dear.

Combining supernatural horror with domestic suspense into a visceral exploration of parental grief, What Kind of Mother cements Clay McLeod Chapman’s reputation as a “star” (Vulture) and “the twenty-first century’s Richard Matheson” (Richard Chizmar, Chasing the Boogeyman.)

Review: Thank you to Quirk Books for providing me with this ARC at ALAAC23!

One of my missions at ALAAC this past summer was to see if I could get my hands on an ARC of Clay McLeod Chapman’s “What Kind of Mother”. After reading “Ghost Eaters” and being wholly blown away and freaked out, his newest book was a must read. I was very happy when I did, indeed, get an ARC, and while I knew it was a high priority read, I would have to prepare myself. For one, Chapman is absolutely no holds barred brutal in his horror stories when he wants to be, whether that be seen through horrifying imagery, or soul shattering pathos. And for another, the themes of this story include a missing and presumed dead child. So combine the two and I’m probably going to be wrecked. But hey, with enough emotional preparation and steeling of oneself, surely I could come out of this relatively emotionally unscathed, right?

Ha ha ha, WRONG. (source)

Chapman has once again knocked me off my feet because his ability to pull out so many elements of multiple genres and apply it to this horror tale is so, so phenomenal. I knew that this was at its heart a horror story, but he also effortlessly brings in glimmers of dark fantasy thriller, with our protagonist Madi. Madi is down on her luck and trying to start over back in her home town, with her teenage daughter in tow (the daughter whose impending birth made a pregnant and teenage Madi flee this town in the first place). She sets up shop reading palms and cold reading clients to tell them what they want to hear. But when she reconnects with old flame Henry, whose own son Skyler disappeared a few years prior when he was a baby, she realizes that she is having actual visions of Skyler, and may be able to find him. As a dark fantasy thriller this is already great. So when Chapman also added in a slight pathos driven romance between the former lovers, as they are both at the end of their ropes and connecting over Skyler’s potential presence. I liked seeing these two desperate characters and seeing them team up, and fall into something potentially emotionally unhealthy. Madi and Henry both have a lot of pain that manifests in different ways, and their complicated personalities and relationship echoes what I expect from gritty complex woman centered thrillers. That alone drew me in. It’s suspenseful and poignant, as the idea of a child going missing is a complete nightmare to me and it felt like Henry’s grief and guilt was pretty spot on.

And then Chapman threw me for a loop that I didn’t at all expect, and it completely fucked me up. I don’t want to go into any spoilers here because I think that it needs to be a surprise. But I will talk about the horror elements in some terms that keep it a bit close to the vest. Firstly, so much nasty body horror. And what I loved about it was that this book isn’t super gory, but Chapman still made me cringe and squirm with some of the descriptions. It’s also incredibly creative in the direction it goes and what it means for the characters who are dealing with it. So the imagery is definitely freaky and unsettling. But then there is the more visceral and personal horror of this book, and that is the grief, fear, and guilt that comes with a missing child for any parent that is going to be reading this story. Chapman really taps into that deep seated horror (one that I absolutely have when it comes to my daughter) and twists the knife, creating moments that are gut wrenching either because of the despair involved, or because as a parent there were moments where something just awful was happening… and I couldn’t really assure myself that I wouldn’t be behaving in a similar way were I in a similar situation. These were the moments that just gutted me, and as the story unfolded in a new way that explored parental devotion and inability to either seek or accept closure, the more disturbed I became. This one is going to sit with me for a long time because of these moments. Goddamn you, Clay McLeod Chapman (I say that mostly in awe of you, sir).

“What Kind of Mother” is just brutal, but it’s a must read for horror fans. Clay McLeod Chapman is an up and coming powerhouse in horror literature, and if you haven’t checked him out yet, now is the time. But be warned: you aren’t going to see crabs the same way after reading this.

Rating 9: Devastating, horrifying, and a brutal depiction of parental grief, guilt, and devotion. I’ll be thinking about “What Kind of Mother” for awhile.

Reader’s Advisory:

“What Kind of Mother” is included on the Goodreads lists “2023 Gothic”, and “Horror to Look Forward to in 2023”.

Serena’s Review: “Godkiller”

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Book: “Godkiller” by Hannah Kaner

Publishing Info: Harper Voyager, September 2023

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

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

Book Description: Kissen kills gods for a living, and she enjoys it. That is until she finds a god she cannot kill: Skediceth, god of white lies, who is connected to a little noble girl on the run.

Elogast fought in the god war, and helped purge the city of a thousand shrines before laying down his sword. A mysterious request from the King sends him racing back to the city he destroyed.

On the way he meets a godkiller, a little girl and a littler god, who cannot find out about his quest.

Review: I was drawn in by the fantastic cover art for this novel, but I stayed for the book description of a young woman whose mission in life is hunting down gods. I’m always a sucker for fantasy novels that deal with wars with gods as I think the themes of religion and fantasy play so well together, each dealing with belief and how that shapes an individual, for good and bad. And this one definitely lived up to my expectations!

While the above book description mentions both Kissen and Elogast, I still went into it with the expectation that this was a single POV story, probably because the title implies that the godkiller, Kissen, would be the main character. And, while I would argue that she still is, the story is in fact not only a dual POV between Kissen and Elogast, but also includes the young girl, Inara, and, surprisingly, the god Skedi as well!

And while Skedi by far has the fewest chapters, I do think his inclusion was integral to the success behind the general premise of this story. The prologue and Kissen’s story set up one clear narrative with regards to gods: they are dangerous and bring only harm to those around them. But Elogast’s history and perspective, and Skedi’s very existence, complicate this narrative. What’s more, Skedi is not a perfect rebuttal, being a very flawed individual in his own right. Instead, his POV serves to highlight the chaotic nature of the gods in this world and to blow wide the discussion regarding inherent nature and how that plays into the ways we regard those around us.

I also really enjoyed the relationships that are built up in this story between all of the different characters. Yes, there is the slow-burn romance between Kissen and Elogast, always a winning feature for me who enjoys a love story included in my fantasy. But all of the characters had nuanced and interesting relationships between them as well! Kissen and Inara, with Kissen’s long-standing dislike of children being slowly worn down in the face of Inara’s strength and persistence. Between Inara and Skedi, we see a long-standing friendship tested with betrayal and misunderstanding. Between Skedi and Kissen, we see how immediate distrust and bias can push people (and gods!) into harming those around them and betraying their own most basic moral baselines. For his part, Elogast’s relationships to all of these characters was the most straight-forward. But I think his more steady character type served as a necessary foundation upon which to anchor much of the chaos created by those around him.

I will say, however, that my one big quibble came down to the geography of this world. This is such a weird, obsessive point that I know many people won’t even care about, but for me, I kept hyper fixating on it throughout the book. The story includes a map in the beginning (yay maps!) and it lays out one of the major cities as across a large body of water from the rest of the world. And then much of the story itself it taken up with the characters travelling to this city. And yet, it seemed like they travelled completely by land, were able to spot the city from quite a distance across land, and generally never acknowledged the layout of the map. I could very well have been missing something, but throughout the book, I kept getting confused about their actual route and looking at the map and just being even more confused. I did read an ARC, so maybe the artwork or these references weren’t finalized (though the word “references” underplays how much the geography plays into the main storyline). Weird quibble, but I couldn’t complete my review without mentioning it as it did take up a serious amount of my reading time, flipping back and forth between the text and the map.

Overall, I really enjoyed this book! It felt refreshing in an often-crowded genre, while also relying on some tried and true character types. There were some legitimately surprising twists and turns towards the end of the novel that lay out an interesting path forward for the next book.

Rating 8: A deceptively simple premise belies the depths to be found in this fantastic fantasy debut tackling themes of religion, family, and what makes up one’s very nature.

Reader’s Advisory:

“Godkiller” isn’t on any Goodreads lists, but it should be on Gods and Goddesses Books

Kate’s Review: “Beneath the Surface”

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Book: “Beneath the Surface” by Kaira Rouda

Publishing Info: Thomas & Mercer, September 2023

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: On a weekend voyage, the power-hungry children of an aging billionaire are unprepared for a storm of deceptions in a novel about ruthless family ambition by USA Today bestselling author Kaira Rouda.

You are cordially invited to an overnight voyage on the Splendid Seas.

An invitation to Catalina Island from billionaire CEO Richard Kingsley. For his sons, Ted and John, and their wives, it’s an opportunity to curry favor, gain control of a real estate empire, and secure their family’s futures. For the controlling patriarch, succession is a contest. He and his newest wife won’t make it an easy win.

Then Richard’s estranged live-wire daughter, Sibley, crashes the party. She’s the least of the night’s surprises. As the stakes for the inheritance of the Kingsley legacy are raised, the beautiful waters of the Pacific look more like a menacing illusion.

Let the games begin for a family who has everything money can buy, and has used lies, deception, and more to keep it. This weekend one of them will be crowned heir. One is in line to lose everything. That’s the plan. But in the coming storm, so much can go dangerously wrong.

Review: Thank you to Thomas & Mercer for sending me an ARC of this novel!

Though I was late to the game when it came to the show “Succession”, my husband and I have been making our way through and enjoying it as a show that we can watch together and be captivated and mortified by the horribleness of the billionaire class. We haven’t finished it but I know basically everything thanks to the Internet, and it boggles the mind how there is pretty much no one to like, and yet I am so invested in their nonsense. So when “Beneath the Surface” by Kaira Rouda came my way and had comparisons to “Succession” to boot, I knew that I wanted to read this book. Bring on more wealthy people behaving just abhorrently, evidently I can’t get enough.

You mean jumping into a thriller with toxic family dynamics and gratuitous displays of wealth to compensate? Yes Roman, we ARE doing this. (source)

If you are still kind of suffering from “Succession” withdrawals, I do think that “Beneath the Surface” will scratch that itch at least a little bit. It’s a similar set up of an uber-wealthy family dealing with the impending stepping aside of the head of the family company, and the children who all want the coveted CEO spot. In this case it’s real estate tycoon Richard Kingsley, and his children are uptight John, charismatic but duplicitous Ted, and the estranged and wild Sibley. While it only takes place over one weekend and doesn’t rise to the same complex and unnerving heights as the Roys in many ways, I did like seeing the awful kids try and gain favor with their awful father while his awful fourth wife looks on with superiority as well as her own duplicity. I mean, I love this kind of soapy and catty drama as bad people are bad to each other, and “Beneath the Surface” is fun enough that it reads fast and kept me going and awaiting every twist and turn with bated breath. I just really enjoy all the drama that comes with rich people behaving badly (unless we get a “Boar on the Floor” kinda deal like on “Succession” and then I just get uncomfortable), and “Beneath the Surface” has a lot of that.

I will say that the characters, however, could have been more fleshed out. We had a few first person perspective from a few of the characters. There’s Paige, the wife of second son Ted who has been supportive and patient for years, putting her own career on hold to raise their children and to bolster her husband. There’s John, the oldest son who feels like the company should be his birthright but has stumbled enough that his father is disappointed and reluctant. There’s Serena, Richard’s fourth wife who is comfortable being a trophy wife but has her own reasons to want security and power within the company hierarchy. And Richard himself, who enjoys pitting his children against each other. And none of them really move beyond two dimensional archetypes of what we would expect from characters such as these. I think that Paige was the most well rounded and complicated, as I greatly enjoyed her chapters and found her to be the most engaging, but most everyone else hit each point of their roles without growth, or if not growth, glimpses into the layers that we are being made privy to on this tense and high stakes yacht weekend. And as for the supporting characters who don’t have perspective chapters, they are pretty standard and static.

All in all, “Beneath the Surface” is entertaining and fast paced. I enjoyed the plot, and while I needed more from the characters, if this does indeed turn into a series I would PROBABLY keep reading just to see where some of these characters end up, and how their story trajectory changes.

Rating 7: A catty and sudsy plot make for an engaging read, although none of the characters really moved outside the boxes they started in.

Reader’s Advisory:

“Beneath the Surface” is included on the Goodreads list “Can’t Wait Books of 2023”.

Highlights: September 2023

The official signal of summer winding down has happened hear in Minnesota. No, not Labor Day, the end of the Minnesota State Fair. When the ridiculous amounts of fried food, farm animals, and quirky crafts wrap up, you can officially feel Fall in the air. For Kate that means the start of the beloved spooky season. For Serena that means bracing herself for the not so far away winter. And for both of them it means school starting for some of their kids! Regardless, it also means a new list of books we’re looking forward to!

Serena’s Picks

Book: “Godkiller” by Hannah Kaner

Publication Date: September 12, 2023

Why I’m Interested: Um, the cover is awesome? Also, I just love fantasy stories that deal with gods and wars and fantasy religions. There just such a depth of potential in plots like these. Add a tough-as-nails godkiller, a young girl who just happens to be tethered to a small god, and disillusioned knight and I’m all in! This one has been out in the UK since January, so there is already a decent amount of positive buzz around it, which just makes me all the more excited!

Book: “A Study in Drowning” by Ava Reid

Publication Date: September 19, 2023

Why I’m Interested: While I struggled with some of the darkness of Reid’s most recent fantasy novel, I still very much enjoy her writing style in general. Add to that a few tags like “gothic fantasy” and “academic rivals” and this was a no brainer for me! The story follows a young woman who is commissioned to come to a mysterious manor to work on architectural designs. While there, however, dark and confusing things begin happening and the only one available to help is her academic rival. Expect a review of this one soon!

Book: “The Fragile Threads of Magic” by V. E. Schwab

Publication Date: September 26, 2023

Why I’m Interested: I feel like I’ve been going on and on about beautiful covers a lot recently. Well, here I am to balance that out. Man, do I not like this cover. Not only do I not like it in its own right, but its one of those covers that makes me mad because the entire first trilogy was done in a style that I really loved! So not only are they going a lesser route here, but now my books won’t match! And no, absolutely NOT will I be persuaded to “upgrade” my entire series to this style. All of that of course has nothing to do with the fact that this is probably my most anticipated book of the year. I absolutely adored “The Shades of Magic” trilogy, and it ended in such a satisfying way that I was frankly shocked to discover that Schwab was not only returning to this world but to the same characters, several years later! Can’t wait for this one!

Kate’s Picks

Book: “Your Lonely Nights Are Over” by Adam Sass

Publication Date: September 12, 2023

Why I’m Interested: I really enjoyed Adam Sass’s thriller “Surrender Your Sons”, and when I saw that he was writing a queer teen slasher novel I, of course, had to get my hands on it! Along with that, anything described as “Scream” meets “Clueless” is going to be on my radar. Enter “Your Lonely Nights Are Over”! Dearie and Cole are queer best friends who feel two against the world in their high school, their friendship notorious, especially after ruffling feathers in the school’s Queer Club. But when a long dormant serial killer known as Mr. Sandman starts killing again, and is targeting the other members of the Queer Club, Dearie and Cole have to use their wits to try and find out who is behind the murders. Not only as potential victims, but as people that others think aren’t so innocent. It sounds promising!

Book: “Earthdivers (Vol. 1): Kill Columbus” by Stephen Graham Jones and Davide Gianfelice (Ill.)

Publication Date: September 19, 2023

Why I’m Interested: Obviously one big factor is that Stephen Graham Jones is one of my favorite horror authors. But another is that this is his foray into graphic novels! I also got to not only get this book at ALAAC23, but I got to meet Jones and he was a delight. So yes, “Earthdivers (Vol. 1): Kill Columbus” is definitely a book I’ve been looking forward to. In a not super distant future on a dying Earth, a group of Indigenous people find a strange cave that can transport people back in time. They research and realize that the moment things went wrong is when America was founded, and one of them is chosen to sent back in time to stop it from happening. Which means he has to kill Christopher Columbus. Jones sure isn’t holding back, and I know that it’s going to be amazing.

Book: “What Kind of Mother” by Clay McLeod Chapman

Publication Date: September 12, 2023

Why I’m Interested: “Ghost Eaters” was a favorite read of mine last year, and I knew that I was going to jump all over whatever Clay McLeod Chapman followed it up with. So I was amped when I saw “What Kind of Mother” hitting the book spheres. And also terrified. Because I know that Chapman goes hard. And I knew that it had themes that can get under my skin. Madi returns to her hometown after leaving during her teenage pregnancy years before, making ends meet by palm reading. When she reconnects with old boyfriend Henry, she learns that his own son Skyler disappeared a few years before when he was just a baby. Then she starts having visions of Skyler, and wonders if she can actually find him. But this is Clay McLeod Chapman, and you just know it’s going to be far more than that.

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

Serena’s Review: “House of Marionne”

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

Book: “House of Marionne” by J. Elle

Publishing Info: Razorbill, August 2023

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

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

Book Description: 17 year-old Quell has lived her entire life on the run. She and her mother have fled from city to city, in order to hide the deadly magic that flows through Quell’s veins.

Until someone discovers her dark secret.

To hide from the assassin hunting her, and keep her mother out of harm’s way, Quell reluctantly inducts into a debutante society of magical social elites called the Order that she never knew existed. If she can pass their three rites of membership, mastering their proper form of magic, she’ll be able to secretly bury her forbidden magic forever.

If caught, she will be killed.

But becoming the perfect debutante is a lot harder than Quell imagined, especially when there’s more than tutoring happening with Jordan, her brooding mentor and— assassin in training.

When Quell uncovers the deadly lengths the Order will go to defend its wealth and power, she’s forced to choose: embrace the dark magic she’s been running from her entire life or risk losing everything, and everyone, she’s grown to love.

Still, she fears the most formidable monster she’ll have to face is the one inside.

Brimming with ballgowns and betrayal, magic and mystery, decadence and darkness, House of Marionne is perfect for readers who crave morally gray characters, irresistible romance, dark academia, and a deeply intoxicating and original world.

Review: Well, I’m predictable at least. If you give me a beautiful cover and mention the words “dark academia” in your book summary, there’s a decent change I’ll check out your book. Also, “Bridgerton” season three has been taking foreeeever to come out, so the reference to ball gowns and high society is a nice little perk to my current interests. Unfortunately, this was one of those cases where a lot of excellent individual ingredients were thrown into a single pot, but the end result was a mess.

But, first, some of the good individual ingredients. I liked the writing style, overall. It did fall a bit on the younger side of YA for my own personal preferences, but everything ran smoothly and I had a clear idea of the scenes we were exploring and the characters making up this world. It seems silly to point out, but whenever a writer manages to tell a story without throwing me out of the narrative with awkward word choices or jilted or repetitive sentence structure, that’s already a great win, and Elle manages all of that here. Overall, I was pretty into the book in the first little bit. I also like a lot of the ideas that make up this world, but this is also where things began to fall apart a bit.

Once we get to the magical world of it all, we quickly discover there are several different societies with different histories and priorities of magic. Luckily for me, I always check out the end of a book, author’s note, etc. before really starting a book, so I was able to discover an appendix with the histories of all of these houses. However, unless a reader also happened to look at the back of the book like I did here, the world-building given in the actual text is very confusing and sparse. The details provided in the appendix were sometimes key to understanding some of the politics of this world, and by hiding this information at the end of the book, it presents a challenging reading experience.

There were also aspects of the world and magic that seemed fairly arbitrary. For example, the women have these tiaras that are essentially part of their heads? And the men have masks? And somehow these are connected to their magical abilities? It’s all very obscure and never explained in any way. Instead, it’s easy to see the author simply picturing this world in this way, and then plopping it down in the book without much support for the entire concept. There were other aspects of the world and magic like this that, as I went a long, became increasingly frustrating to just roll with.

I also really struggled with Quell. Fairly early on, she comes across as a very unserious person who isn’t appreciating the reality of her situation. We’re told that her mom has had them on the run her entire life to protect Quell from those who would harm her for her strange magic. But then the second they are separated, Quell chooses to run straight to the very people her mother has been running from. It’s a bizarre choice, and one that isn’t well supported unless Quell is just a dunderhead. From there, she proceeds to become a Mary Sue, quickly conquering magical tasks that others have been struggling with for years at the school. The were some legitimate twists and interesting choices that Quell makes towards the end of the book, but these were too few, too late.

As is often the case, if I struggle with the main character, I also struggle with the romance. For what it’s worth, I didn’t actively dislike the romantic interest. He was perfectly fine for the type of character he was supposed to be. But my increasing frustration with Quell made my interest in the progression of this romance to wane fairly quickly. Again, there were some interesting turns towards the end in this regard as well. But also again, it wasn’t enough to save my overall reading experience.

Rating 6: A frustrating main character and confusing world left me feeling fairly turned off on this YA fantasy.

Reader’s Advisory:

“House of Marionne” can be found on these Goodreads lists: YA Releases September 2023 and Can’t Wait Sci-Fi/Fantasy of 2023

Kate’s Review: “The Reunion”

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

Book: “The Reunion” by Kit Frick

Publishing Info: Margaret K. McElderry Books, August 2023

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: Eleven Mayweathers went on vacation. Ten came home.

It’s been years since the fragmented Mayweather clan was all in one place, but the engagement of Addison and Mason’s mom to the dad of their future stepbrother, Theo, brings the whole family to sunny Cancún, Mexico, for winter break. Add cousin Natalia to the mix, and it doesn’t take long for tempers to fray and tensions to rise. A week of forced family “fun” reveals that everyone has something to hide, and as secrets bubble to the surface, no one is safe from the fallout. By the end of the week, one member of the reunion party will be dead—and everyone’s a suspect.

The Peacekeeper: Addison needs a better hiding place. The Outsider: Theo just wants to mend fences. The Romantic: Natalia doesn’t want to talk about the past. The Hothead: Mason needs to keep his temper under control.

It started as a week in paradise meant to bring them together. But the Mayweathers are about to learn the hard way that family bonding can be deadly.

Review: Thank you to Margaret K. McElderry Books for sending me an ARC of this novel!

Though I had never really prioritized my travel plans to include a visit to an all inclusive resort in Mexico, I found myself at one this past March when one of our high school friends got married near Puerta Vallarta. I ended up having a good time, outside of awkward chit chat with high school classmates I hadn’t seen for decades and a complete emotional meltdown during the reception due to being fully overwhelmed by EVERYTHING (which sent me to our room to sob it out before hitting the dance floor again, woooo!). But overall it was a very surreal experience, being a very controlled environment with so many amenities, all behind a wall with armed guards at the front. I was thinking a lot about this as I read “The Reunion” by Kit Frick; there’s a veneer that just doesn’t quite gel with the dramas of reality. And in the case of the book, things kind of go full “White Lotus”. Which I, of course, love.

Your enjoyment of this book is probably more guaranteed than your enjoyment of any White Lotus Resort given their, uh, histories… (source)

The story structure is told through first person POVs of the teenage members (and soon to be members) of the wealthy and privileged Mayweather family. We have Addison, a high strung people pleaser who is jumpier than usual. There’s Mason, Addison’s twin who is hotheaded and angry about his mother’s upcoming marriage. Then there’s Theo, the soon to be step sibling of Addison and Mason who is already on thin ice with Mason due to previous interactions. And Natalia, Mason and Addison’s cousin who is trying to have a good time and trying to avoid the twins due do some past unpleasantness. It means that everyone is a possible suspect, as well as a possible victim, as right off the bat we find out that someone at this engagement party between the parents of Theo and The Twins goes missing. I liked getting into the minds of all the teens, as they are all unreliable but also insightful in their own ways. Frick builds up the tension between all of them, with past grievances intermingling with in the moment stress, as well as misunderstandings that sometimes feel a bit farfetched and yet never tread towards wholly unbelievable due to momentary circumstances, or personal biases at play. She knows how to toy with the characters personalities based on their backgrounds, and to find depth and complexity in at least a few of them (mostly Addison and Theo; Addison is a perpetual people pleaser who is frantic to keep everyone happy and it is starting to wear at her, while Theo is NOT wealthy, does NOT relate to his future step siblings, and is very, very anxious surrounded by opulence he is not used to). I did find myself very invested in who was going to be revealed as the missing person, and if any of them were up to no good leading up to it. And actively dreading the answers to that for at least a few of the characters, which goes to show that Frick did a good job.

The mystery itself is also pretty well done. Frick goes at her own pace in laying out clues, whether it’s slowly revealing the details of the missing person or tossing breadcrumbs of info from each character perspective. We also get supplemental material in more epistolary forms, whether it’s guest information updates from the resort itself, or police transcripts as the investigation starts to ramp up and suspects start to be focused in on. Frick has a lot of well done hints as well as a lot of well placed red herrings, with so much well laid doubt and misdirection throughout that it really does make for some good twists and reveals when the moment is right. I was so caught up in the fast pace I mostly read this book in one sitting. Yeah, it was that hard to put down, which is exactly what I would want from a book that has been compared to “The White Lotus” (not just by me, mind you!).

“The Reunion” is a fast paced mystery that is the perfect read as summer comes to an end! If you have one more beach vacation in store Labor Day, this is the one to bring.

Rating 8: With well written first person perspectives and a suspenseful mystery, “The Reunion” is an engaging thriller from Kit Frick!

Reader’s Advisory:

“The Reunion” is included on the Goodreads list “YA Summer Thrillers”.

Serena’s Review: “The Phoenix King”

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Book: “The Phoenix King” by Aparna Verma

Publishing Info: Orbit, August 2023

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

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

Book Description: The Ravani kingdom was born of a prophecy, carved from unforgiving desert sands and ruled by the Ravence bloodline: those with the power to command the Eternal Fire.

Elena Aadya is the heir to the throne—and the only Ravence who cannot wield her family’s legendary magic. As her coronation approaches, she will do whatever it takes to prove herself a worthy successor to her revered father. But she doesn’t anticipate the arrival of Yassen Knight, the notorious assassin who now claims fealty to the throne. Elena’s father might trust Yassen to be a member of her royal guard, but she is certain he is hiding something. 

As the threat of war looms like a storm on the horizon, the two begin a dangerous dance of intrigue and betrayal. And the choices they make could burn down the world.

Review: This book was originally self-published as “The Boy With Fire” before it was picked up by Orbit to be traditionally published under this new title. As such, it already has a fairly devoted fan base who really loved it and, I’m sure, were very excited to get this new version of the book. For me, I hadn’t heard of the book originally, but was excited to check it out, not only due to the hype of previous fans, but because the synopsis sounds right up my alley. I obviously really loved “The Poppy Wars,” so any comparison there is a good sign. And then I was also intrigued by its connections to Hinduism and Indian mythology.

But, while the book overall did have positives, I found myself struggling to read it. Before I get into any of the negatives, I do want to talk about the aspects of the book that I appreciated. For one thing, the writing was very evocative and strong. This very much read as an author who has a firm grip on their own voice and style. The plot moves smoothly (if slowly) and the characterization is fairly solid. I also really liked the book’s depiction of religion and how it is explored throughout the story. While I don’t have a strong knowledge of Hinduism, I liked what we saw here with how it was applied to this fantasy world. As far as world-building goes, I also liked the general idea of mixing fantasy and sci-fi elements into one story.

However, while these all were strengths of the story, my actual experience of reading the book felt like a slog. I think a lot of this has to do with pacing. This book is not short and it takes a long time for any real action to begin. However, at the same time, some of the information is presented in a way that feels rushed or under-explained. The pacing wasn’t helped by the multiple POVs that make up the story. There are many challenges of writing a successful multi-POV novel. The one I’ve most often talked about is the difficulty of writing voices and characters that feel distinct from one another and who have enough of an arch to justify their own page time. But another challenge is the fact that switches in POV can disrupt the pace, and I think that was one of my struggles here.

My second real sticking point was with the characters. I feel like I’ve been running into this problem a lot with some of the recent adult fantasy novels I’ve read lately, but, again, the female POV character, Elena, read much closer to a YA heroine than an adult. Again, no shade on YA heroines, but if a book is billed as an adult fantasy, I expect the adult characters to be going through arcs and challenges that would be typical of that age group. Instead, we see a lot of naivety and a coming-of-age story from Elena, themes which are much more in line with a YA storyline.

For his part, Yassan was more interesting to me, but I did end up becoming quite frustrated with a reveal we get towards the end of the book. I won’t spoil what it was, but it was the kind of reveal that made the fact that we had been in Yassan’s head for large chunks of this book suddenly feel disingenuous. Yassan is not aware that he’s a character in a book and needs to hold back certain information for climatic purposes later in the story. It makes zero sense that he wouldn’t refer to these things in his own inner thoughts, so when it’s later revealed, it’s like a dash of cold water to the reader’s face, casting you out of the reading experience.

Similarly, I didn’t really buy the love story between these two. It wasn’t objectively bad, but I didn’t feel any chemistry between then, and was generally not very invested in their romance. Overall, this was a disappointing read. It definitely has strengths, and I’m sure it will resonate with some readers. Unfortunately, it just didn’t hit right for me.

Rating 7: While the writing is solid and I enjoyed the themes around religion, I struggled to connect with the characters in this one.

Reader’s Advisory:

“The Phoenix King” can be found on these Goodreads lists: Indian Inspired Fantasy Books and South Asian Fantasy

Kate’s Review: “The Shadow Sister”

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Book: “The Shadow Sister” by Lily Mead

Publishing Info: Sourcebooks Fire, June 2023

Where Did I Get This Book: I received an ARC from the publisher at ALAAC23.

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

Book Description: Sutton going missing is the worst thing to happen to Casey, to their family. She’s trying to help find her sister, but Casey is furious. And she can’t tell anyone about their argument before Sutton disappeared. Everyone paints a picture of Sutton’s perfection: the popular cheerleader with an entourage of friends, a doting boyfriend, and a limitless future. But Sutton manipulated everyone around her, even stole an heirloom bracelet from Casey. People don’t look for missing Black girls–or half-Black girls–without believing there is an angel to be saved.

When Sutton reappears, Casey knows she should be relieved. Except Sutton isn’t the same. She remembers nothing about while she was gone—or anything from her old life, including how she made Casey miserable. There’s something unsettling about the way she wants to spend time with Casey, the way she hums and watches her goldfish swim for hours.

What happened to Sutton? The more Casey starts uncovering her sister’s secrets, the more questions she has. Did she really know her sister? Why is no one talking about the other girls who have gone missing in their area? And what will it take to uncover the truth?

Review: Thank you to Sourcebooks Fire for giving me an ARC of this novel and to Lily Meade for signing it!

Back in June, nearing the end of the second to last day at ALAAC23, I was dragging my bag of books et al around, waiting in line for a signing with Darcy Coates. Someone asked me if it was the Lily Meade line, and I, unaware, said ‘no’. But then I was informed that it was, as it was a dual signing, and I just thought to myself ‘ah, okay, bonus book, cool’. But when I was handed “The Shadow Sister”, Lily Meade’s debut thriller novel, the cover caught my eye. And then the description did as well. This bonus book seemed like it was going to not only be a fun additional book, but one that was squarely in my genre interests. When I did sit down to read it, I was hooked almost immediately.

I really enjoyed the narrative construction in this novel, told from present day Casey’s perspective and past Sutton’s perspective (which jumps around in time leading up to the moment she went missing). It allows us to get some insights into how the mystery is being built and pursued on Casey’s end as Sutton returns and isn’t acting like herself, while also giving us a different perspective that sheds light and changes the perceptions of the mystery as it unfolds. There is an eerie unease that builds as we know that SOMETHING isn’t right with Sutton, be it the trauma she endured and the fallout, or whether there is something else at work on top of that. The pacing works well as strange, but maybe(?) plausible things are happening, while Casey is convinced that this Sutton has something very, very wrong with her. And therein the reader also wonders what exactly it is. There are some genuinely well done surprises and twists in this story as well, some I didn’t see coming at all and landed perfectly. Meade carefully and deliberately lays out clues and misdirections and information throughout, things that you think could be significant towards one aspect of the story but then end up being significant towards another one, and it made for a lot of really fun, sometimes devastating, shocks.

But it’s the characters and the greater themes of intergenerational trauma and strife, as well as small town hypocrisy, and racism, that really makes for the really strong pillars of this book. We find out quickly that Sutton and Casey are from a biracial family, with their father’s side descended from enslaved people that has been meticulously mapped due to his personal interest and place in academia, as well as a robust passing down of family stories through the years. This family history is a crucial part of the story, partially because some of the sisterly strife between Sutton and Casey has to do with disagreements over a bracelet that was left by their now deceased grandmother, who was an inspiration and a woman whose stories connected them to their family’s past of tragedy and triumphs of living through slavery and finding reconciliation against the odds. There is also the greater themes of racism in America, as this small town community that feels and seems close knit, harbors a lot of jarring realities, namely the lack of awareness or urgency when Black girls go missing. Just to name a few.

“The Shadow Sister” is a stunning debut, and I am very much looking forward to whatever Lily Meade has in store next. Check this one out!

Rating 8: Tense, mysterious, and emotionally charged, “The Shadow Sister” is a thriller with a genre twist that explores intergenerational trauma, sisters, and small town secrets.

Reader’s Advisory:

“The Shadow Sister” is included on the Goodreads lists “2023 YA Mysteries And Thrillers”, and “YA Horror 2023”.

Not Just Books: August 2023

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

TV Show: “Jack Ryan”

While I really loved the first season, I was not a fan of the second one. I felt like it lost all of the cleverness of the first season, reducing Jack Ryan to every other gung-ho action hero, without the notable intelligence and uncompromising morality that made Ryan stand out from the pack. But while I was on vacation, I watched both the third and the fourth season with my mom, who really enjoyed both. I still thought the third was a bit lacking, but I really enjoyed the fourth and final season. So, if you’re a fan of the show, it’s nice that it went out on a high note at least!

TV Show: “Hijack”

Idris Elba is one of those supremely talented actors where you just look at the films/shows that he’s chosen to do and think…why? Seriously, name the last really high quality thing you’ve seen him in! Not the quality of his acting, which is always good, but the quality of the show/movie on its own! But thankfully, I’m here to report that his latest project was noticeably not cringe-worthy! “Hijack” is at times incredibly suspenseful and it manages to pull off its concept (every hour of the 7 hour flight is one episode of the show) very well. Elba is, of course, very good, but the surrounding cast of characters all hold their own as well. Definitely check this one out if you like action/suspense limited series!

Card game: “Bridge”

I’ve mentioned before that my family is a big card-playing family. We mostly stick to pinochle, but after 20+ years of that, I think we’re all feeling like we’ve mostly mastered it. So on our weekly online card nights, we’ve started to experiment with learning bridge. My mom and aunt (who we often play with) both played bridge a lot when they were younger, so now they’re training the younger generation up. Guess I’m ready and able to embrace my oncoming middle aged years!

Kate’s Picks

TV Show: “Only Murders In The Building”

This cozy mystery show is back and is still filled with all the hijinks that we can only expect from the likes of Steve Martin, Martin Short, and Selena Gomez. It may seem crazy that this show is still sustainable given that our three podcasters/amateur detectives keep finding themselves in the thick of a murder, but it’s still so fun and charming it doesn’t even matter. After Oliver has tried to relaunch his Broadway career with a brand new show, his main star is murdered the night of the opening performance. Now Charles, Oliver, and Mabel are once again on the case, trying to solve the murder and to put out a new podcast season, WHILE ALSO trying to salvage Oliver’s show by making it into a musical? I still adore the chemistry between the three main players, but then you add in Paul Rudd as the murder victim and Meryl FREAKING Streep as a meek cast mate (and yes, she DOES sing) and you have a delightful new season.

Film: “Renfield”

I didn’t get to this one in the theaters even though I REALLY wanted to see it, so when it was on a flight during my August vacation I was amped to finally watch it. I mean, what’s not to love? A new and original story of Dracula’s henchman Renfield is already great, but casting Nic Cage as the Count himself? BRILLIANT!! Renfield has been working as Dracula’s familiar for centuries, but as time has gone on he’s started to feel like he wants out of this toxic and codependent relationship. When they find themselves in New Orleans, and Renfield is caught up in local crime drama and finds himself on the side of the hero, he really wants to change his purpose. But will the Count let him go? Nicholas Hoult is an enjoyable Renfield, but Cage is SO FUN as Dracula, chewing all the scenery in this funny and weird gore fest.

YouTube Show: I Like To Watch”

If it’s a Not Just Books post, it’s pretty likely there is going to be some kind of drag content on my list, and this month it’s the meta web series “I Like To Watch”, a show in which drag queens Trixie Mattel and Katya Zomolodchikova watch Netflix programming and comment and banter about it. Pretty straight forward. I tore through a bunch of these over a few days because they were so addictive and hilarious, in a Mystery Science Theater 3000 kind of way with Trixie and Katya delivering lots of commentary and candid moments. From Christmas love stories to Netflix series to the newest “Texas Chainsaw Massacre” (linked above, as it had me rolling with laughter), these two just keep the laughs up and are sometimes taken completely by surprise. Also, consider watching it with subtitles because whenever they cackle and howl with laughter, the descriptions are FANTASTIC.