Kate’s Review: “Leap”

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

Book: “Leap” by Simina Popescu

Publishing Info: Roaring Brook Press, November 2024

Where Did I Get This Book: The library!

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

Book Description: A coming-of-age graphic novel following two dancers at a conservative performing arts school―exploring friendship, first love, and what it means to fall out of step with your own dreams.

Ana has been studying contemporary dance since she was little, but her heart isn’t in it anymore. Instead her focus is on Carina―a beautiful, ambitious ballerina whose fear of being outed keeps Ana in the closet and their fragile relationship from seeing the light of day. Risking her own career, Ana gives up more and more in order to fit into the shadows of Carina’s life.

Sara, on the other hand, is fielding whispers she may be the best dancer their school has produced in years. Much of that is thanks to her mentor and instructor, Marlena, who plucked Sara from the classical track and encouraged her to blossom as a contemporary dancer. Sara has always been in awe of Marlena, but recently, that admiration has sparked into something more, and Sara’s not sure what to do about it.

As junior year at their performing arts school begins, Ana and Sara are assigned as roommates. What starts off as a tentative friendship soon becomes a much-needed anchor.

Review: Sometimes I have a hard time writing reviews because I find myself somewhat unable to express why I feel a certain way about a book outside of the very simple and concise phrase ‘vibes, man’. It never feels fully constructive, but sometimes it is what I find myself falling back upon. “Leap” by Simina Popescu is absolutely one of those books, as once I had finished it I was chiller and calmer and happier than when I’d started it, all because of the vibes. But then it was time to explain why, exactly, it made me feel that way, and I found myself having a hard time articulating. So you may have to forgive me as you read this review, as it very well may fully turn into a written out screed that all comes back to vibes. But hopefully that can be enough sometimes?

Okay fine, even I’m unconvinced, I’ll give it a shot! (source)

“Leap” has a very straightforward plot: two young women, Sara and Ana, are two dance students at a fairly conservative academy in Romania. They are both in a more contemporary program, though Ana is dating an ambitious ballerina named Carina on the sly, as Carina isn’t ready to come out. Ana and Sara become roommates and start to forge a friendship through a shared interest in dance, as well as the realization that they are both queer women in a setting where they are a bit more invisible, though Ana would love to be out and Sara is grappling with the possibility of doing so. It’s a bit slice of life, and I enjoyed watching their friendship build as they support each other through the highs and lows of what’s going on in their lives (Sara’s unattainable crush on Marlena, one of the teachers at the school, and Ana’s ennui with dance and her somewhat one sided relationship with Carina). The issues were important and weighty without feeling overwrought, and their separate but easily relatable journeys felt very real and fit together well, leading to believable conflict but nothing a little communication and empathy couldn’t fix.

Another aspect that really worked for me, and I do have to spoil a bit here to talk about it but it doesn’t really spoil anything too much, is that this book’s focus really was on the importance of friendship instead of focusing on romance. Ana and Sara are two queer friends who are both going through difficult moments in their personal lives in the romance department; Ana is having to hide her relationship with Carina, and Sara is discovering her sexuality through crush on her teacher Marlena (and which is wholly unattainable for many reasons). While these relationship woes are definitely a conflict for them and unrequited and painful, Ana and Sara are always there and supportive of each other, and the story never hints at a possible romance for the two of them. I can’t tell you how many stories I’ve read that would have taken the opportunity to show that these two girls would fall for each other in the end (not that I dislike that kind of trope, friends to lovers can be fun!), and in this case I loved that Popescu instead decided to show that platonic love and intimacy can be more than enough for connections between two people.

“Leap” is a calm and lovely coming of age story that felt cozy and earnest. If you are looking for something sweet to read this Spring, this is a great choice. Vibes galore.

Rating 8: A sweet and charming coming of age tale about friendship, self discovery, and connection.

Reader’s Advisory:

“Leap” isn’t on any Goodreads lists as of now, but it would fit in on “Graphic Novels Featuring LGBTIQ+ Themes”.

Serena’s Review: “Labyrinth’s Heart”

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

Book: “Labyrinth’s Heart” by M. A. Carrick

Publishing Info: Orbit, Aug. 2023

Where Did I Get this Book: from the publisher!

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

Book Description: Ren came to Nadežra with a plan. She would pose as the long-lost daughter of the noble house Traementis. She would secure a fortune for herself and her sister. And she would vanish without a backward glance. She ought to have known that in the city of dreams, nothing is ever so simple.

Now, she is Ren, con-artist and thief. But she is also Renata, the celebrated Traementis heir. She is Arenza, the mysterious pattern-reader and political rebel. And she is the Black Rose, a vigilante who fights alongside the legendary Rook. 

Even with the help of Grey Serrado and Derossi Vargo, it is too many masks for one person to wear. And as the dark magic the three of them helped unleash builds to storm that could tear the very fabric of the city apart, it’s only a matter of time before one of the masks slips—and everything comes crashing down around them.

Previously Reviewed: “The Mask of Mirrors” and “The Liar’s Knot”

Review: This will be another tough review to write, but for different reasons than I usually experience. I’ve absolutely loved this trilogy so far. In hindsight, I almost want to go back and give both of the other books 10 ratings! They’re the kind of stories that have characters who stick with you, popping up in my mind long after I’ve turned the last page. So it’s a weird situation to now finish up the trilogy and…just like it, not adore it! The struggle in writing up my thoughts, then, is that I may come across as more critical than the book deserves on its own merits. It’s still an excellent book in the end!

I’ll start with the unequivocal good parts. The writing. Across the board, all three books have been so incredibly well written. Natural dialogue, vivid descriptions, and a steady hand at the wheel throughout, never losing a sense of tone or place, even while balancing a million characters, cultures, and magic systems. It’s even more impressive that two authors worked together to write this! It’s absolutely seamless, and I have to wonder how they even pulled it off.

Beyond that, the world-building continues to impress. This is a fully-formed world, complete with various cultures and peoples, all with long histories that we see impacting the choices made today. Further, there are no purely good or purely evil sides to many of the complicated situations that arise. The authors carefully navigate the concepts of necessary revolution while equally condemning wanton violence or the easy slip into simply swapping positions, leaving the wrong-doing still present, if now in different hands. Extremism is rightfully identified and denounced, no matter the histories involved, and instead a focus on working together and living alongside those who are different is clearly emphasized.

The story also started out just as strong as the rest. Indeed, for the first third of the book, I was convinced that this would also end up as a 9 or 10 level read for me. This section had all the hallmarks of what I loved from the first two books: a clever Ren, a morally grey Vargo, and an emphasis on characterization, giving the reader ample opportunity to see even small moments play out between all the characters we’ve come to love so thoroughly. It was only as the book continued that I began to have problems, and it really came down to two things: Ren’s character arc (to lesser extent, Vargo as well), and the attempt to wrap up every loose thread.

To tackle the characters stuff first, while the story started out strong, character-wise, as we got more into the thick of the resolutions to the various plot lines, the characterization began to fall through the cracks. I remember mentioning in my review of the second book that I was beginning to have minor quibbles with the character arch of Ren and Vargo, both having to do with the wavering of their characterization from the first book. Unfortunately, that was doubled-down on here. For his part, Vargo pretty much lost all of his moral ambiguity, instead reacting with nothing but love and understanding to almost every reveal sent his way. Which, sure, I want him to get all the found family connections he ultimately ends up with, but it was all just so…easy, no conflict to speak of.

For her part, Ren became the most special of all the special snowflakes by the end of this book. She was still a well-written character, unlike many characters who end up with this nickname given to them, but the problem remained. By the end of the book, a character joking introduces her listing off all the unique, important roles that she now inhabits. And while it’s played for laughs, it also unintentionally highlights the problem. Ren was at her best when she was a con woman, deftly navigating numerous roles and goals while also trying to balance the deeper feelings and connections she was developing with those around her. Here, after that first third of the book is done, we pretty much lose all of the cleverness or greyness of this character. Again, someone makes a joke at one point that Ren “saves the world through talking.” And it’s true! And that’s bad!! Especially because, for a character like Ren, if she was going to solve problems through talking, it should be through clever manipulation and schemes. Instead, the book devolves into numerous speeches about togetherness and understanding that miraculously solve pretty much every problem or conflict.

Further, some of the joy of the first two books was seeing Ren slowly learn to expand her understanding of family to characters like Vargo, Grey and the Traementis family. Well, here, that’s all blown out of the water by the absolute deluge of family units Ren finds herself apart of. The reason the ties between Ren, Vargo, Grey, and Traementis family worked was due to the sheer amount of page time devoted to developing them. These later connections don’t have that and also worked against these established characters, as we spent less time between the ones we care about, as Ren was overrun by the various family groups that now surround her.

And lastly, this book suffers from a severe case of “Return of the King” syndrome. You know what I’m talking about: a story that ends up with numerous, seemingly endless, endings. And here, it feels like the endings start up near the half way point! There was a lot that needed to be wrapped up in this book already. But the authors didn’t help themselves by adding new characters and new histories on top of what they already had to deal with.

Beyond that, there seemed to be an almost compulsive need to wrap up every ill that ever befell this world. And look, I don’t love grimdark fantasy, and I honestly think that the fantasy genre as a whole, and particularly epic fantasy, needs to come out of the haze inflicted upon it by “Game of Thrones,” the idea that a fantasy story isn’t “serious” if it isn’t full of horribleness and tragedy. So I applaud the authors for proving that this needn’t be the case.

Unfortunately, it feels like they went too far in the other direction! The main plots lines being wrapped up well? Great! But then it began to feel as if every character was being neatly paired up, every historical ill-doing was magically made right, and any point of character conflict was easily resolved with a few short words and a hug. And the magic system was totally abused in the service of this goal! Need some past wrong figured out? Something something magic! It all began to feel like too much. And with everything so, SO neatly resolved, it started to feel unrealistic, undercutting the real pain and heartache that was at the heart of all of the characters’ motivation, up to this point.

I think one of the strangest take aways from this book was the feeling that it was both too long and too short. Too long, because numerous scenes and plot points didn’t seem to go anywhere and could have easily been lifted (even while keeping the strong scenes between members of the core cast!). And too short because a full half of the book had to be devoted to wrapping up the entire trilogy with ending after ending coming in quick succession. Instead, had this been split into two books, some of these ending could have been dealt with in one book, leaving the others to the final book.

Wow, so this ended up being way longer than I had intended, but it turns out I had a lot to say! Overall, however, I still loved Ren, Grey, and Vargo. The love story between Grey and Ren is one of my favorites in a long time, and the writing across the entire trilogy was excellent. This one may trip a bit at the end, but it by no means undercuts the strength of the entire trilogy and my emphatic recommendation of it to all fantasy fans!

Rating 8: Too many endings and some wobbly characterization brought this one down a bit, but it was still a satisfying conclusion to an excellent trilogy!

Reader’s Advisory:

“Labyrinth’s Heart” can be found on these Goodreads lists: Renaissance and Tudor Fantasy and Genius Protagonists ( who DEMONSTRATE actual thinking in intricate plots).

Kate’s Review: “See How They Fall”

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

Book: “See How They Fall” by Rachel Paris

Publishing Info: Scarlet, April 2025

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

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

Book Description: In this compulsive debut thriller set in Sydney’s wealthiest suburbs, one detective’s investigation into a family tragedy threatens to collapse a powerful dynasty. . . .

When Skye married into the wealthy Campbell family, she thought she was entering paradise. But lately, she’s been unhappy in her marriage to Duncan and hiding a few secrets of her own as she tries to maintain a normal, happy life for their six-year-old daughter, Tilly.

Now the family patriarch, Sir Campbell Turner, has died and his three sons are set to inherit the luxury goods empire upon which he built their fortune. But plans for a seamless handover are complicated when a fourth, hitherto unknown, heir named Cody comes forward. The Turners gather for an intimate weekend retreat at an opulent seaside estate in order to meet this newcomer and figure out their next steps. With so much at stake, tempers flare and egos clash within their first few hours together. But even as the tensions rise no one could predict that their very first night would end with a shocking poisoning that leaves one family member dead and another fighting for her life.

Sergeant Mei O’Connor is assigned to investigate the incident and though her superiors are keen to close the case as swiftly as possible, the evidence just isn’t lining up. Mei already has enough on her mind as she struggles to care for her terminally ill mother and recover from her broken engagement, but she can’t help poking around the Turners, convinced that there’s more to the suspicious poisoning than a simple accident. As Mei continues to push for answers, she may just send the carefully laid dominoes of the Turner empire crashing down.

Review: Thank you to SparkPoint Studio for sending me an ARC of this novel!

Hoo boy, buckle up everyone because I have once again brought you all a novel that has scummy rich people behaving badly! Nope, this trope still hasn’t gone out of style for me, and the more frustrated I get with real world examples of this, the more cathartic I find novels that center nasty wealthy sleaze balls and show them for what they are. So of COURSE I wanted to read “See How They Fall” by Rachel Paris! I like soapy thrillers, I like dysfunctional families, and I like murder mysteries. It was bound to be a winner.

The premise is simple. The Turners, a billionaire family still reeling from the patriarch’s death a few months earlier, are gathering with their loved ones for a weekend at a summer estate, with hopes of hashing out the inheritance, while also dealing with a new surprise heir in the form of an illegitimate son of the middle son, Duncan. During the weekend, one of the brother’s wives is dead, and Duncan’s daughter Tilly is hospitalized in grave condition, both victims of arsenic poisoning. Skye, Tilly’s mom, is desperate to find out what happened, while Duncan hides her away, and Mei O’Connor, a detective assigned to the case, starts to peel back the nasty layers of this wealthy family. Our mystery is mostly who poisoned Tilly and her aunt Nina, but as we see it through Skye and Mei’s perspectives, the mystery becomes more about what the family as a whole has to hide. It’s suspenseful, it has believable twists and turns, and it has high stakes with a little girl near death, her mother becoming more unhinged as more secrets come out, and our lead investigator finding lots of dirty laundry, therein putting a target on her back as well. The Turner Family is filled with complete sociopaths, and as the story continued the more tense I became, fearful for Skye AND Mei and what they may uncover. Paris has a lot of tricks up her sleeve, and many of them were pulled off seamlessly.

I also enjoyed the dual perspectives between Skye and Mei, as both of them have some really well constructed back stories, well thought out motivations, and their two takes on the story as it is happening complement each other as they each present different clues to the reader about what is going on and who could be behind the poisonings. Skye is deeply sympathetic as her daughter lies unconscious after being poisoned, and while her husband Duncan is lying, gaslighting, and hiding something from her, and trying to keep her from finding out family business that may or may not be tied to Tilly’s attempted murder and Nina’s actual murder. I was seriously worried for Skye as well as enraged on her behalf, and Paris nails the way that the most insidious of wealthy people will manipulate even those that they purport to love if it will keep power within their grasp. Mei, on the other hand, has problems of her own, and it makes this case deeply personal, whether it’s because she is still reeling from a break up with a manipulative jerk, or because when she was a child her younger sister went missing, and she sees her sister in Tilly. I really felt for her, and if there was a series following her as a detective I would definitely read it.

Overall, “See How They Fall” is fun, addictive, and an entertaining thriller. If you like the genre, definitely seek it out.

Rating 8: Lots of reveals, lots of scandal, and two interesting character perspectives make this book an addictive thriller.

Reader’s Advisory:

“See How They Fall” isn’t on any relevant Goodreads lists as of yet, but it would fit in on the list “Novels If You Like ‘Succession'” in the Goodreads article “What To Read Based on Your Pop Culture Obsessions”.

Serena’s Review: “Last Chance to Save the World”

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

Book: “Last Chance to Save the World” by Beth Revis

Publishing Info: DAW, April 2025

Where Did I Get this Book: Netgalley!

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

Book Description: After a few weeks trapped on board a spaceship with Ada (and, oh look, there’s only one bed), Rian has to admit that maybe Ada’s rebels have a point. The nanobots poised to be unleashed on Earth are infected with malware that will ultimately leave the residents of Earth in a worse position than they’re in now. But is it too late?

Ada and Rian arrive on Earth with little time to spare. Together, they have to break into a high-security facility and infect the nanobots with a counter-virus before they’re released in order to give Earth a fighting chance. And if Ada happens to notice some great tech laying around in this high-security facility she shouldn’t have access to and then happens to steal a bunch of it when Rian’s not looking? Well, he knew who she was before he teamed up with her. And if he wants it back, he’s going to have to catch her first. 

With countless twists and turns, this enemies-to-lovers slow-burn and high-tension romance plays on a Sherlock and Moriarity character dynamic rooted in science fiction with a heavy romance and mystery angle.

Previously Reviewed: “Full Speed to a Crash Landing” and “How to Steal a Galaxy”

Review: I’ve been really enjoying this series of science fiction/romance novellas, so it was with a heavy heart that I picked up this, the final one in the trilogy! But, like the ones that came before, it delivered on every level! And in many ways, this one was even more satisfying than the ones that came before as we finally got to see Ada’s long game come into play. By this point in the series, readers are familiar with not only Ada’s methods, but also the narrative tricks the author uses to emphasize the bewilderment that Rian must feel, tugged along mostly blind in Ada’s chaotic wake. And like in the first two books, it was incredibly gratifying to see everything slot into place, even if it was a bit easier to predict just what Ada was up to.

Instead, many of the new twists and turns and surprises came in the form of deeper reveals into Ada’s history. I don’t want to go into too many details, as many of the late-stage events are tied up in all of this, but I really enjoyed some of the new characters we met, and the ways in which they shone a light on Ada’s life and the shaping of her unique moral compass.

It was also nice getting to spend as much time with Rian and Ada together, more than we’ve seen in the previous books it seems. After now reading the last planned book in this series, I will say that I think these novellas will work better for science fiction/heist readers who also enjoy a dash of romance than for strict romance readers. For some of those readers, they may be a bit disappointed, as the series doesn’t adhere closely to all of the conventions of the romance genre that they might expect. That said, I think the ending for this trilogy was perfect, and really the only thing that made sense for these characters. Anything else would have compromised core portions of their identities in a way that I think would have undercut the excellent work that had gone into creating them.

I also really enjoyed the themes of environmental justice and the ways in which humanity has a tendency to hurt not only the world around us but everyone living in it. There was a short conversation about pigeons that really hit home in a way that was surprising, given that it was a…conversation about pigeons! And throughout, the balance between the exploration of these themes, the fast-moving action of the plot, and the quippy love story was all navigated expertly. I definitely recommend this trilogy to all science fiction/heist readers who are looking for a fun, fast series to consume!

Rating 8: Ada leaves a chaotic wake everywhere she goes, and Rian and the readers are just along for the fun that is the ride!

Reader’s Advisory:

“Last Chance to Save the World” can be found on this Goodreads list: Can’t Wait Books of 2025

Serena’s Review: “Inked in Ashes”

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

Book: “Inked in Ashes” by Shannon Mayer

Publishing Info: Kindle edition, April 2025

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

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

Book Description: I’ve spent twenty-five years in the Hollow, poor as dirt, cursed with a stepmother who hates me, and dreaming about a faraway land that I don’t understand. Only two things that make life worth living are my falcon, Fetch, and my best friend, Molly.

But when Moll’s plot to land a royal husband at the palace ball goes horribly wrong, I find myself staring at a king with a glass stiletto buried in his chest and a blood-covered Molly standing over him. We’ve got to move…and fast, or we’ll both wind up swinging from the hangman’s noose.

Worse? The palace sorcerer is using everything he can to find the culprit including raising the dead.

More complicated? Duncan…brother to the King, whose eye I’ve unintentionally caught, a man whose secrets might be deadlier than the undead soldiers breathing down our necks, is making me second-guess everything I’ve ever known. With revolution brewing and a mysterious man calling to me from my dreams, I have no choice but to embrace my fate…But what if my fate is beyond anything I could ever imagine? What if the only land I’ve ever known isn’t home at all?

What if I’m trapped inside a fairytale, and the only way out…is through?

Review: Any one who is familiar with my reviews will understand immediately why I was interested in checking this book out, based on the description above! Always love me some fairytale action! And this one had a super unique take, with essentially one fairytale set within another. The opening sequence which set up the book and this premise was fantastic, laying out high stakes, a great villain, and introducing some of the magic of this world. The story then shifts to the “inner story” and we pick up with our main character.

First of all, I really enjoyed Harmony. It was refreshing to follow a protagonist who not only is an adult but who is also looking at life through an adult’s viewpoint. Her early interactions with her friend Moll perfectly speak to that rather panicky stage that can happen in one’s twenties when you look around and realize life is going on, you’re aging, and you need to get your shit together. Of course, Harmony and Moll’s stakes are much higher than your average person in our world!

Again, no surprise for those who know my preferences, but I loved the heavy focus on the sister-like bond between Harmony and Moll. This relationship served as a healthy balance point to the romance. Too often in stories like this the love story seems to overwhelm every other aspect of a character’s personality. But by having Moll as such an important and crucial part of Harmony’s life, Harmony herself remains a fully realized character throughout.

I also really enjoyed all of the nods to fairytale tropes and plot points. Some are more subtle than others, but it was always fun running up against a new one! That said, for all of the the light-hearted moments, the author definitely didn’t shy away from the more awful aspects of fairytales as well. Right from the start, it’s clear that this is a violent, dangerous world, and that doesn’t let up throughout. The story itself follows a fairly predictable fantasy plot line, but the pacing was steady and quick, so I never found myself losing interest.

Overall, this was a fun, fast read. It fully took advantage of its fairytale setting and by the end I was excited to see where the story would go from here! Fans of fairytale fantasies should definitely give this one a shot!

Rating 8: Brimming with whimsy and romance, “Inked in Ashes” is fresh fairytale fantasy that is sure to please fans of the genre!

Reader’s Advisory:

“Inked in Ashes” isn’t on any Goodreads lists currently, but it should be on Twisted Fairytales.

Serena’s Review: “The Ashfire King”

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

Book: “The Ashfire King” by Chelsea Abdullah

Publishing Info: Orbit, April 2025

Where Did I Get this Book: Netgalley!

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

Book Description: A merchant and a prince trapped in the crumbling realm of jinn must figure out how to save one world to return to their own in The Ashfire King, the second book in the Sandsea Trilogy.

Neither here nor there, but long ago… After fleeing a patricidal prince, legendary merchant Loulie al-Nazari and banished prince Mazen bin Malik find themselves in the realm of jinn. But instead of sanctuary, they find a world on the cusp of collapse.

The jinn cities, long sheltered beneath the Sandsea by the magic of its kings, are sinking. Amid the turmoil, political alliances are forming, and rebellion is on the rise. When Loulie assists a dissenter—one of her bodyguard’s old comrades—she puts herself in the center of a centuries-old war.

Trapped in a world that isn’t her own and wielding magic that belongs to a fallen king, Loulie must decide: Will she carry on someone else’s legacy or carve out her own?

Previously Reviewed: “The Stardust Thief”

Review: Insert “It’s been 84 years” gif here! But seriously, that’s how long it’s felt since I read and reviewed “The Stardust Thief!” So long that I’ve run into the author of this book not once, but twice, at ALA conventions! So I’ve been super excited ever since I saw that we finally had a publication date for this one!

Wisely, the author included a fairly extensive opening chapter covering all of the action from the first book. I really liked that book, but I’ll admit, I’d forgotten many of the details that were then covered in this introduction. Even with it, I was left a bit floundering when the actual story started up, trying to re-orient myself with not only where our characters were located, but how exactly they’d all ended up where they did. Once I got my footing more under me, I was able to settle in better.

Overall, I think this was a solid second book. It didn’t quite reach the highs of the first one, but it did a good job of reminding me why I enjoyed this world to begin with. Loulie and Mazen remain great characters to follow, though my preference for Loulie continues. Mazen is fine, but it didn’t feel like he had much of an arc to explore in this book, which left his chapters often feeling a bit light or hollow. For her part, Loulie is still reeling from the loss of Quadir, as well as with the new paths she sees for herself going forward. Further, with the loss of this essential relationship, we see her struggle to trust and grow close with Mazen. The barest hints of romance are established here, and I’m definitely excited to see how that is wrapped up in the last book!

Speaking of Quadir, I was disappointed to see him disappear for so much of this book. I get why it was necessary for the plot, but he was a nice balance to the other characters, and I think his loss does effect the overall quality of this book. Especially given the blandness of Mazen’s chapters.

I enjoyed the main plot, for the most part. Though I will say that by the time we get to the end of this book, looking back on the events that took place, much of it felt like side quests, rather than an advancement of the primary story. This book definitely struggled with “second book syndrome,” and I wonder if the story as a whole would have been better served as a duology? There’s always a push for fantasy series to be bigger, longer, and then assumed, better. But sometimes a story works better when it’s tighter, and that might be the case here. Of course, we won’t really know until the third book is out and we see how it all is tied up in the end.

Overall, this was an enjoyable read. It didn’t quite live up to the highs of the first book, and I’ll admit to being a bit let down, given the long wait for this one. But it’s also a solid read on its own and sets up some exciting events for the third book. Ultimately, this may be one of those rare books that will read better if you haven’t already read the first one and can instead now read them back to back. The floundering around that I felt at the beginning is definitely best avoided!

Rating 8: A fun return in a long-awaited sequel! This may have suffered a bit from “second book syndrome,” but it was still great to return to this world and these characters!

Reader’s Advisory:

“The Ashfire King” can be found on this Goodreads list: Arabian, Egyptian, and Indian Fantasy.

Kate’s Review: “The Staircase in the Woods”

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

Book: “The Staircase in the Woods” by Chuck Wendig

Publishing Info: Del Rey, April 2025

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

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

Book Description: A group of friends investigates the mystery of a strange staircase in the woods in this mesmerizing horror novel from the New York Times bestselling author of The Book of Accidents.

Five high school friends are bonded by an oath to protect one another no matter what.

Then, on a camping trip in the middle of the forest, they find something a mysterious staircase to nowhere.

One friend walks up—and never comes back down. Then the staircase disappears.

Twenty years later, the staircase has reappeared. Now the group returns to find the lost boy—and what lies beyond the staircase in the woods. . . .

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

Chuck Wendig has cemented himself as a must read horror author for me, as his books always keep me on the edge of my seat while also sending me on an emotional rollercoaster. Because of this, whenever he has a new book I am always immediately going to seek it out. His newest novel “The Staircase in the Woods” was no exception, and given the premise involves a super unnerving urban legend that has fascinated me for years, I was eager to get my hands on it and see what Wendig would do. Once again, it did not disappoint.

I really enjoyed the foundation of the horror of the story: a mysterious staircase to seemingly nowhere in the middle of the woods. This urban legend has always fascinated me, and I remember reading threads on this on Reddit years ago, so when I saw that Wendig was taking it on for his new book I was eager to see what he would do with it. There is a lot of wiggle room with this baseline concept, as the staircases in most of the urban legends aren’t ever really explained outside of the uncanny (at least in the experiences that I have with this kind of plot), so Wendig could pretty much do anything. And what he DOES do is so unnerving and unsettling and creepy and unique. I don’t want to spoil much because going in without any hints makes it all the more impactful, and WOW does it have its moments of nightmare fuel. And mind bending weirdness.

But, and it comes as no surprise to me because this is usually the case, it’s the very human aspects of this story that elevated it to the levels it rose to. Especially in regards to the complicated friendships between high school friends who grew apart due to time, distance, and a shared trauma that none of them have reckoned with. As someone who keeps up with only three high school friends decades later, the way that Wendig captures the relationships between Owen, Lore, Hamish, and Nick (as well as the now missing Matty) with such bittersweetness, nostalgia, and heartache had a serious emotional impact. I remember those friendships from my teenage years when we were all trying to discover ourselves, and the highs and the lows and how back then we thought we’d never change… only to fall away from each other. Granted, my friend group drifted due to very common reasons, not because one of our friends disappeared at the top of an impossible staircase in the woods, but the melancholy and grief and difficulties of the severed friendships and the tricky reunion felt very, very real. Wendig really just knows how to portray the complexities of human nature and human relationships, and brings it out in the midst of the scary stuff that is at the forefront of this novel.

“The Staircase in the Woods” is another winner of a horror novel from Chuck Wendig. If you still haven’t checked this guy out, what are you waiting for?

Rating 8: Deeply creepy and in many ways emotional and bittersweet, “The Staircase in the Woods” is another winner from Chuck Wendig!

Reader’s Advisory:

“The Staircase in the Woods” is included on the Goodreads list “Horror to Look Forward to in 2025”.

Kate’s Review: “The Ballad of Nod (#1): Waking Up From Nightmares”

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

Book: “The Ballad of Nod (#1): Waking Up From Nightmares” by James Burton and Kira Burton

Publishing Info: Scattered Comics, May 2025

Where Did I Get This Book: I received an eBook from the author.

Where You Can Get This Book: This first issue has not been published yet, but when it does it will be available at James Burton’s website Angry Brain Artworks when it comes out sometime in May.

Book Description: The Ballad of Nod is the story of a young girl named Fey who is grieving the loss of her Father to cancer. The regrets, fear and pain is attracting the nightmares of the dream world to invade her reality every night. The only thing stopping them is the courage of her Guardian, a Teddy Bear named Patches, who each night fights back the darkness. That is until the worst of the worst a night prince called the Phobetor drags him into the dark. Now Fey must choose to find her courage to go in and save him or hide and loose someone else she loves.

Review: Thank you to James Burton for sending me an eBook of this comic!

I am one of those adults who just couldn’t part ways with a couple of my childhood stuffed animals. There are two in particular that I felt a need to hold on to, the first being Carmichael the Cat, the second being Bump the Bear. Both of them now officially belong to my five year old and reside in her room, but every once in awhile when I’m feeing deeply anxious or down I will bring Bump to my room to hang out for a few days before returning him. So I absolutely understand a bond a child has with a beloved childhood toy. And in “The Ballad of Nod (#1): Waking Up From Nightmares” by siblings James and Kira Burton, we get a really good dark fantasy tale that not only captures the security of a childhood toy, but also the deep grief of mourning a parent who has passed away long before their time.

Judging by the cover of this first issue, you can immediately tell that this is going to be a horror story, with a monstrous face being front an center. But then there is this adorable and quite determined looking silhouette of a teddy bear, and that is part of the real crux of this story: the bond between a girl and the guardian teddy that protects her from monsters and beasts every night as she sleeps. Fey is a little girl whose father died of cancer, and has found comfort in a bear named Patches, so named because when she wakes up in the morning he has rips and tears that need to be mended. I love this concept on its own, feeling like a dreamy dark fantasy that also has some very real human elements. I’ll start with the horror first, and I can say right off the bat it worked well for me. I love the idea of a security toy actively fighting off the monsters under the bed or in the closets, as these toys are so loved and so ingrained in childhood as a way to fight anxiety (I mean hello, I still use the aforementioned Bump to help quell my ADULT anxieties!), so the metaphor worked very, very well for me. And then to flip the concept and to have Fey have to be the one to take the first steps to rescue Patches and to face her fears to do so is also a great twist on the expected plot. We only have issue one that has a fair amount of set up, but the monsters that we saw were effective and intimidating, and it has a lot of promise to be VERY creepy for the audience as the story goes on.

But the other huge theme of this comic is the deeply emotional story about Fey losing her father to cancer, and having to navigate her grief and the trauma around it. This story feels personal, and is very well explored and had me tearing up during certain moments. Our first issue has a lot of exposition to set up Fey’s history and her emotional state, and I thought that it did it very well with flashbacks to her father’s hospitalization, implied times right after his passing, and also seeing how Patches came into her life as a buoy during a very dark and difficult time. It makes Patches’s mission feel all the more poignant, and then Fey’s own mission to be the one to save him feel all the more powerful. The dreamy earnestness of it all reminded me of something similar to the likes of “Locke and Key”.

And finally, the artwork. I thought it was well matched to the tone, and it has the ability to be both unsettling and scary as well as adorable (Patches is ADORABLE).

(source: Scattered Comics)

I definitely want to read more to see how this goes. “The Ballad of Nod: Waking Up From Nightmares” is a stellar start to what promises to be an emotional and heartfelt (and scary) series.

Rating 8: Emotional, creepy, and heartfelt to the core, “The Ballad of Nod (#1): Waking Up From Nightmares” is a promising start to a new dark fantasy comic series.

Reader’s Advisory:

“The Ballad of Nod (#1): Waking From Nightmares” isn’t on any Goodreads lists as of yet, but it gives me serious Joe Hill vibes.

Kate’s Review: “Another Fine Mess”

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

Book: “Another Fine Mess” by Lindy Ryan

Publishing Info: Minotaur Books, April 2025

Where Did I Get This Book: I received a hardcover copy from the publisher.

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

Book Description: Making sure dead things stay buried is the family business…

For over a hundred years, the Evans women have kept the undead in their strange southeast Texas town from rising. But sometimes the dead rise too quick–and that’s what left Lenore Evans, and her granddaughter Luna, burying Luna’s mother, Grace, and Lenore’s mother, Ducey. Now the only two women left in the Evans family, Luna and Lenore are left rudderless in the wake of the most Godawful Mess to date.

But when the full moon finds another victim, it’s clear their trouble is far from over. Now Lenore, Luna, and the new sheriff—their biggest ally—must dig deep down into family lore to uncover what threatens everything they love most. The body count ticks up, the most unexpected dead will rise–forcing Lenore and Luna to face the possibility that the undead aren’t the only monsters preying on their small town.

Review: Thank you to Kaye Publicity for sending me a finished copy of this novel!

So the reason that I grabbed “Bless Your Heart” by Lindy Ryan from the library and reviewed it last week was because I had the opportunity to read the new sequel! “Another Fine Mess” is a continuation of this Southern horror series that is part “Gilmore Girls” and part “Buffy the Vampire Slayer” with a little bit of “True Blood” to really tie it all together, and I am pleased to report that it continues to be a fun, charming, and sometimes INCREDIBLY gory ride.

Just to be clear, there will be some spoilers for “Bless Your Heart” in this review. Proceed with caution.

We are picking up shortly after “Bless Your Heart” ended, with grandmother Lenore Evans and granddaughter Luna Evans reeling from the deaths of Lenore’s mother/Luna’s great grandmother Ducey, and Luna’s mother/Lenore’s daughter Grace, who died protecting the community and Lunda from Andy, Luna’s vampire (known as strigoi in this) boyfriend. Who Luna accidentally turned because it turns out her father Samael was a master strigoi that fell in love with Grace. Who has been buried by the Evans’s funeral home. Got that? Okay. Lenore and Luna don’t have much time to grieve, however, as some kind of new monster has started terrorizing the town, as pets start to go missing and animals AND people start showing up mutilated. The horror elements in this are a bit more, shall we say, lupine this time around, and I thought that it was not only a great next choice of monster, but it also makes for more gnarly, and I mean GNARLY, kills. It also gives Ryan the chance to expand upon the lore of the monster mythos and world building for strigoi and other creatures, as well as fleshing out the family history of the Evans and the roles they play in order to balance out the supernatural threats that are constantly creeping up on them. While also showing how damn hard that it can be being an Evans woman, bound to a destiny that makes you so, so burdened.

And I am still really loving Luna’s arc in this story, as now we know that she is part strigoi, and that her powers are a little unpredictable. Which is exactly what an awkward teenage girl who just lost her mother and grandmother needs to make her life all the more complicated. Luna is, for me, the character with the most potential, and her growing relationship with weirdo new kid Crane while also learning more and more family secrets (and perhaps having an opportunity to connect with her strigoi father Samael) made for a very interesting subplot, and I thought that she felt like a pretty real teenager who is dealing with a LOT of shit thrown her way, without feeling shrill or cloying. Seeing more clues and puzzle pieces come together, for ALL of the Evans women, was really fun in general, and adding more friends to their insular circle, like new make-up tech Kim (because corpses need to look nice too!), or a closer relationship to the new Sheriff Taylor (who had been quietly in love with Grace when she was alive), really made this ensemble stand out. Even if one development left me feeling ABSOLUTELY HEARTBROKEN, GOD DAMMIT.

AND LOOK, it was hinted to in a few places that there may be another supernatural path to be taken here, but this was basically my reaction… (source)

But hey, that just means that now I am waiting on pins and needles to see where we are going next!! “Another Fine Mess” made the Evans Women all the more interesting, and made me fall for this world all the more. When does the next one come out?

Rating 8: Another entertaining and utterly charming horror story following a family of women who take care of their town by stopping the undead, no matter the cost.

Reader’s Advisory:

“Another Fine Mess” is included on the Goodreads list “All the New Horror, Romantasy, and Other SFF Crossover Books Arriving in April 2025”.

Kate’s Review: “Bless Your Heart”

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

Book: “Bless Your Heart” by Lindy Ryan

Publishing Info: Minotaur Books, April 2024

Where Did I Get This Book: The library!

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

Book Description: Rise and shine. The Evans women have some undead to kill.

It’s 1999 in Southeast Texas and the Evans women, owners of the only funeral parlor in town, are keeping steady with…normal business. The dead die, you bury them. End of story. That’s how Ducey Evans has done it for the last eighty years, and her progeny―Lenore the experimenter and Grace, Lenore’s soft-hearted daughter, have run Evans Funeral Parlor for the last fifteen years without drama. Ever since That Godawful Mess that left two bodies in the ground and Grace raising her infant daughter Luna, alone.

But when town gossip Mina Jean Murphy’s body is brought in for a regular burial and she rises from the dead instead, it’s clear that the Strigoi―the original vampire―are back. And the Evans women are the ones who need to fight back to protect their town.

As more folks in town turn up dead and Deputy Roger Taylor begins asking way too many questions, Ducey, Lenore, Grace, and now Luna, must take up their blades and figure out who is behind the Strigoi’s return. As the saying goes, what rises up, must go back down. But as unspoken secrets and revelations spill from the past into the present, the Evans family must face that sometimes, the dead aren’t the only things you want to keep buried.

A crackling mystery-horror novel with big-hearted characters and Southern charm with a bite, Bless Your Heart is a gasp-worthy delight from start to finish.

Review: Oddly enough, when the horror novel “Bless Your Heart” by Lindy Ryan came out last year, I just never got around to it. Which, in hindsight, is WILD, because it has so many elements within its pages that so appeal to me. Vampires! Generational ties! Family dysfunction! And to top it all off, it takes place in 1999, so the nostalgia bomb that it would surely detonate would be epic! When I was approached to read the upcoming sequel “Another Fine Mess” (coming out next week – stay tuned!), I realized that I needed to go back and read the first one, only to realize as I was reading it that it was BASICALLY WRITTEN FOR ME! I’m kind of kicking myself for passing it by, because “Bless Your Heart” is a fun, cozy, and gory vampire tale.

Before I get into the vampires, first I want to talk about the setting and the characters. Because “Bless Your Heart” is a bit of a mix of Stars Hollow from “Gilmore Girls”, Bon Temps from “True Blood”, and Santa Clara from “The Lost Boys”, with locals, ambiance, and the usual gossip and community to go with the supernatural. Our main characters are four generations of women whose family has run the town funeral parlor, and who just so happen to kill vampires to keep the town safe. Ducey is the first generation, a grumpy and no nonsense matriarch, her daughter Lenore, who is determined to carry on the business, Lenore’s daughter Grace, who is soft and kind, and Grace’s teenage daughter Luna, who is awkward and getting her footing (off topic: this takes place in 1999, and Luna is fifteen, a bit Goth but awkward about it, and into Sid and Nancy and all things Hot Topic. aka ME DURING THIS EXACT TIME). I loved seeing this family start to realize that vampires are starting to rise again, and not only try to figure out who is causing it, but also how to handle it, as they all have different approaches and different traumas, and how they interact with the people in their town (and how they try and keep their secret from getting out). There’s lots of heart and humor with this family, and it found their interactions to be realistic in their love and complexity. I also found them to be very funny at times, with witty banter and conversations being very prominent.

And I did really enjoy the vampire mythology that Ryan brings to this story and her world building. It’s kind of fallen to the wayside to have vampires be shambling ghouls, with many vampire tales having seductive and mysterious blood suckers that are scary in their predatory and sensual ways. And this book DOES have that. But it also has some rather nasty versions of vampires called strigoi (LOVE IT), giving us a bit of a maturation process for vampires that starts with gross mindless corpses, and eventually turns into the Lestats, the Draculas, the sexier beings with time and experience. I thought that the gory bits in this book were gross and fun, and I really enjoyed how well thought out Ryan’s vampires were, serving up scares as well as the expected seductiveness. And the mystery of why the vampires are rising at this moment was fairly well conceived, and while I called a couple twists, it was still fun seeing them play out. pp

All in all, “Bless Your Heart” is a solid start to a new horror series that has some witty characters, a well developed and charming small town, and some nasty vampires. I can’t wait to see where it goes from here!

Rating 8: A solid small town cozy mystery blended with a gory vampire horror tale, “Bless Your Heart” is a promising start to what could be a fun series.

Reader’s Advisory:

“Bless Your Heart” is included on the Goodreads lists “Pink Horror Genre”, and “Vampires!”.