Tuesday, December 09, 2025

Obituary for Tom Stoppard, Rogue Male Movie, Giving Tuesday Yarn Tree, Quote of the Day, Obit for author Fern Michaels, The Dagger and the Flame by Catherine Doyle, Toni and Addie Go Viral by Melissa Marr, and Bonded By Thorns by Elizabeth Helen

Welcome to December, fellow readers. Sorry it has taken me so long to post some reviews, but my husband of 28 years died on Dec 4, and it has been a massive amount of work dealing with cremation arrangements, death certificates, all the detritus he left behind, and all the bills he left unpaid. So I've been grieving, overwhelmed and relieved that he's no longer in pain and is at peace. He was 65, but alcoholism had taken its toll, and he looked like an 80 year old. Addiction is a cruel mistress, and Jim found out the hard way that unless you face it and try to overcome it, it will eat you alive, body and soul. He became, in the past two-three years, someone I hardly recognized, an angry, hateful, cruel man who wanted to turn back the clock 37 years so he could be a carefree bachelor going out drinking, dancing and carousing every week. Unfortunately, time doesn't work that way, and he paid the price for his egotistic fantasy. Anyway, here's some tidbits and reviews of the three books I was able to read during the past few tumultuous weeks.
 
RIP to am amazing playwright.
 
Obituary Note: Tom Stoppard

Tom Stoppard, whose beloved plays include Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead, Jumpers, Travesties, Night and Day, The Real Thing, Arcadia, The Invention of Love, The Coast of Utopia, Rock 'n' Roll, and Leopoldstadt, has died at the age of 88.

The New York Times called Stoppard "the Czech-born playwright who
entwined erudition with imagination, verbal pyrotechnics with arch cleverness, and philosophical probing with heartache and lust in stage works that won accolades and awards on both sides of the Atlantic, earning critical comparisons to Shakespeare and Shaw....[He] earned a reputation as the most cerebral of contemporary English-language playwrights, venturing into vast fields of scholarly inquiry--theology, political theory, the relationship of mind and body, the nature of creativity, the purpose of art--and spreading his work across the centuries and continents."

The Wall Street Journal said Stoppard "spun wordplay, philosophical
debates and scientific principles into popular theatrical entertainment, landing a string of West End and Broadway hits [and] was known for elevating intellectual theater in the public consciousness and marrying intellectual depth and dramatic entertainment."

Besides more than 30 plays, Stoppard also wrote screenplays for TV,
radio, and the movies. The best-known of them was Shakespeare in Love,
for which he and Marc Norman won an Oscar for Best Original Screenplay.
His other screenplays included Brazil, Empire of the Sun, The Russia
House, Billy Bathgate, Enigma, Anna Karenina, and Parade's End. He
adapted his Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead for film and directed
the movie.

And, as the Guardian noted, "he was the go-to writer for blockbusters in
need of a bit of spit and polish (including Indiana Jones and the Last
Crusade and the Star Wars adventure Revenge of the Sith). Steven
Spielberg once dragged him out of the shower with an urgent phone call
to discuss a problem with Schindler's List."

Among his many honors, he was knighted in 1997 and awarded the Order of
Merit in 2000. In 2013, he won the PEN Pinter Prize for his
"determination to tell things as they are." Another honor was having an
adjective based on his name included in the Oxford English Dictionary:
"Stoppardian."

Tomorrow London's West End theatres will dim their lights for two
minutes in honor of Stoppard. The Society of London Theatre's president,
Kash Bennett, said Stoppard's "extraordinary voice reshaped modern
theatre, combining intellectual daring, emotional depth and razor-sharp
wit in work that challenged, moved and delighted audiences across
generations."

This sounds fantastic, and I hope that I get the chance to see it when it debuts.
 
Movies: Rogue Male

Benedict Cumberbatch "has confirmed that he remains committed" to
adapting Geoffrey Household's Rogue Male, the 1939 British novel that he said inspired Ian Fleming to write the James Bond books, Deadline reported. Cumberbatch and his production company SunnyMarch had announced in 2016 that they planned to adapt the novel, but it hasn't happened yet.

"It's the original fugitive novel and a huge inspiration for Ian Fleming
for Bond. When we first sat down to talk about this, [we thought] is
this a bit of a guy's film?" he said recently on the SmartLess podcast,
adding that he hoped to schedule shooting for 2026.

"The longer we were exploring the themes of it and the motivation behind
the guy's actions, and the outcome, and how he's turned on by his own
side, as well as the side he's tried to take down, it's fascinating how
it plays into the political spectrum of what's going on in the world
right now," Cumberbatch added. Peter O'Toole appeared in a 1977 BBC TV
adaptation of Rogue Male, and the 1940 Twentieth Century Fox movie Man
Hunt was also based on it.

What a great idea for those who are dealing with poverty this holiday season! Books feed the soul, just as food feeds the body.
 
Cool Idea: A Giving Tuesday Yarn Tree

"This past weekend you might have noticed the yarn tree Alex built by
the register," A Novel Idea in Philadelphia, Pa., posted on Facebook. "This is our Giving Tree in honor of Giving Tuesday
(though we're going to keep it up through the holidays).... This holiday
season we encourage you to pay-it-forward. Purchase an ANI gift card,
book, ornament, etc. to go on our tree for someone in the community.
This can be done in-store or online!

"Anyone is welcome to take something from the tree--maybe for
themselves, a gift for a family member or friend, etc.--at no cost, with
no questions asked, and without stigma."

This is true...booksellers are heroic.
 
Quotation of the Day

'Booksellers Are Heroes for Their Communities'

"I grew up mostly an only child, so I spent a lot of time reading in my
room, then imagining stories of my own. Which is to say, books have
always felt like some of the very best, most satisfying company.

"These days, living in the D.C. area, my local indies have become a
refuge from the uncertainty and heartache swirling around this city.
Even as our local economy bears the brunt of a government shutdown and
massive government layoffs, when I visit Wonderland Books or Politics
and Prose, they're almost always bustling with customers. I think that's
because they supply more than books--they provide community and escape.
More than ever, I believe booksellers are heroes for their communities."--Marisa Kashino, author

RIP to the famed potboiler romance writer, Fern Michaels.
 
Obituary Note: Fern Michaels

Prolific author Fern Michaels, "a mother of five in suburban New Jersey who responded to her husband's request to get a job by taking up writing, only to blossom into a bestselling author of more than 200 romances and thrillers," died on November 12, the New York Times reported. She was 92. Michaels began her career writing with a partner, Roberta Anderson, but took legal control of the pen name (her real name was Mary Kuczkir) in 1989 and adopted it as her public persona in interviews.

She sold an estimated 150 million books, according to Kensington
Publishing, her longtime publisher. Her work has been translated into 20
languages. She was best known for the Sisterhood series, a collection of
36 romantic thrillers that began with Weekend Warriors (2003),

Michaels credited a steely resolve that allowed her to launch a writing
career in her 40s: "When my youngest went off to kindergarten, my
husband told me to get off my ass and get a job. Those were his exact
words. I didn't know how to do anything except be a wife and mother....
Rather than face the outside world with no skills, I decided to write a
book. As my husband said at the time, stupid is as stupid does. Guess
what, I don't have that husband anymore." Although the couple never
divorced, they separated in the early 1970s.

She met Anderson, another suburban mother, while working part time in
market research. They chose their pen name because Michaels liked the
name Michael, and had a huge plastic fern in her living room. The Times
wrote that "the duo worked odd jobs, including cleaning clogged drains
and taking door-to-door surveys, before publishing the first Fern
Michaels novel, Pride & Passion, in 1975.... Two years later, they
achieved a commercial breakout with Captive Passions."

"Fern's books became a safe place for women to find someone who not only
understood what they were going through, but also celebrated them," said
Esi Sogah, who edited several of her novels for Kensington. "She gave us
a window into the world the way it could be, and showed us how to have a
fun time doing it."

After she took over the pen name, Michaels continued her relentless pace
for decades. Even into her 90s, she typically published four books a
year. She recently embarked on a new series, Twin Lights, and published
the first installment, Smuggler's Cove, in August. Code Blue, the 37th
Sisterhood novel, will be published this month, and several more books
are scheduled for publication in the coming year.

"Is Fern Michaels a great writer? No," she wrote on her website. "She is
however, one hell of a story teller. When people ask me what I do, I
say, 'I scribble and tell stories.' It's a great way to make a living."

 
The Dagger and the Flame by Catherine Doyle is a YA romantasy that has just the perfect amount of spice and sexual tension, and also has a mystery laden plot with plenty of twists and turns, well outlined by straightforward and gleaming prose. Here's the blurb: In the dark underbelly of a beautiful city, two rival assassins are pitted against each other in a deadly game of revenge, where the most dangerous mistake of all is falling in love in this “steamy” young adult fantasy.

In Fantome, a kingdom of cobbled streets, flickering lamplight, beautiful buildings, and secret catacombs, Shade-magic is a scarce and deadly commodity controlled by two enemy guilds: the Cloaks and the Daggers—the thieves and the assassins. On the night of her mother’s murder, eighteen-year-old Seraphine runs for her life. Seeking sanctuary with the Cloaks, Sera’s heart is set on revenge. But are her secret abilities a match for the dark-haired boy whose quicksilver eyes follow her around the city?

Nothing can prepare Sera for the moment she finally comes face-to-face with Ransom, heir to the Order of Daggers. And Ransom is shocked to discover that this unassuming farm girl wields a strange and blazing magic he has never seen before. As the Cloaks and the Daggers grapple for control of Fantome’s underworld, Sera and Ransom are consumed by the push and pull of their magic…and the deadly spark and terrible vengeance that keeps drawing them back together.
 
 
 I loved Sera's strong backstory and her commitment to her goal of taking out the bad guys and bringing light to all the darkness created by her mother's hatred of her father, the head of the Daggers assassins. I also loved the fact that she was no shrinking violet or damsel in distress, and she let Ransom know this right from the start, so there was no misunderstanding her goal and determination. Of the two, Ransom was the more emotional, confused and unable to accomplish anything due to his infatuation with Sera. Usually in romance fiction the woman gives it all up for the handsome guy, but it was the opposite here, which was refreshing. The prose was juicy and very well done, gripping enough to turn this novel into a page-turner that I couldn't put down. I'd give it an A, and recommend it to anyone who enjoys romantasy with very moderate spice.
 
Toni and Addie Go Viral by Melissa Marr is an LGBTQ romance that was very spicy and full of emotional backstory and reveals. Here's the blurb: Hot new author and her lead actress stun fans in a secret wedding―is it all a publicity stunt? Or something more…

On a whim―and hoping to pay off the hundreds of thousands of dollars in debt her grifter father left behind―Victorian history professor Toni Darbyshire sells her lesbian detective novel in a massive deal. Suddenly thrust into the overwhelming new world of publishing, plus a television adaptation, Toni’s life gets even more complicated when her one-night stand turned pen pal (and the namesake for her main character) shows up in person for casting of the show.

Aspiring actress Addie’s had a crush on the professor ever since she watched her lectures on the Victorian era to prep for a stage role. Now, getting cast in Toni’s TV series could be her big break. But Addie’s in over her head when promo pictures of their fake Victorian wedding go viral. She could lose more than just her heart … and her historically accurate underthings.
 This charming lesbian romance had a lot going for it, not the least of which is sparkling prose and a faster than lightening plot that will keep readers turning pages into the wee hours. Though the descriptive sex scenes were a bit too frequent and overly done, IMO, I'm glad that there are books like this for budding lesbians everywhere to read and know that their desires are normal and natural. The characters introspection was also a bit much, but, though this isn't my usual fare, it was so well done it doesn't matter...a well told story is a well told tale, no matter the genre. I'd give it a B+ and recommend it to anyone in the LGBTQ community, or those who are wondering about their sexuality and looking for roadmaps on their journey.
 
Bonded By Thorns by Elizabeth Helen is a fairy tale romantasy very spicey LGBTQ retelling of Beauty and the Beast that I found to be blush-inducing and charming all at once. Here's the blurb: 
Four beastly princes. One awkward bookworm. An enchanted world of fae, magic, and danger.
I've always loved fairytales. I never imagined I'd actually be in one.
When my father wanders into the enchanted realm of the fae, I know I have to go after him. And when he gets imprisoned, I'll do anything to save him... Even trade my freedom for his. I had no idea I'd end up imprisoned by four fae princes who turn into beasts at night.
I have to win my freedom, and that means making a bargain with them. They must find their mates in order to break the curse. If I can help them do that, they'll set me free. Sounds simple, right?
It's not. Because against my better judgment, I'm starting to fall for these beastly princes. One is smart and sweet, the other mysterious and deadly, another flirty and confident, and the last prince... He's handsome, strong, has a wicked temper, and is dead-set against breaking the curse. Why does he want to keep me here forever?
But it's not just my freedom on the line. If I don't break the princes' curse soon, all the magic in the Enchanted Vale will be stolen by the evil—and stupidly hot—Prince of Thorns. And I'm not letting my princes stay cursed.
Not after I've fallen in love with them.
Though there's lots of metaphors in this book, I'm not completely sure what the thorns represent, unless they're male anatomy covers. There's a lot of descriptive gay male sex that goes on in this book, though the beauty has 4 male suitors and I'd expected at least one "throuple" or "group sex" scene somewhere, but was disappointed. An effort is made to tell readers that all the main characters are actually bisexual, but none of those scenarios are ever played out. There were some dark and bloody scenes here, and alight bondage, while it was apparent that each character was insecure in one way or another. I liked that the castle was run by women who shape-shifted into adorable animals like bunnies or raccoons at night, while the four princes become savage wolves. The prose was clean and crisp, and the plot beautifully swift, which was a blessing since the book was over 500 pages long, so it was never a slog to read. Engrossing, if somewhat redundant with the constant gay male sex scenes, I'd still give this beautifully created (great cover art and rosy burgundy edges) novel a B, and recommend it to anyone looking for some spicy male on male action and an elegant retelling of Beauty and the Beast. Warning, this is the first part of a series, so cliffhangers are inevitable.
 

Sunday, November 30, 2025

The Bodyguard (Katherine Center's version, not the Houston/Costner version) Movie, Obituary for Sri Owen, Death at Dovecote Hatch by Dorothy Cannell, Vow of Thieves by Mary E Pearson, Between Us by Mhairi McFarlane and Violet Thistlewaite is Not a Villain Anymore by Emily Krempholtz

One last time on the last day of November! Hey there, book dragons! November was a tough month, and December is not looking much better, unfortunately. However, I have some great people on my side, and I'm hoping that all goes well this holiday (and birthday) season. Meanwhile, here are some tidbits and four book reviews for books that kept me going during dark times. 
 
I remember reading and loving this book right after it was published and hit shelves in the bookstores. Katherine Center's prose was eloquent and moving, and the plot was engaging and made the book a real page turner. The movie looks to be just as riveting. I will keep a weather eye on Netflix this next year so I can watch it unfold.
 
 Movies: The Bodyguard

Leighton Meester (Good Cop/Bad Cop) and Jared Padalecki (Supernatural)
will star in a Netflix holiday rom-com based on Katherine Center's The
Bodyguard. Deadline reported that in the 2022 novel, "a no-nonsense bodyguard is assigned to protect a charming action star over the holidays, leading sparks to fly and secrets to unravel, with Christmas getting a whole lot more complicated."

The movie's cast includes Andie MacDowell, Walker Hayes, Noah LaLonde, and Toby Sandeman. The project is directed by Elizabeth Allen Rosenbaum (Aquamarine) from a script by Erin Cardillo & Richard Keith (Isn't It Romantic, Virgin River). Gina Matthews and Grant Scharbo are producing for Little Engine Productions, alongside Jared & Genevieve Padalecki for Living in the Asterisk.

Deadline noted that "fans of The Bodyguard will have a hand in titling
the new Netflix movie--keep an eye on the Instagram pages of Meester,
Padalecki and Center to find out more."

Rosenbaum said, "I began paying close attention to BookTok culture
around the success of my last Netflix Film, Purple Hearts. The
overwhelming enthusiasm on social media and with readers for Katherine
Center's novel was a major factor in my decision to come on board as
director.... It's been amazing to work closely with Katherine so far,
and to see her so excited about moving her witty story about a
no-nonsense bodyguard to an A-list actor into the holiday season."

I not only had a copy of the Rice Book cookbook, I bought two more over the years and gave them away as gifts. RIP to a wonderful cookbook author, who made making delicious Indonesian meals easy.
 
Obituary for Sri Owen
Sri Owen, a Sumatra-raised food writer living in London "who brokered her homesickness for her native cuisine into a prolific career as a cookbook author credited with popularizing Indonesian delicacies in the English-speaking world," died October 4, the New York Times reported. She was 90.
Owen published 10 books, starting with The Home Book of Indonesian Cookery (1976), a groundbreaking work that "brought to light a national cuisine that was little known in the Western world, weaving myriad recipes into a memoir format that also traces the swirl of cultural influences--Chinese, Indian, Spanish, Arabic and others--that shaped the Indonesian palate," the Times wrote.
The Rice Book (1993) explored the historical legacies of the grain, as well as its myths and legends, while offering more than 250 recipes from many countries. The Observer ranked The Rice Book #19 on its list of the 50 best cookbooks of all time. Her other cookbooks include Healthy Thai Cooking (1997), Noodles the New Way (2000), and New Wave Asian (2002). In 2017, the Guild of Food Writers honored her with its lifetime achievement award. Her final book, Sri Owen's Indonesian Food, is available from Interlink Books.
Owen moved from Sumatra to Britain in 1964 with her English husband, Roger Owen. A Jane Austen fan and self-described Anglophile, she later said she had been eager to move, but soon began to yearn for the foods she had grown up with. "When I arrived in London, Indonesian food was not known at all," Owen said in an interview with the Times in 2020. "I started cooking Indonesian food because I wanted to eat my own home cooking. The flavors of Indonesian food are difficult to leave behind."
A literary agent friend of her husband who had dined in the Owen home helped arrange a deal for The Home Book of Indonesian Cookery with Faber & Faber.
In 1984, Owen opened an Indonesian food shop on the ground floor of the family home, naming it Mustika Rasa, roughly, "jewel of flavor," which sold its wares at Harrods, the Times noted, adding that by her later years, she "had no shortage of Indonesian restaurants to choose from in London. But there was little point in asking her for recommendations. As she put it to Food52, 'I find I can cook better than any of the average eating places.' "

 

Death at Dovecote Hatch by Dorothy Cannell is a wonderfully old fashioned historical cozy mystery that brings to mind Downton Abbey at it's most charming. Here's the blurb: "Agatha Christie meets Downton Abbey…a charming reminder of all the country house murders of Britain's golden age."—Kirkus Reviews
 
It's November 1932, and the peaceful village of Dovecote Hatch is still reeling from the recent murder at Mullings, country estate of the wealthy Stodmarsh family. Now it's about to be rocked by news of another violent demise. When the body of mild-mannered Kenneth Tenneson is found at the foot of the stairs in his home, the coroner's inquest announces a verdict of accidental death. Florence Norris, however—the quietly observant housekeeper at Mullings—suspects there may be more to the story than a fall.
Florence's suspicions of foul play would appear to be confirmed when a second will turns up revealing details of a dark secret in the Tenneson family's past. Determined to find the truth about Kenneth's death, Florence gradually pieces the clues together—but will she be in time to prevent a catastrophic turn of events?
This slender volume of only 251 pages gripped me right from the first paragraph, as, like Downton Abbey, I got caught up in the small village characters circa 1932, and their lives and loves. The prose is also old fashioned (think Sherlock Holmes-style) but readable and elegant, and it moves along the stalwart English plot "a treat" as the British are like to say. I'd give this marvelous story an A, and recommend it to anyone who likes classic and cozy mysteries that don't give away the ending in the first third of the novel.
 
Vow of Thieves by Mary E Pearson is the second book in the "Dance of Thieves" duology, and it's quite a firecracker of a YA dystopian romantasy. Though it's as hefty (480 pages) as its predecessor, the plot moves at a running pace that will leave you breathless. Here's the blurb: 
Vow of Thieves is the thrilling sequel to Dance of Thieves, set in the same world as Mary E. Pearson's New York Times-bestselling Remnant Chronicles.

Kazi and Jase have survived, stronger and more in love than ever. Their new life now lies before them—the Ballengers will be outlaws no longer, Tor's Watch will be a kingdom, and Kazi and Jase will meet all challenges side by side, together at last.

But an ominous warning mars their journey back, and they soon find themselves captured in a tangled web of deceit woven by their greatest enemies and unlikeliest allies, a place where betrayals run deeper and more deadly than either had thought possible, and where timeless ambitions threaten to destroy them both.
Pearson's prose is lovely and intricate without being stuffy and boringly full of researched details that slow down the plot. I liked Kazi and Jase's journey, though I still found a whiff or two of the misogyny of the female protagonist taking a backseat on her hopes and dreams to the male protagonist, who is always a bit of a jerk, if not an outright asshat in most romantasy novels. This fills me with anguish, especially with YA books because what kind of message does it send to young women in our country that they are still expected to be the sidekick and leave behind their dreams and needs in favor of "love," especially of a guy who is usually nasty and grumpy and treats the female main character poorly at the outset (which is seen as sexy...why?). Also the male protagonist is almost always tatted up and has swoopy hair that falls onto his forehead, and he's muscular, tall and just so handsome that the female protagonist suddenly loses her ability to reason or be her badass self because her hormones take over and she can't stop drooling over this egotistical (but damaged) guy. Again, why are we telling young women that this is what love is? Not an equal partnership but a severing of a woman's independence and fighting spirit for the "joys" of love, marriage and producing children. Anyway, this novel, due to its adventure and rabble rousing, has much less of the "woman reduced to child-like stupidity for love" themes in it, so I enjoyed the way that the author tied up all the loose ends from the first book. I'd give it a B+, and recommend it to anyone who read the first book "Dance of Thieves."
 
Between Us by Mhairi McFarlane is a romantic comedy novel that's contemporary enough to posit the question of what happens when your long term BF decides to use your private confessions and family situations as fodder for his streaming show, without telling you or asking for your permission? I would have been furious with the heat of a thousand suns if with happens to Roisin happened to me, but she just cringes, hides and sulks, without a thought of getting a lawyer and suing her BF Joe for stealing from her for his own gain. Anyway, here's the blurb:  Mhairi McFarlane delivers a witty, clever, emotional new novel about a woman whose life unravels spectacularly after her screenwriter boyfriend uses their relationship as inspiration for his new television show.

When Roisin and Joe join their friends for a weekend at a country house, it’s a triple celebration—a birthday, an engagement, and the launch of Joe’s shiny new TV show. But as the weekend unfolds, tensions come to light in the group and Roisin begins to question her own relationship. And as they watch the first episode of Joe’s drama, she realizes that the private things she told him—which should have stayed between them—are right there on the screen.

With her friend group in chaos and her messy love life on display for the whole world to see, Roisin returns home to avoid the unwanted attention and help run her family’s pub. But drama still follows, in the form of her dysfunctional family and the looming question: what other parts of her now-ex’s show are inspired by real events? Lies? Infidelity? Every week, as a new episode airs, she wonders what other secrets will be revealed.

Yet the most unexpected twist of all is an old friend, who is suddenly there for Roisin in ways she never knew she needed

Matt turns out to be a halfway decent human being, for which he's lauded like the second coming of Christ, but its clear early on that he's been enamored of Roisin for years, but was too much of a coward to do anything about it. Again, his failings are somehow soft-pedaled as sexy and vulnerable, and Roisin can't help but fall for him, as he goes from confidant to lover.McFarlane's prose is succulent and fun, and her plot dances along to a zippy beat. I'd give this odd novel a B-, and recommend it to anyone who is interested in privacy in the digital age.
 
Violet Thistlewaite Is Not a Villain Anymore by Emily Krempholtz (bad luck on that cloddish last name, Em) is a an action/adventure cozy romantasy that is so full of warm and wonderful magic that I was enchanted from the first chapter on! Here's the blurb: 
A powerful plant witch and a grumpy alchemist must work together to save their quiet town from a magical plague in this debut cozy fantasy romance about starting over, redemption, and what it really means to be a good person.

Guy Shadowfade is dead, and after a lifetime as the dark sorcerer’s right-hand, Violet Thistlewaite is determined to start over—not as the fearsome Thornwitch, but as someone kind. Someone better. Someone
good.

The quaint town of Dragon’s Rest, Violet decides, will be her second chance—she’ll set down roots, open a flower shop, keep her sentient (mildly homicidal) houseplant in check, and prune dark magic from the twisted boughs of her life.

Violet’s vibrant bouquets and cheerful enchantments soon charm the welcoming townsfolk, though nothing seems to impress the prickly yet dashingly handsome Nathaniel Marsh, an alchemist sharing her greenhouse. With a struggling business and his own second chance seemingly out of reach, Nathaniel has no time for flowers or frippery—and certainly none for the intriguing witch next door.

When a mysterious blight endangers every living plant in Dragon’s Rest, Violet and Nathaniel must work together, through their fears, pasts, and growing feelings for one another, to save their community. But with a figure from her previous life knocking at her door and her secrets threatening to uproot everything she’s worked so hard to grow, Violet can’t help but wonder…does a former villain truly deserve a happily-ever-after?
Violet is a charming bungler of a witch, whose desire to start over is thwarted when she tries to deny her second nature as a badass thorn witch. Her landlord and neighbor, apothecary and one-time alchemist Nathaniel, is a brooding, grumpy guy for whom denying what he wants in life, in order to run his parent's shop (so his sister can run around playing music and dancing, but it appears that only one twin is allowed to follow her dreams, due to gender, which hardly seems fair) has become second nature. When Vi and Nate start to grouse at one another and banter via shop signs, its inevitable that they'll fall in love with one another. The prose here is light and frothy, and the plot as swift as a summer storm that comes out of nowhere. I loved the story and the surprise at the end that allowed Vi to realize that accepting her "dark" side need not siderail her plans for a new and better life as a florist. I'd give this uplifting novel a B+, and recommend it to anyone who enjoys cozy romantasy and second chances.
 

Monday, November 24, 2025

Iowa Bookstore's Food Fundraiser, Obit for Jim Hamilton of Forbidden Planet, Don't Let The Devil Ride on TV, Wuthering Heights Movie, Quote of the Day, Sheraton Boston's Goodnight Moon Suite, Queen Esther by John Irving, Brigands and Breadknives by Travis Baldree, Under Loch and Key by Lana Ferguson, and the Locksmith's Daughter by Karen Brooks

Hola amigos and amigas, it's the third week of November, and its been a hell of a month, healthwise and otherwise. So I am behind in my posts, and for that I apologize, but it couldn't be helped. But today I will rectify that situation with some news and reviews from the book world, or at least my corner of it. Keep cozy and keep reading, fellow book lovers!
 
This is a great idea, and I notice that more stores and communities are banding together to bolster food bank resources for all the people affected by our current fascist POTUS's draconian policies that are removing food stamp benefits and social security benefits and other programs (such as free school lunches) from the poorest people in our society, all so mega rich asshats can get a tax break on their billions. Thank heaven there are caring people out there who are helping prevent starvation in the supposedly richest nation on earth. Good for you, Iowa bookstores...now if you'd just quit voting for evil, lying dictators!
 
Cool Idea: Iowa Bookstores' Food Nonprofit Fundraiser

HEA Book Boutique and Swamp Fox Bookstore hosted a book swap.
On Sunday, in reaction to the administration's efforts to halt SNAP food
benefits for more than 40 million people, five Iowa bookstores banded
together to raise funds for HACAP, a nonprofit and member of Feeding America that serves nine counties in eastern Iowa.
HEA Book Boutique and Swamp Fox Bookstore hosted a book swap at Lowe Park in Marion, where for $15 readers could swap up to five gently loved books and shop with the stores as well as with the Green Dragon Bookshop, in Fort Dodge, Perennial Pages Bookshoppe, Ackley,
and Sisters Books and Nooks, Cedar Rapids. Once all rental fees were covered, profits were donated to HACAP. More than 70 people attended the event, and more than $900 was raised for HACAP.

In a related note, yesterday the New York Times reported at length on
the independent bookstores that are collecting food for Americans whose food assistance is being threatened by the administration. The Times wrote in part, "Independent bookstores have long operated as hubs for activism and community service. In recent years, some stores have increasingly waded into political and social issues by conducting voter registration drives, sending free books to L.G.B.T.Q. prison inmates and distributing emergency contraceptives to women in states where abortion access has been restricted. Dozens of bookstores have rallied around the issue of food insecurity in recent weeks, according to the American Booksellers Association."

RIP Mr Hamilton! Forbidden Planet is an iconic bookstore.
 
Obituary Note: Jim Hamilton 

Jim Hamilton, co-owner of Forbidden Planet International and Forbidden Planet Glasgow, died November 9. He was 67. Bleeding Cool reported that Hamilton and Kenny Penman had been the owners of Science Fiction Bookshop in Edinburgh, Scotland, which opened under previous owners in 1975 and was purchased by them in 1985. The first Forbidden Planet, founded by Nick Landau, Mike Lake, and Mike Luckman, launched in 1978 as a small store on Denmark Street, then relocated to larger premises.

The original partners then teamed with Hamilton and Penman to open other
stores around the country, "expanding Forbidden Planet out and making it
the first British proper chain of stores," Bleeding Cool wrote. In 1992
and 1993, the original chain split into two firms--Forbidden Planet and
Forbidden Planet Scotland, later renamed Forbidden Planet International.
Hamilton had remained prominent since, especially in the running and
recent relaunch of Forbidden Planet Glasgow.

Penman, his business partner for more than 40 years, wrote to staff:
"Both Jim and I came from pretty ordinary working class backgrounds, and
despite not coming from wealthy families both had happy childhoods a big
part of which was the escapism of the cheapest form of entertainment
going--comics. It was our first passion, and for both of us, it never
waned as we grew Forbidden Planet from one little shop on the
backstreets of Edinburgh. We were a partnership; I had perhaps more of a
business head, but Jim knew comics like no one else, and he was always
the one guiding the product mix....

"When we started out, our ambition was that Science Fiction Bookshop
would be the shop Jim, as a fan and collector, wanted to shop in. We
worked hard to achieve that over the years, and I know he was very proud
of the amazing shop that is our Glasgow store. There were always new
things to be doing, but I think he felt we had nearly achieved what he
set out to do, and more, by bringing all sorts of new fans into the
fold, with the Sauchiehall St branch. If there was one thing we can all
do to remember Jim, I think he would be more than happy if, by our love
and application, we finally perfected his vision."

This sounds fascinating, and I can't wait to stream it on one of the streaming platforms we subscribe to at my house.
 
TV: Don't Let the Devil Ride

Tomorrow Studios (The Better Sister, One Piece) has acquired the novel
Don't Let the Devil Ride by Ace Atkins, which will be adapted for TV by
award-winning showrunner Cheo Hodari Coker (Marvel's Luke Cage).

The story: "Addison McKellar thought she knew the man she
married--charming, successful Dean McKellar--until he vanished. Fearing
the worst, she hires private investigator Porter Hayes, an old friend of
her father and a legend in Memphis. As Hayes starts pulling at loose
threads Addison's entire life unravels. Her husband's prosperous
construction firm? It doesn't exist. Instead, her easy, affluent
lifestyle is funded by blood money from Dean's shadowy international
mercenary firm--and she doesn't even know his real name."


This also sounds intriguing, and I've often wondered why there aren't more modern adaptations of the Bronte sisters works.
 
Movies: Wuthering Heights

Warner Bros has released an official trailer for Wuthering Heights,
writer-director Emerald Fennell's adaptation of Emily Brontes
gothic romance novel. Deadline reported that the film, starring Margot
Robbie as Catherine Earnshaw and Jacob Elordi as Heathcliff, "is gearing
up for a Valentine's Weekend 2026 premiere in theaters."

The cast also includes Hong Chau, Shazad Latif, Alison Oliver, Martin
Clunes, and Ewan Mitchell. Fennell wrote, directed, and produces. Robbie
produces through her LuckyChap Entertainment, marking the production
company's third collaboration with Fennell (Saltburn, Promising Young
Woman).

This is true! Indie Bookstores are amazing community hubs of information and education.
Quotation of the Day

"The independent bookstores, their superpower is that they can make the
store whatever they want, they can stock whatever they want. And when
you think about the market as a whole, that creates incredible diversity
in stock and books and displays and experiences in bookstores. When we
homogenize it, what we have instead is something that looks really
sterile.
"Bookstores are currently building their capacity to be centers that
activate their communities and keep their communities informed about
issues like the freedom to read, like the banks skimming off the top of
transactions, and so much more. What we're doing right now is building
this network of independent bookstores into a political force that I
know can have a clear voice and stand up for the issues that impact
them."--Philomena Polefrone, associate director of American Booksellers for Free Expression

I would LOVE to stay in the Goodnight Moon Suite! Complete with a bowl full of mush (What is mush? Is it like cream of wheat?). I imagine it will be very cozy and a wonderful way to get into Margaret Wise Brown's world. I bet there are millions of children who, like myself, grew up hearing their mothers read them Goodnight Moon at bedtime.
 
Cool Idea: Sheraton Boston Hotel's Goodnight Moon Suite

Sheraton Hotels has teamed up with HarperCollins, publishers of the
beloved children's book Goodnight Moon by Margaret Wise Brown,
illustrated by Clement Hurd, to re-create the book's iconic bedroom in a
suite at the newly renovated Sheraton Boston Hotel.

Available through February 2026, the suite is designed for guests of all
ages, who "can actually step inside the book's whimsical world," House
Beautiful reported, adding that the life-size re-creation of Hurd's illustrations
features "Kelly-green walls, red-and-yellow accents, the cozy fireplace,
and even the bowl full of mush."

"Goodnight Moon Suite at Sheraton Boston was dreamed up with the hope of creating a universal moment of comfort," said Peggy Roe, executive v-p & chief customer officer at Marriott International. "For so many of us,
Goodnight Moon is just that. It's more than a book; it's a beloved
memory, and one I have created time after time with my own children. We
wanted to capture that sense of home and tranquility and deliver it to
the often busy and bustling world of travel."

Queen Esther by John Irving is what is often described as "literary fiction," though in this case it felt more like a very poorly executed romance novel written by a misogynistic man past his prime. I read all 7 of Irvings original novels, and I even read Trying to Save Piggy Sneed, but when it came to Son of the Circus and the novels following Sneed, (one of which had an interview with Irving in which he recommended that all teenage girls take a turn as prostitutes, so they might know better how to please men), I was so grossed out by Irvings obvious narcissism and misogyny and pedophilia that I couldn't, in good conscience, read any more of his books. His formerly acclaimed prose had also degraded and become cliche-ridden and dull, full of info-dumps and agonizingly slow plots. Here's the blurb: 
After forty years, John Irving returns to the world of his bestselling classic novel and Academy Award–winning film, The Cider House Rules, revisiting the orphanage in St. Cloud’s, Maine, where Dr. Wilbur Larch takes in Esther—a Viennese-born Jew whose life is shaped by anti-Semitism.

Esther Nacht is born in Vienna in 1905. Her father dies on board the ship to Portland, Maine; her mother is murdered by anti-Semites in Portland. Dr. Larch knows it won’t be easy to find a Jewish family to adopt Esther; in fact, he won’t find
any family who’ll adopt her.

When Esther is fourteen, soon to be a ward of the state, Dr. Larch meets the Winslows, a philanthropic New England family with a history of providing foster care for unadopted orphans. The Winslows aren’t Jewish, but they despise anti-Semitism. Esther’s gratitude for the Winslows is unending; even as she retraces her roots back to Vienna, she never stops loving and protecting the Winslows. In the final chapter, set in Jerusalem in 1981, Esther Nacht is seventy-six.

John Irving’s sixteenth novel is a testament to his enduring ability to weave complex characters and intricate narratives that challenge and captivate.
Queen Esther is not just a story of survival but a profound exploration of identity, belonging, and the enduring impact of history on our personal lives showcasing why Irving remains one of the world’s most beloved, provocative, and entertaining authors—a storyteller of our time and for all time.
The above blurb is full of lies...first of all, this novel should NOT have been called Queen Esther, because we only read a bit about her at the beginning and again at the end of the book. 95 percent of the novel is about James (Jimmy) Winslow (Esther's son or grandson) and his creepy pal Claude, who are obsessed with women's breasts (all the women in the novel have their breasts described repeatedly and evaluated every time they are mentioned) and sex, and with male circumcision. This was not a good story, it was a bunch of research into post WWII Jewish people and a bunch of weird women and male wrestlers who are all apparently trying to avoid having babies via heterosexual sex, but are obsessed with still actually having children nonetheless. There's barely a mention of Dr Larch from Cider House Rules, and there's a lot of discussion of Jimmy learning the German language (WHY? Who cares? I didn't, nor did it make Jimmy any more endearing, it made him even more strange and stupid) and a lot of the women in his life telling him that he must get a girl pregnant (even though he spends much of the novel nowhere near America) so he can avoid the draft for the Vietnam War. He finally gets his lesbian friend to offer up her girlfriend, who wants to "try" heterosexual sex, to sleep with him for a prescribed three days, after which she gets pregnant and allows the child to be raised by all the weird women in Jimmy's life. There's also a lot of fawning over a dog whom everyone's concerned about becoming incontinent in the bathtub during a thunderstorm, which never actually happens. There's little coherency to the plot or the prose, which is awful. I never would have purchased this book if I had known what a slow and boring slog it would be to read, replete with reprehensible characters. The POV is oddly omniscient, and the prose reads like it was written by a grad student studying post WWII America for a thesis paper...There's also liberal use of exclamation points, for no apparent reason, throughout the book. Grotesque and boring, I'd give this book a C-, and I can't really imagine anyone who would enjoy reading this misogynistic twaddle. Give it up, Irving, you've lost it.
 
Brigands and Breadknives by Travis Baldree is a cozy romantasy adventure, and the first of his novels that I've read (I've read and enjoyed the others in this series) that has a main character who is cowardly and completely unlikable. Here's the blurb: Return to the fantasy world of the Legends & Lattes series with a new adventure featuring fan-favorite, foul-mouthed bookseller Fern

Fern has weathered the stillness and storms of a bookseller’s life for decades, but now, in the face of crippling ennui, transplants herself to the city of Thune to hang out her shingle beside a long-absent friend’s coffee shop. What could be a better pairing? Surely a charming renovation montage will cure what ails her!

If only things were so simple.
It turns out that fixing your life isn’t a one-time prospect, nor as easy as a change of scenery and a lick of paint.

A drunken and desperate night sees the rattkin waking far from home in the company of a legendary warrior, an imprisoned chaos-goblin with a fondness for silverware, and an absolutely thumping hangover.

As together they fend off a rogue’s gallery of ne’er-do-wells trying to claim the bounty the goblin represents, Fern may finally reconnect with the person she actually is when nothing seems inevitable.
  
 
So despite the excellent prose and easily-followed plot, there wasn't the beloved or fascinating characters that populated Baldree's other books to keep the reader engrossed in their adventure. Fern is foul mouthed for no other reason that other characters don't expect a small rodent to say such violent sounding things. She's not a good person, really, as she starts up a bookstore, then gets drunk and leaves her friends holding the bag in the middle of the night. We learn that apparently Fern is really more suited to a brigand's life on the road, rather than running a bookstore, which was her dream before. So while on the road she tells tales from the books she has read, and has some hair raising adventures which she barely survives, and all this culminates in her realizing that a cozy bookstore is not for her. Her companions on the road are a brilliant elf maiden and a magical troll goblin who is just plain creepy in the end. There wasn't a character here whom I was invested in reading about their journey. I'd give this book a B- and only recommend it to those who have read the other books in the Legends and Lattes series and who like road-trip tales with questionable characters.
 
Under Loch and Key by Lana Ferguson is a paranormal romance that answers the question "what if the Loch Ness Monster was a shape-shifting dude?" Here's the blurb: Keyanna “Key” MacKay is used to secrets. Raised by a single father who never divulged his past, it’s only after his death that she finds herself thrust into the world he’d always refused to speak of. With just a childhood bedtime story about a monster that saved her father’s life and the name of her estranged grandmother to go off of, Key has no idea what she’ll find in Scotland. But repeating her father’s mistakes and being rescued by a gorgeous, angry Scotsman—who thinks she’s an idiot—is definitely the last thing she expects.

Lachlan Greer has his own secrets to keep, especially from the bonnie lass he pulls to safety from the slippery shore—a lass with captivating eyes and the last name he’s been taught not to trust. He’s looking for answers as well, and Key’s presence on the grounds they both now occupy presents a real problem. It’s even more troublesome when he gets a front row seat to the lukewarm welcome Key receives from her family; the strange powers she begins to develop; and the fierce determination she brings to every obstacle in her path. Things he shouldn’t care about, and someone he
definitely doesn’t find wildly attractive.

When their secrets collide, it becomes clear that Lachlan could hold the answers Keyanna is after—and that she might also be the key to uncovering his. Up against time, mystery, and a centuries old curse, they’ll quickly discover that magic might not only be in fairy tales, and that love can be a real loch-mess.
 
This is another one of those romantasy novels that make love and sex into a cure-all for everything from curses to magical entrapment. But, as usual, Key is just so beautiful, and Lachlan just so handsome, that their love is inevitable, and it breaks the curse that is on him and his father. An HEA ensues, of course. This is a somewhat silly, but cozy romance, so I'd give it a B, and recommend it to anyone who wonders about the gender and mating habits of infamous, legendary monsters.
 
The Locksmith's Daughter by Karen Brooks is a historical mystery/thriller which is quite a fascinating look into Elizabethan England and its extensive spy network. Here's the blurb: From acclaimed author Karen Brooks comes this intriguing novel rich in historical detail and drama as it tells the unforgettable story of Queen Elizabeth's daring, ruthless spymaster and his female protégée.

In Queen Elizabeth's England, where no one can be trusted and secrets are currency, one woman stands without fear.

Mallory Bright is the only daughter of London's most ingenious locksmith. She has apprenticed with her father since childhood, and there is no lock too elaborate for her to crack. After scandal destroys her reputation, Mallory has returned to her father's home and lives almost as a recluse, ignoring the whispers and gossip of their neighbors. But Sir Francis Walsingham, Queen Elizabeth's spymaster and a frequent client of Mallory's father, draws her into his world of danger and deception. For the locksmith's daughter is not only good at cracking locks, she also has a talent for codes, spycraft, and intrigue. With Mallory by Sir Francis's side, no scheme in England or abroad is safe from discovery.

But Mallory's loyalty wavers when she witnesses the brutal and bloody public execution of three Jesuit priests and realizes the human cost of her espionage. And later, when she discovers the identity of a Catholic spy and a conspiracy that threatens the kingdom, she is forced to choose between her country and her heart.

Once Sir Francis's greatest asset, Mallory is fast becoming his worst threat—and there is only one way the Queen's master spy deals with his enemies.

This novel's prose is clean and crisp, and the plot moves along at a bracing clip. Mallory is a fascinating character, and her ability to move around the shady underworld of English society in the 16th century is a wonder to behold. I enjoyed all the lock-picking information and the mysteries solved, so I'd give this book a B+ and recommend it to anyone who is interested in women in history who didn't get their due in the history books for all they accomplished for Queen and country. 

ages, who "can actually step inside the book's whimsical world," House
Beautiful reported, adding that the life-size re-creation of Hurd's illustrations
features "Kelly-green walls, red-and-yellow accents, the cozy fireplace,
and even the bowl full of mush."