Tuesday, January 14, 2025

Talking About Murderbot, Nook and Cranny Books Seeks New Home in Seattle, SoCal Fires Bookstore Response, In the Lost Lands Movie, The Performance Movie, Future Home of the Living God by Louise Erdrich, Throne of Secrets by Kerri Maniscalco, and The Hazelbourne Ladies Motorcycle and Flying Club by Helen Simonson

Welcome to the second week and second post of 2025, book lovers! I'm trying to get as much read as possible between caregiving and household duties, and while that might not be as many books per week as in previous years, it will have to do for now. Anyway, there's a lot going on in the book world, so here's some tidbits and a few reviews for your reading pleasure.
 
I love Martha Well's groundbreaking Murderbot series, not the least because Murderbot has such a dry wit and is still unfailingly kind, even after all it has been through, that it is hard not to love them. I also agree with the person who wrote this that Wells has written a lot of novels and short stories that have yet to be discovered by the general public...lets get right on that, shall we?
 
And It’s Never a Bad Time to Talk About Murderbot
Ending today with an interview I just recently came across with Martha Wells, author of one of the greatest science fiction series, The Murderbot Diaries . (I would definitely want Murderbot at my dinner with fictional characters, even though I know they wouldn’t want to be there.) Wired talked to Wells about everyone’s favorite self-aware security bot, writing a bazillion books, her newfound fame, cats, and her existential crisis:
What’s also annoying is when people who’ve just discovered Murderbot wonder if she can write anything else. Wells, who is 60 years old, has averaged almost a book a year for more than three decades, ranging from palace intrigues to excursions into distant worlds populated by shapeshifters. But until Murderbot , Wells tended to fly just under the radar. One reason for that, I suspect, is location. Far from the usual literary enclaves of New York or Los Angeles, Wells has lived for all this time in College Station—which is where the nearly 100-year-old library we’re at today resides. Housed on the campus of Texas A&M, her alma mater, the library contains one of the largest collections of science fiction and fantasy in the world.
It’s from this cradle that Wells’ career sprang forth. But post-Murderbot, things have changed. Wells now counts among her friends literary superstars like N. K. Jemisin and Kate Elliott, to say nothing of her fiercely loyal fandom. And it turns out that she’d need all of it—the support, the community, even Murderbot—when, at the pinnacle of her newfound, later-in-life fame, everything threatened to come to an end.”


I didn't even know this place existed, in the shadow of the famous Elliott Bay Book Company on Cap Hill in Seattle...now I wonder where they'll land? Good luck to them in their campaign to gather moving expenses.
 
Nook & Cranny Books, Seattle, Wash., Looking for New Home
Nook & Cranny Books https://www.shelf-awareness.com/ct/x/pjJsdgHdkr4I6a1kK090HQ~k1yJoKXv-hs8x67GD5P2poMLg-gVdw in Seattle, Wash., has launched an Indiegogo campaign to help support a move to a new space.

According to store owner Maren Comendant, she was informed last November
that her lease at 324 15th Ave. E., in the Capitol Hill neighborhood,
would not be renewed, and she has until March 31 to vacate the space.
Funds raised through the Indiegogo campaign, which has a goal of
$12,000, will go toward expenses such as deposits, additional shelving
and furniture, and more inventory.

Comendant noted that although the move's timing is a challenge, it does
present an "amazing opportunity for growth." The current location is
only about 320 square feet, and a larger storefront would allow for
greater capacity for events, more space for customers to sit and relax
during the day, more inventory and display space, and room for pop-ups
with local artisans and other businesses.

In 2022, Comendant purchased the bookstore Oh Hello Again, which
resided in the same space. She took over the lease, changed the name to
Nook & Cranny Books, and put her own spin on the bookstore.
It carries a curated collection of fiction and nonfiction, with an
emphasis on elevating underrepresented voices. Books are organized by
"theme or vibe," rather than by genre. Comendant and her team host open
mics, book clubs, discussion panels, and author events, and there is a
monthly artist-in-residence.

Watching the wildfires consume acres of businesses and homes in California has been horrible, but I'm glad to read that bookstores are responding with help for body and soul to displaced persons who have lost it all to the fires.

Southern California Wildfires: Bookstores Respond
Bookstores near the wildfires in Los Angeles have responded in a variety
of ways to the devastation, becoming centers for the community to
gather, help, and comfort one another, and to begin to try to deal with
the terrible events of the past week.

Octavia's Bookshelf in Pasadena has done amazing work in the days since the Eaton fire destroyed much of nearby Altadena. The store has become an impromptu center for distribution of all kinds of items needed by people affected by the wildfires, especially those who lost their homes. Donated and frequently requested items have included toiletries, first aid kits, towels, water, blankets, pillow cases, non-perishable food, and more. The store, which opened two years ago and emphasizes books by BIPOC authors, is also delivering items to the elderly, disabled, and vulnerable.

Vroman's Bookstore in Pasadena reopened
on Friday, saying in part, "Our hearts go out to the entire community of
Pasadena, Altadena, and everyone impacted by the fires. Just like you,
we are trying to make sense of the tremendous loss and uncertainty of
the last few days and the near future.

At Vroman's, Steve Ross (aka storyteller Mr. Steve) bringing children's
books to the evacuation center at the Pasadena Convention Center.
"We continue to take this situation one day at a time with an awareness
of the role books and bookstores play in the community we serve. Both
can offer a place of refuge and engagement that people may need or want
in a time of difficulty... Come visit if you need a change of scenery, a
place to meet friends, to browse or see a friendly face."
Vroman's added that customers, who have been able to donate to their
favorite local nonprofits through Vroman's Gives Back, now have the
option also to support the Pasadena Community Foundation's Eaton Canyon
Fire Relief and Recovery Fund

This movie looks awesome. I sincerely hope that I get the chance to see it, as I'm a fan of GRRM's early works.
 
Movies: In the Lost Lands

A trailer has been released for In the Lost Lands https://www.shelf-awareness.com/ct/x/pjJsdgCIkr8I6a1kdR11Hw~k1yJoKXv-hs8x67HWpP3poMLg-gVdw, based on the George R.R. Martin short story. Entertainment Weekly reported that the project, starring Milla Jovovich and Dave Bautista, is directed by Paul W.S. Anderson and will premiere March 7. "In the Lost Lands" is one of Martin's earliest fantasy stories, first published in 1982 as part of the Amazons II anthology. In a November
blog entry, Martin described the movie as "dark and twisted and atmospheric, and a lot of fun.... A long time ago, I had hoped to write a series of stories about Gray Alys and those bold enough to buy from her... but life and other stories intervened, and somehow I never got around to writing that second tale. But who knows? If the film does well enough, maybe I will finally write that sequel. In my copious spare time."
LOL.


Wow, this movie based on an Arthur Miller short story sounds fascinating! I can hardly wait to see it.

Movies: The Performance
A trailer has been released for The Performance
based on a short story by Arthur Miller. IndieWire reported that the
film, starring Jeremy Piven, "centers on a dance troupe that is asked to
travel from New York City to Berlin in 1937 to perform for the Nazis.
However, Piven's character Harold May is Jewish, and amid the rise of
Hitler in Germany, his ability to pass as a gentile could be a matter of
life and death."

Directed by Shira Piven (Fully Loaded, Welcome to Me), who co-wrote the
script with Josh Salzberg, the project's cast also includes Maimie
McCoy, Adam Garcia, Isaac Gryn, and Lara Wolf. The Performance premieres February 28 in theaters. "Shira shared the story with me, and it captivated me from the pitch," Salzberg said. "We talked about turning it into a kind of folktale,
like, did you hear the one about the Jewish guy who went and tap danced
for Hitler? It's a larger-than-life concept, it's not some stodgy period
piece."

Future Home of the Living God by Louise Erdrich, published in 2017, is a speculative fiction or what we used to call social science fiction account of a dystopian world and a young Native American woman's desperate struggle to find her freedom within it. This is a poignant story that is at times hard to read, but well worth it. Here's the blurb:
Louise Erdrich, the National Book Award-winning author, paints a startling portrait of a young woman fighting for her life and her unborn child against oppressive forces that manifest in the wake of a cataclysmic event.
The world as we know it is ending. Evolution has reversed itself, affecting every living creature on earth. Science cannot stop the world from running backwards, as woman after woman gives birth to infants that appear to be primitive species of humans. Twenty-six-year-old Cedar Hawk Songmaker, adopted daughter of a pair of big-hearted, open-minded Minneapolis liberals, is as disturbed and uncertain as the rest of America around her. But for Cedar, this change is profound and deeply personal. She is four months pregnant.
Though she wants to tell the adoptive parents who raised her from infancy, Cedar first feels compelled to find her birth mother, Mary Potts, an Ojibwe living on the reservation, to understand both her and her baby’s origins. As Cedar goes back to her own biological beginnings, society around her begins to disintegrate, fueled by a swelling panic about the end of humanity.
There are rumors of martial law, of Congress confining pregnant women. Of a registry, and rewards for those who turn these wanted women in. Flickering through the chaos are signs of increasing repression: a shaken Cedar witnesses a family wrenched apart when police violently drag a mother from her husband and child in a parking lot. The streets of her neighborhood have been renamed with Bible verses. A stranger answers the phone when she calls her adoptive parents, who have vanished without a trace. It will take all Cedar has to avoid the prying eyes of potential informants and keep her baby safe.
A chilling dystopian novel both provocative and prescient, Future Home of the Living God is a startlingly original work from one of our most acclaimed writers: a moving meditation on female agency, self-determination, biology, and natural rights that speaks to the troubling changes of our time.
 
This short book of startling clear and crisp prose and a fast-paced plot, is similar to Atwood's "The Handmaids Tale" but stripped of the family ritual and infused with fearful flight and the chilling perspective of Native/Indigenous women who have been seen and used as disposable for generations. Though we're rooting for Cedar, she ends up exactly where she didn't want to be, in despair and in detention, being used for her womb and separated from her baby. So those looking for an uplifting read need to look elsewhere. Still, I feel strongly that this book should be read in every high school across America, so that young women can see what happens when White Christian males take over the country and see women as slaves and a means to an end, and not people with rights and freedoms. I'd give this hard look at the difficulty in obtaining female agency in these trying times an A, and again, I'd recommend it to anyone with a brain.
 
Throne of Secrets by Kerri Maniscalco is a striking romantic fantasy that utilizes the seven deadly sins as its guide, and the various demons and witches as players in a bold game of cat and mouse, or demon and dragon, as the case may be. There's more than a few steamy/spicy scenes herein, so be warned, if you're not into "hate" sex, then this book isn't for you. Here's the blurb: Two rivals torn apart by a dark memory reunite on a deadly hunt—and in an irresistibly twisted fairy tale—in the next steamy standalone fantasy romance from Kerri Maniscalco.

A wicked prince determined to save his kingdom.

Gabriel Axton—infamous as the Prince of Gluttony, the self-proclaimed rake of rakes—has always lived for indulgence: in delicious food, in tantalizing women, and most of all, in the thrill of the hunt, where his love of danger can take over. But when his favorite adventure takes a deadly turn, he realizes something is very wrong in his demon court. With the clock ticking, he must turn to the only one who might uncover the truth: a journalist he has spent a decade avoiding.

A reporter hell-bent on finding the truth.

Adriana Saint Lucent has been on the hunt for years—if she could just report something damning enough about that no-good scoundrel Gabriel Axton, she knows others would finally see the demon as she does. But she never expected to turn up a rumor too terrifying to be believed: could the ice dragons to the north be growing restless? Drawn into the secrets of the Underworld, Adriana’s investigation leads her into the place she dreads most…Axton’s infamous court.
 

A dangerous rivalry—and deliciously twisted fairy tale.


To stop darkness from falling over their kingdom, Axton and Adriana will have to unite against an escalating danger. But with each holding tight to their own secrets, can they find the truth before it’s too late? And what will they do with an equally troubling rumor: that they might not actually hate one another, after all?
 
 
While the steamy sex scenes are interesting, there's still a few times that the plot gets confusing or lags behind on a redundancy. Still, the prose is vigorous and bright, and the characters banter riveting. I also felt the influence of "50 Shades of Grey" in the sexual games and light BDSM that is portrayed between the two main characters. I've never been a fan of Twilight, and the 50 Shades series got its start as Twilight fan fiction, which makes me queasy. So the idea of women actually wanting to be hurt or receive pain as pleasure seems to be just another misogynistic male invention to justify and codify abuse of women to me. Pain, at least from my perspective, has never been exciting or titillating. It's enervating and awful and shortens the lifespan of those who live with chronic pain day in and day out. It also takes a toll on women's mental health. At any rate, I would give this page-turner a B, and recommend it to those who like Sarah J Maas's books or those who like the 50 Shades series.
 
The Hazelbourne Ladies Motorcycle and Flying Club by Helen Simonson is a historical romance that takes place soon after the end of WW1, when both women and men were trying to find their place in a world that was without so many loved ones lost to wartime violence or new inventions like the airplane. Though the first 100 pages were a bit slow in warming up, soon after it gets cooking, this book turns out to be a corker. Here's the blurb: A timeless comedy of manners—refreshing as a summer breeze and bracing as the British seaside—about a generation of young women facing the seismic changes brought on by war and dreaming of the boundless possibilities of their future, from the author of Major Pettigrew's Last Stand

It is the summer of 1919 and Constance Haverhill is without prospects. Now that all the men have returned from the front, she has been asked to give up her cottage and her job at the estate she helped run during the war. While she looks for a position as a bookkeeper or—
horror—a governess, she’s sent as a lady’s companion to an old family friend who is convalescing at a seaside hotel. Despite having only weeks to find a permanent home, Constance is swept up in the social whirl of Hazelbourne-on-Sea after she rescues the local baronet’s daughter, Poppy Wirrall, from a social faux pas.

Poppy wears trousers, operates a taxi and delivery service to employ local women, and runs a ladies’ motorcycle club (to which she plans to add flying lessons). She and her friends enthusiastically welcome Constance into their circle. And then there is Harris, Poppy’s recalcitrant but handsome brother—a fighter pilot recently wounded in battle—who warms in Constance’s presence. But things are more complicated than they seem in this sunny pocket of English high society. As the country prepares to celebrate its hard-won peace, Constance and the women of the club are forced to confront the fact that the freedoms they gained during the war are being revoked.

Whip-smart and utterly transportive,
The Hazelbourne Ladies Motorcycle and Flying Club is historical fiction of the highest order: an unforgettable coming-of-age story, a tender romance, and a portrait of a nation on the brink of change. 
 
I was fascinated by how, after both world wars in which women kept the country running and did hard work for little pay, that their rights and responsibilities were immediately revoked once the few men returned, often broken in body and spirit, to their home country. Women were expected to marry these often violent and alcoholic, mentally ill men and settle down and have families, even if they weren't interested in leading that kind of life. When women tried to have their own life and support themselves they were looked down on or treated like there was something wrong with them. I have to say that I liked several of the side characters, like Tilly and Poppy and Mrs Fogg, who has waited her whole life to marry a man of mixed heritage. Fortunately, Constance does get her HEA, only its at the final hour, just a few sentences from the end of the book. I'd give this rambling novel a B-, and recommend it to anyone interested in the plight of women, post Great War.
 



Wednesday, January 08, 2025

Legal Victory for Amanda Jones, Librarian, RIP former President Jimmy Carter, Shakespeare is Safe, Jimmy Carter encounter in a Bookstore, Copyright Infringement Vs Trope, Reese's January Book Club Pick, All Girl Filling Station Movie, The Scarlet Veil by Shelby Mahurin, Blood Over Bright Haven by M. L. Wang, and Ink and Ore by Hayley Whiteley

Welcome to 2025, my fellow book dragons! I'm hoping that this year won't be as fraught with pain and suffering, and will instead be a record year for reading good books! I love that people are banding together all over the US to fight censorship and book bans, and that there are also many people determined to keep America inclusive and diverse and kind to those disadvantaged folks who are poor, or elderly or chronically ill, or all three. Keep fighting the good fight, my friends!
 
I love that Jones had a big win at the end of the year! Good for her! 
A Legal Victory for That Librarian
Louisiana library and activist Amanda Jones, author of That Librarian: The Fight Against Book Banning in America, closed out 2024 with a big win. In 2022, Jones filed a defamation suit against two men who accused her of grooming children and promoting pornographic material after she pushed back against efforts to ban books containing LGBTQ-related themes from her town’s public library. A district court judge dismissed the case before arguments began in September 2022. Now, following a failed appeal attempts, the Louisiana Supreme Court has revived the case, noting that, “The burden will be on defendants to prove that plaintiff did in fact do the acts they have publicly accused her of.”
That’s going to be a tall order for book banning advocates, who often conflate any mention of sexuality with being pornographic and obscene and have targeted librarians around the US with harassment, abuse, and unfounded allegations. And that is precisely Jones’s point. She is seeking just $1 in damages and an apology. This case is about the fact that words mean things and actions have consequences. Jones explains: “We teach our children to report and speak out against bullying, and that is what I am doing. I am doing this on behalf of myself, and on behalf of the countless other librarians across the country who have been targeted and harassed simply for standing up for intellectual freedom and standing up for our school and public libraries.
A win here would set an important precedent. May her efforts succeed.

I always liked Jimmy Carter, as did my father, when Carter was president. The man lived his core values, and the world is a less kind and spiritual place without him in it. RIP Mr President.

In Memoriam: Jimmy Carter, Author RIP
We leave the longer tributes to the late Jimmy Carter to others, but we
want to note that in his long "retirement," among the many things that
the former President did was write books, more than 30 altogether, on a
range of subjects, from Bible study and the importance of religion in
his life, to memoirs of his Presidency and early years, to fly fishing
and aging as well as peace, foreign affairs, and the Middle East. His
best-known titles were An Hour Before Daylight: Memoirs of a Rural
Boyhood, Our Endangered Values: America's Moral Crisis, Palestine: Peace
Not Apartheid, A Full Life: Reflections at Ninety, Faith: A Journey for
All, and The Nobel Peace Prize Lecture. He also wrote The Hornet's Nest:
A Novel of the Revolutionary War, the first novel by an ex-President,
and Always a Reckoning and Other Poems, the first book of poetry by an
ex-President.

He wrote some titles with others, including Everything to Gain: Making
the Most of the Rest of Your Life, with his wife, Rosalynn, and the
children's book The Little Baby Snoogle-Fleejer, which his daughter,
Amy, illustrated.

Carter also was nominated 10 times for Grammy Awards and won three, in
the best spoken-word album category, for Our Endangered Values, A Full
Life, and Faith.
Carter promoted his books with national tours and is remembered by many
booksellers as an exemplary author and person--respectful, curious, and
friendly to all staff and customers as well as an efficient, quick book
signer.

I have always HATED the denigration of writers (and famous playwrights) by this ridiculous urban legend of a bunch of monkeys being able to eventually churn out quality prose just by dint of time and mathematical probability. I'm thrilled that another modern math whiz has disproven this ugly theorem. Writing is an art and a craft, and it's not easy if you're doing it right. Those that believe that it is should stuff a sock in it! 

Turns Out Shakespeare is Safe
You’ve probably heard it theorized that on an infinite timeline, an infinite amount of monkeys pecking away at typewriters would eventually stumble onto reproducing all of Shakespeare. It’s known as the infinite monkey theorem—man, it’s great when science takes a silly thing seriously—and was first posited by French mathematician Émile Borel in 1913. Now, Stephen Woodcock, a mathematician at the University of Technology Sydney, has tested the theory—using PCs, not primates— and concluded that Shakespeare’s legacy is safe . “There is simply not enough time until the universe expires for a defined number of hypothetical primates to produce a faithful reproduction of “Curious George,” let alone “King Lear.”” Delightful.


I love stories like this, of a chance encounter that has a meaningful impact on someone's life. President Carter was a generous and kind man, RIP.
 
A Jimmy Carter Bookstore Visit Remembered

Tom Campbell of The Regulator Bookshop, Durham,
N.C., from 1976 to 2017, remembers a visit by the late Jimmy Carter.

Jimmy Carter came to The Regulator Bookshop in 2003 to sign copies of
his latest book, The Hornet's Nest: A Novel of the Revolutionary War. A
couple of weeks before he was scheduled to appear, a woman came into the
bookshop and asked to talk to me. The woman said she was the caregiver
for Juanita Kreps, who had been a dean and professor of economics at
Duke, and Secretary of Commerce in President Carter's cabinet for the
first two years of his term. Ms. Kreps was suffering from Alzheimer's
disease, her caregiver explained, but she still remembered her time as
Secretary of Commerce, and it would make her very happy to see Jimmy
Carter again, privately, for a short period of time.

I replied that I would try to make this happen, and immediately got in
touch with people on Carter's staff. I explained the situation to them,
and told them that they should convey to President Carter that while Ms.
Kreps could still understand many things, her ability to speak was
greatly diminished.

When President Carter arrived at The Regulator on the evening of his
book signing, he and a member of his staff and a Secret Service agent
came in through the downstairs back door, where the door to the Computer
Cellar is now. (The bookstore at that time took up both floors of the
building at 720 Ninth Street.) We had arranged that no customers would
be allowed downstairs just then, so when Jimmy Carter entered the
building, the only people there to greet him were me, Juanita Kreps, and
her caregiver. Carter broke out in a smile and proceeded to make quite a
fuss over Ms. Kreps, telling her things like how great she had been in
his cabinet, how very glad he was to see her again, how much she had
helped our country, how young she still looked, etc., etc. I can only
describe her response by saying that she simply lit up and glowed,
smiling all the while.

Since Jimmy Carter passed away, much has been written about his kind and
caring nature. From what I saw that night at The Regulator, I can
completely agree that he was indeed a truly kind and caring human being.

This proliferation of romantasy, just as a way to get your book sold and published is heinous, and it must end. The New Yorker states the obvious, that it has become the most derivative genre, created just to be on trend, when a number of these books that I've read are really just horror or science fiction or mystery that has been edited into a romantic fantasy in order to sell copies by lying to the reader. It's awful, and this cringe-worthy bounty of "spicy" romantasy novels are starting to turn readers off of the genre, period.

What is Copyright Infringement and What is Trope? A Romantasy Story
Oh buddy, I guess romantasy is still the name of the game in 2025–we’re kicking off the year with a New Yorker deep dive into a copyright infringement lawsuit from the world of romantasy. What the piece really speaks to is the difficulty of parsing true theft of creative work from the proliferation and use of tropes that has become a mainstay of some of the most popular books and successful publishers of romantasy and other genres and categories. The piece in part argues that romantasy has become so derivative that the genre exacerbates this existing challenge. It also gets into the thorny territory of mass producing books at breakneck speed to capitalize on trends. It’s a real doozy and worth a lunch break read.
 
This, like a lot of Reese's picks, looks fascinating, and I will be on the look out for a copy ASAP.
Reese's January Book Club Pick: The Three Lives of Cate Kay
The Three Lives of Cate Kay by Kate Fagan (Atria) is the January pick
for Reese's Book Club, which described the book as: "a journey across America as the elusive Cate Kay, one of the most successful authors of her generation, finds her way back home after a life on the run. Unexpected turns lead to impossible choices that will keep you captivated to the very end."
Reese wrote: "This story swept me away with its big dreams, love, and
unexpected twists."

I love all of Fannie Flagg's novels, as does my mother, so I'm sure both of us will be excited to see the premier of this movie adaptation of the delightful book.
 
Movies: The All-Girl Filling Station's Last Reunion
Wonder Project is developing The All-Girl Filling Station's Last Reunion,
an adaptation of Fannie Flagg's 2013 bestselling novel, to be produced
by and star Reba McEntire, Deadline reported.
Callie Khouri (Thelma & Louise) will direct from a script by playwright
and screenwriter Bekah Brunstetter (Maid). McEntire is joined as
producer by Jeremy Latcham for Wonder Project, as well as Khouri.

"I've always been a fan of Fannie Flagg and her writing, and it's been
an honor to call her my friend for the past decade," said McEntire. "I
cannot wait to work with this incredible team to bring another one of
her special stories to life on the big screen."

The Scarlet Veil by Shelby Mahurin is a YA romantasy that comes in a gorgeous embossed package of red/black and silver, with red and black end papers that make the whole trade paperback stand out. The prose is equally ornate and the plot flits along on decorated butterfly wings. Here's the blurb: 
This deluxe edition of Shelby Mahurin's  bestselling The Scarlet Veil features shimmering silver foil embossing on the title and in flourishes across the cover, French flaps with a lace pattern on the interior, and custom designed edges for a stunning romantasy package.
Célie Tremblay has always been a good girl: kind and beautiful, a daughter of whom every parent would be proud. She surprises the entire kingdom when she defies tradition to become the first huntswoman—including her new captain and fiancé, Jean Luc, who rules the huntsmen with an iron fist. He isn’t the only one concerned for Célie’s safety, however. Though her friends try to protect her from the horrors of her past, mysterious whispers still haunt her, and a new evil is rising in Belterra—leaving bodies in its wake, each one drained of blood.
Determined to prove herself in her new role, Célie tracks the killer to the lair of Les Éternels—ancient creatures only spoken about in nursery rhymes—and catches the attention of their king, a monster who hides his plans for her behind beautiful words and sharp smiles. Now Célie has new reason to fear the dark because the closer he gets, the more tempted she feels to give in to his dark hunger—and her own.
I really wanted to love this beautiful book, but the female protagonist, Celie, is a self-sacrificing fool who is that horrid misogynistic cliche of the virginal innocent child who abhors violence, even to save her life or the lives of others. All the self sacrifice is for naught in the end, as the bad guys/necromancer and dead sister win, and the girlish protagonist bites the dust.  Of course the male protagonist is the cliche/stereotype of the cold and cruel vampire who is gorgeous and super sexy, so the Celie can't resist him and falls for the evil creep. UGH. This is old territory for anyone who has read any YA romance or romantic fantasy. Manic pixie dream girl falls for evil badboy, and it doesn't end well...how unoriginal. I had such high hopes here, and was so disappointed, I'm going to have to give this book a C+ and only recommend it to those looking for a retread of all the other romantasy or YA romances they've read in the past 15-20 years.
 
Blood Over Bright Haven by M. L. Wang is not what it seems at first glance. At first blush it appears to be a dark academic paranormal fantasy, but on closer inspection, its a scathing indictment of colonialism and capitalism and the ruthlessness of white Europeans as they conquered native populations and decimated those groups of people for their own gain as a group. Here's the blurb: The stunning first edition hardcover features red stained edges, gold and red foil on the jacket, a full-color endpaper map, and an interior illustration of an in-world magical item
For twenty years, Sciona has devoted every waking moment to the study of magic, fueled by a mad desire to achieve the impossible: to be the first woman ever admitted to the High Magistry at the University of Magics and Industry.

When Sciona finally passes the qualifying exam and becomes a highmage, she finds her challenges have just begun. Her new colleagues are determined to make her feel unwelcome—and, instead of a qualified lab assistant, they give her a janitor.

What neither Sciona nor her peers realize is that her taciturn assistant was not always a janitor. Ten years ago, he was a nomadic hunter who lost his family on their perilous journey from the wild plains to the city. But now he sees the opportunity to understand the forces that decimated his tribe, drove him from his homeland, and keep the privileged in power.

At first, mage and outsider have a fractious relationship. But working together, they uncover an ancient secret that could change the course of magic forever—if it doesn’t get them killed first.
 
Wang's  prose is full of vigor and excitement, and her plot filled with surprises that will leave you gasping. This poignant treatise on the inherent racism of many religions used by white Europeans to enslave and kill indigenous people will shock and appall you, and stay with you for a long time. Not only could I not put the book down once I began reading it, but I didn't see the dire ending coming at all. Like Sciona, I had hoped that people's minds and hearts and better natures would take over and allow them to change society for the better. But, as my son often says, "People are assh*les at heart" and unfortunately, the majority of them are willing to kill others to keep their own lives comfortable and easy. That makes me sad, but it also makes me think of ways that I can have an impact on society and making it a more equitable place. I'd give this book an A, and recommend it to anyone who has studied history that wasn't written by white people, especially white religious men who used their holy books to justify genocide and misogyny. 
 
Ink and Ore book 1 by Hayley Whiteley is a YA fantasy with just enough romance to keep it on the edge of romantasy, but without the spice required to keep most older YA fans interested. This book reads like it was written by a young adult for a middle school (12-13 year olds) audience of giggling girls. The prose is simplistic and the characters all tropes and cliches of characters in famed children's books. Sadly, this makes them seem dim witted and silly a lot of the time, but for a young pubescent audience, I'm sure it would be delightful to re-tread the same ground. Here's the blurb:
A mysterious letter. A forbidden magic. A lie that led to war—and two girls who know the truth.

Lifelong friends Brenna Malley and Katiel Salzbruck are looking forward to a summer visit, but their plans are ruined when war breaks out between their rival homelands, Bar Kur and A’slenderia. Then, they find a shocking message hidden on the back of a letter, claiming the war started because of a treasonous plot. Determined to end the war before their loved ones die in battle, Brenna and Katiel leave their small-town lives behind and embark on a quest for the truth.

Following a trail of letters, Brenna and Katiel learn about the involvement of the ore—a legendary magical substance that can transform into anything. To restore peace to the Continent of Kerafin, they must harness the magic, navigate questionable allies, and survive harrowing ordeals. But as love, secrets, and betrayal complicate the journey, the friends must determine where their true loyalties lie—before it’s too late.

Perfect for fans of
Shadow and Bone and Divine Rivals, Ink and Ore is the first installment in The Kerafin Chronicles, a character-driven, young adult gaslamp fantasy trilogy.
Brenna and Katiel are hopelessly idealistic and naive, and their belief that two girls can stop a war created by grown men intent on their own interests is patently absurd. But of course they keep trying, and in the end, Katiel is able to use her powers to save the children of the royal family from certain death. While it was a laughably simple read, I did enjoy the background world building, and I think that the author will beef up her prose in the coming sections of the trilogy. I'd give it a B-and recommend it to young teens in search of a fantasy adventure about learning to believe in yourself.
 

Tuesday, December 31, 2024

Happy New Year, Blake Lively Sues CoStar for Sexual Harassment, To Kill a Shadow and To Shatter the Night by Katherine Quinn, Ghost Talkers by Mary Robinette Kowal, Miss Amelia's List by Mercedes Lackey, and Jilted in January by Cara Maxwell

Happy New Year, my fellow readers! I hope that this year brings you a plethora of wonderful books and movie/TV adaptations of books to keep your mind and heart alive with creative sparks! I've got only one tidbit and five books to review on this, the last day of 2024, so lets get to it!

I watched It Ends With Us just recently on Netflix, and while I thought it was well done, I felt there was something off about the production right from the get-go. Now I know why, and I'm sickened that Lively's co-star treated her so cruely during the production of this film about a woman who ends her abusive relationship after the birth of her daughter.  Baldoni ought to be ashamed of himself.

The Bloom is Off

Following a press tour that managed to be more fraught than the rollout of Don’t Worry Darling, Blake Lively is suing her It Ends With Us co-star and director Justin Baldoni for sexual harassment. Lively also alleges—with the help of damning private messages—that Baldoni launched a smear campaign intended to tank her career. This is a fantastic piece of reporting by the New York Times ‘s Megan Twohey, Mike McEntire, and Julie Tate, and it’s well worth your time, both for the specifics of this case and the generally chilling details about what a Hollywood take-down effort looks like in the social media era. It Ends With Us author Colleen Hoover, who tends to avoid the spotlight, spoke out this weekend in support of Lively, encouraging her to “Never change. Never wilt.” (That’s a reference to Lively’s character, Lily Bloom, who owns a floral shop.) If you missed it in theaters, It Ends With Us is streaming on Netflix now.

To Kill A Shadow and To Shatter the Night by Katherine Quinn are both romantasy/dark/horror adventure novels that, while beautifully produced with lovely cover art and dark blue-black end pages,falls prey to every trope and cliche of fantasy romances, including the poor-but-gorgeous petite heroine who is child-like but sexually attractive, yet trained from childhood to be a lethal assassin/warrior. She also, inevitably, has a very sad background story in which her parents were terrible people and abandoned her to die. Of course, the same thing happened (what a coincidence!) to the male protagonist, with whom she falls deeply in love almost instantly, and with whom she shares her scars, both external and internal. This, of course, bonds them even deeper, and somehow makes them lust after one another even more (he "gets" me! she "understands my pain"!). Ugh. Here's the blurbs: 
 
To Kill a Shadow: Jude Maddox knows nothing of love or even light. He knows only his grim duty as the Hand of Death, to lead the Knights of the Eternal Star into a land filled with nightmares and certain demise. It’s only when he sees her―a young woman with wild, amber eyes who’s as fierce, defiant, and swift as the shadow beasts themselves―that he feels the warmth of life in his blood…

The other Knights may fear their lethal commander, with his hard, merciless demeanor. Outcast Kiara Frey sees only a leader, a man who knows how to survive.
Someone like her. But wanting him is as treacherous as the shadows themselves…and just as seductive.

With a kingdom on the verge of collapse, the Knights must now venture into the darkest heart of the land and uncover the secrets of the misted shadows, where evil will prey upon their minds and feast on their flesh.

It will betray their senses.
It will surpass their nightmares.
Most of them will die.

But they have no other choice. Because the only way to fight the darkness…
is to become it.
To Shatter the Night: Welcome back into the Mist…in the astonishing sequel to the instant New York Times bestseller To Kill a Shadow

Some fear the darkness. It’s the place where horror hides, concealing its rank, sharp teeth and insatiable hunger. But there is no darkness more feared than that of the mist that’s overtaken the kingdom...and its brave―and ultimately doomed― soldiers.

Except for Kiara Frey.
She has nothing to fear from the night.
Not anymore.

Driven by the fury of her splintered heart, Kiara knows that the answers―and the only possible way to a future with Jude Maddox―begin with the realm’s most notorious thief, the Fox. Together, they hunt down the path to breaking Asidia’s dark curse, but in the shadows, something more horrifying than the mist lies in wait.
Watching. Willing Kiara to find the game pieces set in place long ago.

As Jude and Kiara are lured to a sacred temple―a shrine that is the home to both exquisite dreams and chilling nightmares―Kiara’s newfound powers flourish but her shadows threaten to consume her.

Because here in these cursed lands, it’s not the darkness that destroys the soul...
it’s love
.
 
While the prose was lush and often too descriptive for my taste (I didn't need to read about how people die gruesome deaths), the plots of both these novels was straight as a string and moved at a clip, keeping the reader going until the easily predicted ending. The Gods and Goddesses of this world seem as flawed and petty as the people inhabiting it, and while that makes them seem more accessible, it also makes them seem inordinately cruel for using humans as game pieces on a cosmic chessboard. I'd give the first book a B, and the second a B-, and recommend them to those who enjoy "spicy" horror adventure novels.
 
Ghost Talkers by Mary Robinette Kowal is a paranormal historic fantasy novel that was beautifully written and plotted to perfection. Here's the blurb: Ghost Talkers is a brilliant historical fantasy novel from acclaimed author Mary Robinette Kowal featuring the mysterious spirit corps and their heroic work in World War I.

Ginger Stuyvesant, an American heiress living in London during World War I, is engaged to Captain Benjamin Harford, an intelligence officer. Ginger is a medium for the Spirit Corps, a special Spiritualist force.

Each soldier heading for the front is conditioned to report to the mediums of the Spirit Corps when they die so the Corps can pass instant information about troop movements to military intelligence.

Ginger and her fellow mediums contribute a great deal to the war efforts, so long as they pass the information through appropriate channels. While Ben is away at the front, Ginger discovers the presence of a traitor. Without the presence of her fiancé to validate her findings, the top brass thinks she's just imagining things. Even worse, it is clear that the Spirit Corps is now being directly targeted by the German war effort. Left to her own devices, Ginger has to find out how the Germans are targeting the Spirit Corps and stop them. This is a difficult and dangerous task for a woman of that era, but this time both the spirit and the flesh are willing.
 
 The first line of this book was written by the wonderful John Scalzi, which is a delightful detail, but the rest of the novel is just as well written, with an action-packed and unrelenting plot that will keep readers turning pages just as rapidly as I was. The chapters are laden with the emotional turmoil of the time of the Great War, and the spiritualist movement that was on the rise at the time of the first decade of the 20th century. In fact, this book was so well researched and written that I had a hard time believing that there wasn't actually a group of mediums set to talk to dead soldiers about troop movements and positions. Ginger and Ben's love story is poignant without being too soupy or sentimental, and the ending was heartbreakingly beautiful. I'd give this stellar novel an A, and recommend it to anyone interested in the first world war and spiritualism.
 
Miss Amelia's List by Mercedes Lackey is her 17th Elemental Master's novel, which are all wonderfully addictive fantasy/romance/adventure books (I've read them all). Here's the blurb:
The seventeenth novel in the magical alternate history Elemental Masters series follows Amelia Stonehold and Serena Meleva as they navigate property acquisition, marriage proposals, and other ancient horrors in Regency England, but with the help of elemental magic

The year is 1815, and an American, Miss Amelia Stonehold, has arrived in the Devon town of Axminster, accompanied by her "cousin" Serena Meleva. She’s brought with her a list to tick off: find a property, investigate the neighbors, bargain for and purchase the property, staff the property and...possibly...find a husband. But Amelia soon finds herself contending with some decidedly off-list trouble, including the Honorable Captain Harold Roughtower, whose eyes are fixed on her fortune. Little does Amelia know that his plans for her wealth extend far beyond refurbishing his own crumbing estate — they include the hidden Roman temple of Glykon, where something very old, very angry, and very dangerous still lurks.

But Roughtower isn’t prepared to reckon with the fact that neither Amelia nor Serena are pushovers. And he certainly isn’t ready for the revelation that he has an Earth Master and a Fire Mage on his hands — or that one of them is a shapeshifter.
 
One thing that I love about Lackey's EM series is that her female protagonists are strong and bright enough to fend for themselves, even in an environment where its frowned upon for women to be anything but fragile and demur. Her heroines also usually have some type of physical or mental disability that doesn't hold them back from saving the day. Here both young women, Amelia and Serena face racism, misogyny and pathologically evil men bent on stealing their powers and fortunes. Lackey's prose is divine, and her plots are sturdy and straightforward, and never flag or slow for info-dumping. I couldn't put the book down, and look forward to book 18 in the series, hopefully coming soon. I'd give this book an A, and recommend it to anyone who has read any of her other EM novels.
 
Jilted in January by Cara Maxwell was a surprising find on "stuff your e-reader with free books day" on December 26th.  While most of the books were by authors I've never heard of, and many looked to be self-published, this novel was well-edited and written with style. This subtitled "Rake Review" tackles racism and sexism while also providing a fairly spicy love story. Here's the blurb: No. Absolutely not. Persephone Cuthbert would rather walk over hot coals than say one word to the man who broke her heart—let alone help him.

The author of The Rake Review may have declared him the most marriageable man in London, but Persephone knows the truth. Edward Johns is the cold-hearted bastard who broke her heart. She will not allow him to play her or the unsuspecting ladies of London false.

Except Persephone has made helping people her life’s work. How can she refuse him when a man’s life is in danger?

Ten years ago, Edward Johns jilted the love of his life for the sake of familial duty. He’s hardened his heart to steel, and he has no desire to marry—he intends to leave all of that to his younger brother, Alfred. Until said wastrel disappears without a trace.
 
 
Few romantic fantasy novels that I've read have a male protagonist who is half Chinese (or Asian of any kind), and fewer have a smart as a whip female protagonist who has a history with said gentleman and who doesn't want to allow him back into her heart or to toy with some other young woman's heart. Though she sometimes veers a bit close to "so smitten she can't think" territory, Persephone figures Edward out and the two manage to solve the "mystery" of his stupid wastrel brother's kidnapping, which wasn't a real kidnapping at all. I'd give this saucy and bright novel a B+, and recommend it to anyone looking for a smart romantic fantasy that's diverse and full of amusing dialog.
 

Monday, December 23, 2024

Quote of the Day, Holiday Hum for Phinney Books, Reminders of Him Movie, Wuthering Heights Movie, Worthy of Fate by A.N. Caudle, Obsidian by Jennifer Armentrout, Hell and Back by Gray Holborn, and The Rose Arbor by Rhys Bowen

Merry Christmas and Happy New Year, and Happy Holidays to all on this Christmas eve evening! I've got one more Christmas book coming this year, and then I plan on only cooking a simple meal on Christmas day, and spending the rest of the time drinking hot tea and reading in bed, which is a luxury that I am not always afforded as a caregiver to my gravely ill husband (and I myself am battling pneumonia). But, though I still haven't reached a thousand posts, I do plan on keeping this blog going through next year, which will be it's 20th year of existence. I was unsure I'd have the energy and time to keep going, but I've found that making time for my blog helps keep me sane when things get bad around my household, which has happened more and more frequently. May the heavens smile on you all in 2025, and may you read as many good/great books as possible.
 
Though. I have to shop Amazon sometimes (due to there not being a bookstore nearby, and the fact that they do free shipping all over for prime members, so I can send my mom in Iowa some books), I still prefer a real indie bookstore, like Island Books on Mercer Island, or Powells in Oregon, to putting money in the pocket of this extremely rich and powerful man.
 
Quotation of the Day
 
"Jeff Bezos: The weaselly Amazon owner forbade the Washington Post from
endorsing Kamala Harris, so I'm no longer endorsing Amazon. Why buy
books from this craven creep when independent bookstores deserve our
support? That's why I'm pleased to announce that the official vendor of
my books is now Bookshop.org, which has raised millions of dollars for
local bookstores."--Andy Borowitz in the Borowitz Report, about his own Project 2025,which focuses on "breaking up with the oligarchs," including Jeff
Bezos


I'm so glad that there are folks who go out of their way to shop at real bookstores during the holidays. It makes my heart happy that places like Phinney Books (in the neighborhood where Jim and I lived when we moved here in 1991) will continue to exist for years to come, becoming old haunts for my fellow bibliophiles, just like the Couth Buzzard Bookstore was for me back in the early 90s.
 
 Holiday Hum: Nearing the Finish Line
With less than a day to go until Christmas and the first night of
Hanukkah, booksellers from around the U.S. offer their assessment of the
holiday shopping season:

Phinney Books in Seattle, Wash., has had a fall season that has matched last year's "almost exactly," reported owner Tom Nissley, "which we're very happy with."

Nissley described most of 2024 as a year without a single huge book that
everyone needs to have. Over the past week or so, however, James by
Percival Everett has started to emerge as that title, with Nissley
describing it as a book that one can give to "almost any reader." His
personal favorite handsell of the season, he said, is A Woman in the
Polar Night by Christiane Ritter, written in 1938 and recently reissued
by Pushkin Press. And "many, many people," he added, seem to want to
read or re-read On Tyranny by Timothy Snyder.

Other highlights include The Backyard Bird Chronicles by Amy Tan, which
has "been a hit ever since it came out," and Jonathan Blitzer's Everyone
Who Is Gone Is Here, which has seen a nice boost since it was included
in the New York Times' Top 10. All of Claire Keegan's "beautiful little
books," including Small Things Like These, have seen boosts as well.
Local titles also do well over the holidays, with two examples this
season being Street Trees of Seattle by Taha Ebrahimi and Renee
Erickson's cookbook Sunlight & Breadcrumbs.

Nissley noted that while shipping has been slow from some midsize
suppliers, and some titles have been out of stock since early December,
things have been running "relatively smoothly." And when it comes to
titles being out of stock in particular, the situation is better this
year than the "first couple Covid seasons."

Looking ahead, Nissley expects the end of the season to be "very busy,"
and hopes there isn't any severe weather right around Christmas.
"Although even if there is," he said, "we'll likely stay open." The
"real unknown," he continued, is "how the country, and our part of it,
will respond when the new regime actually takes power in January."
Priorities may change, but Nissley said he has "no idea how that will
relate to publishing, and to reading."

I just watched the movie adaptation of "It Ends With Us" which was about surviving domestic abuse and gaslighting from toxic men. It was a heart-wrenching film, but very well done. I hope that this next movie based on a Hoover novel is just as smart and interesting.
 
Movies: Reminders of Him
Vanessa Caswill (Love at First Sight) will direct Reminders of Him,
based on the bestselling novel by Colleen Hoover. Deadline reported that
Hoover and Lauren Levine adapted the novel, which they are producing
through their production company, Heartbones Entertainment. The movie is
set to release on February 13, 2026.

The film adaptation of Hoover's It Ends With Us was a box office hit
last summer. Her novel Verity "is undergoing the feature film treatment
with The Idea of You duo Anne Hathaway and Michael Showalter attached to star and direct, respectively. Regretting You is also getting adapted
for the big screen with Allison Williams, McKenna Grace and Dave Franco
set to star among others," Deadline noted.

I've been a fan of Wuthering Heights and the Bronte sisters for years, so I look forward to seeing this new adaptation.
 
Movies: Wuthering Heights
Emerald Fennell's (Promising Young Woman, Saltburn) adaptation of Emily
Bronte's Wuthering Heights"has landed a romantic release date" of February 13, 2026 (Valentine's Day Weekend), IndieWire reported, noting that the movie "is already shaping up to be one of the more anticipated dramas despite being over a year away, but that's because the film stars Margot Robbie and Jacob Elordi."

 
 
Worthy of Fate by A.N. Caudle is a romantasy novel with an unusual magic system and some equally unusual characters. I don't believe this book was traditionally published, but as a self published tome, it took me a longer time than normal to get ahold of a copy. Here's the blurb:

The Gem

Marked by the Gods, Kya is forced to partake in a Trial for a chance to be deemed Worthy. If she succeeds, she’ll be gifted great powers. If she fails, she could lose her life or worse. But that’s only the start of her worries. Now, the same plague that took her home is spreading and threatening the fate of the realm. Can Kya survive the Trial of the Gods and gain the needed power to rid the world of the growing threat before it’s too late? Or will she be drawn to what awaits her in the shadows?

The Shadow

Ryker has waited a long time for her—his mate. Now he’s found her. He plans to claim what is rightfully his, but dark forces threaten to destroy his Nation should he embrace the bond he so desperately desires. Unable to escape the drive to be near her, he waits for his precious gem, lingering in her shadow.

Worthy of Fate is the first book in a new adult, dark fantasy romance series with an intriguing magic system, dark forces, Spirits, and forbidden fated mates.
The "dark" fantasy trope I feel has become somewhat overused, as had the overly possessive mean and large male "mate" who, as an expert at killing, always seems on the edge of domestic violence, and can only be "reigned in" by the female protagonist, though she is, inevitably, petite and infantilized (though she's a warrior who can take care of herself, unless its against magic creatures, and then she needs her big strong mate to rescue her) enough that all the men she encounters find her irresistibly sexy. Of course, to contrast with how wonderful the female protagonist is, the female antagonist goes around destroying things in the name of the male antagonist. I felt that the story was very readable, and the prose clean and clear enough that the strong plot sailed along, making this book a page turner, for the most part.  The ending cliffhanger was a pain, but at least it had an ending. I'd give this book a B-, and recommend it to those who believe that fate decides our destiny.
 
Obsidian by Jennifer Armentrout is a YA romantasy that tries to be different than the millions of other romantasy books being published out there, by not having the male protagonist be a vampire or a werewolf or some other kind of shapeshifter that is common fairytale/fantasy story lore (especially these days when it seems every author is encouraged to write YA or adult romantic fantasy. Seriously, the market is over-saturated at this point, but publishers are all in on making money on the coattails of Sarah Maas's works and that of her predecessors like Anne McCaffrey and Zenna Henderson and Andre Norton). Here's the blurb: This deluxe hardcover edition features gorgeous sprayed edges with stenciled artwork and bonus content. This breathtaking collectible, available in the US and Canada, is a must have a must-have for any book lover.

Starting over sucks.

When we moved to West Virginia right before my senior year, I'd pretty much resigned myself to thick accents, dodgy internet access, and a whole lot of boring...until I spotted my hot neighbor, with his looming height and eerie green eyes. Things were looking up.

And then he opened his mouth.

Daemon is infuriating. Arrogant. Stab-worthy. We do not get along. At all. But when a stranger attacks me and Daemon literally freezes time with a wave of his hand, well, something...unexpected happens.

The hot alien living next door marks me.

You heard me. Alien. Turns out Daemon and his sister have a galaxy of enemies wanting to steal their abilities, and Daemon's touch has me lit up like the Vegas Strip. The only way I'm getting out of this alive is by sticking close to Daemon until my alien mojo fades.

If I don't kill him first, that is.
 
So instead of the jerk who is too handsome to ignore being a vampire, he's an alien who glows like a lightbulb, and his sister is a manic pixie dream girl looking for someone like herself to befriend, since she's a lonely alien. So Katy, who can't seem to keep away from Daemon, though he's a complete asshat, becomes friends with the fragile and child like Dee, (Daemon's sister) who really, really needs a friend who isn't one of her fellow aliens. WHY is never quite clear to me, just as I can't understand why any young woman with half a brain can't seem to keep it in her pants for the local bad boy asshat who literally takes pleasure in insulting her and making her feel bad about herself, mainly because he doesn't want to fall for her himself, which is the reason we're supposed to forgive him this consistent abuse and support his relationship with Katy. I didn't support nor understand their relationship at all, and I find this kind of backhanded misogyny to be repulsive. This is right up there with the 19th century BS that was fed to society about women being too emotional and too hormonal to hold political office, or to vote, or start their own business or even have their own bank account. FOR SHAME, Armentrout! I have read other series you've written where the female protagonist was strong and not some sweet infantilized petite girl who can't keep her head around a handsome boy. So I'd give this novel a B-, and not recommend it to anyone looking for something imaginative and new, because this novel is mutton dressed as lamb.
 
Hell and Back (Book 4 of the Protector Guild) by Gray Holborn is a long romantasy series with a lot of "spicy" sex scenes and an unusual group of young men and women who are all sexually attracted to the main character, the inevitable manic pixie dream girl, who doesn't recognize her powers and seems always on the edge of ripping off her clothes and having sex with a member of team 6. Here's the blurb:
Team Six and I have finally found our ticket into Hell. But the journey to cashing it will be anything but easy, and every decision along the way will come with a sacrifice...sacrifices we might not be willing to make.
Darius’s creepy brother, Claude, is determined to push us out of his city as soon as he possibly can. And, oh man, are we ready to leave. But, unfortunately for us all, hitching a ride to hell will have to wait.
On top of dealing with the fang twins’ turbulent relationship (and, wow, is that putting it lightly), I have to navigate Declan and Atlas’s suddenly chilly demeanor towards me. Something happened that night in the hotel suite that changed things between us all, but nobody will talk to me about it.
And something changed in me too, something that I don’t quite know how to deal with. A strange power is starting to build, and I have to find a way to harness and accept it before it destroys me and everyone I care about. Unfortunately, that means coming to terms with the increasingly real possibility that everything The Guild—and my family—has told me is a lie.
The monsters are coming for me, that much is clear—but it just so happens that I may very well be a monster myself… Hell and Back is the fourth book in The Protector Guild series and it does end on a cliffhanger. Max's story is a slow-burn why choose / polyandry romantasy series. Get ready for action, spice, and intrigue. 
 
Max's irresistibility aside,  I found it difficult to understand why everyone could barely keep their hands off of her, even a tortured vampire with PTSD. Since no one can seem to uncover what flavor of monster she is, my guess is that they're going to find out Max is either an angel or a demon of some kind. Her overly optimistic and naive personality got to be rather irritating by the end of this book, which is why I don't think I will be moving on to book 5 in the series. That said, Holborn's prose is succinct and her characters well developed, and the plots of her novels move gracefully along with few plotholes or infodumps to slow things down. I'd give this novel a B, and only recommend it to those who have read the first three books.
 
The Rose Arbor by Rhys Bowen is a historical romantic mystery novel that had a swift plot and fascinating characters. Here's the blurb:
An investigation into a girl’s disappearance uncovers a mystery dating back to World War II in a haunting novel of suspense by the bestselling author of The Venice Sketchbook and The Paris Assignment.
London: 1968. Liz Houghton is languishing as an obituary writer at a London newspaper when a young girl’s disappearance captivates the city. If Liz can break the story, it’s her way into the newsroom. She already has a scoop: her best friend, Marisa, is a police officer assigned to the case.
Liz follows Marisa to Dorset, where they make another disturbing discovery. Over two decades earlier, three girls disappeared while evacuating from London. One was found murdered in the woods near a train line. The other two were never seen again.
As Liz digs deeper, she finds herself drawn to the village of Tydeham, which was requisitioned by the military during the war and left in ruins. After all these years, what could possibly link the missing girls to this abandoned village? And why does a place Liz has never seen before seem so strangely familiar?
 
I found the tale of children misplaced or stolen during the WWII evacuations to be riveting stuff, as these are tales you don't often hear of during the war years. I've read other books by Bowen, and she rarely lets the reader down with her fully formed characters and her background research into the times and places her characters live. I always learn something from her novels, and this particular one was so poignant, with the lives of families changed forever and the grief that goes with that, that I felt this mystery with a heart was well worth the price I paid to purchase it as an e-book. Though it definitely doesn't have a traditional HEA, there's a satisfying ending for most of the characters, including the female protagonist, journalist Liz H. I'd give this book an A, and recommend it to anyone who wonders about the children who went missing during WWII.