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🎇 Happy Lunar New Year! 🎇 in honor of the first day of the Lunar New Year, I figured I would post this book review!
Rating: ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
Summary: 😍📱💖
Read: Jan. 2023
Olivia Huang Christenson has taken over the family's matchmaking business, using the Chinese zodiac to find the perfect match for everyone. Unfortunately, someone else has the same idea but brings it to the digital age. In comes Bennet O'Brien, who believes traditions are meant to be broken.
I love their chemistry, their competition to see who is better at matchmaking, and how they challenge each other's ideas and beliefs. These two change each other for the better. I can't wait to read her other books!
#k's thoughts#bigheartedbibliophile#books#book review#book reviews#book reccs#book recommendations#contemporary romance#rom com#debut#lunar new year#lunar love#lauren kung jessen#book quotes#romance#romance books
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Book Review: "Yin Yang Love Song" by Lauren Kung Jessen
New Book Review & Author Interview. "Yin Yang Love Song" by Lauren Kung Jessen is a delightful read for fans of fake dating and celebrity romance. Plus, we're discussing finding balance as perfectionists, just like the characters. Check it out. #books
I was already interested in Lauren Kung Jessen’s 2025 book after chatting with her about her 2024 release, Red String Theory [Buy Bookshop Amazon LibroFM], but when her publicist called it her best book yet, I was even more intrigued. It’s a phrase that I hear a lot and don’t always agree with, but this time, it is 100% accurate. Yin Yang Love Song [Buy Bookshop Amazon LibroFM] introduces us to…
#5 star#5 star book reviews#5 star books#book#book review#book reviewer#Book Reviews#books#books with fake dacing#books with fake dating#bookstagram#bookworm#celebrity romance books#celebrity romance trope#chinese american romance#contemporary romance book review#diverse author#diverse authors#diverse book review#diverse books#diverse characters#diverse romance#diverse romance review#Diverse Stories#fake dating#five star books#is lauren kung jessen a good writer#is yin yang love song a good book#lauren kung jessen#lauren kung jessen book review
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Do you have any recs for Feysand-like characters romance but healthier? I love them but I love the wholesome parts of them so so much more and it would be nice to enjoy them in a sweeter setting. I will take books/shows, even movie works but not my favourite option.
It's fine if you don't have any. Thanks anyways.
I consulted my feysand experts (@thesistersarcheron, @rosanna-writer, @octobers-veryown, @kataravimes-of-the-shire, @velidewrites, and @reverie-tales - this is what everyone came up with) (under cut due to length):
One Dark Window by Rachel Gillig (duology, complete):
Elspeth needs a monster. The monster might be her.
Elspeth Spindle needs more than luck to stay safe in the eerie, mist-locked kingdom of Blunder—she needs a monster. She calls him the Nightmare, an ancient, mercurial spirit trapped in her head. He protects her. He keeps her secrets.
But nothing comes for free, especially magic.
When Elspeth meets a mysterious highwayman on the forest road, her life takes a drastic turn. Thrust into a world of shadow and deception, she joins a dangerous quest to cure Blunder from the dark magic infecting it. And the highwayman? He just so happens to be the King’s nephew, Captain of the most dangerous men in Blunder…and guilty of high treason.
Together they must gather twelve Providence Cards—the keys to the cure. But as the stakes heighten and their undeniable attraction intensifies, Elspeth is forced to face her darkest secret yet: the Nightmare is slowly taking over her mind. And she might not be able to stop him.
The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue by Victoria E. Schwab:
France, 1714: in a moment of desperation, a young woman makes a Faustian bargain to live forever and is cursed to be forgotten by everyone she meets.
Thus begins the extraordinary life of Addie LaRue, and a dazzling adventure that will play out across centuries and continents, across history and art, as a young woman learns how far she will go to leave her mark on the world.
But everything changes when, after nearly 300 years, Addie stumbles across a young man in a hidden bookstore and he remembers her name.
Unsteady by Peyton Corinne:
Rhys Koteskiy is back — at least, he's supposed to be.
During last year’s Frozen Four, the Waterfell University hockey captain, and NHL legacy, took a brutal hit that left him with a concussion and a new discomfort on the ice. Plagued by nightmares and panic attacks every time he attempt to skate, Rhys wonders if he’ll ever play again — if he’ll ever want to.
Sadie Brown is staying focused this semester — no matter what.
Currently drowning in debt, custody hearings for her younger brothers and skating practices, she's just trying to make it to the next day. A spitfire figure skater known for her bad attitude and frequent disappearing acts, she has a reputation on campus. And it’s not a pretty one.
When she accidentally witnesses one of the golden boy hockey captain’s panic attacks and attempts to help him, a strange sort of understanding strikes up between them.
No questions asked. Just comfort.
But Rhys finds himself drawn to Sadie. Where he feels empty, a shell of the man and player he was before, Sadie is so full of everything it bursts from her; every emotion she feels seems like it’s blasted at max. Rhys is desperate to feel anything, Sadie wants to stop feeling so much.
But healing doesn’t mix with secrets, and they’re both skating a thin line, unsteady .
Red String Theory by Lauren Kung Jessen:
When it comes to love and art, Rooney Gao believes in signs. Most of all, she believes in the Chinese legend that everyone is tied to their one true love by the red string of fate. And that belief has inspired her career as an artist, as well as the large art installations she makes with ( obviously ) red string. That is until artist’s block strikes and Rooney begins to question everything. But then fate leads her to the perfect guy . . . Jack Liu is perfect. He’s absurdly smart, successful, handsome, and after one enchanting New York night—under icy February skies and fueled by fried dumplings—all signs point to destiny. Only Jack doesn’t believe. And after their magical date, it looks like they might be lost to each other forever . . . until they’re given one more chance to reconnect. But can Rooney convince a reluctant skeptic to take a leap of fate?
Neon Gods by Katee Robert:
He was supposed to be a myth. But from the moment I crossed the River Styx and fell under his dark spell... he was, quite simply, mine.
Society darling Persephone Dimitriou plans to flee the ultra-modern city of Olympus and start over far from the backstabbing politics of the Thirteen Houses. But all that’s ripped away when her mother ambushes her with an engagement to Zeus, the dangerous power behind their glittering city’s dark facade.
With no options left, Persephone flees to the forbidden undercity and makes a devil’s bargain with a man she once believed a myth... a man who awakens her to a world she never knew existed.
Hades has spent his life in the shadows, and he has no intention of stepping into the light. But when he finds that Persephone can offer a little slice of the revenge he’s spent years craving, it’s all the excuse he needs to help her—for a price. Yet every breathless night spent tangled together has given Hades a taste for Persephone, and he’ll go to war with Olympus itself to keep her close…
A modern retelling of Hades and Persephone that’s as sinful as it is sweet.
The Magician's Guild (Black Magician's Trilogy) by Trudi Canavan:
"We should expect this young woman to be more powerful than our average novice, possibly even more powerful than the average magician."
This year, like every other, the magicians of Imardin gather to purge the city of undesirables. Cloaked in the protection of their sorcery, they move with no fear of the vagrants and miscreants who despise them and their work-—until one enraged girl, barely more than a child, hurls a stone at the hated invaders...and effortlessly penetrates their magical shield.
What the Magicians' Guild has long dreaded has finally come to pass. There is someone outside their ranks who possesses a raw power beyond imagining, an untrained mage who must be found and schooled before she destroys herself and her city with a force she cannot yet control.
Hoarded by the Dragon by Lillian Lark:
A thief doing a final job and the dragon caught in a precarious situation that changes both of their lives.
He’s powerful and wealthy and he hates me.
But I have something he wants.
It wasn’t a part of the plan.
I’m the thief stupid enough to break into a dragon’s hoard… and walk away pregnant with his baby.
An Enchantment of Ravens by Margaret Rogerson:
With a flick of her paintbrush, Isobel creates stunning portraits for a dangerous set of clients: the fair folk. These immortal creatures cannot bake bread or put a pen to paper without crumbling to dust. They crave human Craft with a terrible thirst, and they trade valuable enchantments for Isobel’s paintings. But when she receives her first royal patron—Rook, the autumn prince—Isobel makes a deadly mistake. She paints mortal sorrow in his eyes, a weakness that could cost him his throne, and even his life.
Furious, Rook spirits Isobel away to his kingdom to stand trial for her crime. But something is seriously amiss in his world, and they are attacked from every side. With Isobel and Rook depending upon each other for survival, their alliance blossoms into trust, perhaps even love . . . a forbidden emotion that would violate the fair folks’ ruthless laws, rendering both their lives forfeit. What force could Isobel's paintings conjure that is powerful enough to defy the ancient malice of the fairy courts?
Isobel and Rook journey along a knife-edge in a lush world where beauty masks corruption and the cost of survival might be more frightening than death itself.
Desire In His Blood by Zoey Draven:
Gemma Hara is drowning under the weight of her father’s debts. Working herself to the bone, she knows that if she doesn’t pay them off in time, the sadistic creditors will take everything: their home, their respected name, and, worst of all, her two beautiful sisters.
To save her family, Gemma agrees to do something reckless: marry a wealthy and mysterious stranger, who offers her a wicked bargain she can’t afford to refuse.
However, his bargain comes with one terrifying catch. Because her husband-to-be is a Kylorr.
One of the most fearsome alien races in the Four Quadrants, the Kylorr are beastly monsters, all muscle and menace, with powerful wings, depraved cravings, and berserker-like rages. The worst part?
They survive on blood.
Cold and cruel, Azur of House Kaalium, the High Lord of Laras, demands Gemma as his blood bride. To feed from her. To use her body in whatever way he wishes. For paying off her family’s debts, he expects her complete submission.
What neither of them predicts is how his bite doesn’t bring pain—it fills Gemma with more exquisite pleasure than she’s ever known. And as she finds her footing on a strange new planet, the one thing Gemma thought she’d never surrender might be at risk after all.
Her heart.
Too bad her new husband can’t seem to decide if he wants to break it…or keep it forever.
Master of Crows by Grace Draven:
This is the question that sets bondwoman, Martise of Asher, on a dangerous path. In exchange for her freedom, she bargains with her masters, the mage-priests of Conclave, to spy on the renegade sorcerer, Silhara of Neith. The priests want Martise to expose the sorcerer's treachery and turn him over to Conclave justice. A risky endeavor, but one she accepts without hesitation--until she falls in love with her intended target.
Silhara of Neith, Master of Crows, is a desperate man. The god called Corruption invades his mind, seducing him with promises of limitless power if he will help it gain dominion over the world. Silhara struggles against Corruption's influence and searches for ways to destroy the god. When Conclave sends Martise as an apprentice to help him, he knows she's a spy. Now he fights a war on two fronts -against the god who would possess him and the apprentice who would betray him.
Mage and spy search together for a ritual that will annihilate Corruption, but in doing so, they discover secrets about each other that may damn them both. Silhara must decide if his fate, and the fate of nations, is worth the soul of the woman he has come to love, and Martise must choose continued enslavement or freedom at the cost of a man's life. And love.
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2025 books read thread
2025 goal: 150 books key: ✨ (arc), 💜 (reread), 📖 (physical copy), 💻 (ebook), 🎧 (audiobook), 📚 (multiple formats)
january: 1) a sea of unspoken things → adrienne young (✨ 💻 ) 2) funny story → emily henry (💜📖) 3) yin yang love song → lauren kung jessen (✨ 💻 ) 4) i am not jessica chen → ann liang (✨ 💻 ) 5) the doll's house → lisa unger (💻 ) 6) darkly → marisha pessl (🎧) 7) night of the mannequins → stephen graham jones (🎧) 8) here lives a vengeful bitch → codie crowley (💻 ) 9) my darling dreadful thing → johanna van veen (📖) 10) plain bad heroines → emily m. danforth (🎧) 11) lies on the serpent's tongue → kate pearsall (💻 ) 12) bloom → delilah s. dawson (💻 ) 13) a dark and drowning tide → allison saft (📚) 14) the kamogawa food detectives → hisashi kashiwai (translated by jesse kirkwood) (🎧) 15) the restaurant of lost recipes → hisashi kashiwai (translated by jesse kirkwood) (🎧) 16) the empress of salt and fortune → nghi vo (📖)
february: 17) sea of tranquility → emily st. john mandel (📚) 18) done and dusted → lyla sage (📖) 19) needy little things → channelle desamours (💻 ) 20) a killing cold → kate alice marshall (📖) 21) society of lies → lauren ling brown (🎧)
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which romance novels have you liked the most and also which ones have you disliked the most??
YEAH LET'S GO!!!
Helen Hoang is my absolute #1 ride or die, anything she writes I'm here for forever. I do think that Kiss Quotient is the weakest of her books, which isn't shocking from a first novel, but the sex is solid and she got SIGNIFICANTLY better for the Bride Test and the Heart Principle. those were the best romances I read in 2023 and the competition is not close, Bride Test in particular is just a heap of fun.
Alexis Hall's A Lady for a Duke is also pretty excellent, just really dreamy trans woman historical romance with the most #woke and fuckable 19th century duke who ever lived. yes the duke gets over his alcoholism and laudanum addiction way too fast. yes there's an insane shoehorned Wickham-running-off-with-Lydia style plot at the end that comes out of nowhere and doesn't really make the story better. no there's no enough sex. but who cares? just have fun with it.
I also really really enjoyed Lauren Kung Jessen's Lunar Love but like... entirely because I was reading the protagonist, Olivia, as like a Rachel Bloom Crazy Ex-Girlfriend type who's so obsessed with the Chinese zodiac because she has an undiagnosed personality disorder. that's definitely not what the intent was but I think Olivia should have been allowed to be way MORE unhinged, tbh. I think Olivia should be allowed to kill.
as for the dishonorable mentions... god.
Tessa Bailey's Unfortunately Yours is ATROCIOUS. unbearable characters and dialogue that feels like listening to a garbage disposal and sex scenes that almost ruptured my spleen because I was laughing so hard. also the premise was just. very dumb. I Cannot Handle fake relationship books where the characters are stupid about it. the only part of it I like was the female protag's mom, a frigid evil milf who could keep me like a purse dog.
speaking of fake relationships, Chencia Higgins' book D'vaughn and Kris Plan a Wedding was also a huge letdown. the premise of two strangers having to fake a relationship on a reality tv show is good silly fun but Higgins just seemed like... DEEPLY uninterested in the reality tv aspect except as an excuse for how the characters met? when camera crew politely agreed not to film D'Vaughn coming out to her family, that was some bullshit. the whole book is just really sloppy, it's very disheartening that this is like THE #1 Black lesbian romance that I see recommended because it sucks and Black lesbians deserve soooo much better.
Kiss Her Once for Me by Alison Cochrun has been one of the hardest books to read because the protagonist/POV character is just soooo whiny and insufferable. she's supposed to be a very #relatable smol bean but god she was exhausting, I couldn't stand her.
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🎵 Happy Release Day Yin Yang Love Song 🎵
🌸 Thank you @readforeverpub for sending me a copy of Yin Yang Love Song by Lauren Kung Jessen, out now!
🎵 Chinese herbalist Chryssy Hua Williams never actually believed in the Hua family curse. But after Break-Up #9, Chryssy stopped laughing. Now she and her aunties run a special healing retreat center for the broken-hearted. After all, there’s nothing a proper cup of herbal tea can’t fix...but Chryssy’s innocent run-in with celebrity cellist and bad boy Vin Chao has everyone brewing about a different kind of tea. So he offers her a deal: they’ll fake-date, he’ll “break” her heart (and increase ticket sales), and in return, he’ll promote her business. It’s like Chryssy’s whole cursed love life has been leading up to this moment. But all it takes is one kiss—and a whole lot of unexpected chemistry—to land both of them in hot water.
🫖 This was such a joy to read! If you love breaking love curses, fake dating, and finding recipes in the back of a foodie book, this one's for you! From the author of Lunar Love and Red String Theory, Yin Yang Love Song is a 2025 romance you don't want to miss! Here's what to expect:
🌸 Dragons 🫖 Steamy Acupuncture Scene (Closed Door) 🎻 Love Curse 🌸 Yes, Chef! 🌸 Dual POV 🫖 He Falls First 🎻 Fake Dating
#books#books and cats#cats and books#books and flowers#romance books#romance novels#romance#book lovers#bookshelves#bookshelfie#book shelves#cats#cats reading#black cat#batty about books#battyaboutbooks#book review#book reviews#book blog#booklr
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Books to Try if You Loved Miraculous Ladybug
The way I have always viewed media is that it’s stories, first and foremost, and then the medium comes next. Medium can make a lot of difference in how stories are told, with visual media working quite well for the superhero genre and interiority shining in the written format. I want to draw attention to books that I think lovers of certain stories would also enjoy while also throwing in a few extras along the way and highlighting a diverse range of authors and genres.
If you loved the romance between a biracial artist and someone who likes science, try:
Red String Theory by Lauren Kung Jessen
Rooney Gao grew up the daughter of a famous artist and wants to make a name for herself in the art world independent of her mother, going by the moniker Red String Girl. Drawing from Chinese folklore about the red string of fate, Rooney also follows ideas of destiny in many aspects of her life, including love. Jack Liu is a scientist at NASA who is perfect for Rooney, but his own insecurities and resistance to fate might be enough to keep them apart.
If you loved the Parisian setting and strong fashion components, try:
If I Promise You Wings by A. K. Small
A. K. Small spent part of her life in the Sacré-Cœur of Paris and you can feel the city come alive in her story of grief and moving on. Alix Leclaire has graduated high school and lands her dream job at the Mille et une Plume, a feather boutique that plays a part in the haute couture fashion scene. Despite her happiness, the loss of her best friend is still a fresh wound for Alix to heal from.
If you loved the Parisian setting and the exploration of a character with anxiety, but want more of the Eiffel Tower and a Queer historical bent, try
The Paris Affair by Maureen Marshall
Fin Tighe is working for Gustave Eiffel as they work to build the Eiffel Tower in time for the World’s Fair. But as the illegitimate son of an English earl with no other heirs, the guardian of a ballerina cousin who wants to focus on her craft, and the love interest of a member of the Parisian elite, Fin and his anxiety are going to be tested in ways he never thought possible.
If you loved the dynamic of Adrien coming from a famous family and Marinette coming from a working class family with the struggles of making friendships, try
Love at First Knight by Megan Clawson
When Daisy Hasting, LARPer enthusiast from a family of LARPer enthusiasts, is volunteered to be a temporary knight at the Tower of London for a summer camp, the last thing she expects it to find love, let alone with a member of the royal family.
If you liked the secret identities but want a more grounded romance, try
Maya’s Laws of Love by Alina Khawaja
School teacher Maya Mirza has agreed to an arranged marriage with her friend from college, but on her way to Pakistan, she Sarfaraz, a Pakistani-Canadian divorce lawyer who is cynical towards love and romance. Both keep meeting up as roadblock after roadblock appears on their way to Pakistan.
If you loved the magical girl elements, but want an adult POV, try
A Magical Girl Retires by Park Seolyeon trans. Anton Hur
When the protagonist is told that she is the legendary Magical Girl of Time, she’s thrust into the world of women with superpowers. From job expos to credit card debt to discussions around climate change to conversations surrounding grief and loss, this is the perfect book for people who grew up on the magical girl genre.
Bonus:
If you liked the monsters being people the MCs know and are impacted by strong feelings, try:
Princess Tutu
When Ahiru is transformed from a duck into the magical girl Princess Tutu to save Prince Mytho, she has to fight her own friends and grow closer to enemies to accomplish her goals, even at the risk of breaking her own heart. A metacontextual examination of opera, ballet, fairy tales, and broader storytelling, Princess Tutu scratches the Miraculous itch while also doing something wholly new.
You can also find this post on substack under:
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let your followers get to know you!! list the top 5 books you've read this year and then send this ask to other blogs you like
i had to take a look at my reading tracker for this bc i have read many good books this year, so in no particular order, this is my top five:
the seven year slip by ashley poston
the ex vows by jessica joyce
lost and lassoed (rebel blue ranch #3) by lyla sage
a lively midwinter murder (three dahlias mysteries #4) by katy watson
business casual (lovelight #4) by b.k. borison
honorable mentions that almost made it:
the girl in question (the girls i've been #2) by tess sharpe
truly, madly, deeply by alexandria bellefleur
emily wilde's map of the otherlands (emily wilde #2) by heather fawcett
natural beauty by ling ling huang
blue sisters by coco mellors
red string theory by lauren kung jessen
funny story by emily henry
a love song for ricki wilde by tia williams
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Libby eBook Spotlight: 2023 Debut Authors
Lies We Sing to the Sea by Sarah Underwood
Each spring, Ithaca condemns twelve maidens to the noose. This is the price vengeful Poseidon demands for the lives of Queen Penelope’s twelve maids, hanged and cast into the depths centuries ago.
But when that fate comes for Leto, death is not what she thought it would be. Instead, she wakes on a mysterious island and meets a girl with green eyes and the power to command the sea. A girl named Melantho, who says one more death can stop a thousand.
The prince of Ithaca must die - or the tides of fate will drown them all.
Lunar Love by Lauren Kung Jessen
Always a matchmaker, never a match...
Olivia Huang Christenson is excited-slash-terrified to be taking over her grandmother’s matchmaking business. But when she learns that a new dating app has made her Pó Po’s traditional Chinese zodiac approach all about “animal attraction,” her emotions skew more toward furious-slash-outraged. Especially when L.A.’s most-eligible bachelor Bennett O’Brien is behind the app that could destroy her family’s legacy...
Liv knows better than to fall for any guy, let alone an infuriatingly handsome one who believes that traditions are meant to be broken. As the two businesses go head to head, Bennett and Liv make a deal: they’ll find a match for each other - and whoever falls in love loses. But Liv is dealing with someone who’s already adept at stealing business ideas... so what’s stopping him from stealing her heart too?
River Sing Me Home by Eleanor Shearer
The master of the Providence plantation in Barbados gathers his slaves and announces the king has decreed an end to slavery. As of the following day, the Emancipation Act of 1834 will come into effect. The cries of joy fall silent when he announces that they are no longer his slaves; they are now his apprentices. No one can leave. They must work for him for another six years. Freedom is just another name for the life they have always lived. So Rachel runs.
Away from Providence, she begins a desperate search to find her children - the five who survived birth and were sold. Are any of them still alive? Rachel has to know. The grueling, dangerous journey takes her from Barbados then, by river, deep into the forest of British Guiana and finally across the sea to Trinidad. She is driven on by the certainty that a mother cannot be truly free without knowing what has become of her children, even if the answer is more than she can bear. These are the stories of Mary Grace, Micah, Thomas Augustus, Cherry Jane and Mercy. But above all this is the story of Rachel and the extraordinary lengths to which a mother will go to find her children...and her freedom.
The Love Match by Priyanka Taslim
Zahra Khan is basically Bangladeshi royalty, but being a princess doesn’t pay the bills in Paterson, New Jersey. While Zahra’s plans for financial security this summer involve working long hours at Chai Ho and saving up for college writing courses, Amma is convinced that all Zahra needs is a “good match,” Jane Austen-style.
Enter Harun Emon, who’s wealthy, devastatingly handsome, and... aloof. As soon as Zahra meets him, she knows it’s a bad match. It’s nothing like the connection she has with Nayim Aktar, the new dishwasher at the tea shop, who just gets Zahra in a way no one has before.
So, when Zahra finds out that Harun is just as uninterested in this match as she is, they decide to slowly sabotage their parents’ plans. And for once in Zahra’s life, she can have her rossomalai and eat it: “dating” Harun and keeping Amma happy while catching real feelings for Nayim.
But life - and boys - can be more complicated than Zahra realizes. With her feelings all mixed up, Zahra discovers that sometimes being a good Bengali kid can be a royal pain.
#debut author#2023 reads#fiction#ebooks#libby#reading recommendations#reading recs#book recommendations#book recs#library books#tbr#tbr pile#to read#booklr#book tumblr#book blog#library blog#readers advisory
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January 2024 Diverse Reads
January 2024 Diverse Reads:
•”How We Named the Stars” by Andrés N. Ordorica, January 30, Tin House Books, Literary/LGBT/Hispanic & Latino/Coming of Age
•”Red String Theory” by Lauren Kung Jessen, January 09, Forever, Romance/Romantic Comedy/Asian American
•”Come and Get It” by Kiley Reid, January 30, G.P. Putnam's Sons, Literary/Coming of Age/Women
•”Martyr!” by Kaveh Akbar, January 23, Knopf Publishing Group, Literary/Family Life/LGBT
•��The Storm We Made” by Vanessa Chan, January 02, S&S/Marysue Rucci Books, Literary, World Literature/Asia/Historical /20th Century/Post-World War II/Women
•”The Mayor of Maxwell Street” by Avery Cunningham, January 30, Hyperion Avenue, Romance/Historical/African American/Women
•”The Queen of Sugar Hill: A Novel of Hattie McDaniel” by Reshonda Tate, January 30, William Morrow & Company, Biographical/Historical/African American/Women/Own Voices/World Literature/American/20th Century/Post-World War II
•”A Quantum Love Story” by Mike Chen, Mira Books, January 30, Romance/Time Travel/Science Fiction/Time Travel/Family Life/Siblings
•”The Bullet Swallower” by Elizabeth Gonzalez, January 23, Simon & Schuster, Literary/Hispanic & Latino/Magical Realism
•”When Things Don't Go Your Way: Zen Wisdom for Difficult Times” by Haemin Sunim & Charles La Shure (Translator), January 23, Penguin Life, Buddhist/Mindfulness & Meditation/Philosophy/Personal Growth/Buddhism
•”Black Women Taught Us: An Intimate History of Black Feminism” by Jenn M. Jackson, January 23, Random House, Women/American Government/Feminism & Feminist Theory/Women's Studies
•Our Hidden Conversations: What Americans Really Think about Race and Identity” by
Michele Norris, January 16, Simon & Schuster, Ethnic Studies/Discrimination & Race Relations/Social Classes & Economic Disparity/Cultural & Social
•”River East, River West” by Aube Rey Lescure, January 09, William Morrow & Company, Literary/Coming of Age/Family Life/Asian American/Cultural Heritage/World Literature-China/21st Century
•”Where I Belong: Healing Trauma and Embracing Asian American Identity” by Soo Jin Lee & Linda Yoon, January 09, Tarcherperigee, Ethnic Studies/ Asian American Studies/Mental Health/Personal Growth
•”Your Utopia: Stories” by Bora Chung & Anton Hur, January 30, Algonquin Books, Horror/Science Fiction/Short Stories/World Literature/Korea
•”On Thriving: Harnessing Joy Through Life's Great Labors” by Brandi Sellerz-Jackson, January 09, Ballantine Books, Personal Memoirs/Inspiration & Personal Growth
•”The Djinn Waits a Hundred Years” by Shubnum Khan, January 09, Viking, Historical/Gothic/Women
•”Behind You Is the Sea” by Susan Muaddi Darraj, January 16, Harpervia, Literary/Short Stories/Humor/Coming of Age/Women/Family Life/Cultural Heritage/Feminist/Muslim/Own Voices/World Literature/Middle East/Arabian Peninsula
•”Be a Revolution: How Everyday People Are Fighting Oppression and Changing the World--And How You Can, Ijeoma Oluo, January 30, HarperOne, Activism & Social Justice/Ethnic Studies/Personal Growth/Anthropology/Cultural & Social/Race & Ethnic Relations/Civil Rights/Social Activists/United States/21st Century/Human Rights/Motivational & Inspirational
.”The Night of the Storm” by Nishita Parekh, January 16, Dutton, Thriller/Mystery & Detective/Family Life/Asian American
#books#bookish#bookworm#bibliophile#book lover#reading#bookaddict#book#booklr#bookaholic#reading list#to read#reading resolutions#reading recommendations#bookblr#books and reading#reader#diverse books#diverse reads
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I really enjoyed this book - a rival business owners to lovers book with two Chinese American main characters who run matchmaking companies? Who get into a bet to find each other love?
Lauren Kung Jessen is great at laying out hints of things to come - nothing came as a surprise to me, but the journey I took with Olivia was satisfying. I especially liked how some of the questionable decisions Olivia made and the misunderstandings between Olivia and Bennett were handled.
The discussions of both our characters being half-Chinese and the questions of identity that come from feeling "not enough" was done really well. I also liked how they bonded over shared struggles as business owners, even though their business were in much different stages.
A thank you to Forever (Grand Central Publishing), Forever, and NetGalley for the ARC.
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FEBRUARY TBR LIST
Hello Dears,
Happy February! I know that many people hate winter (where it’s grey and cold), but let’s make the most of our last winter month. For those struggling, spring will be here soon😊
Here is what I’m planning on reading during the next month. My TBR list is quite extensive😆 Especially taking into consideration that February only has 28 days.
I managed to choose 11 books (some are whole series), which I won’t be able to finish up, but I’ve created two categories.
The first one is the “must” reads, which I prioritise:
The Love of my Afterlife by Kirsty Greenwood - It’s a monthly book club pick, it sounds very intriguing😊
The Crimson Moth duology by Kristen Ciccarelli: I have only heard very-very good reviews about this series so far, and the second book comes out on the 18th February.
The Corfu trilogy by Gerald Durrell: I watched the series that was created based on this series a few years ago. I loved it! I rewatched it with my mom, and the both of us got hooked. (Me for the second time😆) Now I’d like to read the books.
As Good as Dead by Holly Jackson: I love this author! Also it’s a buddy read with my best friend🥰
Yin Yang Love Song by Lauren Kung Jessen: I have read a book by her, which was good, so I’m looking forward to this one😊
Deep End by Ali Hazelwood: I love her! She’s AMAZING! So it’s not a surprise that I would love to read her new romance!
The Last Library by Freya Sampson: She’s become one of my favorite authors, so I’m very excited to read this book.
And now here are the other options:
The Empyrean series by Rebecca Yaros: I have heard great things, the length of the books is what’s holding me back😅
Between us by Mhairi McFarlane: I’ve heard nice things about this author, so I bought her book😅
The Prison Healer series by Lynette Noni - I’m intrigued, but I haven’t got to this series yet.
Drop Dead by Lily Chu - I loved her first two books, but her last one was quite disappointing for me, so I’m curious.
Have a nice weekend!🥰
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booksnmagic’s year in review: 2023 edition
2024 goal: 20 books (Red String Theory by Lauren Kung Jessen)
2024 total book count: 83
favorite book: The Ex Vows by Jessica Joyce (special mentions: Divine Rivals by Rebecca Ross, The Seven Year Slip and The Dead Romantics by Ashley Poston, A Love Song for Ricki Wilde by Tia Williams, Funny Story by Emily Henry, The Road Trip by Beth O’Leary, Out on a Limb by Hannah Bonam-Young, The Girl In Question by Tess Sharpe, Honey Girl by Morgan Rogers, The Villain Edit by Laurie Devore, Business Casual by B. K. Borison, Blue Sisters by Coco Mellors, The Inheritance of Orquídea Divina by Zoraida Córdova, Graveyard Shift by M. L. Rio, Natural Beauty by Ling Ling Huang, Diavola by Jennifer Marie Thorne, Emily Wilde’s Encyclopaedia of Faeries and mily Wilde’s Map to the Otherlands by Heather Fawcett, A Lively Midwinter Murder by Katy Watson, This Is How You Lose the Time War by Amal El-Mohtar and Max Gladstone, A Risk Worth Taking by Jessica Joyce, What the River Knows by Isabel Ibañez,Truly, Madly, Deeply by Alexandria Bellefleur, Lost and Lassoed by Lyla Sage)
least favorite: The Rom-Commers by Katherine Center
monthly breakdown under the cut:
january (4 books)
Divine Rivals (Letters of Enchantment #1) by Rebecca Ross — 5★ (jan 2 - jan 7)
Ruthless Vows (Letters of Enchantment #2) by Rebecca Ross — 5★ (jan 9 - jan 14)
The Atlas Complex (The Atlas #3) by Olivie Blake — 3★ (jan 15 - jan 21)
Valley Verified by Kyla Zhao — 4★ (jan 26 - jan 28)
february (4 books)
The Breakup Tour by Emily Wibberley and Austin Siegemund-Broka — 3★ (feb 2 - feb 5)
The Dead Romantics by Ashley Poston — 5★ (feb 8 - feb 11)
The Seven Year Slip by Ashley Poston — 5★ (feb 14 - feb 18)
Love From Scratch by Kaitlyn Hill — 3.75★ (feb 22 - feb 26)
march (5 books)
Pandora's Jar: Women in the Greek Myths by Natalie Haynes — 4.5★ (mar 2 - mar 5)
Wordslut: A Feminist Guide to Taking Back the English Language by Amanda Montell — 3★ (mar 7 - mar 9)
Divine Might: Goddesses in Greek Myth by Natalie Haynes — 5★ (mar 10 - mar 14)
A Love Song for Ricki Wilde by Tia Williams — 5★ (mar 18 - mar 23)
Cover Story (Stars Collide #2) by Rachel Lacey — 4★ (mar 26 - mar 30)
april (5 books)
The Good, the Bad, and the Aunties (Aunties #3) by Jesse Q. Sutanto — 4★ (apr 1 - apr 4)
The Road Trip (The Road Trip #1) **by Beth O’Leary — 4.5★ (apr 6 - apr 9)
Out on a Limb by Hannah Bonam-Young — 5★ (apr 12 - apr 16)
The Familiar by Leigh Bardugo — 5★ (apr 16 - apr 19)
Funny Story by Emily Henry — 4.75★ (apr 23 - apr 27)
may (7 books)
The Return Journeys (The Road Trip #1.5) by Beth O’Leary — 4★ (may 1)
Red String Theory by Lauren Kung Jessen — 5★ (may 1 - may 3)
Lunar Love by Lauren Kung Jessen — 4.5★ (may 6 - may 9)
The Switch by Beth O’Leary — 3.5★ (may 10 - may 13)
The Girl In Question (The Girls I’ve Been #2) by Tess Sharpe — 5★ (may 13 - may 16)
The Paradise Problem by Christina Lauren — 4★ (may 17 - may 19)
The Dixon Rule (Campus Diaries #2) by Elle Kennedy — 4★ (may 20 - may 23)
june (7 books)
But How Are You, Really by Ella Dawson — 4★ (jun 4 - jun 6)
Honey Girl by Morgan Rogers — 5★ (jun 9 - jun 11)
We Got The Beat by Jenna Miller — 4.5★ (jun 12 - jun 14)
Hotel Queens by Lee Winter — 3★ (jun 16 - jun 19)
Looking for a Sign by Susie Dumond — 4★ (jun 20 - jun 22)
The Romance Recipe by Ruby Barrett — 3.5★ (jun 23 - jun 25)
Out Of The Blue by Rachel Lacey — 3.5★ (jun 27)
july (9 books)
youthjuice by E. K. Sathue — 3★ (jul 1 - jul 3)
The Villain Edit by Laurie Devore — 4★ (jul 4 - jul 6)
Margo’s Got Money Problems by Rufi Thorpe — 3.5★ (jul 7 - jul 10)
A Novel Love Story by Ashley Poston — 5★ (jul 11 - jul 14)
Savor It by Tarah DeWitt — 3.5★ (jul 16 - jul 19)
Business Casual (Lovelight #4) by B. K. Borison — 5★ (jul 20 - jul 22)
Blue Sisters by Coco Mellors — 5★ (jul 23 - jul 25)
Done and Dusted (Rebel Blue Ranch #1) by Lyla Sage — 3★ (jul 26 - jul 29)
Swift and Saddled (Rebel Blue Ranch #2) by Lyla Sage — 4★ (jul 30 - jul 31)
august (9 books)
Done and Dusted: Bonus Chapter (Rebel Blue Ranch #1.1) by Lyla Sage — 4★ (aug 1)
The Ex Vows by Jessica Joyce — 5★ (aug 1 - aug 4)
You, With a View (You, With a View #1) by Jessica Joyce — 5★ (aug 5 - aug 9)
The Pairing by Casey McQuiston — 4.5★ (aug 10 - aug 14)
Five Times Theo Spencer Thought About Loving Noelle Shepard (You, With a View #1.1) by Jessica Joyce — 5★ (aug 14)
Hera by Jennifer Saint — 4★ (aug 14 - aug 17)
The Seventh Veil of Salome by Silvia Moreno-García — 4★ (aug 18 - aug 20)
We Love the Nightlife by Rachel Koller Croft — 3.5★ (aug 21 - aug 23)
You Will Never Be Me by Jesse Q. Sutanto — 3.75★ (aug 25 - aug 27)
september (7 books)
The Blonde Identity by Ally Carter — 3.75★ (sept 2 - sept 5)
All Roads Lead to Rome by Sabrina Fedel — 3★ (sept 6 - sept 12)
Vilest Things (Flesh and False Gods #2) by Chloe Gong — 5★ (sept 12 - sept 15)
The Rom-Commers by Katherine Center — 2.5★ (sept 16 - sept 18)
Gods of Jade and Shadow by Silvia Moreno-García — 4★ (sept 19 - sept 21)
The Inheritance of Orquídea Divina by Zoraida Córdova — 4.5★ (sept 22 - sept 2)
Guava and Grudges by Alexis Castellanos — 4★ (sept 26 - sept 28)
october (10 books)
So Thirsty by Rachel Harrison — 4★ (oct 1 - oct 3)
Frankenstein, or the Modern Prometheus by Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley — 5★ (oct 3 - oct 6)
Graveyard Shift by M. L. Rio — 4.75★ (oct 7)
La Petite Mort by Olivie Blake — 3.75★ (oct 8 - oct 9)
The Daughter of Doctor Moureau by Silvia Moreno-García — 3.25★ (oct 10 - oct 12)
Natural Beauty by Ling Ling Huang — 5★ (oct 13 - oct 14)
Diavola by Jennifer Marie Thorne — 4.5★ (oct 15 - oct 18)
What the Hex by Alexis Daria — 4★ (oct 19)
Lucy Undying by Kiersten White — 3.5★ (oct 21 - oct 25)
In These Hallowed Halls: A Dark Academia Anthology by Various Authors — 3.75★ (oct 27 - oct 29)
november (8 books)
Januaries: Stories of Love, Magic & Betrayal by Olivie Blake — 4.5★ (nov 1 - nov 5)
Lost and Lassoed (Rebel Blue Ranch #3) by Lyla Sage — 4.5★ (nov 5 - nov 8)
Triple Sec by T. J. Alexander — 4★ (nov 9 - nov 11)
My Lucky Star by Enni Amanda — 2.5★ (nov 13 - nov 16)
Emily Wilde’s Encyclopaedia of Faeries (Emily Wilde #1) by Heather Fawcett — 4★ (nov 16 - nov 18)
Emily Wilde’s Map to the Otherlands (Emily Wilde #1) by Heather Fawcett — 4.5★ (nov 18 - nov 23)
Truly, Madly, Deeply by Alexandria Bellefleur — 5★ (nov 23 - nov 26)
The Truth According to Ember by Danica Nava — 3.75★ (nov 27 - nov 30)
december (8 books)
This Is How You Lose the Time War by Amal El-Mohtar and Max Gladstone — 4.5★ (dec 1 - dec 2)
Seven Lively Suspects (Three Dahlias Mysteries #3) by Katy Watson — 5★ (dec 5 - dec 8)
Want: Sexual Fantasies by Anonymous by Gillian Anderson — 3★ (dec 8 - dec 13)
Baggage Claim (Aspen Peaks #1) by Juliana Smith — 2.75★ (dec 13 - dec 15)
Snowed Under (Aspen Peaks #2) by Juliana Smith — 4★ (dec 16 - dec 20)
A Lively Midwinter Murder (Three Dahlias Mysteries #4) by Katy Watson — 5★ (dec 20 - dec 22)
A Risk Worth Taking by Jessica Joyce — 5★ (dec 24)
What the River Knows (Secrets of the Nile #1) by Isabel Ibañez — 4.5★ (dec 27 - dec 29)
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2024 books read
2024 goal: 150 books
january: 1 - heartstopper vol. 1 → alice oseman (reread) 2 - heartstopper vol. 2 → alice oseman (reread) 3 - heartstopper vol. 3 → alice oseman (reread) 4 - heartstopper vol. 4 → alice oseman (reread) 5 - heartstopper vol. 5 → alice oseman 6 - a fragile enchantment → allison saft 7 - some shall break → ellie marney (audiobook) 8 - only if you're lucky → stacy willingham (arc) 9 - over my dead body: a witchy graphic novel → sweeney boo 10 - notes on an execution → danya kukafka (physical & audiobook) 11 - murder on the orient express → agatha christie (reread) 12 - our wives under the sea → julia armfield (physical & audiobook) 13 - the invocations → krystal sutherland (arc) 14 - red string theory → lauren kung jessen 15 - the breakup tour → emily wibberley & austin siegemund-broka (arc) 16 - the name drop → susan lee 17 - the secret of the old clock → carolyn keene (reread) 18 - bright young women → jessica knoll (audiobook) 19 - last call at the local → sarah grunder ruiz (audiobook) 20 - no one can know → kate alice marshall
february: 21 - worst wingman ever → abby jimenez 22 - drop, cover, and hold on → jasmine guillory 23 - with any luck → ashley poston 24 - the atlas six → olivie blake (reread, audiobook) 25 - that's not my name → megan lally 26 - not here to stay friends → kaitlyn hill 27 - this golden state → marit weisenberg 28 - today tonight tomorrow → rachel lynn solomon (reread, annotation) 29 - past present future → rachel lynn solomon (arc, annotation) 30 - the atlas paradox → olivie blake (reread, audiobook) 31 - the guest list → lucy foley (audiobook) 32 - in the market for murder → t.e. kinsey (audiobook) 33 - the neighbor favor → kristina forest 34 - in the mix → mandy gonzalez 35 - everyone in my family has killed someone → benjamin stevenson 36 - the seven year slip → ashley poston 37 - veronica ruiz breaks the bank → elle cosimano (audiobook) 38 - finlay donovan rolls the dice → elle cosimano (audiobook) 39 - the simmonds house kills → meaghan dwyer (arc)
march: 40 - the mysterious case of the alperton angels → janice hallett 41 - the book of cold cases → simone st. james 42 - what the river knows → isabel ibañez (audiobook) 43 - cut loose! → ali stroker & stacy davidowitz 44 - how i'll kill you → ren destefano 45 - the reappearance of rachel price → holly jackson (arc) 46 - when no one is watching → alyssa cole (audiobook) 47 - outofshapeworthlessloser: a memoir of figure skating, f*cking up, and figuring it out → gracie gold (audiobook) 48 - julius caesar → william shakespeare (rerad, audiobook) 49 - the family plot → megan collins (audiobook) 50 - if we were villains → m.l. rio (reread) 51 - alone with you in the ether → olivie blake (physical & audiobook) 52 - disappearance at devil's rock → paul tremblay (audiobook)
april: 53 - shakespeare: romeo and juliet graphic novel → martin powell & eva cabrera 54 - shakespeare: macbeth graphic novel → martin powell & f. daniel perez 55 - shakespeare: julius caesar graphic novel → carl bown & eduardo garcia 56 - shakespeare: a midsummer night's dream graphic novel → nel yomtov & berenice muniz 57 - twelfth knight → alexene farol follmuth (arc) 58 - kill for me, kill for you → steve cavanagh 59 - murder road → simone st. james 60 - everyone on this train is a suspect → benjamin stevenson 61 - listen for the lie → amy tintera 62 - king cheer → molly horton booth, stephanie kate strohm, jamie green 63 - twelfth night (musical adaptation) → kwame kwei-armah & shaina taub 64 - in juliet's garden → judy elliot mcdonald 65 - fat ham → james ijames 66 - death by shakespeare → philip l. nicholas, jr 67 - a good girl's guide to murder → holly jackson (reread) 68 - good girl, bad blood → holly jackson (reread) 69 - as good as dead → holly jackson (reread) 70 - dark corners → megan goldin (audiobook) 71 - the one that got away with murder → trish lundy (audiobook) 72 - funny story → emily henry 73 - imogen says nothing → aditi brennan kapil 74 - people we meet on vacation → emily henry (audiobook, reread)
may: 75 - episode thirteen → craig dilouie 76 - the girls i've been → tess sharpe (reread) 77 - the girl in question → tess sharpe (arc) 78 - wild about you → kaitlyn hill (arc) 79 - just for the summer → abby jimenez 80 - my best friend's exorcism → grady hendrix 81 - second first date → rachel lynn solomon 82 - the ballad of darcy & russell → morgan matson 83 - the good, the bad, and the aunties → jesse q. sutanto (audiobook) 84 - truly, madly, deeply → alexandria bellefleur 85 - your blood, my bones → kelly andrew 86 - amy & roger's epic detour → morgan matson (reread) 87 - romancing mister bridgerton → julia quinn (reread) 88 - the viscount who loved me → julia quinn (reread) 89 - bittersweet in the hollow → kate pearsall 90 - to sir phillip, with love → julia quinn (reread) 91 - when he was wicked → julia quinn (reread) 92 - it's in his kiss → julia quinn (reread) 93 - on the way to the wedding → julia quinn (audiobook, reread) 94 - emma → jane austen (audiobook, reread)
june: 95 - first lie wins → ashley elston 96 - we got the beat → jenna miller 97 - firekeeper's daughter → angeline boulley 98 - chlorine → jade song (audiobook) 99 - what stalks among us → sarah hollowell 100 - hollow fires → samira ahmed (audiobook) 101 - part of your world → abby jimenez 102 - the road trip → beth o'leary 103 - yours truly → abby jimenez 104 - finally fitz → marisa kanter 105 - the last love song → kalie holford
july: 106 - dead girls walking → sami ellis (audiobook) 107 - home is where the bodies are → jeneva rose 108 - we used to live here → marcus kliewer 109 - the children on the hill → jennifer mcmahon (audiobook) 110 - what moves the dead → t. kingfisher 111 - my throat an open grave → tori bovalino 112 - dashed → amanda quain (arc) 113 - asking for a friend → kara h.l. chen (arc) 114 - beach read → emily henry (reread, audiobook) 115 - book lovers → emily henry (reread, audiobook) 116 - happy place → emily henry (reread, audiobook) 117 - you have a match → emma lord (reread, annotation) 118 - bonnie & clyde musical script → ivan menchell (reread) 119 - such charming liars → karen m. mcmanus (arc) 120 - she left → stacie grey (audiobook) 121 - let the games begin → rufaro faith mazarura (audiobook) 122 - death at morning house → maureen johnson (arc)
august: 123 - cleat cute → meryl wilsner (audiobook) 124 - i wish you would → eva des lauriers 125 - the break-up pact → emma lord (arc) 126 - water for elephants → sara gruen 127 - when you get the chance → emma lord (reread, annotation) 128 - come out, come out → natalie c. parker (arc) 129 - my lady jane → cynthia hand, brodi ashton, jodi meadows 130 - the lies of alma blackwell → amanda glaze (arc)
september: 131 - the spare room → andra bartz 132 - late bloomer → mazey eddings (audiobook) 133 - savor it → tarah dewitt (audiobook) 134 - triple sec → t.j. alexander (audiobook) 135 - the skeleton key → erin kelly 136 - the examiner → janice hallett (arc) 137 - the dark we know → wen-yi lee (audiobook) 138 - pretty girls → karin slaughter 139 - a good girl's guide to murder → holly jackson (reread, annotation) 140 - lady macbeth → ava reid 141 - the pumpkin spice café → laurie gilmore 142 - the main character → jaclyn goldis (audiobook) 143 - queen macbeth → val mcdermid (arc) 144 - the cinnamon bun bookstore → laurie gilmore (audiobook)
october: 145 - midnight on beacon street → emily ruth verona (audiobook) 146 - make me a mixtape → jennifer whiteford (arc) 147 - haunt sweet home → sarah pinsker 148 - graveyard shift → m.l. rio 149 - the bitter end → alexa donne (arc) 150 - morbidly yours → ivy fairbanks 151 - someone in the attic → andrea mara 152 - a new lease on death → olivia blacke (arc) 153 - the christmas tree farm → laurie gilmore 154 - staged → elle cosimano 155 - the reunion dinner → jesse q. sutanto 156 - a crime of fashion → emma rosenblum 157 - the nosy neighbor → nita prose 158 - one lucky subscriber → kellye garrett 159 - a classic case → alicia thompson 160 - interview with the vampire → anne rice (audiobook) 161 - horror movie → paul tremblay (audiobook) 162 - everything is poison → joy mccullough (arc) 163 - romeo and juliet → william shakespeare (reread) 164 - no place left to hide → megan lally (arc) 165 - macbeth → william shakespeare (reread)
november: 166 - dinner for vampires → bethany joy lenz (audiobook) 167 - make the season bright → ashley herring blake 168 - a bánh mì for two → trinity nguyen (audiobook) 169 - merriment and mayhem → alexandria bellefleur 170 - a novel love story → ashley poston 171 - guilt and ginataan → mia p. manansala
december: 172 - looking for smoke → k.a. cobell (audiobook) 173 - seven lively suspects → katy watson 174 - the rival → emma lord (arc) 175 - a lively midwinder murder → katy watson 176 - the cheerleaders → kara thomas (rerad, audiobook) 177 - the champions → kara thomas (audiobook) 178 - a guide to the dark → meriam metou (audiobook)
#post: 2024 books read#i always get SO excited to start these threads!#and as y'all know i love starting the new year with a reread#so i figured this year it would be heartstopper and then i'd finally get to read heartstopper vol 5#i loved it which is no surprise#i just love these characters so much <3
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reading roundup: February 2024
I literally completely forgot I needed to do this oopsie poopsie
WHAT DID I READ IN FEBRUARY!!! LET'S TALK ABOUT IT!!!!
Rouge (Mona Awad, 2023) - listen. there are some very cool ideas in this book, and it's definitely big creepy in places. some of the childhood flashbacks, in particular, had me shrieking with pure dread. but ultimately my issue with this book is the same as my issue with Awad's most well-known novel, Bunny: I would just... kind of like to understand what's going on? like even a little bit? at literally any time? you don't need to explain everything, but man, give me something. vibes alone do not make a meal, and I left this book not really feeling fed.
Our Share of Night (Mariana Enríquez, trans. Megan McDowell 2023) - god, this book makes you WORK FOR IT, but I'm glad I stuck it out. Enríquez has written a fucking doorstopper of intergenerational drama, about an Argentinian family deeply embroiled in a cult that worships something otherworldly and... hungry. perpetually sickly Juan is the Order's prized prophet, but after his wife's death is orchestrated by her own mother he becomes determined to get their young son, Gaspar, away from the Order's control by any means necessary. a wrenching read that swings through every kind of horror, swinging from the supernatural to Argentina's military dictatorship in the 70s to the AIDS epidemic in the 80s and 90s to an absolutely brutal ending.
Red String Theory (Lauren Kung Jessen, 2024) - some of you may recall that Lauren Kung Jessen wrote Lunar Love, one of my favorite romance novels of last year thanks to a zodiac-obsessed protagonist who's (unintentionally) giving major Rebecca Bunch pre-diagnosis in Crazy Ex-Girlfriend vibes. Red String Theory also has a female lead obsessed with mythological matchmaking, so I was really hoping for another unhinged queen, but please don't make my mistake: everyone in this book is devastatingly hinged, and the only real conflict is two characters who like each other from the jump repeatedly coming up with unsatisfying excuses for why they can't date each other. my least favorite was "we'll only in the same city for A YEAR," which is absolutely hogshit wild. "only a year." get out of here. I hate you guys.
Drinking from Graveyard Wells (Yvette Lisa Ndlovu, 2023) - a tiny short story debut by Ndlovu, a Zimbabwean sarungano. one of my very favorite genre of short story collections is "women having a bad time taken up to 11," and god does this deliver. Ndlovu writes about the many indignities heaped upon Zimbabwean women at home and abroad, weaving together tight stories about misogyny, war, poverty, and immigration with restless spirits, bored gods, ignored wise women, and unsatisfactory afterlives. there's a story about a near future in which diamond miners are purposefully set up and sacrificed to an angry underground god to create more diamonds that was so fucking clever, and the final story - the titular Drinking from Graveyard Wells - was just... an absolutely perfect short story. suspenseful and eerie and just enough of a hint of explanation to really chill you. chef's kiss.
It Happened One Summer (Tessa Bailey, 2021) - shout out to all of my patreon supporters who voted to make me read another Tessa Bailey book; you truly wish darkness and despair upon me. here's the insane thing about this book: if you just completely ignore the actual central romance, it's just a sweet book about an infinitely likeable young woman unplugging from her shallow socialite life and finding a new niche reviving her deceased father's bar in a tiny fishing town in Washington. it's like, you know, the plot of a pretty okay disney channel original movie? it's no Minute Men or High School Musical, but it's cute. it's a solid Dairy Girls or Princess Protection Program. but then there's the love interest, who's just a fucking tool all the way down. reader, I kept wishing he would get swept over the rigging of his own crab boat and die ingloriously at sea. this guy sucks so bad. also the sex scenes were identical to the ones in Unfortunately Yours and they did not taste any better reheated. fascinating treatise on cishetero gender norms, rancid romance. I wrote a whole thing about it on my patreon if you're into that kind of nastiness.
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book log - 2023 (continued)
the good lie by a.r. torre
something wilder by christina lauren
pineapple street by jenny jackson
drinking games by sarah levy
the housemaid by frieda mcfadden
full disclosure by camryn garrett
the dream job by kiersten modglin
never lie by frieda mcfadden
the silent woman by minka kent
hidden pictures by jason rekulak
girl in trouble by stacy claftin
the waitress by nina manning
xoxo by axie oh
yellowface by r.f. kuang
unmissing by minka kent
the rise by shari king
take me home tonight by morgan matson
the best lies by sarah lyu
arsenic and adobo by mia p. manansala
our missing hearts by celeste ng
the locked door by frieda mcfadden
where the crawdads sing by delia owens
the couple at table six by daniel hurst
survive the night by riley sager
the wife upstairs by freida mcfadden
one of us is dead by jeneva rose
five little indians by michelle good
the push by ashley audrain
i’ll stop the world by lauren thoman
silver nitrate by silvia moreno-garcia
romantic comedy by curtis sittenfield
the maidens by alex michaelides
every last secret by a.r. torre
the headmaster’s list by melissa de la cruz
last summer at the golden hotel by elyssa friedland
the collective by alison gaylin
one true loves by taylor jenkins reid
the trade off by sandie jones
my summer darlings by may cobb
the last housewife by ashley winstead
good rich people by eliza jane brazier
the club by ellery lloyd
phantom limb by lucinda berry
the night shift by alex finlay
layoverland by gabby noone
the writing retreat by julia bartz
never never by colleen hoover
reckless by cecily von ziegesar
the family game by catherine steadman
just say yes by maxine morrey
a pho love story by loan le
the birthday girl by melissa de la cruz
local woman missing by mary kubica
the last to vanish by megan miranda
yolk’s on me by d.t. henderson
the housemaid’s secret by frieda mcfadden
happy people are annoying by josh peck
the fraud squad by kyla zhao
wrong place wrong time by gillian mcallister
the grayson legacy by boris bacic
remarkably bright creatures by shelby van pelt
the couple in the cabin by daniel hurst
yerba buena by nina lacour
the ex by frieda mcfadden
notorious by cecilyn von ziegesar
layla by colleen hoover
the inmate by frieda mcfadden
last night at the telegraph club by malinda lo
the friend zone by abby jimenez
how to american by jimmy o. yang
lunar love by lauren kung jessen
the it girl by crackly von ziegesar
what lies in the woods by kate alice marshall
queen of thieves by beezy march
weather girl by rachel lynn solomon
the perfect marriage by jeneva rose
my sister, the serial killer by tonkin braithwaithe
things we never got over by lucy score
like me by hayley phelan
do not disturb by frieda mcfadden
for the love of friends by sara goodman confino
reckless girls by rachel hawkins
ghost 19 by simone st. james
the winter people by jennifer mcmahon
please join us by catherine mckenzie
under the whispering door by t.j. klune
the bookstore sisters by alice hoffman
lessons in chemistry by bonnie garmus
the new year’s party by daniel hurst
the house in the cerulean sea by t.j. klune
trixie and katya’s guide to womanhood by trixie mattel
i kissed shara wheeler by casey mcquiston
horrorstor by grady hendrix
yours truly by abby jimenez
happy place by emily henry
the soulmate by sally hepworth
i have some questions for you by rebecca makkai
what happened the ruthy ramirez by claire jimenez
mad honey by jodi picoult
really good, actually by monica heisey
the ballad of songbirds and snakes by suzanne collins
the lightning thief by rick riordan
harry potter and the philosophers stone by j.k. rowling
the sea of monsters by rick riordan
the titan’s curse by rick riordan
harry potter and the chamber of secrets by j.k. rowling
the battle of the labyrinth by rick riordan
harry potter and the prisoner of azkaban by j.k. rowling
the last olympian by rick riordan
the lost hero by rick riordan
harry potter and the goblet of fire by j.k. rowling
the son of neptune by rick riordan
the mark of athena by rick riordan
harry potter and the order of the phoenix by j.k. rowling
harry potter and the half blood prince by j.k. rowling
harry potter and the deathly hallows by j.k. rowling
harry potter and the cursed child by john tiffany
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