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12

Top 10 Tuesday – 5 Books That Blew Me Away & 5 Books That…Not So Much

February 21, 2017/28 Comments/by Suzanne

top ten tuesday

Top Ten Tuesday is a fun weekly meme hosted by The Broke and the Bookish. This week’s topic is “Ten Books I Loved Less/More Than I Thought I Would (recently or all time) — or you could do something like books I liked more/less than everyone else.”

Okay, so I struggled with this topic a bit. I couldn’t think of 10 books I loved more or less than I thought I would, so I split it down the middle and did five of each.  What I went for here are books I read in 2016 that either far exceeded my expectation or else didn’t meet my expectations at all or live up to the hype that surrounded them.  In other words, I liked them well enough; I just didn’t love them like I was sure that I would.  Let’s start with the good…

5 BOOKS THAT BLEW ME AWAY

* * * * *

1. THE MARTIAN by Andy Weir

To this day, I still can’t get over how much I truly loved this book.  The only reason I even picked it up was because of the Matt Damon movie and my rule about always reading the book first.  I ended up devouring it in less than a day.  It fed both my inner geek and my inner smart ass and I loved every page of it.  Talk about exceeding expectations – if you haven’t read it yet, I highly recommend it!

* * * * *

2. A COURT OF MIST AND FURY by Sarah J. Maas

I’m actually finishing this book as we speak and cannot believe how quickly I’ve blown through 600+ pages.  This is one of the few books I’ve read in the past year or so that really lives up to all of the hype that has surrounded it and as much as I enjoyed A Court of Thorns and Roses, I think this book far exceeds that one.  I’ll be reviewing this book soon so don’t want to say too much, but  I’m beyond ready to get my hands on the third book!

* * * * *

3. MY LADY JANE by Cynthia Hand Brodi Ashton, and Jodi Meadows

I truly had no idea what to expect when I picked up My Lady Jane but it ended up being one of my favorite reads of 2016.  Written in the vein of The Princess Bride or perhaps Monty Python, if you love random and quirky humor, definitely put this one on your TBR. It’s truly laugh-out-loud funny!

 

* * * * *

4. THE BEAR AND THE NIGHTINGALE by Katherine Arden

I honestly chose this book because I thought the cover was so beautiful and because I was intrigued by the idea of a retelling involving Russian folklore.  I was thrilled to find that the writing inside is just as beautiful as the cover outside.  Truly exquisite. This is a title that I hope receives the acclaim I believe it deserves.  I still can’t believe it’s Arden’s debut novel.

* * * * *

5. LILAC GIRLS  by Martha Hall Kelly

I’ve always been drawn to historical fiction so I picked this book up as soon as I heard it was centered during World War II and focused on a women’s concentration camp.  Lilac Girls is a powerful exploration of how women in particular were impacted by the atrocities committed by the Nazis during WWII. The primary setting of the book is the Nazi concentration camp Ravensbruck and its primary focus, the women — primarily Polish political prisoners — who were detained there, with special attention paid to those known as the “Ravensbruck Rabbits”, a group of prisoners who were experimented on against their will by Nazi doctors.  One of the most compelling qualities of Lilac Girls, in my opinion, is its moving portrayal of the strength and courage of the Ravensbruck prisoners. Up against inhumane treatment and almost certain death, they demonstrated such resilience, determination, and even at times, defiance, that it just blew me away. I found the sisterhood they created for themselves within the camp very moving as well – the way they worked so hard to keep hope alive, no matter how hard the Nazis tried to dehumanize them and strip that hope away.   I knew it would be a compelling read and an educational one, but I still wasn’t prepared for just how much it would blow me away.  Lilac Girls was a 2016 Goodreads Choice finalist and it’s my most recommended book of 2016.  It’s an important book because of the story that it tells and it’s also an incredibly well written book.

* * * * *

5 BOOKS THAT … NOT SO MUCH

* * * * *

6. THE UNDERGROUND RAILROAD by Colson Whitehead

underground railroad colson whitehead

I liked this book, but I hate that I didn’t completely love it, especially considering the widespread acclaim it has received. I thought Cora’s story was very compelling and that Whitehead’s writing is powerful in the way it exposes so many of the horrors of slavery. I also loved the imaginative idea of the Underground Railroad as an actual physical railroad — Cora’s journey on the various stops was probably my favorite part of the novel. That said, there was still just something about this book that made it a difficult one for me to get through. I’m thinking maybe it was something stylistic or maybe the point of view, but I just wasn’t as riveted by what was going on as I would have expected to be. It took me nearly two months to finish the book, which just isn’t like me at all.

* * * * *

7. HARRY POTTER AND THE CURSED CHILD by John Tiffany, Jack Thorne, and J.K. Rowling

I don’t know if there was anyway this could possibly live up to the hype, but I found it to be a real letdown.  I’m sure it’s a phenomenal play, but that’s the thing. It’s meant to be seen rather than read.  I found the script to be just too bare bones for my liking and many of the characters that should feel familiar just didn’t.

* * * * *

8. THE GIRL ON THE TRAIN by Paula Hawkins

I guess maybe I was just already over the hype of “The Girl….” books with unreliable narrators and unlikable characters by the time this one came out, but The Girl on the Train just didn’t do much for me to live up to all of the hype it was generating.

* * * * *

9.  MODERN LOVERS BY EMMA STRAUB

This was another super-hyped book that just didn’t do much for me.  I literally saw it on every “Most Anticipated”, “Must Read” books list I came across last year and after I read it, I just sat there like “I don’t get it. What was all the fuss about?”

* * * * *

10.  RED QUEEN by Victoria Aveyard

I have a love-hate relationship with the Red Queen series. It’s one of the most fast-paced and entertaining series out there, which is why I love it, but it also has Mare and her endless distracted behavior when she’s around her crushes. And don’t even get me started on the love triangle/love square thing she has going on in the first book.  What the heck?  I soooo want this to be a 5 star read because so many parts of it are so epic, but every time the love gets in the way of the rest of the storyline, I want to scream and so I end up rating it as a 3 star read.  I’m still hoping for that 5 star amazing-ness when the next book comes out later this year though!

Question: What books have blown you away recently or have let you down?

https://thebookishlibra.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/toptentuesday.png 864 1600 Suzanne http://thebookishlibra.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/trimmed-Copy-of-Bookish-Logo-copy.png Suzanne2017-02-21 06:26:442017-02-23 18:26:53Top 10 Tuesday – 5 Books That Blew Me Away & 5 Books That…Not So Much
practical magic

Book Review: Practical Magic by Alice Hoffman

February 17, 2017/8 Comments/by Suzanne
Book Review:  Practical Magic by Alice HoffmanPractical Magic by Alice Hoffman
Also by this author: Faithful, The Rules of Magic
three-stars
Published by Putnam Adult on June 13th 1995
Genres: Fantasy
Pages: 244
Amazon
Goodreads

Goodreads Synopsis:  The bestselling author of Second Nature, Illumination Night and Turtle Moon now offers her most fascinating and tantalizingly accomplished novel yet — a winning tale that amply confirms Alice Hoffman’s reputation not only as a genius of the vivid scene and unforgettable character but as one of America’s most captivating storytellers.

When the beautiful and precocious sisters Sally and Gillian Owens are orphaned at a young age, they are taken to a small Massachusetts town to be raised by their eccentric aunts, who happen to dwell in the darkest, eeriest house in town. As they become more aware of their aunts’ mysterious and sometimes frightening powers — and as their own powers begin to surface — the sisters grow determined to escape their strange upbringing by blending into “normal” society.

But both find that they cannot elude their magic-filled past. And when trouble strikes — in the form of a menacing backyard ghost — the sisters must not only reunite three generations of Owens women but embrace their magic as a gift — and their key to a future of love and passion. Funny, haunting, and shamelessly romantic, Practical Magic is bewitching entertainment — Alice Hoffman at her spectacular best.

My Review:

Practical Magic is the second book that I’ve read from Alice Hoffman. I read her 2016 release Faithful last fall and fell in love with it, so my sister, who is a huge Alice Hoffman fan, loaned me this book as well as several other Hoffman novels. I chose Practical Magic since it was the one I had heard the most about, primarily because of the movie of the same name.

Practical Magic tells the story of Sally and Gillian Owens, two sisters who are orphaned at a young age and are taken in by their eccentric aunts. We soon learn that the seeming eccentricity is actually magic and that the aunts are apparently witches of some sort.  They are, for the most part, shunned by the people in the community, unless of course, someone is desperately seeking help in the form of perhaps a love potion or some other magical concoction.  Superstitions abound when it comes to these aunts and, as Sally and Gillian now live with them, the superstitions soon surround them as well and they spend their time either being mocked relentlessly or else avoided entirely by their classmates.  That is, until they hit puberty and Gillian, in particular, becomes quite the magnet for boys.  Without even trying, she practically has them falling at her feet. At first, this comes across a little silly and over-dramatic until it clicks that these girls probably have some magical powers of their own that they’re unaware of.  Gillian eventually runs off with one of her many suitors and begins her adult life basically moving from city to city, following man after man when each relationship doesn’t ultimately work out.  Sally, who spent much of her time in Gillian’s shadow while she was living at home, eventually finds someone who falls madly in love with her as well and they live happily with the aunts and begin their own family. But then tragedy strikes and the young man is killed. Looking for a fresh start and a “normal” life for her children, Sally too leaves the aunts behind and moves to a new city.  Sally grieves for her dead husband for a long time but eventually starts to feel more like herself and starts living again. All goes smoothly until one fateful night when Gillian shows up on her doorstep unannounced, bringing a world of trouble with her.

 What I Loved:

What really stood out for me in Practical Magic, even more so than the actual magic, is the authentic portrayal of the sisterly relationship.  In these relationships, Hoffman is a master of really getting the reader inside the mind of her characters and then perfectly capturing all of the emotional complexities of what it feels like to have a sister: the love, the jealousy, the rivalry and competitiveness, the protectiveness and loyalty, and even the occasional disappointment that sisters feel for each other.  Sally is often jealous of Gillian because of her incredible beauty and her ability to attract male admirers without even trying.  When Gillian leaves home and basically falls man after man around the country, Sally is incredibly disappointed in her and is not at all happy when Gillian turns back up on her doorstep years later looking for help.  But ultimately that sisterly love and sense of loyalty wins out and Sally takes her sister in.  The relationship between Sally’s daughters, although a minor part of the book in comparison, is still portrayed with that same sense of authenticity.

I also really liked the book’s main theme, which centers around the importance of family.  No matter how hard Gillian and Sally try to avoid their past and escape from the embarrassment of being associated with their aunts and whatever magic they may possess, they still ultimately need them when the going gets tough.  And even though both girls basically abandon their aunts because of that embarrassment, the aunts come running, no questions asked, as soon as they hear the girls are in trouble and need their help.  Just like no matter how upset Sally is at Gillian for showing up on her doorstep and bringing trouble with her, she still loves her and would do anything for her, without question, even if it means turning her own life upside down.  That’s what family is all about.

When it comes to this theme, I actually found the synopsis of the book to be quite misleading.  Practical Magic is described as “funny, haunting, and shamelessly romantic.” That’s not how I would describe the story at all.  While I did find it to be haunting and almost eerie at times, especially because of the trouble Gillian brings to town, I didn’t find the book to be especially humorous at all. As I’m sitting here thinking about the story, I can’t even recall a single funny moment actually.  And while the two sisters were definitely seeking love, I can’t say that I found this to be “shamelessly romantic” either.  The synopsis makes it sound like it’s going to be a light-hearted romantic comedy, but I found it to be a much heavier, more dramatic read, which for me is a good thing since I’m not typically big on romantic reads or chick lit of any kind.

Misleading blurb aside, another element of Practical Magic I loved was the writing itself.  Hoffman’s writing is just atmospheric and mesmerizing– vivid and lyrical – but without being overdone or overly wordy.  The writing doesn’t move at a fast pace, but the sentences just glide from one to the next, smooth as silk.  As I was reading this story, I kept wondering if she has ever written any poetry because if so, I’d certainly love to read it. I’m sure it’s absolutely beautiful.  Below are a few sample lines from Practical Magic:

“Do you ever just put your arms out and just spin and spin and spin? Well, that’s what love is like; everything inside of you tells you to stop before you fall, but for some reason you just keep going.” 

“You can never tell about a person by guessing…that’s why language was invented. Otherwise, we’d all be like dogs, sniffing each other to find out where we stood.” 

“Some things, when they change, never do return to the way they once were. Butterflies for instance, and women who’ve been in love with the wrong man too often.” 

What I Didn’t Love So Much:

 I have to say that I didn’t particularly care for the way the novel was structured.  Instead of being broken into manageable chapters, it was organized into 4 or 5 lengthy sections.  Since the read isn’t a fast-paced read, I found myself getting a little bored at times and wanting to find a good stopping point.  Since there were so few natural breaks in the story, I often found myself just leaving off mid page at the end of a random paragraph because I’d just give up trying to make it to one of the breaks.  The section titles – Superstition, Premonitions, etc.  – were great in the sense that they really added to the book’s slightly supernatural atmosphere, but I still definitely would have preferred more chapters.

The structure also tended to make the different points of view more confusing to follow than I think they would have been if the story had been organized differently.  The point of view jumped back and forth quite a bit between the different characters so that I sometimes had to backtrack to see who I was reading about and, in some cases, to figure out if the event being depicted was in the present or if it was a memory.  I had that problem several times with Gillian as she kept randomly thinking back on her time with her abusive ex Jimmy.

Who Would I Recommend Practical Magic to?

From other reviews I’ve read, many readers who have watched the movie Practical Magic think that the movie is actually better than the book.  I haven’t watched the movie so I can’t attest to that, but I saw similar comments enough to say that I’d probably recommend the book to someone who hasn’t seen the movie yet.  Even with my issues with the way it was structured, I still found Practical Magic to be a solid and entertaining read with realistic characters and relationships but also with that little added magical twist to spice things up a bit.  It’s also such an atmospheric and, at times, almost spooky read that I kept wishing I had saved it to read in October.  It would make for an excellent Halloween read.

 

Rating: 3 stars

three-stars

About Alice Hoffman

alice hoffman

Alice Hoffman was born in New York City on March 16, 1952 and grew up on Long Island. After graduating from high school in 1969, she attended Adelphi University, from which she received a BA, and then received a Mirrellees Fellowship to the Stanford University Creative Writing Center, which she attended in 1973 and 74, receiving an MA in creative writing. She currently lives in Boston.

Hoffman’s first novel, Property Of, was written at the age of twenty-one, while she was studying at Stanford, and published shortly thereafter by Farrar Straus and Giroux. She credits her mentor, professor and writer Albert J. Guerard, and his wife, the writer Maclin Bocock Guerard, for helping her to publish her first short story in the magazine Fiction. Editor Ted Solotaroff then contacted her to ask if she had a novel, at which point she quickly began to write what was to become Property Of, a section of which was published in Mr. Solotaroff’s magazine, American Review.

Since that remarkable beginning, Alice Hoffman has become one of our most distinguished novelists. She has published a total of twenty-three novels, three books of short fiction, and eight books for children and young adults. Her novel, Here on Earth, an Oprah Book Club choice, was a modern reworking of some of the themes of Emily Bronte’s masterpiece Wuthering Heights. Practical Magic was made into a Warner film starring Sandra Bullock and Nicole Kidman. Her novel, At Risk, which concerns a family dealing with AIDS, can be found on the reading lists of many universities, colleges and secondary schools. Hoffman’s advance from Local Girls, a collection of inter-related fictions about love and loss on Long Island, was donated to help create the Hoffman Breast Center at Mt. Auburn Hospital in Cambridge, MA. Blackbird House is a book of stories centering around an old farm on Cape Cod. Hoffman’s recent books include Aquamarine and Indigo, novels for pre-teens, and The New York Times bestsellers The River King, Blue Diary, The Probable Future, and The Ice Queen. Green Angel, a post-apocalyptic fairy tale about loss and love, was published by Scholastic and The Foretelling, a book about an Amazon girl in the Bronze Age, was published by Little Brown. In 2007 Little Brown published the teen novel Incantation, a story about hidden Jews during the Spanish Inquisition, which Publishers Weekly has chosen as one of the best books of the year. Her most recent novels include The Third Angel,The Story Sisters, the teen novel, Green Witch, a sequel to her popular post-apocalyptic fairy tale, Green Angel. The Red Garden, published in 2011, is a collection of linked fictions about a small town in Massachusetts where a garden holds the secrets of many lives.

Hoffman’s work has been published in more than twenty translations and more than one hundred foreign editions. Her novels have received mention as notable books of the year by The New York Times, Entertainment Weekly, The Los Angeles Times, Library Journal, and People Magazine. She has also worked as a screenwriter and is the author of the original screenplay “Independence Day,” a film starring Kathleen Quinlan and Diane Wiest. Her teen novel Aquamarine was made into a film starring Emma Roberts. Her short fiction and non-fiction have appeared in The New York Times, The Boston Globe Magazine, Kenyon Review, The Los Angeles Times, Architectural Digest, Harvard Review, Ploughshares and other magazines.

Toni Morrison calls The Dovekeepers “.. a major contribution to twenty-first century literature” for the past five years. The story of the survivors of Masada is considered by many to be Hoffman’s masterpiece. The New York Times bestselling novel is slated for 2015 miniseries, produced by Roma Downey and Mark Burnett, starring Cote de Pablo of NCIS fame.

The Museum of Extraordinary Things was released in 2014 and was an immediate bestseller, The New York Times Book Review noting, “A lavish tale about strange yet sympathetic people, haunted by the past and living in bizarre circumstances… Imaginative…”

Nightbird, a Middle Reader, was released in March of 2015. In August of this year, The Marriage Opposites, Alice’s latest novel, was an immediate New York Times bestseller. “Hoffman is the prolific Boston-based magical realist, whose stories fittingly play to the notion that love—both romantic and platonic—represents a mystical meeting of perfectly paired souls,” said Vogue magazine. Click here to read more reviews for The Marriage of Opposites.

Website | Facebook | Goodreads

https://thebookishlibra.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/02/practical-magic.jpg 1117 736 Suzanne http://thebookishlibra.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/06/trimmed-Copy-of-Bookish-Logo-copy.png Suzanne2017-02-17 06:33:412017-02-17 06:34:46Book Review: Practical Magic by Alice Hoffman

Top Ten Tuesday: My Top Ten Favorite Realistic Couples in Literature

February 14, 2017/28 Comments/by Suzanne

top ten tuesday

Top Ten Tuesday is a fun weekly meme hosted by The Broke and the Bookish. This week’s topic is “All About Romance Tropes/Types — top ten favorite hate-to-love romances (from books or movies or tv), top ten favorite (or least favorite) instalove romances, favorite slow-burn romances, favorite starcrossed lovers, etc. etc. Can go so many ways with this one).”

Okay, so I actually groaned a little bit when I read this week’s topic since romance isn’t really my thing when it comes to reading. I don’t like love triangles, instalove, or basically any romantic situation that I see as a distraction from the main storyline of a book.

That said, what I do very much enjoy are realistic portrayals of relationships – the slow build from strangers to friends to lovers, or maybe even from hate at first sight to friendship to something more. I love witty banter, fights, going through tough times together and coming out stronger than ever, or maybe even a couple drifting apart and eventually finding their way back to each other. I even love reading just the evolution of an established relationship over time.  So yeah, realism is definitely my thing when it comes to romance.  So what I went with for this week’s special Valentine’s Day Top 10 edition are my Top Ten Favorite Realistic Couples in Literature.  I think each of my selections in some way embodies what I’ve just described in terms of a realistic relationship.  As you’ll see, Jane Austen’s novels figure prominently in my list as I consider her to be one of the masters of creating a realistic relationship.

MY TOP 10 FAVORITE REALISTIC COUPLES IN LITERATURE

* * * * *

1. BENEDICT AND BEATRICE

from Much Ado About Nothing by William Shakespeare

* * * * *

2. ELIZABETH BENNETT AND FITZWILLIAM DARCY

from Pride and Prejudice by Jane Austen

* * * * *

3. RON WEASLEY AND HERMIONE GRANGER

from the Harry Potter Series by J.K. Rowling

* * * * *

4. AUGUSTUS AND HAZEL

from The Fault in Our Stars by John Green

* * * * *

5. ELINOR DASHWOOD AND EDWARD FERRARS

from Sense and Sensibility by Jane Austen

* * * * *

6. WILL TRAYNOR AND LOUISA CLARK

from Me Before You by Jojo Moyes

* * * * *

7. IFEMULU AND OBINZE

from Americanah by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie

* * * * *

8. ANNE ELLIOTT AND FREDERICK WENTWORTH

from Persuasion by Jane Austen

* * * * *

9.  CINDER AND KAI

from Cinder by Marissa Meyer

* * * * *

10.  ELEANOR AND PARK

from Eleanor and Park by Rainbow Rowell

* * * * *

Question:  What literary couples do you find to be the most realistic?

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About Me

me

Hi, I'm Suzanne. Proofreader by day, book blogger by night, devourer of books 24/7. My reading tastes: Basically you name it, I probably like it. I read a lot of contemporary and historical, both adult and YA, and I've also been enjoying more and more fantasy lately. Hobbies include: buying and hoarding of books, rambling about books to anyone who will listen, and trying to recommend books to my family and friends whether they are readers or not - because seriously, how can you not love to read books?

BOOKSTAGRAM

✨25 IN 2025 CHALLENGE MINI REVIEWS ✨ ✨Revie ✨25 IN 2025 CHALLENGE MINI REVIEWS ✨

✨Review - A Breath of Snow and Ashes (Outlander #6, Book 18 - 25 in 2025)✨

Author - Diana Gabaldon

Pub Date - 9/27/2005

What impresses me most about the books in this series is that even though the books are well over 1,000 pages each and each one takes me about three weeks to read, they never feel like a chore or like they’re just packed with filler. My love for Jamie and Claire and all of the other major characters is just as strong as ever, and my interest in their journey only grows stronger the closer the timeline moves to the onset of the American Revolution.  This book was an emotional roller coaster and was also filled with twists and turns that kept me fully invested every step of the way. ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

✨Review - Hooked (Never After #1, Book #19 - 25 in 2025)✨

Author - Emily McIntire

Pub Date - 9/5/2021

I have mixed feelings about this book.  It was definitely an addicting read, but I can’t decide if I really liked it or not.  This take on the Peter Pan fairytale was pretty interesting and I enjoyed the twists, but I honestly wasn’t as invested in the couple as I would like to be, and I’m not sure if fractured fairy tales are really my thing. ⭐️⭐️⭐️

✨Review - Twisted Love (Twisted #1, Book 20 - 25 in 2025)✨

Author - Ana Huang

Pub Date - 4/21/2021

This is one of those books where I enjoyed it while I was reading it but have already forgotten so much of what I read. I think it’s a me thing because I did enjoy the author’s writing style and had no complaints while I was reading. The highlights for me were that it’s a brother’s best friend, grumpy-sunshine dark romance, that both characters had bad experiences when they were children and it was interesting to follow that storyline and see how it played out, and I especially liked that the male main character is morally gray. Because I did forget most of the story within two weeks of finishing it though, I’m on the fence about whether or not to continue. ⭐️⭐️⭐️✨

❓QOTD - Have you read any of these series? If so, do you think I should try another book before I give up on the two I’m on the fence about continuing?
Thanks so much to @arndellbooks for the #gifted e- Thanks so much to @arndellbooks for the #gifted e-arc and ALC!

✨ REVIEW - A LOVE LETTER TO WHISKEY ✨

Author - Kandi Steiner

Pub Date - 10/19/21 (Indie), 10/7/25 (Arndell)

A Love Letter to Whiskey is one of those books I’ve been hearing my fellow romance readers rave about for years and I’m so glad I finally read it because it definitely lives up to all of the hype! 

This book took me on such an emotional roller coaster! It’s so full of angst and heartbreak that I had moments where I truly doubted there would be a happily ever after, but I was so invested in B and Jamie’s relationship that I was willing to follow it even if I ended up with my heart broken.

Steiner’s writing is gorgeous, and the emotions these two characters are feeling, particularly the passion and that aching sense of longing, practically jump off the page.

When I finished the book, I originally rated it 4 stars and thought it was a solid read, but that was two weeks ago and I haven’t stopped thinking about these characters and how truly painful it can be to meet the right person at the wrong time.  A story that resonates like that is definitely a five star read! 

I did an immersive read with the e-book and audiobook. The audiobook is narrated by Audrey Obeyn and Edward Black and they both perfectly captured the angst, the tension, and the heartbreak these characters experience as well as their all consuming love for one another.  The story is addicting and the audiobook truly elevates the reading experience.

Perfect for Fans of:

Friends to Lovers
Second Chances
Angsty, Emotional Reads
It’s Always Been You
Right Person, Wrong Time
Slow Burn
Forced Proximity

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

❓QOTD - Have you ever changed your mind about a rating you gave a book?  Or what are you reading this weekend?
🩵Friday Favorite - Story of My Life 🩵 Thank 🩵Friday Favorite - Story of My Life 🩵

Thanks so much to @read_bloom and @scorelucy for the #gifted copy and for the invitation to be part of Lucy’s Story Lake Squad! ♥

As we get closer and closer to the end of 2025 (How the heck is it October already?!), I start reflecting on my favorite reads of the year and which books will probably end up on my Best of 2025 list. 

When I think about romance books, and specifically about romcoms, Lucy Score’s Story of My Life is at the top of that favorites list. I first read it back in April and I still think about Hazel and Cam and the town of Story Lake all the time. 

As you can tell from my photo, I’m a huge Lucy Score fan anyway, but Story of My Life quickly became my favorite book of hers. It’s both heartwarming and hilarious and filled with so many of my favorite tropes. 

It also features a main character who is a romance author looking for inspiration for her latest book, as well as a sexy contractor who becomes that inspiration. That was a scenario that I just couldn’t get enough of, and which lent itself to so many fun moments. 

When it first came out, I remember it being described as Gilmore Girls meets Schitt’s Creek, and I think that description is so perfect. The story is filled with cozy, small town vibes, a grumpy-sunshine couple with incredible chemistry and top notch banter, a full cast of lovable quirky characters, hilarious town hall meetings, adorable scene-stealing animals, and over-the-top romcom antics that will have you absolutely cackling.

Story of My Life is the first book in the Story Lake series, and I can’t wait to continue the series and get to know more of the residents from this charming small town!

I highly recommend Story of My Life to anyone who enjoys:

💙Spicy Rom-Coms
🩵Bookish Main Characters
💙Small Town Romance
🩵Grumpy - Sunshine
💙Forced Proximity
🩵Found Family

❓QOTD - What tropes immediately make you want to pick up a book?
🎧 AUDIOBOOK MINI REVIEWS 🎧 Thanks to @macmi 🎧 AUDIOBOOK MINI REVIEWS 🎧

Thanks to @macmillan.audio #macaudio2025 for the gifted ALCs

OVERDUE by Stephanie Perkins

Pub Date - 10/7/25

Overdue is a slow burn romance that features two librarians, Macon and Ingrid. I love books that feature bookish characters and I did enjoy the chemistry between Macon and Ingrid, but the slow burn was a little too slow for me. I actually found myself more invested in Ingrid’s very relatable personal journey than in the romance.  Ingrid’s journey was one of growth and self discovery and I loved watching her move on from a relationship that wasn’t working and also branch out and open her own Indie bookstore.  Eva Kaminsky narrates and I very much enjoyed her narration, especially her portrayal of Ingrid. ⭐️⭐️⭐️💫

THE SCORE by Elle Kennedy (#17 for my 25 in 2025 challenge, purchased by me)

Pub Date - 1/11/16

I’ve really been enjoying the Off-Campus series and The Score is another bingeable installment. I loved the dynamic between Dean and Allie and it was just so much fun watching their relationship evolve over time, especially since Dean has historically been such a ladies’ man.  It’s a spicy romance and the spice was definitely spicing, but the story also had some nice emotional depth. Savannah Peachwood & Andrew Eiden narrate and they are fantastic, especially when it comes to delivering Kennedy’s banter. So fun! ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

GAME ON by Ki Stephens

Pub Date - 9/9/25

Game On is a spicy college sports romance that features Ella, a cheerleader from England who is spending a year at Whitland University in Nashville as part of their elite cheering squad, and Hudson, Whitland’s star quarterback. I enjoyed the chemistry between Ella and Hudson, and I always enjoy a good “He Falls First” story. There was some drama that I wasn’t entirely sold on, but overall, this was a fun, fast-paced read for me that I binged in a couple of days.  Jane Grove and Charlie Valentine narrate and do a wonderful job of capturing that chemistry between Ella and Hudson. ⭐️⭐️⭐️

❓QOTD - Describe your current read in one sentence.
🩷 PINK WEDNESDAY 🩷 On Wednesdays, we post p 🩷 PINK WEDNESDAY 🩷

On Wednesdays, we post pink books! 

Hey book friends, I hope your week is going well. I needed an excuse to show off my cute pink ghosts, so I figured Pink Wednesday is as good an excuse as any other. 👻

I also wanted to do a fall-ish, spooky season assortment of books but ran out of books with pink in them so it kind of went off the rails and is now mainly just a mix of recent pink reads I loved and others that are on my TBR.

Books Featured:

Ready or Not by Cara Bastone (TBR)
Uncharmed by Lucy Jane Wood
A Witch’s Guide to Magical Innkeeping by Sangu Mandanna
The Seven Year Itch by Amy Daws (TBR)
The Devil She Knows by Alexandria Bellefleur (TBR)
Fall into Temptation by Lucy Score

❓QOTD - Do you try to plan your posts for the week (or month) in advance or do you mostly wing it? 

AOTD - I usually have a rough outline of what I want to post each week, but I do wing it if I’m in the mood to post something different at the last minute.  This post was supposed to be another review but I ran out of steam and didn’t feel like writing another one. 😅
Thanks for the free book @berkleyromance #berkleyp Thanks for the free book @berkleyromance #berkleypartner #Berkley

🤠 Review - DUST STORM (Griffith Brothers #1) 🤠

Author - Maggie Gates

Pub Date - 10/7/25

I’m a sucker for a good spicy, single dad romance and Dust Storm by Maggie Gates just completely stole my heart!

The story follows Cassandra, a consultant from NYC whose career takes a hit when one of her clients makes false accusations against her.  To do damage control, Cassandra’s firm exiles her to a ranch in Texas to do work for the Griffiths, another client of theirs.  Cassandra is angry and frustrated but reluctantly agrees to go. 

Christian Griffith is a widower and a single dad of two tween girls.  He is totally focused on being the best possible dad he can be to his girls, even growing out his own hair so that he can practice doing the hairstyles that his daughters want to wear.  Christian also runs the ranch where Cassandra has been sent.  The sparks fly between Cassandra and Christian from the moment they meet, and I was so here for it!  They are opposites in almost every way and really get under each other’s skin.  Cassandra is career-driven and headstrong, while Christian is old-fashioned in many ways and always cool-headed.  At first it seems like they may actually drive one another up the wall, but as with any good forced proximity story, close quarters really helps them to better see and understand one another.

I adored these characters! At first Cassandra comes across as abrasive, but it’s easy to understand why especially as we learn more about her situation. I also just loved how much she grows as a person the more time she spends on the ranch, and specifically the more time she spends around Christian and his daughters. Christian is a total swoonworthy single dad and the scenes where he spends quality time doing his daughters’ hair every morning just melted my heart.  His daughters were also adorable and it was so fun to watch them win over Cassandra, who swears she doesn’t like kids. 

I just loved this book and highly recommend it for fans of:

🤠Single Dad
🤠Forced Proximity
🤠Cowboy Romance
🤠Opposites Attract

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️💫

❓QOTD - Do you prefer city life or rural life?
Thanks for the free book @berkleyromance @acebooks Thanks for the free book @berkleyromance @acebookspub #berkleypartner #Berkley

🐦‍⬛ Review - HOLLOW 🐦‍⬛

Author - Karina Halle

Pub Date - 10/7/2025

When I was growing up, The Legend of Sleepy Hollow was one of my favorite spooky stories so I couldn’t resist diving into this spicy retelling to see a new twist on my old favorite.  And it did not disappoint. I devoured this book! 

Hollow is not only a Legend of Sleepy Hollow retelling. It’s also part dark academia and part why-choose romance with major Gothic vibes.  It follows Kat Van Tassel, a young woman who knows she possesses magical abilities but has been told by her parents to hide her magic at all costs.

Her parents have also arranged things so that Kat will marry her childhood best friend, Brom Bones, when she is of age.  When Brom disappears from Sleepy Hollow and Kat’s father dies, that plan goes out the window and Kat’s mother enrolls her at the secretive academy that her family runs.  It is here Kat meets and falls for her new and much older professor, Ichabod Crane. Crane is fascinated by dark magic and the occult, and he also expands Kat’s horizons when it comes to sex. 

Brom suddenly reappears as a student at the school, but he is not the Brom Kat grew up with. He’s moody and prone to angry outbursts, and not only that, but his reappearance coincides with several horrific decapitations that have taken place in Sleepy Hollow, which are believed to be the work of the Headless Horseman.  Brom also shares a secret past with Ichabod but doesn’t seem to remember it.

Kat and Ichabod set out to figure out what is going on and how it relates to Brom, and the three of them end up intertwined in a dangerous game of dark magic and desire. 

This book was so good! I thought the chemistry between Kat, Ichabod & Brom was captivating, & I loved all of the spooky Gothic vibes that surrounded Sleepy Hollow, the academy with its dark magic, as well as the terrifying lore of the Headless Horseman. 

If you like spicy romance, dark academia, & Gothic vibes, Hollow is the perfect spooky season read for you!

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ 💫

❓QOTD - Favorite retelling? If you don’t read them, what was your last 5 star read?
🍁 OCTOBER HOPEFULS 🍁 Happy Tuesday, book fr 🍁 OCTOBER HOPEFULS 🍁

Happy Tuesday, book friends! I hope your week is off to a good start and that you’ve already had some great reads this month.  I’m a few days late sharing the books I’m hoping to read this month, but I think I’ve got a pretty good line up and I’ve already finished a couple of these so be on the look out for my reviews. 

There are several in my hopefuls list that were gifted, so I’ve tagged those publishers. Thanks so much to all of them for their generosity! ♥

📚 Physical Copies: 📚

Hollow by Karina Halle (Finished, review to come soon)
The Cinnamon Bun Bookstore by Laurie Gilmore
Fall I Want by Lyra Parish
The Keeper of Magical Things by Julie Leong
Dead & Breakfast by Kat Hillis and Rosiee Thor (Currently reading)
Witches of Dubious Origin by Jenn McKinlay
The Devil She Knows by Alexandria Bellefleur
Last on the List by Amy Daws
Rewitched by Lucy Jane Wood
Mate by Ali Hazelwood
Dust Storm by Maggie Gates (Finished, review to come soon)
Backslide by Nora Dahlia
Anne of Avenue A by Emily Harding and Audrey Bellezza
Never Over by Claire Gilmore
Gideon the Ninth by Tamsyn Muir (25 in 2025 book)
Twisted Love by Ana Huang (25 in 2025 book)
The Italian Secret by Tara Moss

🎧📱E-ARCs/ALCs: 📱🎧

Play Nice by Rachel Harrison (Finished, review to come soon)
The Bone Thief by Vanessa Lillie
Yours for the Season by Emily Stone

❓QOTD - What are some books you’re hoping to read in October? Do we have any in common?
Thanks for the free e-book & #gifted ALC @berkleyp Thanks for the free e-book & #gifted ALC @berkleypub @acebookspub #BerkleyPartner #Berkley & @prhaudio #prhaudiopartner

🔥 Review - COLIN GETS PROMOTED AND DOOMS THE WORLD 🔥

Author - Mark Waddell

Pub Date - 10/7/2025

Colin is a low-level employee at Dark Enterprises, a Hell-like corporation that uses questionable methods to solve many of the world’s most difficult problems. Colin spends most of his days getting bullied by his coworkers and desperately wants a promotion and the power that he thinks comes along with it.  To get said promotion, he makes a deal with a mysterious shadowy figure, not realizing at the time that making this deal unleashes an ancient evil capable of bringing about the end of the world. No worries though!  Colin has a great plan. Since no one knows he’s the one who has doomed the world, he’ll just figure out a way to recapture the evil he has unleashed so that he can take credit for saving the world, and in the process, really impress his bosses. What could possibly go wrong?

This was such a fun read and just an all around wild ride!  Colin is this fascinating mix of underdog and anti-hero.  So many of his actions are questionable and completely motivated by self interest and getting revenge against those who have bullied him, and every time there’s a choice to be made, he seems to choose wrong, yet you really can’t help but root for him to pull off his crazy plan. 

The worldbuilding is also phenomenal! Dark Enterprises is such a frightening place. There are monsters who eat people living in the stairwells and being terminated is often done quite literally with a “firing squad.” I couldn’t figure out for the life of me why Colin even wanted to work there, but I was fascinated by the place every time he stepped foot inside or visited a different floor of the mysterious building. 

I read the e-book and listened to the audiobook, which was narrated by Pete Cross.  If you’re into audiobooks, I highly recommend giving this one a listen because Cross is absolutely hilarious and had me laughing out loud even when destruction and death is everywhere. 

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

❓QOTD - What was your first read of October? How was it?
📚 MESSY MONDAY - SEPTEMBER WRAP-UP 📚 Hey bo 📚 MESSY MONDAY - SEPTEMBER WRAP-UP 📚

Hey book friends! I hope your October is off to a great start. Was September a good reading month for you? 

I had another really solid reading month.  I was able to finish 24 books, including almost all of the books from my list of September hopefuls, 2 more books from my 25 in 2025 challenge, and a couple of other books that have been on my physical TBR for a while. 

My photo features all of the physical copies I read, but I also read a few e-arcs and listened to several audiobooks as well. I am somewhat behind on posting reviews, but will be playing catch up this week so you can expect to see quite a few review posts from me in the upcoming days.

❓QOTD:  How was your reading month? What were some of your favorite September reads?

❤️ 5 STARS ❤️

A Breath of Snow and Ashes (Outlander #6) by Diana Gabaldon (25 in 2025 book, review to come)
Wild Side by Elsie Silver (Review to come)

🧡 4.5 STARS 🧡

It Had to be Him by Adib Khorram
Pitcher Perfect by Tessa Bailey
We Met Like This by Kasie West
The Heartbreak Hotel by Ellen O’Clover
Roadtrip with a Vampire by Jenna Levine

💛 4 STARS 💛

A Love Letter to Whiskey by Kandi Steiner (Review coming this week)
Colin Gets Promoted and Dooms the World by Mark Waddell (Review coming this week)
Soul Searching by Lyla Sage
Ghost Business by Jen DeLuca
Love Walked In by Sarah Chamberlain
People Watching by Hannah Bonam-Young
Obsession Falls by Claire Kingsley
The Princess and the P.I. by Nikki Payne
Blood Sisters by Vanessa Lillie (Review to come)
Uncharmed by Lucy Jane Wood
A Hexcellent Chance to Fall in Love by Ann Rose

💚 3.5 STARS 💚

Storms and Secrets by Claire Kingsley
Overdue by Stephanie Perkins (Review to come)

💙 3 STARS 💙

Hooked by Emily McIntire (25 in 2025 book, review to come)
Game On by Ki Stephens (Review to come)

💜 2 STARS 💜

NONE

1 STAR or DNFs

NONE
Thanks for the #gifted ALC @prhaudio #prhaudiopart Thanks for the #gifted ALC @prhaudio #prhaudiopartner

👻🎧 Audiobook Review - SOUL SEARCHING 🎧👻

Author - Lyla Sage

Pub Date - 9/30/25

If you’re a small town romance fan, Lyla Sage’s new book Soul Searching is the perfect spooky season read for you! It has all of the cozy, small town charm of her popular Rebel Blue Ranch series, but with a ghostly twist added into the mix.

Collins Cartwright has reluctantly returned home to Sweetwater Peak after unexpectedly losing her job as a photographer. She says she’s there to help her parents with their antique shop, but Collins is also really just trying to figure out what comes next for her.  She’s also feeling off kilter because she has always been able to communicate with ghosts, but now suddenly she can only see them, not actually connect with them.  Collins ends up renting a room from Brady Cooper, the new guy in town who happens to have a spare room above his upholstery shop. 

I love a good forced proximity story, and this one doesn’t disappoint, especially since this is also a black cat/golden retriever romance. The sparks fly between Collins and Brady from the moment they first meet and things only get more interesting once they’re under the same roof.  I especially enjoyed the paranormal element as there are meddling ghosts who are trying to push the two of them together.  The romance itself is a slow burn, as both characters are working on themselves and growing, but the payoff is spicy and worth the wait. There are also plenty of fun moments along the way so the overall read is just such a good time.

Samantha Brentmoor and Jason Clarke narrate the audiobook and these two are truly the dynamic duo when it comes to narrating romance audiobooks.  They made these characters and their chemistry just leap off the page for me, and I binged the whole audiobook in a day. 

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

❓QOTD - What’s a trope you’ve been enjoying lately?
🍁 Nothing beats a brisk breeze and falling leav 🍁 Nothing beats a brisk breeze and falling leaves... except our monthly spellstack!🍁

My favorite time of the year is fall, specifically the month of October. I love the vibrant colors of the changing leaves, the crisp air and cooler temperatures, all things apple and pumpkins, and of course all of the spooky season reads on my fall TBR.  October is also my birthday month, so it’s special to me for that reason as well. 

For my October book stack, I tried to create one that captured colors that I associate with fall and Halloween. 

Books Featured:

O - Only and Forever by Chloe Liese
C - Cash by Jessica Peterson
T - Temple of Swoon by Jo Segura
O - Once Persuaded, Twice Shy by Melodie Edwards
B - Before I Let Go by Kennedy Ryan
E - Exes & O’s by Amy Lea
R - Rewitched by Lucy Jane Wood

❓QOTD - What’s your favorite time of the year and why do you love it?

Check out #OctSpellStack25 for a look at all our O-C-T-O-B-E-R stackers; and if you see this, consider yourself challenged!

Don’t forget to use #OctSpellStack25 to join us, and DM @cynsfictionaddiction to jump into our last few monthly SpellStack challenges of the year.
🧹 WITCHY WEDNESDAY 🧹 It’s officially Octo 🧹 WITCHY WEDNESDAY 🧹

It’s officially October and I don’t know about you, but my spooky season is in full swing! Since I have nothing but fall and Halloween on the brain, I thought it would be fun to share some of my favorite witchy reads today for anyone who may still be putting together their fall TBR. 

Books Featured:

🧹Wicked by Gregory Maguire
🔮Practical Magic by Alice Hoffman (I’m obsessed with this whole series!)
🧹A Witch’s Guide to Fake Dating a Demon by Sarah Hawley
🔮The Once and Future Witches by Alix E. Harrow
🧹Payback’s a Witch by Lana Harper
🔮Go Hex Yourself by Jessica Clare
🧹The Late Night Witches by Auralee Wallace
🔮 by Lucy Jane Wood
🧹Uncharmed by Lucy Jane Wood
🔮The Very Secret Society of Irregular Witches by Sangu Mandanna

❓QOTD - What are some of your favorite witchy reads?  Or if you don’t read them, what are you currently reading?
📫 THREE FOR TUESDAY - BOOK MAIL 📫 Thanks so 📫 THREE FOR TUESDAY - BOOK MAIL 📫

Thanks so much to @berkleyromance #BerkleyPartner #Berkley and @acebookspub for the free books!

These are three highly anticipated fall/spooky season reads for me so I can’t wait to dive into them.

Books Featured:

Hollow by Karina Halle (Pub Date 10/7/25) -  From the New York Times bestselling author of River of Shadows and A Ship of Bones and Teeth comes a smutty spooky dark academia gothic romance retelling of The Legend of Sleepy Hollow , where Kat Van Tassel doesn’t have to choose between Brom Bones and Ichabod Crane, and there are worse things haunting them than the Headless Horseman.

Dead & Breakfast by Rosiee Thor & Kat Hillis (Pub Date 10/14/25) - A cozy mystery about two vampires who run a bed and breakfast but end up trying to solve a murder when the town’s mayor turns up dead in their flower garden.

The Keeper of Magical Things by Julie Leong (Pub Date 10/14/25) - An almost-mage discovers friendship—and maybe something more—in the unlikeliest of places in this delightfully charming novel from the USA Today bestselling author of The Teller of Small Fortunes.

Scroll through the rest of the slides for the full synopsis of each book.

❓QOTD - Are any of these on your radar? Which one do you think I should read first?
Thanks for the free e-arc & #gifted ALC @berkleyro Thanks for the free e-arc & #gifted ALC @berkleyromance #BerkleyPartner #Berkley & @prhaudio #prhaudiopartner

🎃 Review - A HEXCELLENT CHANCE TO FALL IN LOVE 🎃

Author - Ann Rose

Pub Date - 9/9/25

A Hexcellent Chance to Fall in Love is a cute sapphic romance that is perfect for spooky season. I loved the unique premise of having a cursed Halloween store that pops up in a new location in town every year and then disappears two days after Halloween as if it never existed, and that Pepper, one of our main characters, is trapped by this curse and tied to the store so that she too disappears without a trace every November 2nd.  If Pepper wants to break the curse, she’ll have to convince someone else to take her place or trick them into doing so.  The idea that not even Pepper’s family would remember that she was missing from year to year requires some suspension of disbelief, but I chalked that up to the nature of the curse and happily kept reading. 

In the five years she has been trapped, Pepper has not really thought about trying to break the curse, but then she meets Christina who has come to the store shopping for supplies to build a haunted house for the school where she works. Pepper falls for Christina and the feelings are mutual, so Pepper hates knowing that after November 2nd, she will disappear and Christina will forget all about her, and thus starts pondering how to break the curse. 

I thoroughly enjoyed the friends to lovers romance between Christina and Pepper. Even though it happens fairly quickly, I thought their growing connection felt authentic, so it was easy to feel Pepper’s dilemma about whether or not to try to tell Christina about the curse. I loved their interactions both at the store and at the haunted house, where Pepper pitches in to help. They have a natural chemistry, which makes it all the easier to root for a way to break the curse & give them both a happily ever after.

Sarah Beth Goer & Imani Jade Powers narrate the audiobook & they made the chemistry between Pepper & Christina palpable & captured both the fun & the more suspenseful moments as the countdown to the store disappearing. 

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

❓Do you dress up for Halloween?
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