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Jefferz

Jefferz

  • Book ReviewsARCHistorical FictionRomanceSpeculative Fiction

    Hayley Gelfuso: The Book of Lost Hours Review

    by Jefferz July 14, 2025
    July 14, 2025

    The following review is based on a complimentary ARC provided by Atria Books via Netgalley in exchange for an honest review. Winston Churchill wrote that history is written by the victors but in Hayley Gelfuso’s debut novel The Book of Lost Hours, it’s not about who writes history but who can access and manipulate it. A cavernous sprawling expanse filled with shelves of books, the Time Space is a place entirely removed from linear time as we know it, full of history and people’s memories stored as books. Referred to as Timekeepers, those that can access this place shape history to match their vision by removing select memories from this space, wiping them from existence. Trapped in this timeless space since 1938, Lisavet Levy tries to save these memories deemed dangerous by salvaging and hiding them within her book until an American timekeeper Ernest Duquesne begins to take notice in 1949. Meanwhile in 1965, mourning the death of her Uncle Ernest, Amelia Duquesne is approached by a mysterious CIA agent named Moira who presents her a Time Space watch and tasks her with finding a mysterious book of memories Ernest had been searching for. Blending elements of speculative fiction, time…

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  • Book ReviewsFantasyYA

    Ava Reid: A Study in Drowning Review

    by Jefferz July 10, 2025
    July 10, 2025

    In recent years, certain book genres or topics have become marketing fodder material that have taken on a considerably different impression and expectation from what they once were. Take for example “dark academia”. Once known for scholastic themed narratives rich in literature or academic theory, the term is now often associated with common romantasy publishing trends of spice, stories that have geeky main characters, magic research, or worse, any fantasy story that has some loose book or library motif. However, when it comes to Ava Reid’s YA debut novel A Study In Drowning, all of the common booktok/influencer associations of dark academia are thrown out the window. Meticulously crafted, nuanced, unhurried, yet beautiful and poetically written, A Study In Drowning is an impressively crafted story that returns to the “academia” part of the genre. The novel blends fantasy elements, scholarly pursuits, and metaphorical socio-political commentary presented through a light historical fiction lens. While not for everyone due to its notably slow pacing and the plot focusing on literary works vs more common, in-your-face fantasy concepts (not to mention it’s uncomfortable material to read though), I thoroughly loved this novel and found it to be brilliant. “I know you think I…

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  • Book ReviewsFantasyKorean LiteratureMagical Realism

    Miye Lee: The Dallergut Dream-Making District Review

    by Jefferz July 6, 2025
    July 6, 2025

    The second novel in Lee Miye’s Dallergut Dream Department Store duology, The Dallergut Dream-Making District continues Lee’s whimsical take on the dream world and its inhabitants. Picking up not long after Penny’s employment at the famed dream-selling department store, this novel expands on its dreaming mechanics in expectedly creative and refreshing ways. While still comprised of several short stories and vignettes covering different aspects of dream-creation and experiences, like a real department store, this novel explores what happens when a customer has a complaint about their purchased dream or those that have issues with dreaming in general. Continuing with the first novel’s unique ideas paired with its signature cozy and casual presentation, this book is exactly the sequel one would expect and enjoy, referencing its past short stories and neatly tying up the few loose plotlines previously left as unresolved breadcrumbs. Similar to the first novel in the duology, the Dallergut Dream-Making District follows first floor store employee Penny’s exploration of the dream-making and selling industry presented through several short stories. However, unlike the first novel that followed a preset formula of each story introducing a new type of dream and a representative creator, this book instead looks at other…

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  • Book ReviewsFantasyRomantasyYA

    Kathryn Purdie: The Forest Grimm Review

    by Jefferz July 5, 2025
    July 5, 2025

    Invoking a wonderfully foreboding air of mystery paired with a classic fairytale-like presentation, Kathryn Purdie’s The Forest Grimm is an interesting take on Grimms’ Fairy Tales. Attempting to give bigger context to a few classic fairy tales within an overarching original fantasy story, the novel is a creatively ambitious narrative full of great ideas and inspirations. While not all the ideas are executed to their full potential and I had some notable qualms with certain storytelling elements, The Forest Grimm is a distinctive and imaginative story, albeit one that’s far from perfect. With a premise centered around a dark fantasy forest with a recurring fanged creature imagery, the story is required to have the right tone for the whole book to work. Fortunately, the ambiance and dark fantasy feel is easily one of the book’s strongest elements. Forbidden forests are nothing new but from the get-go, The Forest Grimm sets the tone perfectly with its decaying village fittingly named Grimm’s Hollow. The folklore-flavored storytelling suits the story wonderfully and once Clara ventures into the Forest Grimm, the general feel of the narrative is great. Obviously inspired by Little Red Riding Hood’s red cape and journey into the woods, the atmosphere…

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  • Book ReviewsLGBTQ+Romance

    Chip Pons: Winging It With You Review

    by Jefferz July 1, 2025
    July 1, 2025

    An Amazing Race-style reality TV competition, an airport breakup + hot pilot meet-cute, and the good ol’ fake dating + forced proximity tropes, Chip Pon’s M/M romcom Winging It With You is a vibe. A perfect summer read mixing international travel destinations with romance trope hijinks, Pon’s trade publisher debut is a fun, light-hearted yet comforting story. Featuring lots of laughs, embarrassingly awkward moments, spicy scenes, yet a lot of heart, Winging It With You is the type of book that will make your day just a little bit brighter or leave a smile on your face with its endearingly sweet and cute story. I openly admit that I am a huge fan of the Amazing Race and have been watching it for years, so when this book randomly popped up in my Instagram reel suggestions I was intrigued. An Amazing race-style reality show paired with a fake dating M/M romcom, the algorithms are getting scary good these days. Comically over the top right from the start, Winging It With You makes it clear that it’s a story written for pure, unadulterated enjoyment and a good time. Rather than coming off as derivatively tired, Winging It With You wears its…

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☕ About Me

Reader & Coffee Connoisseur

Reader & Coffee Connoisseur


I am a reading enthusiast and book reviewer who enjoys reading with a warm latte in-hand, breaking down what I read in detail. Although my favorite genres are sci-fi, high/epic fantasy, mystery noir, and a sprinkle of contemporary romance, I consider myself a variety reader.


With a coffee (or favorite beverage) of choice, join me on The Book Grind as we read and sip our way through some great novels.

Professional Reader10 Book ReviewsFeatured Book Reviewer

☕ Currently Reading

Dylan James: Cedar Mills ReviewMira Grant: Overgrowth Review

☕ Recent Reviews

  • Hayley Gelfuso: The Book of Lost Hours Review

    July 14, 2025
  • Ava Reid: A Study in Drowning Review

    July 10, 2025
  • Miye Lee: The Dallergut Dream-Making District Review

    July 6, 2025
  • Kathryn Purdie: The Forest Grimm Review

    July 5, 2025
  • Chip Pons: Winging It With You Review

    July 1, 2025
  • Daria Lavelle: Aftertaste Review

    June 25, 2025
  • Holly Race: Six Wild Crowns Review

    June 19, 2025
  • Colin Searle: The Call of Abaddon Review

    June 15, 2025
  • Cara Bastone: Promise Me Sunshine Review

    June 9, 2025
  • Robert Jackson Bennett: The Tainted Cup Review

    June 7, 2025
  • Beth Cato: Cheddar Luck Next Time Review

    June 3, 2025
  • Holly Jackson: A Good Girl’s Guide to Murder Review

    June 1, 2025

☕ Recent Blog Posts

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  • Kindle Unlimited Reading Marathon Picks

    February 9, 2025
  • 2024 Most Pleasantly Surprising Reads

    January 31, 2025
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The Book Grind
  • Home
  • Book Reviews
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