A haunted- or rather “enchanted” house on a private undeveloped island, a mysterious institute tasked with managing said properties in question, a budding and free-spirited writer teaming up with a prim and proper housekeeper; oh and there’s a dangerous magic-stealer on the loose. Charlie Holmberg’s Keeper of Enchanted Rooms has a lot of great elements working for it that should’ve culminated in an enchanted and dreamy experience. Unfortunately for me these pieces weren’t assembled in the most effective manner which made the overall reading experience feel underwhelming and a missed opportunity. With its diverse plot threads, the Keeper of Enchanted Rooms is a lot of things. Taking place in New England in 1846, it’s sort of a historical fiction novel (more on that below) with a fantasy and magical theme. However in actuality, the story is better described as a cozy fantasy of sorts; I’m not sure how to describe it beyond being slow-paced and comfortable. The fantasy elements are beyond magical realism, the romance isn’t strong enough to be considered romantasy yet the magic is not development enough to be pure or hard fantasy. The book feels like it’s intended as an adult novel due to the age of…
Jefferz
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Much like Darrow facing impossible odds against the forces of the Sovereign, Morning Star had the daunting task of concluding an epic that is monstrous in scale. Breaking the chains and political hierarchy introduced in Red Rising then replacing it with a fair society in a 500+ page book is a tall order but Pierce Brown’s decision to extend the originally announced trilogy to a saga (albeit announced after Morning Star was published) smartly avoids a rushed or worse, contrived conclusion. Disclosure upfront, Darrow does not fix the political system in place (that is continued over the next four books) but does attempt to overthrow the powers that be within Morning Star. As a side note, this review will be spoiler free but I will lightly detail a few specific plot arcs that do not take away anything from the read. If you want to go in completely blind I would recommend not reading my review past this paragraph. Summarizing the rest of the review, t I thought the 2nd half of the novel was great and very much a continuation of the general feel and action of Golden Son. The 1st half is an entirely different being that’s introspective,…
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This was short novella was fine and a quick sub-25 minute read. Part of the Amazon’s The Improbable Meet-Cute Series featuring short stores themed around Valentines Day written by popular romance authors, I found With Any Luck to be cute yet inconsequential. 50 pages requires a concise and tidy story which With Any Luck manages by covering only two days worth of plot during Audrey Love’s best male friend’s wedding. At the wedding she unfortunately is greeted by the fiance’s best man who she had a fling with on a previous trip. The novella is essentially an enemies to lovers setup but the short length does the trope no favors. The only way to reverse the animosity is via misunderstandings which I’ve mentioned many times as being one of my pet peeves. This is exemplified by Audrey believing she ruined the wedding when her best friend goes missing the morning of the wedding following a drunken night out she can’t remember. However, the fact that enemies to lovers romantic interest was there during the drunken night and knows exactly what happened to Audrey feels like a cheap gotcha plot twist. The entire conflict could’ve been avoided had he just told…
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After a string of disappointing and underwhelming mystery crime thriller reads picked off of Goodread’s best mystery lists, I picked up Charlie Donlea’s The Girl Who Was Taken on a blind Kindle app recommendation via Amazon’s Prime Reading hoping for something different. And different is what I got. The Girl Who Was Taken reads like a crime documentary reenactment that is colder, calculated, and more developed than many contemporary disappearance novels. The story primarily focuses on two women who work together to solve who is kidnapping young teenage girls across various stateliness and why. Livia Cutty is a forensic pathology student finishing up her fellowship performing daily autopsies whose career choice was inspired by the disappearance and of her younger sister Nicole Cutty. Megan McDonald is an overnight sensation after she miraculously escapes after being held captive in a basement for two weeks and publishes a book summarizing her experience. The twist is that Megan was kidnapped on the same night Nicole went missing, however only Megan was found two weeks later while Nicole is mia. What got my attention from the get-go was how well-researched and meticulous the book is with the details of the investigation and forensic pathology.…
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I recently wrote about my 2023 Most Pleasantly Surprising Reads, therefore of course you know I would also highlight the five Most Disappointing Reads of 2023. Like my list for the most pleasantly surprising books, those mentioned here are not necessarily the worst or lowest rated books that I read of the year (though some definitely are). Sometimes a book may be questionable but at least it matches a less than good-looking marketing material or it fully knows it’s rubbish. Other books are those that look promising on the surface or have a lot going for them, yet are either not for me personally, have questionable execution, or take a nosedive over the course of the story. This list are those kind of books. As a disclaimer, these are mostly subjective opinions and simply are what I thought about each book. By no means do I judge anyone who enjoyed these books, we can agree to disagree. With that warning aside, let’s get into my 2023 Most Disappointing Reads! #5) Happy Place by Emily Henry Easily my most controversial pick of the five books, this is one of those “hear me out” picks where I try to explain myself before…