Sunday, May 10, 2026
Jaysea Lynn: For Whom the Belle Tolls
Tuesday, May 5, 2026
K.M. Moronova: Your Knife, My Heart
K. M. Moronova put a whole new perspective of keeping those alive around you.
If you are wanted a twisted dark modern day military romance, then is this is for you. This book was all kinds of dark and Moronova didn't shy away from the details all the times. You really feel the stakes throughout the book as well as the tension between Cameron and Emery so your heart really gets going when you read this book. I personally did not want to put it down.
Basically Cameron is a Black MMC, who you don't really know if he is going to protect her or kill her, which is really his MO for all the partners that he gets. I mean he tries to kill her in their very first meeting even though he was told not to. You cannot help for feel for him though, the more you get to know him as a character. What he goes through to prove his worth is absolutely crazy.
Emery is a contradiction a lot of the time. there are times when she is the badass killer and other times where she doesn't seem capable of it and she is more timid than I thought she would be. I'm still not sure if that is Moronova writing her that way to keep the people around Emery on their toes or if Moronova really didn't know which way she wanted to take Emery as a character.
This has trial and games that many people will like, but these games are super super high stakes, as in fail and you die kind of stakes as well as you may complete them and still die, so you really don't know which side characters are going to make it in the end. Plus, everyone is out there for themselves except for Cameron as his main trial is to keep Emery alive. This may be seen as an advantage but often it is not as it creates more of a target on there back.
This is the first book that I have read by Moronova and I know it wont be the last, I need to read more by her and I can't wait to pick up another book by her. Truly one for those who like things on the darker side.
Thursday, April 30, 2026
Laurie Forest: The Iron Flower
Saturday, April 25, 2026
Stacy Willingham: Only if You're Lucky
The only character that I did find interesting was Lucy. You can tell there is more to her, you can tell that she manipulates everyone around her and is glad to be doing it. She had way more personality than Margot does in the story, which is probably why Margot is drawn to her over and over again.
I liked the dual main two timelines. There is a third one in there as well but we get so few chapters from when Eliza was alive that I don't count it as a main aspect of the book. personally I would have loved from the Eliza time frame, as it may have sped up the pacing of the book a bit.
This book wasn't for me. I have read a few college psychological books and this just didn't add anything new to the ones that I had previously read and was way slower. I understand that these books are often character led but there needs to be some interesting plot points to hold it all together.
Monday, April 20, 2026
Riley Sagar: The House Across the Lake
I love an unreliable narrator, whether you know they are unreliable or not. This one you know that Casey is unreliable because she is an alcoholic. She starts drinking from when she wakes up, till she passes out for the night. This plays with her perception of events and the time frame of things. More often than not the events she witnesses are from the darkness of her deck as she is watching things unfold across the lake and how one interprets the things she seems. Once again she is an alcoholic so there are times when things really can be questioned. I find it just adds something more to the story as we question what can be true and what cannot.
I enjoyed the main two timelines and it had me turning the pages pretty fast to get to where they meet as Sagar does a great job of characters in the book all could have committed a crime. You even question has a crime even been committed against Katherine as that is how well Sagar has laid out the plot of the story.
So this book was not for me in the end, but I was enjoying it up to that one point/twist in the book. So I know that I will read more books by Sager (plus I have two more on my physical TBR shelf).
Tuesday, April 14, 2026
Jennifer Lynn Barnes: The Naturals
Tuesday, April 7, 2026
Sangu Mandanna: A Witch's Guide to Magical Inkeeping
I was really excited to return to Mandanna and the cozy witchy reads that she has created and I really wanted to love this as much as the first book in this series but if just fell flat a few times and I think this was through the pacing of the book.
I loved idea for this plot of this story of Sera loosing her power and having to live without it but always looking for a way to get it back. She is trying to survive in a world of magic and those who have magic around her and now she has very little of her own. Sera tries to put on a brave face to the world around her but she wants nothing more than getting her magic back and is willing to go to great lengths to achieve it. She has defined herself by the magic she has and lost and can’t seem to see that she is great and thriving without it.
Luke is amazing. Such a great example of a man, he puts other’s needs over his own, will go above and beyond for those he loves especially his sister.
I didn't really feel the romance. To me Sera and Luke relationship lacked a spark and their relationship felt more of one of friendship than anything else. Which I would have been fine with Mandanna having it stay that way, I don’t really see the found family changing much by not having them in a relationship.
I appreciated the ending of where the book end up but i don't think that it will be for everyone.
Overall, this book is a darling read and I did enjoy it I just preferred The Very Secret Society of Irregular Witches more. I hope that Mandanna continues to write in this cozy witchy world as I will be there to read them.
Tuesday, March 31, 2026
Caroline Peckham & Susanne Valenti: Never Keep
Monday, March 23, 2026
Juliette Cross: Firebird
Tuesday, March 17, 2026
Tarryn Fisher: The Wrong Family
Friday, March 13, 2026
Deidra Duncan: Until I Die
Friday, March 6, 2026
Caroline Peckham & Susanne Valenti: Dark Fae
Saturday, February 28, 2026
Kelley Armstrong: First Sign of Danger
I guess I’ll just come out and say it but this one did not hit for me. I think I went in with too high expectations as the book before this one was one of my favourites in both the Rockton and Haven’s Rock.
I felt like this book lacked the suspense from the other book, the mystery was just okay and felt familiar like it had been done before in this series. This book just was lacking when I think of the other books in the series. I found I was not picking this book up and was reading others book I had on the go over this one.
I enjoyed seeing Casey and Duncan adjusting to the new life that they have in Haven's Rock and the additional responsibilities that they now have. I think of how great a life there sounds, even with all the dangers that lurk by and not just forest creatures. Casey and Duncan are for sure a power couple in my books.
I miss the side characters, the man ones from Rockton will have a sentence here and there but nothing like it was before. I felt having them more engrained in the story made you feel like you were in the town and interacting with them as well. I will say I like how April’s character has developed and she is the only secondary character who get some page time.
I’m glad we get some closure in this book with a few aspects and so would have been fine with Armstrong ending the series here, but it looks like there will be one more book in this series. Of course I’ll read it, I want to see how Armstrong ends it all after this many book and storylines from both series.
This book was fine, but personally I don’t think it was up to par with her other books. Armstrong is one of my favourite authors so I’ll continue to read her books.









.jpg)



















.jpg)






