Monthly Wrap Up/What’s On My Plate January/February

I’m trying to post a wrap up for the end of each month, mainly to help me to keep track of my reading and at the same time look at what I’m intending to read during the month ahead (inspired by Books Bones and Buffy’s What’s on My Plate.

In this post I shall be looking at the reading I completed during January and also setting out what I’m hoping to achieve during February.   I will say that, firstly, I cannot believe that January is nearly complete – where did the time go.  Secondly, I have been really busy and I also had a few days with a nasty stomach upset but even so.  My reading is definitely not back up to scratch, I have a few outstanding posts and I haven’t caught up with comments and blog hopping yet.  But, I’m not worried.  I can get back on track (haha, I hope so anyway).

This month I’ve read:

  1. The House of Frost and Feathers by Lauren Wiesebron
  2. Witchcraft for Wayward Girls by Grady Hendrix
  3. Beautiful Ugly by Alice Feeney
  4. Daughter of Chaos by A S Webb

I’ve also read two of my SPFBO finalists and by the time this post goes live I hope to have completed one of my February review books, so, all going well, 7 books in total.

Here’s what I’m hoping to read in February:

  1. Black Woods, Blue Sky by Eowyn Ivey
  2. Grave Empire by Richard Swan – already started this and hoping to complete shortly
  3. The Crimson Road by AG Slatter
  4. Emily Wilde’s Compendium of Lost Tales by Heather Fawcett
  5. You Are Fatally Invited by Andy Pliego
  6. The Sirens by Emilia Hart
  7. The Woman in the Wallpaper by Lora Jones
  8. Wooing the Witch Queen by Stephanie Burgis

So, 10 books if you include the two SPFBO finalists that I intend to read as well, which might be a tall order given this is a shorter month, but, as mentioned above, I’ve already started one of these and on top of that March is a lighter month so hopefully I’ll catch up then.

I will also definitely be reading two more SPFBO finalists. You can find them all here.

BTB

I haven’t started this challenge yet as I do need to squeeze in some of the SPFBO finalists.

Bookforager‘s Picture Prompt book bingo

I shall post separately about this particular challenge which I’m really looking foward to.

Total books read so far this year: 7

Friday Face Off: The Storm Beneath the World by Michael R Fletcher

FFO

Today I’m returning to the  Friday Face Off, originally created by Books by Proxy).  I’ve missed these for the past few months and so would like to get back to comparing covers (and hopefully I will be updating this page with a new banner.  This is an opportunity to look at a book of your choice and shine the spotlight on the covers.  Of course this only works for those books that have alternative covers (although sometimes I use this to look at a series of books to choose a favourite). . So, if you have a book that has alternative covers, highlight them and choose your favourite.  If you’re taking part it would be great if you leave a link so I can take a look at what you’ve chosen.

This week I’ve chosen a book that I’ve read previously and loved.  The Storm Beneath the World by Michael R Fletcher.  Here are the covers:

My favourite this week:

Have you read this book already?  What did you think and which is your favourite?

Join me next week in highlighting one of your reads with different covers.

Can’t Wait Wednesday: We Live Here Now by Sarah Pinborough

CWW

“Waiting On Wednesday” is a weekly meme that was originally created by Breaking the Spine.  Unfortunately Breaking the Spine are no longer hosting so I’m now linking my posts up to Wishful Endings Can’t Wait Wednesday. Don’t forget to stop over, link up and check out what books everyone else is waiting for.  If you want to take part, basically, every Wednesday, we highlight a book that we’re really looking forward to.  This week my book is: We Live Here Now by Sarah Pinborough.  Well, colour me happy.  A new book by Sarah Pinborough is always cause for celebration.   Check out the cover and description below (and,yes, this is described as ‘gothic’ so, double cause for that celebration).  

Award-winning author of New York Times bestselling breakout novel (and hit Netflix show) Behind Her Eyes returns with a haunting Gothic novel about a house—and a marriage—gone terribly wrong.

After an accident that nearly kills her, Emily and her husband, Freddie, move from London to a beautiful Dartmoor country house called Larkin Lodge. The house is gorgeous, striking—and to Emily, something about it feels deeply wrong.

Old boards creak at night, fires go out, and books fall from the shelves, and all of it stems from the terrible presence she feels in the third-floor room. But these things happen only wWhen Emily’s alone, so are they happening at all? She’s still medically fragile; her postsepsis condition can cause hallucinatory side effects, which means she can’t fully trust her own senses. Freddie doesn’t notice anything odd and is happy with their chance at a fresh start.

Emily, however, starts to believe that the house is being haunted by someone who was murdered in it, though she can find no evidence of a wrongful death. As bizarre events pile up and her marriage starts to crumble, Emily becomes obsessed with discovering the truth about Larkin Lodge.

But if the house has secrets, so do Emily and her husband.

And they live here now.

Expected publication: May 2025

Top Ten Tuesday: New-to-Me Authors I Discovered in 2024

TTT

Top Ten Tuesday is a weekly meme where every Tuesday we look at a particular topic for discussion and use various (or more to the point ten) bookish examples to demonstrate that particular topic.  Top Ten Tuesday (created and hosted by  The Broke and Bookish) is now being hosted by That Artsy Reader Girl and future week’s topics can be found here.  This week’s prompt is:

New-to-Me Authors I Discovered in 2024

I actually had quite a few ‘new to me’ authors during last year’s reading and so many good books but the following ten were definitely some of my favourite reads for 2024.

  1. The September House by Carissa Orlando 
  2. Murder Road by Simone St James
  3. The Silverblood Promise by James Logan
  4. We Used To Live Here by Marcus Kliewer
  5. A Little Trickerie by Rosanna Pike
  6. Gorse by Sam K Horton
  7. Bless Your Heart  by Lindy Ryan
  8. Hear Him Calling by Carly Reagon
  9. Run by Blake Crouch
  10. The Scholar and the Last Faerie Door by HG Parry

Have you read any of these? What did you think??

Review: Witchcraft for Wayward Girls by Grady Hendrix

My Five Word TL:DR Review: Not for the faint hearted

I’m very much enjoying this author at the moment and although, I own up that this wasn’t my favourite book by him, it was a compelling read.  I will just say that this is a little bit harrowing in parts and also possibly triggering for some people.

Set during a sweltering summer in the 1970s this story takes a good long look at the treatment meted out to young girls who found themselves compromised (pregnant).  This was an age where a girl that becomes pregnant is a source of deep shame, a ‘thing’ to be hidden away until the pregnancy is over and the baby adopted.  Then they can return home and never speak of ‘it’ again.  Fifteen year old Neva (soon to be known as Fern) is one such girl.  Driven to the Wellwood Home in St. Augustine, Florida by her father she is to be secreted away until her pregnancy reaches its natural conclusion.  Neva’s father is livid with his daughter to the extent he doesn’t even wish her goodbye after depositing her.

The other girls at the home are of varying ages and stages of pregnancy and Fern soon becomes firm friends with a few of the others.  Life at the home is dull.  The girls are expected to clean and wash the house itself, they don’t receive any education and most of their time is spent watching old films and playing cards.  Their food is monitored and dietary restrictions imposed to control weight etc.  Basically, they have no say or control of anything that is happening either to or around them and they’re kept in the dark about everything.

Fern is a keen reader and looks forward to the arrival of the mobile library.  This is when things start to spice up a little, the girls find themselves in possession of a witch’s spellbook, a grimoire if you will, and when they achieve success with their first attempt at casting a hex they start to think of other ways that the book can help during their incarceration.

What I really liked about this is, first and foremost, the writing.  Hendrix writes in such a way that you’re almost immediately hooked and although at first I began to wonder if this was going to include any ‘witching’ or fantasy aspects once our little coven eventually forms things escalated quite quickly.

I enjoyed the friendship between the girls and the way they ground each other.  It’s sad in a way that they had such high hopes, little realising just how very little real control they actually had.  They had their minor rebellions but at the end of the day they were children and the adults around them were capable of so much manipulation and lying to achieve their end goals.

To be fair, life at the home wasn’t abusive as such but the treatment they received at the hand’s of some of the adults was incredibly harsh and utterly judgemental.

If I had any little niggles it would probably relate to the witches and their portrayal.  In some respects I think this was handled really well, their lifestyle quite grim and constantly on the move to avoid detection, but, at the same time I think I would have preferred it if their aims had been more by way of helping the girls – rather than helping themselves.  Although, perhaps this is just a statement of fact in that all the adults involved were capable of manipulating these young women for their own gain and things did have a way of working out eventually.

Now, I mentioned above that some of this is harrowing – and I’m not joking.  There are a couple of quite explicit ‘birthing’ scenes that might not be for everyone.  Also, some of the ‘sacrifices’ that the girls were required to make to pay the price for their witching was also particularly gruesome.  You have been warned.

All told, this was a quick read, I was hooked almost instantly and was keen to discover what was going on, I was even more intrigued to discover how things would pan out and in that respect the ending is both what you would expect and at the same time a little bittersweet.  Some definite food for thought here though and I’ve found myself thinking of this often since completing it.

I received a copy through Netgalley, courtesy of the publisher, for which my thanks.  The above is my own opinion.

My rating 4 of 5 stars

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