Countdown to 2026

A short and sweet post to let you all know that once again I am doing my December Countdown where I tick off the days to the new year by spotlighting a book from the present one.  This is a one per day prompt where I will literally post the prompt and the book I think fits the prompt.  I’m hoping to use books read during 2025 where possible and use this as an opportunity to shine the light on some good reads (although some of the prompts may require books from the year before or after).  Books will be linked to reviews where possible or Goodreads.  If you fancy joining me feel free to dip in and out.  This is not meant to be hard work, a little fun and the chance to highlight some good books – post, or do not post, or, post five prompts in one post, or ignore some of the prompts, etc.  Just enjoy yourself.  Starts on 1st December and concludes on 31st.

Here are the prompts: 31 days of December and 31 opportunities to give a very quick shout out to a book you’ve loved or are highly anticipating.

Prompts:

  1. Snow – a book set in a cold or wintry climate
  2. Shopping – the last book added to your wishlist
  3. Wrapping paper – a lovely cover
  4. Gifts – a book you enjoyed more than you expected to
  5. Chocolates – a book that was simply delicious
  6. Christmas stocking – stocking fillers – a novella or short story
  7. Christmas Tree –  a winter read
  8. Baubles – these add some colour, a very colourful and striking cover
  9. Fairy Lights – something magical
  10. Under the Tree – a book you forgot you owned
  11. Mistletoe – a little bit of romance
  12. Holly and Ivy – a book with great world building
  13. Feast – a book that was magnificent
  14. Christmas pudding – if you could squeeze in just one more book this year
  15. Mince pies –  a little sweet something
  16. Turkey Dinner– eye’s too big for your belly?  A chunkster
  17. Glitter – A book that you simply have to have
  18. Christmas Cards – a book with a message
  19. Christmas Carols – a book with musicians, song or instruments
  20. Eggnog – a book that was out of your comfort zone
  21. Santa’s Snack – a book that was a ‘light read’ between heavier books
  22. Reindeers – a book with memorable critters
  23. Sleigh bells – a series that you want to ring out the praise for
  24. Christmas Eve – One of your most anticipated books for next year
  25. Christmas Day – a book you received as a gift
  26. Boxing Day – feeling bloated, a palate cleanser
  27. Christmas Crackers – Ended with a bang
  28. Candlelight – a book that kept you up into the early hours
  29. A roaring fire – a book that was heartwarming
  30. Family and Friends – a book with great characters
  31. Bottle of Bubbly – your first read in the New Year

Booking Ahead/Weekly Wrap Up

Sunday Post

Weekly Update

Hey everyone.  Hope you’re all doing well.  I’m starting to tentatively ease back into blogging and I’ve started to catch up with reviews although I still have a few to post.  My reading is good though and I’m enjoying the books I’m picking up very much.  This week I have been busy with lots of going out and socialising – it’s that time of year – so slightly less reading than normal but I read The Austen Christmas Murders by Jessica Bull, I’m enjoying this series of books very much and this was a very intriguing read.  I’ve also started Too Old For This by Samantha Downing which I’m really enjoying – oddly enough as it’s about a retired serial killer – the dark humour is very good (thanks Tammy).

Next Week’s reads

I’d like to finish reading Too Old for This and then my next read will be The Blackfire Blade by James Logan.  I’ll also be posting on Monday about my ‘Countdown to Christmas’ which I will be once again hosting if you care to join in – there’s a list of prompts and no rules!

Reviews Posted:

The Everlasting by Alix E Harrow

Outstanding Reviews

Review: The Everlasting by Alix E Harrow

My Five Word TL:DR Review: Another Contender for Best Book

Honestly, I’ve been reading some fantastic books just recently.  I mean books that are just so good they’re not only going to stay with me probably forever but I’m undoubtedly going to be ‘pushing’ them and recommending them at every and any opportunity.  The Everlasting is definitely one such book.

I went into this a little wary.  The reviews were glowing and so I started to avoid the book chatter in order to keep my expectations from going through the roof, and as I started the read I would describe my initial reaction almost as a little doubtful.  I think before I picked this up, although I’d heard the general hullabaloo, I had little idea what the story was about and I hadn’t quite expected it to take the turn it does in the first few chapters.  Now, take all this with a very large pinch of salt because as soon as the story took this ‘turn’ I fell head over heels in love with it in, literally, a New York minute.  In fact it’s ridiculous how much of a big pushover I really was given my initial thoughts that this wouldn’t be for me. I hadn’t expected this whole time loop, nor the Arthurian legend (with a twist) to poke it’s head above the parapet and then the love interest – the nerdy scholar who has read all about her exploits and is perhaps her biggest fan!.  It all works so perfectly.

I’m not even going to tell you about the plot because going into this story with no knowledge was a winner for me – so maybe it will be for you too.

So,

Are you enjoying your romantasy at the moment?  If so, this is about to knock your socks off.  This is the romantasy I didn’t know I needed in my life.  I don’t like romance and I really dislike it if the fantasy elements are tacked on rather than grounded.  That isn’t the case with this book.  This is a love story that puts a stupid smile on your face when you’re reading, it makes you want to turn the pages faster, it makes you want to skip the pages (don’t) so you can find out what’s going to happen, it makes you want to cry but more than that it delivers all the feelings.

Then we have this whole ‘Arthurian legend’ element.  The central couple work so well together.  The strong knight and the geeky, book loving scholar turned on its head by the fearsome, undefeated knight, being the female whilst the male brings his strength to the table in the form of ‘knowledge’.

Thirdly, the scope of the story is quite breathtaking.  This is a couple who know how to wait for each other.  They’ve been through so much together but actually trying to simply hold onto it, to retain their own little bit of happiness, is so difficult.  They’ve made themselves rules, they’ve broken the rules, they’ve loved, laughed, fought and died for each other but they keep trying and waiting underneath the old yew tree and believing that maybe the next iteration will succeed.

It helps of course that I liked all the characters.  Even the antagonist is the perfect fit for the story.  I’m not going to say too much about her because, again, I don’t want to ruin the discovery, but she has motivations that you can actually understand, even if you don’t sympathise with her, she’s trying to find her way and to succeed in an environment where she would most probably be cast out with ridiculous ease if not for all her own dastardly interventions.

The writing is, much as I expected from this author, quite beautiful and utterly beguiling to read. This element of the story I can truthfully promise was not a surprise to me.  I’ve read Harrow before and love her storytelling.  Okay, well, maybe she surprised me a little by not only delivering a first class romantasy to a sceptic but also managing to deliver a story that can at times be so beautiful and yet so dark and brutal.

In conclusion, come for the great writing and stay for one of the most deliciously unexpected romantasies that you’re likely to read.  This is a story about the power of stories, a story with many stories creating the whole and a story that truly shows the power that stories can wield.  Dare I say – the pen is mightier than the sword!?  Maybe not if the sword is wielded by Sir Una Everlasting.  Read it and weep people.

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

My rating 5 of 5 of the most dazzling stars

Can’t Wait Wednesday: Daughter of Crows (The Kindness Academy #1) by Mark Lawrence

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: Daughter of Crows (The Kindness Academy #1) by Mark Lawrence.  Check out the fantastic cover and description below:

The survivor of a brutal academy must exhume her own past in the first book in a new series from the international bestselling author of the Library Trilogy and the Broken Empire series.Set a thief to catch a thief. Set a monster to punish monsters.

The Academy of Kindness exists to create agents of retribution, cast in the image of the Furies—known as the kindly ones—against whom even the gods hesitate to stand. Each year a hundred girls are sold to the Academy. Ten years later only three will emerge.

The Academy’s halls run with blood. The few that survive its decade-long nightmare have been forged on the sands of the Wound Garden. They have learned ancient secrets amid the necrotic fumes of the Bone Garden. They leave its gates as avatars of vengeance, bound to uphold the oldest of laws.

Only the most desperate would sell their child to the Kindnesses. But Rue … she sold herself. And now, a lifetime later, a long and bloody lifetime later, just as she has discovered peace, war has been brought to an old woman’s doorstep.

That was a mistake.

Expected publication : March 2026

Top Ten Tuesday: Modern Books You Think Will Be Classics In The Future 

TTT

Today is the first Top Ten Tuesday I’ve participated in for a while, mainly because of being busy and personal reasons, but, I’m getting back on track and, I love this topic.  So, here’s my take on modern books (which I’m taking to mean recently written as oppose to contemporary setting – although, obviously, you could interpret it either way) that I think could be classics in the future:

King Sorrow by Joe Hill – I haven’t written my review for this one yet but I absolutely loved it.  It’s a chunkster of a book but it’s so good that it doesn’t feel that way.

The Everlasting by Alix E Harrow – this is another recent read that I loved.  Again, I haven’t posted my review yet (which will follow shortly) but this was so good.  The writing is fantastic, the story is totally absorbing, literally a story that spreads across the ages.

Ten Thousand Doors of January by Alix E Harrow – yes, two books by the same author on this list.  It probably seems a little indulgent but I love her books and this particular book is like a love letter to readers.

Station Eleven, the Glass Hotel and Sea of Tranquility by Emily St John Mandell.  This is not a series as such but the books all interconnect in ways that you wouldn’t be aware of without having read the others.  Basically, each book is a standalone and brilliant in it’s own right but if you have the pleasure of reading all three, well, it’s really quite mind blowing.

The Justice of Kings, The Tyranny of Faith and The Trials of Empire by Richard Swan.  Fantasy books with murder mysteries, epic in their scopo but with a more modern feel in terms of ease of reading, great writing and totally gripping.  I would love to see these books become recognised for the scope, writing and originality.

A Dowry of Blood by ST Gibson.  I’m not always a fan of classic retellings but this story works.  Told from the point of view of one of Dracula’s ‘bride’s this is a dark tale of doubt and seduction and based itself on a ‘classic’ I would love to see it last the test of time.

A Boy and His Dog at the end of the World.  Such a fantastic tale, told in a way to deliver a really powerful twist.  I loved it and didn’t see it coming.

The Mermaid and Mrs Hancock by Imogen Hermes Gowar.  Oh dear me, how much did I love this book?  Ridiculously so.  It’s an absolute keeper.  A new story told in a way that brings all the charm of many older classics but easily readable and with hints of fantasy.

The Winternight Trilogy by Katherine Arden.  The Bear and the Nightingale, The Girl in the Tower, The Winter of the Witch.  This series is so good, beautiful writing, fairytale fantasy and Russian Folklore.  Quite mesmerising.

Finally, The Broken Empire series by Mark Lawrence.  This series definitely falls into the ‘grimdark’ genre (and, as such, maybe isn’t for everyone) but being the first of it’s kind that I read it felt so unique and unusual, plus the writing is superb and the overall scope, of not only this series, but all the following series by this author, well, it really is impressive.

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