Can’t Wait Wednesday : Moontangled (The Harwood Spellbook #2.5) by Stephanie Burgis
29 January 2020
Filed under Book Reviews
Tags: Can't wait Wednesday, Moontangled, Stephanie Burgis, The Harwood spellbook #2.5, Wishful Endings

“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 : Moontangled (The Harwood Spellbook #2.5) by Stephanie Burgis. I’ve loved Snowspelled and Thornbound so can’t wait to return to the world that this author has created:
Take one ambitious politician and one determined magician with wildly different aims for their next meeting.
Add a secret betrothal, a family scandal, and a heaping of dangerous fey magic in an enchanted wood…and watch the sparks fly!
For just one moonlit, memorable night, Thornfell College of Magic has flung open its doors, inviting guests from around the nation to an outdoor ball intended to introduce the first-ever class of women magicians to society…but one magician and one invited guest have far more pressing goals of their own for the night.
Quietly brilliant Juliana Banks is determined to win back the affections of her secret fiancée, rising politician Caroline Fennell, who has become inexplicably distant. If Juliana needs to use magic to get her stubborn fiancée to pay her attention…well, then, as the top student in her class, she is more than ready to take on that challenge!
Unbeknownst to Juliana, though, Caroline plans to nobly sacrifice their betrothal for Juliana’s own sake – and no one has ever accused iron-willed Caroline Fennell of being easy to deter from any goal.
Their path to mutual happiness may seem tangled beyond repair…but when they enter the fey-ruled woods that border Thornfell College, these two determined women will find all of their plans upended in a night of unexpected and magical possibilities.
Expected publication : February 2020
Top Ten Tuesday : Cover lover
28 January 2020
Filed under Book Reviews
Tags: Cover Lover, That Artsy Reader Girl, Top Ten Tuesday

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 topic is:
Book Cover Freebie
Colour me happy. I may have used more than the ten allocated spots – but who can stop at ten. So many lovely book covers – they just make me happy. Some of these I’ve read, and some I’m looking forward to picking up. Do you have a favourite?
Highfire by Eoin Colfer
I have slightly mixed feelings about Highfire. On the one hand, I really enjoyed certain aspects of the story and would no doubt read more if the author intended to revisit. But, at the same time I did struggle a little to get into this and I’m not entirely sure why, other than my reading seemed to ebb a little last week so maybe I was just not in the right frame of mind.
This is fantasy of a very different kind. To an extent, without Vern (who was actually more akin to a Wyvern than a dragon) and his mysterious friend, the fantasy aspect of the story is very low key. This is a story that plays out in the bayous of Louisiana and I have to say upfront that I loved the setting.
Deep in the bayou lives a dragon, the last of his kind maybe. He’s all about keeping a low profile and keeping the howling mobs at bay. In the modern era your likeness and a full on video can be recorded so easily that Vern has taken to hiding out, he’s a bit depressed, he lacks companionship, he has something of an alcohol problem and I suppose he lacks purpose. Until Squib enters his life.
Basically this is a story that focuses very much on the characters. Everett Moreau, aka Squib, is a teenage boy who is one step away from crossing the line. He’s not had the easiest childhood and although at heart he’s basically a good lad he’s struggling to help his mother with a debt that she didn’t run up whilst at the same time trying to keep the attention of the local law from focusing too hard on either himself or his mother. Everett is quite easy to like, especially his enthusiasm for Vern the dragon.
Vern has lived a long life. He doesn’t like humans, mainly due to the fact that they turned on his kind many centuries ago and killed them off, leaving Vern alone and bitter. I suppose you could say that Squib really shakes Vern’s life up, a lot and I did enjoy their interactions, especially the slow way that Vern comes round to this new human in his life.
Regence Hooke is the local law and a bigger lowlife you are unlikely to ever meet. Being privy to his internal thoughts is positively hideous. He’s a murderer and a nasty piece of work. Your basic psychopath really, and he has the big hots for Squib’s mum and would very much like to take Squib out of the picture entirely so that he can move his agenda forward. He really is quite despicable.
The story revolves around these three characters, starting fairly low key until their lives become inextricably entangled and go down the route of no return – things then reach an explosive climax.
I think what held me back from a little with Highfire is that it has a fairly young feel – yet, it’s undoubtedly an adult read. There is violence, people getting their faces ripped off and their guts spilled but in spite of the adult content, for me, this felt almost like Pete and his dragon. I haven’t got a problem with that in some respects but I think I was expecting a darker tone somehow. Vern is definitely an impressive beast and you wouldn’t want to get on his wrong side, but at the same time the comic feel to the story prevents him from having any real menace and I confess it took me a while to form any real attachments to the characters.
Okay, I was aware that this was going to be full of humour when I picked this up so the comic elements weren’t really a surprise but not all the humour quite hit the spot for me personally.
I don’t really mean to come across as overly negative. On finishing this book I would say that I enjoyed it. The ending was satisfying and refreshingly creative and I immediately felt that if more books were planned with Vern as the central character then I would be keen to pick them up, but, I’m not totally in love with the characters just yet, they still have a little more work for me to be totally on board.
I received a copy through Netgalley, courtesy of the author, for which my thanks. The above is my own opinion.
Rating 3.5 of 5 stars
Weekly Wrap Up – 26th January 2020
Hey everyone. Hope you’ve all had a lovely week. Another week flies by and the first month of 2020 is almost over. I can’t believe how quickly time is rushing by at the moment. I’ve had a bit of a slow week with reading – although I have been reading three books. I’ve completed one of those and hopefully the other two will soon follow. I’ve been exercising for half an hour each day though and trying some new healthy recipes and I’ve just been really enjoying that.
Here’s my week in books:
- Highfire by Eoin Colfer
What I’m reading next week:
- Crownbreaker by Sebastien deCastell
- The Bard’s Blade by Brian D. Anderson
- Starsight by Brandon Sanderson
Upcoming Reviews
- King of the Road by RS Belcher
- Queenlayer by Sebastien DeCastell
- The Absinthe Earl by Sharon Lynn Fisher
- Deeplight by Frances Hardinge
- King of Assassins by RJ Barker
- Highfire by Eoin Colfer
I’d love to know what you’re reading this week.
The Bard’s Blade is an entertaining and very easy read that combines a classic old school style of story telling with two young protagonists coming to terms with the harsh realities of the world beyond their own sheltered homes and their personal journeys along the way.





