Better Late Than Never: Booking Ahead/Weekly Wrap Up
22 July 2024
Filed under Book Reviews
Tags: Book Reviews, Booking Ahead, Books, Caffeinated Book Reviewer, Mystery, Thriller, Weekly wrap up

Today I’m posting my Weekly Wrap Up and II’m linking up to The Sunday Post over at Kimberly’s Caffeinated Reviewer. Without further ado:
Books read this week:
So, I’ve been very absent from the blog. I managed to strain a muscle in my leg and it’s been a flipping nuisance and has stolen my mojo for everything. Anyway, I’ve still tucked some reading under my belt and have a few reviews due. I read and really loved The Moonlight Market by Joanne Harris. I also completed my second batch of SPFBO books reading 25% of them all. I’ll be posting my third batch soon. I also read Love Letters To A Serial Killer by Tasha Coryell. What an unusual read this was. Finally, I’ve made a good start on The Trouble With Mrs Montgomery Hurst by Katie Lumsden which I’m thoroughly enjoying.
- The September House by Carissa Orlando
- Fourth Wing by Rebecca Yarros
- Storm Child by Michael Robotham
- In the Middle of the Night by Riley Sager
- Love Letters To A Serial Killer by Tasha Coryell
- The Moonlight Market by Joanne Harris
Booking Ahead/Weekly Wrap Up
14 July 2024
Filed under Book Reviews
Tags: Book Reviews, Booking Ahead/Weekly Wrap Up, Books, Caffeinated Book Reviewer, fiction, reading, Sunday Post

Today I’m posting my Weekly Wrap Up and II’m linking up to The Sunday Post over at Kimberly’s Caffeinated Reviewer. Without further ado:
Books read this week:
You may have noticed the tumbleweed rolling around on my blog over the past week or so. I’m not having a moment over here, or feeling jaded with my blog or books. Put simply, a combination of travelling, illness and slight injury and other irritants (a dodgy keyboard being the least of my problems) have left little time for reading or anything else. Anyway, I’ve read Middle of the Night by Riley Sager and started The Moonlight Market by Joanne Harris and I’ve made progress on my second batch of SPFBO books reading 25% of the first two.

Next Week’s Reads:
Next week. I’d like to complete the Midnight Market and maybe pick up Love Letters to A Serial Killer by Tasha Cornell. I’d also like to read The Undermining of Twyla and Frank but when I requested this one I hadn’t realised it was the second in series. Does anyone else know this series? Do I need to read the first book before picking up this one?
Reviews Posted:- When She Was Good by Michael Robotham
- Lying Beside You by Michael Robotham
- The September House by Carissa Orlando
- Fourth Wing by Rebecca Yarros
- Storm Child by Michael Robotham
- In the Middle of the Night by Riley Sager
The Friday Face Off : The Book of Witching by CJ Cooke
5 July 2024
Filed under Book Reviews
Tags: CJ Cooke, Friday Face off, The Book of Witching

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’m really excited about reading. The Book of Witching by CJ Cooke. I’m loving this author’s work at the moment and seriously, A Haunting in the Arctic was – well, brilliantly haunting. Here are the two covers:

I actually like both covers but I can’t resist a book cover with a book on it.
Which is your favourite?
Join me next week in highlighting one of your reads with different covers.
Beat the Backlist: The Girl With No Face by MH Boroson The Daoshi Chronicles #2 Review
4 July 2024
Filed under Book Reviews
Tags: Beat the Backlist 2024, Book Reviews, book-blog, Books, Fantasy, MH Boroson, The Daoshi Chronicles #2, The Girl with no Face

My Five Word TL:DR Review : This Series is Seriously Good

TGWNF is a book that I’ve been wanting to read for quite some time. I loved The Girl With Ghost Eyes and was so desperate to read the next instalment but then in the way of a lot of great books this one seemed to get left behind in the ever mounting furore of deadlines. So, this year I’ve been taking a look back at my TBR and trying to read at least one book a month to make a small dint in my backlist books
The first book in the series was wonderful. Please check out my review here. And. I’m pleased to say that the second instalment is equally breathtaking. What a wonderfully unique storyteller Boroson is. I can’t remember reading a series before with such attention to detail. Clearly the author has taken research to the next level and this is reflected in the story.
Once again we return to the world of Li-lin. She is an amazing character. Beset with prejudices and inequalities she is a woman unafraid to take chances to help others and stand by what she feels is the right way to behave.
I’m not going to over elaborate on the plot – especially as I’m so late to the party there are already some excellent reviews available that tell you everything you need to know. Suffice to say that we pick up not long after the first instalment. Li-lin has been disowned by her father. She is working for a local gangster. Her life is undoubtedly a struggle, she is grieving for her husband and she now finds herself with a new mystery to ponder. A young girl has died in the most unusual circumstances and dark magic is suspected.
What I really loved about this.
Once again Li-lin is an amazing character to read about. I love this character and I think in this instalment, she goes through an incredible story arc, particularly where the relationship with her father is concerned.
I mean, the imagination here is incredible. I could go into great detail about spirit trains and tiger priests but to be fair if I get started there’s little hope that I’ll be able to stop. Instead take my word for it, this is a fascinating world. I seriously don’t think I’ve read anything quite like this before with the depth of world building, which isn’t to say such books don’t exist of course, just this feels like such a great exploration of culture, tradition, folklore and superstition.
Overall, I had a really good time reading the next instalment in Li-lin’s journey and whilst the mystery here was wrapped up nicely I hope that we will return to this world again.
I received a copy through Netgalley, courtesy of the publisher, for which my thanks. The above is my own opinion.
My rating 4.5 of 5 stars
Can’t Wait Wednesday : The House at Watch Hill by Karen Marie Moning
3 July 2024
Filed under Book Reviews
Tags: 'Gothic', Books, Can't wait Wednesday, fiction, Karen Marie Moning, The House at Watch Hill, 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: The House at Watch Hill by Karen Marie Moning. I’ve not read this author before but the promise of a gothic mansion definitely grabbed my attention.

#1 New York Times bestselling author Karen Marie Moning is back with a gripping, imaginative, and seductive new series in which a young woman moves to Divinity, Louisiana, to inherit a large fortune and a Gothic mansion full of mysteries and ominous secrets…
Zo Grey is reeling from the sudden death of her mother when she receives a surprising call from an attorney in Divinity, Louisiana, with the news she has been left an inheritance by a distant relative, the terms of which he will only discuss in person. Destitute and alone, with nothing left to lose, Zo heads to Divinity and discovers she is the sole beneficiary of a huge fortune and a monstrosity of a house that sits ominously at the peak of Watch Hill—but she must live in it, alone, for three years before the house, or the money, is hers.
Met with this irresistible opportunity to finally build a future for herself, Zo puts aside her misgivings about the foreboding Gothic mansion and the strange circumstances, and moves in, where she is quickly met by a red-eyed Stygian owl and an impossibly sexy Scottish groundskeeper.
Her new home is full of countless secrets and mystifying riddles, with doors that go nowhere, others that are impossible to open, and a turret into which there is no visible means of ingress. And the townspeople are odd…
What Zo doesn’t yet know is that her own roots lie in this very house and that in order to discover her true identity and awaken her dormant powers, she will have to face off against sinister forces she doesn’t quite comprehend—or risk being consumed by them.
Expected publication : October 2024






