We Used To Live Here by Marcus Kliewer
17 June 2024
Filed under Book Reviews
Tags: Book Reviews, Books, fiction, Horror, Marcus Kliewer, The Summer of Horror, We Used to Live Here

My Five Word TL:DR Review : This Is One Scary Book

Wow this book. My mind is blown. This is one scary read. I believe this is being made into a movie and at this point, I’m not sure I actually have the courage to watch it and, this is made even more impressive by the fact this is a debut.
I’m not, going to over elaborate about the plot. The gist. A young couple, Eve and Charlie have bought a house with the intention of quickly restoring it to make a profit. However, things take a nasty turn when a family shows up one evening, the father claims this was his childhood home and wonders if he could quickly show his wife and children around. My immediate reaction would be a resounding ‘no’ but Eve is a people pleaser and even though the little voice inside her head is shouting ‘no’ she lets the family in. Well, from there things go all wrong., but you’ll have to read this to find out why.
What did I love about this?
Well, as I mentioned above, this book has the scare factor in spades. And this is horror without a question of a doubt. A creepy house. A dark basement. An attic with secret nooks and crannies. Plenty of unexplained shock elements. And just what the heck is wrong with this family? Also, your basic fear elements such as torches and lights cutting out at the most inopportune moments, things being misplaced or simply changing in design, bad weather and an ever increasing feeling of intense dread.
Eve and Charlie are a great couple. I love their dynamic and their feelings for each other are plain to see. Charlie is very forthright and not shy about making things plain, whilst Eve has a constant niggling voice running through her head that questions everything and makes the fear even more real. She relies on Charlie to be the firm hand.
The writing is really good. I was completely sucked into this story. There are little snippets of strange occurrences that have taken place that feed into the dread about the house and I felt myself really caring about Eve and Charlie. Plus feeling total dread concerning the ‘family’ and the desire to get them out of the house at any cost.
I don’t really want to say too much more. I loved this. I’m not absolutely sure I understand everything but I’m not sure that’s the point. For me the house seems to be some sort of focal point for strange, hauntings, possessions, alternate realities and mind bending creepiness.
In conclusion. This book has set up home inside my head and at the moment, much like Eve and her unwelcome visitors, I’m unable to shift it. Twisted and unexpected with a shocker ending that has pickled my tiny brain. I could read this again.
I received a copy through Netgalley, courtesy of the publisher, for which my thanks. The above is my own opinion.
My rating 5 freaked out stars
Sunday Post/Weekly Wrap Up
16 June 2024
Filed under Book Reviews
Tags: Bitter Waters, book-blog, Books, Caffeinated Book Reviewer, currently-reading, Marcus Kliewer, reading, Sunday Post, Vivien Shaw, We Used to Live Here, Weekly wrap up

I’m trying to get back into the habit of doing a round-up of the week just completed and also take a look at my plans for the forthcoming week. I rather got out of the habit of doing so but I would like to reinstate this type of post as I feel it keeps me on track. So, I’m linking up to The Sunday Post over at Kimberly’s Caffeinated Reviewer. Without further ado:
Books read this week:
We’re back from Granada. We had a fantastic time. It’s a lovely city. We had great weather, the people are so friendly and there was plenty of wine and tapas. Highly recommended. Obviously my reading and blogging have been a little slower so I’m planning on catching up this week, fingers crossed. In reading news. I read Bitter Waters by Vivian Shaw. I also read We Used To Live Here by Marcus Kliewer (which was very chilling) and I’ve made a start on Two SIdes To Every Murder by Danielle Valentine. I’ve also made a start on my first batch of SPFBO books.
- Winter Lost by Patricia Briggs

Outstanding Reviews
- The September House by Carissa Orlando
- Fourth Wing by Rebecca Yarros
- When She Was Good by Michael Robotham
- Lying Beside You by Michael Robotham
- Bitter Waters by Vivian Shaw
- We Used to Live Here by Marcus Kliewer
Friday Face Off : The Busy Body (The Ghostwriter #1) by Kemper Donovan
14 June 2024
Filed under Book Reviews
Tags: book-blog, Books, Friday Face off, Friday Face Off : The Busy Body (The Ghostwriter #1) by Kemper Donovan, Kemper Donovan, reading

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 haven’t read yet but is a forthcoming read. The Busy Body (The Ghostwriter#1) by Kemper Donovan.

Which is your favourite?
Join me next week in highlighting one of your reads with different covers.
Can’t Wait Wednesday : The Book of Witching by CJ Cooke
12 June 2024
Filed under Book Reviews
Tags: Can't wait Wednesday, CJ Cooke, The Book of Witching, 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 Book of Witching by CJ Cooke. Here’s the cover and description:

A mother must fight for her daughter’s life in this fierce and haunting tale of witchcraft and revenge from the author of A Haunting in the Arctic.
Clem gets a call that is every mother’s worst nightmare. Her nineteen-year-old daughter Erin is unconscious in the hospital after a hiking trip with her friends on the remote Orkney Islands that met a horrifying end, leaving her boyfriend dead and her best friend missing. When Erin wakes, she doesn’t recognize her mother. And she doesn’t answer to her name, but insists she is someone named Nyx.
Clem travels the site of her daughter’s accident, determined to find out what happened to her. The answer may lie in a dark secret in the history of the Orkneys: a woman wrongly accused of witchcraft and murder four centuries ago. Clem begins to wonder if Erin’s strange behavior is a symptom of a broken mind, or the effects of an ancient curse?
Expected publication : October 2024
#SPFBO X : My First Batch of Books

SPFBO X is now underway and the books allocated. I’ve divided my books into three sets of five. Hopefully tackling one batch of five per month for the next three months.
For those who don’t know about SPFBO (the Self Published Fantasy Blog Off) – this is a competition created and run by Mark Lawrence. The competition is now in its tenth year and you can find more about all the other entrants and judges over on Mark Lawrence’s blog. This year I am again teaming up with the Critiquing Chemist.
This year I am planning on reading the first 25% (or for those larger books the first 100 pages) of all the books in my allocation. This way I will quickly gain an idea of the books that I want to continue to read.
Without further ado, lets take a look at my first five books:
River of Crows by NP Thompson

A cryptic prophecy. A dangerous quest. An explosive family secret. And a crow with a white feather who is more than he appears…
Mortal peril is twelve-year-old Ty Baxter’s new normal when he teams up with the weird girl from school to help an injured bird and suddenly finds himself trapped in a strange, magical world.
Now the target of a brutal tyrant with unfathomable power, Ty grapples with a life-altering revelation about his past and the implications of an ancient prophecy. As he struggles to control his own emerging magical Talent, Ty embroils himself in a desperate gamble to help his new friends save their missing family before the emperor uses his dark sorcery to transform them into birds, enslaving them forever as soldiers in his enchanted avian army.
And if he survives all of that, he’s probably still going to get grounded—if he ever finds a way to get back home.
***
Dark Empathy by Katy Morgan

For an empath, “How do you feel?” is never just a question.
Not when it can kill you.
These are the rules:
1. Rare and powerful empaths never escape the compound.
(Bastian Lucas escaped a year ago, and just because he’s been dragged back doesn’t mean he won’t escape again.)
2. Compound officers don’t ask questions.
(Captain Henry Mortimer has always followed orders, but Bastian’s arrival—and the disappearance of one of Henry’s team—have him wondering things he probably shouldn’t be wondering.)
When Major Valentine orders Bastian and Henry to investigate a series of murders committed by an asset with powers similar to Bastian’s, it brings to light more than just a cover up. Things like why an empath who shouldn’t exist is killing senators, what’s really behind the compound’s sinister asset program, and whether Bastian and Henry will live to see the end of this case.
Because they’re in danger of breaking rule number three as well:
3. Don’t fall in love.
***
Messengers of Ilbeor by TJ Klapprodt

Messengers connect six races of the verdant and beautiful land of Ilbeor, and newly trained messenger Alanda feels the promise of her adult life as she steps into the world to find her fortune. Faithful dog Alis at her side, Alanda traverses the mountainous wilderness only to be punished by storm and sun before becoming the first elf-friend in generations. When she meets charming messenger Tostig and feels the spark of a connection unlike any she’s ever known, she believes her life has truly begun.
After being greeted by tragedy and a brother changed by primal magics she does not understand, Alanda must travel the icy wastes with an unlikely companion to discover the answers to her brother’s prophetic gifts and her own heritage. With only a mysterious artifact to guide her way, she knows only one thing: her entire destiny is about to change. In Tostig’s attempt to race to her side, he is waylaid by the mysterious Sashu toward his own changed future as powerful magician and a hand of the gods themselves.
As Alanda and Tostig uncover who they were fated to be, they learn the appearance of peace in Ilbeor is only given by the lack of outright war…and when they each come to the attention of vengeful elven mage Altoneir, they stand to find out just how much they have to lose.
***
Facing Shadows by Anna J Worthy

“We’re more than our worst impulses, more than the shadows we face.”
When Evaya, a 16-year-old warrior, stumbles into one of the mysterious chasms that have suddenly appeared near her remote island village, she’s determined to find what’s causing them before another one destroys them all.
If only it were that simple.
Her concerns are ignored by her village’s Elders who are distracted by the decades-long feud between warriors and hunters—a conflict that has Evaya questioning which side she should be on. And a desperate power-play made by the volatile Elder warrior, Delcrom, could unravel any hope of unity.
Meanwhile, a prophesy suggests that pairing Evaya with the flawless young hunter, Rykas, would finally end the village feud. But she has developed complicated feelings for Aldric, a brooding cook who’s fallen hard for her. The only thing Aldric wants more than Evaya is to defeat his father, Delcrom, who intends to pair Evaya with Valgrun, a treacherous young warrior who will stop at nothing to claim her.
Evaya must unite her people and confront the mystery of the chasms before it’s too late. But can she save them without sacrificing her heart?
***
Woodspell by CR Collins

Humanity’s time has run out.
She’ll never be a victim again, but Rowena’s new power could destroy her country.
WOODSPELL is Volume 1 in the completed trilogy, TALES OF ARDONNA: WOODSPELL SERIES, a fairy tale for adults.
The series includes the following:
WOODSPELL – Volume 1
THE WILDER WORLD – Volume 2
A WAYWARD WIND – Volume 3
Content Advisory: adult themes, domestic violence, suicidal ideation
Good luck everyone 😀




