Top Ten Tuesday: Love Freebie

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:

Valentines/Love Freebie

Romantasy seems to be all the rage at the moment so I’m certain I shall have no problem finding ten books with a little bit of romance going on:

Don’t they all look lovely together?

Review: Rings of Fate (Curses and Crowns #1) by Melissa de la Cruz

My Five Word TL:DR Review: Didn’t Quite Hit the Mark

Well, I’m on a bit of a romantasy reading ‘thing’ at the moment and so this book appealed to me with its description of a cursed prince and a hard working barmaid who reluctantly strike a bargain that ultimately puts their hearts at risk!

Prince Dietan is living under a curse.  Only a few select people know the details and I’m not going to spill them here in this review.  He’s currently travelling the country, supposedly looking for a bride.  In truth, he’s looking for someone with magic who might be able to help him.

Aren Bellamore is a hard working barmaid with dreams of escaping her small world.  Unfortunately she has too many responsibilities to make this dream a reality, until a handsome prince walks into her world and strikes up a bargain.

What worked for me.

This was definitely an easy to read story.  It had a kind of Cinderella vibe but with a totally different angle.  We have Aren, hard working and responsible, her mother has died and her elderly father takes a back seat in affairs.  She has two sisters – but far from being evil step sisters they are beautiful and adorable and Aren wants nothing more than to see them happily settled.  And, of course, we have a handsome prince, supposedly looking for a bride to secure alliances for his country to stop the threat of war.

The story is told in alternating chapters by Aren and Dietan.  I really liked this approach letting the readers get into both heads to see what was really going on and of course it gives us a bit of insight into the world itself.

To be honest, I didn’t have any problems reading this, it was light, fun in parts and I was never at the point of putting it down and not picking it up again.

What didn’t work too well for me.

Well, firstly, this being adult fantasy I did expect the foundations to be a little stronger.  That being said, I’m new to romance and romantasy so I’m never really quite sure what to expect.  Personally this felt very focused on the romance and less so on the fantasy.  The world building was thin, I never really got the feeling of threat and most of the story was the two povs travelling together with little thought about the looming war – I don’t know, I just didn’t feel any real urgency just a lot of backward and forward ‘does he doesn’t he like me’ and ‘does she doesn’t she like me’.

I also thought that the other characters were very underplayed.  I mean, let’s take a look at Aren’s sisters for example.  They fall in love instantly, they have no voice at all, they do nothing whilst Aren runs herself into the ground running a bar, staying up into the early hours sewing dresses to make them look amazing, cooking – I mean, she really is a Cinderella character – but they’re adorable, supposedly, I just don’t understand why they don’t offer to help maybe, or occasionally get more involved, or, maybe they don’t want to be married off either?  The same with Dietan who has his two closest friends travelling with him – they never really get to play a strong role or have anything useful to contribute.  The four of them exist purely so they can all fall in love and not take part in the story at all, so why include them at all?  Just start with Dietan and Aren and keep it simple.  It felt like a missed opportunity not to have the four of them contribute a little more.

That probably sounds a little more critical than I intended.  On the whole, this was an entertaining and light read.  It didn’t quite work for me but I can definitely see it working for other readers who are not only more familiar with romance and therefore know what to expect but also have a firmer grip on what they’re really looking for.  These are new waters for me and I’m still really finding my feet so strictly speaking it’s more a case of ‘it’s me not you’ at play here.

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

My rating 3 of 5 stars

Bookish Highlights for 2025

For the past month I’ve been highlighting a book a day during the Countdown to 2026, just to shine a little more light on some of the books I read this past year.

During 2025 I didn’t read as many books as I would usually, mainly due to a couple of periods where I had various issues that stopped me picking up, or even wanting to pick up books.  That being said I read 83 books last year and I will say that I picked up some fantastic books.  Below is a quick spotlight on various books broken into different categories.

Tomorrow I shall be posting my Top Ten Books for 2025

Happy New Year to you all.

Fantasy:

  1. Grave Empire by Richard Swan
  2. Greenteeth by Molly O’Neill
  3. Vianne by Joanne Harris
  4. A Far Better Thing by HG Parry
  5. My Ex, the AntiChrist by Craig DiLouie
  6.  The Hexologists: A Tangle of Time by Josiah Bancroft
  7. Alchemy of Secrets by Stephanie Garber
  8. King Sorrow by Joe Hill
  9. The Everlasting by Alix E Harrow
  10. The Blackfire Blade by James Logan

Horror:

  1. Incidents Around the House by Josh Malerman
  2. Senseless by Ronald Malfi
  3. Victorian Psycho by Virginia Feito
  4. It Was Her House First by Cherie Priest
  5. My Ex, the AntiChrist by Craig DiLouie
  6. Play Nice by Rachel Harrison
  7. The Cold House by AG Slatter
  8. The Place Where They Buried Your Heart by Christina Henry

Great additions/conclusions to series:

  1. The Crimson Road by AG Slatter
  2. Emily Wilde’s Compendium of Lost Tales by Heather Fawcett
  3. Paved With Good Intentions by Peter McLean
  4. Another Fine Mess by Lindy Ryan
  5. Damned by Genevieve Cogman
  6. Ring the Bells by CK McDonnell
  7. Ragwort by Sam K Horton

Romantasy:

  1. Wooing the Witch Queen by Stephanie Burgis
  2. Paladins Grace by T Kingfisher
  3. Swordheart by T Kingfisher
  4. The Enchanted Greenhouse by Sarah Beth Durst
  5. Hemlock and Silver  by T Kingfisher
  6. A Honeymoon of Grave Consequence by Stephanie Burgis
  7. The Knight and the Moth by Rachel Gillig

Historic/Period Drama/Ancient History

  1. Daughter of Chaos by A S Webb
  2. A Fortune Most Fatal by Jessica Bull
  3. The Rush by Beth Lewis
  4. Bewitching by Silvia Moreno Garcia
  5. No Friend to This House by Natalie Haynes
  6. No Women Were Harmed by Heather Mottershead
  7. House of Splinters by Laura Purcell
  8. The Last Witch by CJ Cooke
  9. The Austen Christmas Murders by Jessica Bull

Murder Mystery/Thriller:

  1. Beautiful Ugly by Alice Feeney
  2. The Vipers by Katy Hays
  3. A Fortune Most Fatal by Jessica Bull
  4. The Maid’s Secret by Nita Prose
  5. We Live Here Now by Sarah Pinborough
  6. The Man Made of Smoke by Alex North
  7. The Countdown Killer by Sam Holland
  8. The Bodies by Sam Lloyd
  9. The Dead Husband Cookbook by Danielle Valentine
  10. Forget Me Not by Stacy Willingham

New to Me Authors:

  1. Molly O’Neill
  2. Steve Jones
  3. Heather Mottershead
  4. Natalie Haynes
  5. Shalini Abeysekara
  6. Francesca May
  7. Jackson Ford
  8. Rachel Gillig
  9. Lauren Wiesebron
  10. A S Webb
  11. Josh Malerman
  12. Virginia Feito
  13. Devney Perry

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