Mini-Reviews: January Reads

In My Dreams I Hold a Knife by Ashley Winstead

Let’s be clear—none of these characters are likable. They are all selfish, entitled, horrible people. With that being said, the mystery is intriguing and the puzzle pieces are satisfying to put together. Each person legitimately has a motive and it was more than halfway through that I felt I had a good handle on who did it and why. So if you’re looking for a murder mystery, this is a pretty good one. But if you’re looking for a book with enjoyable characters, look elsewhere. 3.5/5

The Last Graduate by Naomi Novik

This book is wordy. Very wordy. I’d say probably 75% of the book is El’s inner dialogue. At least. There were times I had to reread sentences because they didn’t quite make sense the first time I read them. With all that being said, I still really enjoyed this book. I happen to like El’s voice as a character and so reading 300+ pages of her snark was fun for me (though I can understand why others might be less enthused).

The stakes are higher in this book as El is actively trying to prepare herself and her alliance for graduation. Things are made much harder when it seems like the Scholomance is specifically out to get El. The action in this book was pretty straightforward and I thought the logic of the students as they got their plans together made a lot of sense. I also really liked that we expanded our cast of characters with this book. But with more characters and the amount of time we spend in El’s head, we don’t really get to learn much more about preexisting characters like Liu, Aadhya, and Chloe which would have been nice.

Overall, I can see how this series won’t be for everyone, but I love it. Can’t wait for the next one! 4/5

The Thursday Murder Club by Richard Osman

Typically for mysteries, I like to be able to fit the puzzle pieces together myself and form my own conclusions. You can’t do that with this book, unfortunately, too much happens off screen. Despite that, I still really enjoyed this book. I thought the audio was just delightful. The narrator is very good and it reminded me a bit of the audio for the Flavia de Luce series which I’ve also enjoyed. I loved our cast of elderly characters and I thought that Donna and Chris rounded out the ensemble really well. The scene where the Thursday Murder Club all sit down with Chris and Donna for the first time had me laughing out loud multiple times. Overall, a fun little murder mystery and I’ll definitely be continuing the series! 4/5

Piranesi by Susanna Clarke

I don’t know that I really understand what I just read…but I liked it? There was something about it that I found to be really calming even though some of the events were not. Piranesi is an endearingly innocent character. I thought the length of this book was perfect—a lesser author would have stretched it out for another 150 pages. 4/5

To Have and to Hoax by Martha Waters

Wow. Okay, so these two main characters are absolutely infuriating. Multiple times throughout this book they come to some sort of resolution, but then by the next page they’re fighting again. And it’s basically always over some misunderstanding where if they would just COMMUNICATE everyone could get on the same page. But I guess then we wouldn’t have a book. This book is fine. It’s nothing special in this realm of regency romances. Will I continue the series? Maybe. I’ll say this though, poor Wooton doesn’t deserve to be treated like this and needs his own book. 3/5

To Love and to Loathe by Martha Waters

Just fine. Once again, the main characters were kind of infuriating and I felt like the resolution happened really quickly (like all within the last 20 pages). 3/5

The Maid by Nita Prose

I felt so mad while reading this book at basically every single character. The way Molly was being treated was disgusting. With that being said, that fact made the book’s conclusion especially satisfying. I loved Molly as a character. She felt really refreshing. The mystery was also a fun one to try to solve. Who exactly is involved and who knows what information? Overall, I’d definitely recommend this book, but prepare for it to make you a little mad. 4/5

The Royals Next Door by Karina Halle

Yeah…just not my favorite. Authors sometimes like to do this thing where they want their main character to be like “I don’t even know why this guy likes me? He’s so special and I’m so normal (or below-average) and it makes no sense!” Sometimes the reader can see what the main character can’t and the romance makes sense. But then other times the author has done too good of a job and the reader also can’t tell why the love interest is attracted to her. That was the case with this book. We are given no real reason for their relationship other than vicinity and that made it hard to get invested in the whole book. 2/5

12 Best Book Deals for 9/4/19: Leah on the Offbeat, Lincoln in the Bardo, and more

As of this posting, all of these deals are active, but I don’t know for how long!
Less than $2

The Heiresses by Sara Shepard

Remembrance by Meg Cabot

Little Beach Street Bakery by Jenny Colgan

Carthage by Joyce Carol Oates

Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell by Susanna Clarke

A Study in Charlotte by Brittany Cavallaro

The Female Persuasion by Meg Wolitzer

Less than $3

Leah on the Offbeat by Becky Albertalli

Lincoln in the Bardo by George Saunders

Seafire by Natalie C Parker

Archenemies by Marissa Meyer

Moxie by Jennifer Mathieu


Recommended from this post:

BOOK TAG: Books I WANT to read, but don’t want to READ

Book Tags

Jami over at Jamishelves created and posted this tag a couple weeks ago. I’m not usually a book tag kind of blogger, but this one seemed really fun! So even though I wasn’t tagged, I’m doing it anyway!

Rules:

  • Link back to the original tag (@Jamishelves)
  • Complete the questions with books you want to have read but don’t want to read
  • Tag some people at the end to do the tag next

1: A book that you feel you need to read because everyone talks about it

  • The Belles by Dhonielle Clayton

This is a book that has just never appealed to me for whatever reason. I keep hearing great things about it and about the sequel, but I’m just not into the premise!

The Belles

2: A book that’s really long

  • Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell by Susanna Clarke

This baby is over 1,000 pages. I repeat, OVER 1,000 PAGES. That’s literally like three normal sized books combined.

Jonathan Strange and Mr Norrell

3: A book you’ve owned / had on your TBR for too long

  • The Beauty of Darkness by Mary E Pearson

I asked for this book for Christmas the year it came out (which I guess wasn’t that long ago, but it feels really long ago). I’d read the first two and couldn’t remember much. So I told myself I would wait to read this one until I’d reread the first two and now…it’s just been sitting on my shelf.

The Beauty of Darkness

4: A book that is ‘required’ reading
(eg, school text, really popular classic – something you feel obligated to read!)

  • Jane Eyre by Charlotte Bronte

The old answer for this was Wuthering Heights, but I finally read that last year (the year before?). Spoiler: not worth it, imo. But this one I’m a little more excited for because I really liked My Plain Jane.

Jane Eyre

5: A book that intimidates you

  • The Harry Potter series by J.K. Rowling (reread)

This is a bit of a cheat, but I have been meaning to reread the Harry Potter books forever. I read them as they were coming out and I’ve attempted rereads since (most notably when I got my wisdom teeth out) but I can never seem to get past the fourth book! It’s just such a commitment and the books just get longer.

harry potter series

6: A book that you think might be slow

  • The Winter of the Witch by Katherine Arden

Apparently, I really liked the first two books, but at this point I can’t remember why? I remember the books are slow reads (for me at least) even though they contain some action. I’m just worried this book will be slow and I don’t have the motivation to pick it up.

The Winter of the Witch

7: A book you need to be in the right mood for

  • Lair of Dreams by Libba Bray

While I liked the first book (The Diviners), it was long and had a lot of loose ends. It was obviously setting things up for the rest of the series, so I feel like I’m really going to need to be in the right mood to finish.

Lair of Dreams

8: A book you’re unsure if you will like

  • Dread Nation by Justina Ireland

Another book that I’ve only heard good things about, but I have a thing about zombies. I. DO. NOT. LIKE. ZOMBIES. Especially on TV/in movies, but also in books. But like the rest of the premise sounds really good, and like I said, everyone’s been RAVING about it (it has a freaking 4.17 rating on Goodreads).

Dread Nation

I tag:
Deanna @A Novel Glimpse
Book Beach Bunny
Margaret @ Weird Zeal
Ashley @ Socially Awkward Bookworm
Kristin @ Kristin Kraves Books
Kaeley @ Spoilers May Apply

Here’s the list of prompts without my answers for your copying and pasting pleasure:

1: A book that you feel you need to read because everyone talks about it
2: A book that’s really long
3: A book you’ve owned / had on your TBR for too long
4: A book that is ‘required’ reading
(eg, school text, really popular classic – something you feel obligated to read!)
5: A book that intimidates you
6: A book that you think might be slow
7: A book you need to be in the right mood for
8: A book you’re unsure if you will like