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2019-08-05 02:02 pm

Until You - T.J. Klune

Title: Until You (At First Sight #3)
Author: T.J. Klune
Genre: Fiction, LGBTQ
Rating: 4/5
# pages: 162
Date read: July 2019, May 2022

Together with their families and friends, Paul Auster and Vincent Taylor request the honor of your company at the celebration of their marriage.

Paul Auster and Vince Taylor just want to have a simple wedding. Really, is that too much to ask?

As the big day approaches, they struggle to keep everything from spiraling out of control. From meddling friends and intrusive family, to a certain drag queen's idea as to what constitutes a normal bachelor party, Paul and Vince have their work cut out for them.


Short and sweet and made me laugh out loud on several occasions. I absolutely LOVED Paul drunk on Jäger and adored the idea of a gay anthem X-D

And as always, T.J. Klune takes toxic masculinity and tosses it as far away as at all possible. Darren, Vince and Charlie all give awesome examples of how to openly communicate feelings - even when - in the case of the two latter ones - they may be out of practice.
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2019-07-29 01:29 pm

Under Currents - Nora Roberts

Title: Under Currents
Author: Nora Roberts
Genre: Fiction, Suspense
Rating: 5/5
# pages: Audiobook 14.5hrs.
Date read: July, 2019

Zane Bigelow grew up in a beautiful, perfectly kept house in North Carolina’s Blue Ridge Mountains. Strangers―and even Zane’s own aunt across the lake―see his parents as a successful surgeon and his stylish wife, making appearances at their children’s ballet recitals and baseball games. Only Zane and his sister know the truth, until one brutal night finally reveals cracks in the facade, and Zane escapes for college without a thought of looking back...

Years later, Zane returns to his hometown determined to reconnect with the place and people that mean so much to him, despite the painful memories. As he resumes life in the colorful town, he meets a gifted landscape artist named Darby, who is on the run from ghosts of her own.

Together they will have to teach each other what it means to face the past, and stand up for the ones they love.


Alright, I'll state my biases right away - I love Nora Roberts' newer books, and though I can see that they're incredibly formulaic, I just don't care. I can see a book's weaknesses and love it anyway, and this was definitely the case here.

Because this? This was one of the most unputdownable books I've come across in a very long time, and reading it as an audiobook was a HUGE mistake. So big, in fact, that I ended up buying the ebook version as well, because I reached <big spoilerific turning point> right as I arrived somewhere where I couldn't listen to the audiobook any longer, and just HAD to know what happened next RIGHT NOW!!! ... and then relistened to it once I got back to the audiobook, because it was so satisfying that I just had to experience it once again :-D

In the end, I listened to 14.5hrs in 5 days.

I grew to care for all the main characters and really love how Nora Roberts writes little-town communities. Just like in "The Obsession" she ended up describing a place I'd like to live in myself, and though I know nothing about gardening myself, I loved reading about Darby's landscaping business and would DEFINITELY like to book her for my own garden!

The ending was perhaps a bit to quick (I would have liked more of a follow-up, though I do get how the characters getting closure meant they didn't need the follow-up themselves) and a bit too repetitive, and from a purely objective point of view should probably have subtracted a star... but it's a rare thing that I get this obsessed about finishing a book (yet don't want it to end at all!), so 5 stars it is.
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2019-07-25 01:28 pm

The Last Anniversary - Liane Moriarty

Title: The Last Anniversary
Author: Liane Moriarty
Genre: Fiction
Rating: 4/5
# pages: Audiobook ~14hrs
Date read: July 2019

It's been over 70 years since Connie and her sister Rose visited their neighbours and found the kettle boiling and a baby waking for her feed, but no sign of her parents. The 'Munro Baby Mystery' still hasn't been solved and tourists can visit the abandoned home, exactly as it was found in 1932.

But now Connie has passed away and the island residents ponder her legacy. Sophie Honeywell is looking down the barrel of her 40th birthday and still hoping for that fairytale ending. Her beautiful new friend Grace, the Munro Baby's grand daughter, can't tell anyone what she hopes for. It would be too shocking.

Meanwhile, a frumpy housewife makes a pact with a stranger, an old lady starts making her own decisions and a family secret finally explodes on an extraordinary night of mulled wine, fire-eating, and face-painting


I really enjoyed this book, and it was very well suited to the audiobook media. I liked Sophie, I liked Rosie, I didn't think I would end up liking Grace, but I did, and even the characters I didn't particularly like were still interesting, and I didn't dislike them either. I'd guessed the truth about the Munro baby long before it was revealed, but that's okay - I think we were more or less meant to figure it out along the way, so it wasn't set up to be this shocking surprise, but rather "of COURSE that is what happened".

I do wish postnatal depression wasn't such a taboo though... or rather, that some people didn't feel so ashamed about admitting to it, and others weren't so quick to brush it off as "hormones". It really bothered me to see Grace so clearly suffering from it (that's no spoiler - it's very obvious!), and having nobody else act upon it.

Not Moriarty's best, but quite high up there.
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2019-07-23 03:02 pm

Kaninjægeren - Lars Kepler

Title: Kaninjægeren (Joona Linna #6) (The Rabbit Hunter)
Author: Lars Kepler
Genre: Suspense
Rating: 3/5
# pages: 576
Date read: July 2019

It begins with a nursery rhyme.
Nineteen minutes later you die…

There’s a face at the window.
A stranger wearing a mask stands in the shadow of a garden. He’s watching his first victim through the window. He will kill him slowly, make it last – play him a nursery rhyme – make him pay.

There’s only one person the police can turn to – ex-Detective Joona Linna – but he’s serving time in a high-security prison. So they offer him a chance to secure his freedom: help superintendent Saga Bauer track down the vicious killer known as The Rabbit Hunter, before he strikes again.

Soon another three victims have been murdered and Stockholm is in the grip of terror. Joona Linna must catch a disturbed predator, whose trail of destruction leads back to one horrific night of violence – with consequences more terrifying than anyone could have imagined…


Unfortunately not nearly as good as the other books in this series, and I think it might be time for me to say goodbye to Joona Linna and his friends. The story was still captivating, and made it easy for me to read 576 pages in less than 24 hours, but it had so many minor issues that by themselves would be no problem at all, but put together just served to annoy me.

First and foremost, the plot just seemed extremely far fetched. While I don't particularly doubt the premise, there were just certain aspects that really, really didn't work for me.

Secondly, I've gotten tired of the writing style. I don't mind a lot of really short chapters, but I draw the line when a chapter break might JUST as well have been a line break.

Thirdly, the amount of stuff that goes on between the lines. I keep worrying that I'll miss important plot points, because there are so many things just hinted at, where I have no idea if they turn out to be important or not.

That said, it did have a lot of good things going for it as well. I really loved Rex and his son and was happy that so much page-time was spent on the two of them. I also did like the concept of a spree killer as a plot point, and just wish the motivation and resolution had been better executed.

So 3 stars, and a fond farewell to the series.
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2019-07-23 01:29 pm

Sorry I'm Late, I Didn't Want to Come - Jessica Pan

Title: Sorry I'm Late, I Didn't Want to Come
Author: Jessica Pan
Genre: Memoir
Rating: 4/5
# pages: 274
Date read: July, 2019

What would happen if a shy introvert lived like a gregarious extrovert for one year? If she knowingly and willingly put herself in perilous social situations that she’d normally avoid at all costs? Writer Jessica Pan intends to find out. With the help of various extrovert mentors, Jessica sets up a series of personal challenges (talk to strangers, perform stand-up comedy, host a dinner party, travel alone, make friends on the road, and much, much worse) to explore whether living like an extrovert can teach her lessons that might improve the quality of her life. Chronicling the author’s hilarious and painful year of misadventures, this book explores what happens when one introvert fights her natural tendencies, takes the plunge, and tries (and sometimes fails) to be a little bit braver.


When I read the blurb here, I immediately felt a kinship with Jessica Pan. As an introvert myself (although fortunately not a shy one) the truth of the title resonated deeply with me, and like Jessica, I too have declined invitations simply because I was peopled out, and would rather snuggle up on my couch with a book or my knitting.

So her challenge of saying yes to everything for a change is one that at the same time appealed to me and terrified me. Yes to improv? Absolutely, sign me up! I LOVE that stuff! Yes to stand-up comedy? Meh... would require somebody else to write my material, but otherwise, ok (I don't have a funny bone in my body, but love being on stage). Yes to friend-dates? Sure... it's a one-on-one situation, it could work. Yes to a solo vacation where I'm not allowed to buy guidebooks but have to rely on asking locals for advice? Meep! Yes to networking events and - gasp - talking to strangers on the bus? Noooooooo!!!!

I was a bit hesitant at first, because it seemed like this could very easily just be one cringe-worthy experience after the other, and some of the first forays into the world of extroverting did indeed end up that way, but as the year progressed and Jessica found more and more mentors to help her through - and made more and more friends along the way! - it became both a pleasant and a motivating read. I don't know that I'll go out and sign up for the friendship version of tinder anytime soon, but it's quite refreshing to know that while people might not wave - everybody waves back.
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2019-07-22 11:47 am

Kingdom of Needle and Bone - Mira Grant

Title: Kingdom of Needle and Bone
Author: Mira Grant
Genre: Dystopian
Rating: 4/5
# pages: Audiobook ~3hrs
Date read: July 2019, April 2020

It begins with a fever. By the time the spots appear, it’s too late: Morris’s disease is loose on the world, and the bodies of the dead begin to pile high in the streets. When its terrible side consequences for the survivors become clear, something must be done, or the dying will never stop. For Dr. Isabella Gauley, whose niece was the first confirmed victim, the route forward is neither clear nor strictly ethical, but it may be the only way to save a world already in crisis. It may be the only way to atone for her part in everything that’s happened.
She will never be forgiven, not by herself, and not by anyone else. But she can, perhaps, do the right thing.

We live in an age of monsters.


A fascinating book, which I'm sure I'll have to read several times to fully get all aspects of - especially in view of some of the twists revealed near the end which will influence how I read earlier parts. But I really shouldn't expect anything else from Mira Grant by now.

It's a thrilling story, that definitely shines light on the dangers of the anti-vacc movement. It's also really, really short and reads more like a prequel than a full story in its own right (which is the ONLY reason I didn't give it 5 stars - even though I'm pretty sure the prequel-feel was the intention, I still wanted to know more!) and I DEFINITELY want to read the rest of the story now! In many ways it's very similar to many of the shorts in the Newsflesh universe, and while I know they're not related, they very easily could be.

Mira Grant is fast becoming one of my all-time favourite authors. I've yet to meet a book of hers I didn't love.

Reread 2020: A bit too much "on the nose" right now, but that's basically why I felt a need to reread it. It's still amazing.
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2019-07-22 11:36 am

Down Among the Sticks and Bones - Seanan McGuire

Title: Down Among the Sticks and Bones (Wayward Children #3)
Author: Seanan McGuire
Genre: Fantasy
Rating: 3.5/5
# pages: 186
Date read: July 2019

Twin sisters Jack and Jill were seventeen when they found their way home and were packed off to Eleanor West’s Home for Wayward Children.

This is the story of what happened first…

Jacqueline was her mother’s perfect daughter—polite and quiet, always dressed as a princess. If her mother was sometimes a little strict, it’s because crafting the perfect daughter takes discipline.

Jillian was her father’s perfect daughter—adventurous, thrill-seeking, and a bit of a tom-boy. He really would have preferred a son, but you work with what you've got.

They were five when they learned that grown-ups can’t be trusted.

They were twelve when they walked down the impossible staircase and discovered that the pretense of love can never be enough to prepare you a life filled with magic in a land filled with mad scientists and death and choices.


So far the weakest of the Wayward Children books, but I still really liked it - even if I now do feel the urge to reread "Every Heart a Doorway" to remind myself what happened "next" to Jack and Jill.

It is a LOT darker than the other books in the series - but due to the nature of the Moors (no pun intended) it really couldn't be anything else. I mean... there's even a character CALLED "Dr. Bleak"!
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2019-07-17 02:51 pm

Rebel - Audrey Faye

Title: Rebel (Ghost Mountain Wolf #3)
Author: Audrey Faye
Genre: Paranormal
Rating: 4.5/5
# pages: 320
Date read: July 2019, March 2020, October 2022

A baby alpha who absolutely doesn’t want to upend her pack—and is going to do it anyhow.

Kennedy is a badass and she knows it.

She’s also scared. That she’s too strong. Too fierce. Too much. That her pack won’t be able to hold her, no matter how much she wants to stay.

We’ll just see what her pack has to say about that.


I loved seeing the teenagers get more page-time in this one. Audrey Faye really does have a soft spot for feisty teenagers with big hearts - I think they feature in almost all her series! But it was delightful to see Kennedy find her legs as a strong Baby Alpha and fight for her place in the pack... although definitely not the same way she thought she was doing it. I was thrilled to see her interact with Hayden's mum.

The Ghost Mountain Wolf series is very similar to the Modern Witch series in that it is NOT the plot that matters - it is the characters. They drew me in from the very beginning and I just want to spend as much time with them as at all possible. I hope this turns out to be a very long series indeed :-D
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2019-07-17 01:26 pm

Heart - Audrey Faye

Title: Heart (Ghost Mountain Wolf #2)
Author: Audrey Faye
Genre: Paranormal
Rating: 4/5
# pages: 318
Date read: July 2019, March 2020, October 2022

Lissa chose to stay, to stand with the tattered remnants of her pack as they try to make themselves whole again. She somehow didn’t expect it to try her patience quite so much.

Which means it might be time for a meek bookkeeper to take matters into her own hands.

Before her wolf does.


Not quite as good as the first one, but pretty darn close. And I think the main reason might be that it didn't tug on my heartstrings quite as much. But that's almost always the case for sequels. And I still really, really enjoyed it and found myself picking it up whenever I had just a few minutes of spare time.

I enjoyed seeing Lissa stepping out in faith again, and loved the pebbles she threw... even if they did turn out to be more like boulders!

Hayden reminds me so much of Jamie from "A Modern Witch" - and he even has the love for ratty old couches to prove it!
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2019-07-17 11:35 am

Alpha - Audrey Faye

Title: Alpha (Ghost Mountain Wolf #1)
Author: Audrey Faye
Genre: Paranormal
Rating: 5/5
# pages: 322
Date read: July 2019, March 2020, August 2021, October 2022, February 2025

A pack broken.
A pup in danger.
A submissive wolf who will fight with her last breath.

Hayden Scott doesn’t know his stroll in the woods is going to start with a backpack full of watermelon and end with him the new alpha of the Ghost Mountain Pack. A very traumatized pack, and those are only the shifters he can see. Too many are missing, hiding in the woods or worse.

His wolf doesn’t care. He has a pack. One with maple-syrup-covered toddlers, a ten-year-old boy who smells like wolf right up until he shifts, and a brave woman with green eyes and serious trust problems who defended her pup with nothing more than a tree branch and sheer guts.

The walk ahead won’t be easy, but he has a list:
-- Burn down the den.
-- Deal with the evil still stalking the woods.
-- Call Mom.


I'd been hesitant to start reading this because while I typically LOVE Audrey Faye's writing, I've never really been a fan of shape shifters.

However, there are exceptions to every rule, and I ought really have known better. I finally picked this up when I needed some light reading for my vacation as Audrey Faye usually delivers that quite nicely. I think it took me about 5 (cell-phone sized) pages to get absolutely positively thoroughly HOOKED! This is her best work since the witches, and in fact it is INCREDIBLY similar to the witches in both atmosphere and character interactions. Granted, this necessarily has some significantly darker moments, but Audrey Faye's amazing gift in writing relationships and human interactions shines through bright and clear from the very beginning.

I laughed out loud on numerous occasions. I cried on at least one. I grew to love the characters. I never wanted the book to end. There were some elements I would have liked elaborated on (e.g. the dominants in the woods), but I trust Audrey Faye's pacing, that we'll get to hear more about them in the later books.

WHY did it take me so long to get started on this series? Of course, the good thing is that this means I now have another two books waiting for me. Excellent!
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2019-07-17 10:52 am

The Quite Nice and Fairly Accurate Good Omens Script Book - Neil Gaiman & Terry Pratchett

Title: The Quite Nice and Fairly Accurate Good Omens Script Book
Author: Neil Gaiman, Terry Pratchett
Genre: Play, Paranormal
Rating: 4/5
# pages: 512
Date read: July 2019

According to "The Nice and Accurate Prophecies of Agnes Nutter, Witch" (the world's only completely accurate book of prophecies, written in 1655, before she exploded), the world will end on a Saturday. Next Saturday, in fact. Just before dinner.

So the armies of Good and Evil are amassing, Atlantis is rising, frogs are falling, tempers are flaring. Everything appears to be going according to Divine Plan. Except a somewhat fussy angel and a fast-living demon—both of whom have lived amongst Earth's mortals since The Beginning and have grown rather fond of the lifestyle—are not actually looking forward to the coming Rapture.

And someone seems to have misplaced the Antichrist . . .


Disclaimer - I actually haven't read the original book yet! I kept meaning to, but suddenly clips from the new series (which I also haven't seen yet) were EVERYWHERE and I had to know what the fuss was all about.

As it was, I really enjoyed it. I know that it was naturally quite significantly abridged, but honestly I wasn't really reading it for the story (I'll pick up the original book for that) but to put the gifs and youtube clips into context. And for that purpose, it worked beautifully. I still want to watch the series, and I still want to read the original book, but this will tide me over nicely, until I get the chance to do either.
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2013-12-28 07:07 pm

At Knit's End - Stephanie Pearl-McPhee

Title: At Knit's End: Meditations for Women Who Knit Too Much
Author: Stephanie Pearl-McPhee
Genre: Crafts, Non-fiction
Rating: 3/5
# pages: Audiobook ~4hrs
Date read: December 2013

Knitting finally takes its rightful place on the spectrum of personal obsessions, alongside golfing, fishing, and gardening. The tangled life of the knitter is the subject of inspired nuttiness in these 300 tongue-in-cheek meditations from the self-proclaimed yarn harlot, Stephanie Pearl-McPhee.

As any knitter can attest to, this is an activity fraught with guilt, frustration, over-optimism, sly deception, and compulsion, along with passionate moments of creative enlightenment. To soothe the unraveled knitter's soul, Pearl- McPhee has selected some of her favorite quotes to cast off from, and then, like the standup comic of the knitting world, she rants, raves, and reflects on common experiences that are sure to leave avid knitters in stitches.

Not a book I'd normally go for, but I've become really fond of the "Yarn Harlot"'s writing, so I thought I'd give it a chance. It was funny, and had me laughing out loud on several occasions, but it really is just a bunch of meditations. No plot, no story, no nothing... just some statements and situations to ponder over.

However, it did prove that while I do knit a lot - according to Stephanie's definition, I don't knit too much ;)

This version was read by Stephanie herself, which meant extra charm and a strong Canadian accent :)