As most of you will know, I tend to have a go at multiple reading challenges. This year I’ve added quite a few and even a few more throughout the year. Now that we are nearing the end of Augu…| A Dance With Books
Ambitious or It Couldn’t Quite Be What It Wanted To Be| The Corner of Laura
Recap: Witch Please by Ann Aguirre This was the book from my last TBR Jar Pick, and I am glad that I finally got to it. I really enjoyed this, it was funny and the romance was really sweet. It didn…| Pages & Procrastination
Adam Scovell’s third novel is loosely based on his own memories of growing up on the Wirral, Merseyside, and, through his usual mix of prose and photographic fragments, examines how a place a…| What I Think About When I Think About Reading
Four years ago I bought a book from Manchester’s Modernist Society shop about Wales’s modernist architecture (sort-of review here – I still haven’t completed my attempt at t…| What I Think About When I Think About Reading
Lucie McKnight Hardy’s debut novel weaves together a smattering of personal experience with folk horror tropes to create a quiet novel about revenge, belonging and control. It’s an unse…| What I Think About When I Think About Reading
Henry and Astrid: a psychiatrist and a singer, drawn together at one of her gigs into an unequal relationship. Told in alternating chapters, Henry’s relayed in the first person, Astrid’…| What I Think About When I Think About Reading
Another thing I enjoy doing around this time of year is making reading plans and forming TBR lists. As you’d have seen, I sometimes stick to the plans, but I never stick to TBR lists, lol, no matte…| Zezee With Books
I entered 2024 asking cautiously if it would like to be friends, to which it largely replied fuck no. Give it it’s due: it was different flavours of drama to the previous years and had excell…| onemore.org
Death Comes for the Archbishop is a retelling of the story of Catholic priests Jean-Baptiste Lamy and Joseph Projectus Machebeuf and their mission to New Mexico. Set in the period shortly after New…| What I Think About When I Think About Reading