Book Review: THE WEAVER AND THE WITCH QUEEN by Genevieve Gornichec

Did “The Witch’s Heart” break you into one thousand glittering pieces and you loved every moment of your shattering? Do you crave a Viking fix now that “The Last Kingdom” TV series is over? Do you believe a woman’s worth is independent from any men with whom she is associated? Do you appreciate trans representation in your reading? Does the idea of witches battling it out physically, magically, and psychically sound exciting to you?

Well then please come on over to one of my favorite books of 2023, “The Weaver and the Witch Queen!”

With a degree in history that focused on Vikings, Gornichec is a scholar of Norse mythology and Icelandic sagas. Using her studies for inspiration, this book is her version of the origin story of the actual historical figure of Gunnhild, Mother of Kings, from tenth century Norway. It’s historical fantasy, granting the story’s seeresses actual magical powers.

The story revolves around a blood oath three young girls take to swear themselves to always look out for one another. When one of them is captured and sold to slavers years later, the other two will do whatever is in their power to rescue her. This turns out to entail ensuring the assistance of King Eirik, named successor to the king of all of Norway. Eirik has his band of formidable supporters, all loyal to their king despite the shames of his own past, because they have had the opportunity to see what kind of person he truly is.

There is romance in this story, including an enemies-to-lovers arc. But the focus is the women learning to employ their unique skill sets in the name if rescuing their sworn sister, even if it means taking on multiple kings and sorceresses who stand in their way. It didn’t hit me as hard emotionally as the author’s debut novel did, but I was rapt, and definitely laughed out loud at some of the banter.

I realize we have a few months left in the year, but I have little doubt this book will wind up on my top ten list for 2023!

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Book Review: STRANGE SALLY DIAMOND by Liz Nugent

Strange Sally Diamond by Liz Nugent is a dark and suspenseful story about how abuse effects everyone directly and indirectly touched by it.

Sally is a neurodivergent character, whose “quirks” are thanks to an early childhood of extremely atypical socialization. Readers will root for Sally as she puts in the work to address her social and emotional issues (although, really, why can’t people just say what they mean, and mean what they say?!)

The more compelling story, though, was revealed in chapters that alternate with Sally’s, told from the POV of a character named Peter. This looks at what happens when a child witnesses horrible abuse presented as normal and acceptable. How does that affect a person’s development? How do they integrate into the world?

The subject matter in this book is very dark. I was mostly enjoying the story, but at the end, it seems like all progress gets set back to zero, which was kind of a letdown. But overall it kept me interested (and vaguely troubled!) all the way through.

CW: abduction, forced confinement, pedophilia, abuse (sexual, physical, emotional)

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Book Review: THORNHEDGE by T. Kingfisher

What if the princess was actually a changeling, dark and cruel by nature?

What if her toad-like fairy godmother put her to sleep in order to protect the world?

What if the princes and the knights didn’t realize the hedge of brambles and thorns to keep them out was for their own good?

🦹‍♀️🏰🪄🐸🍄🧚‍♂️🫅🕌

This reimagining of Sleeping Beauty contains dark things, because fairy tale, but it’s also bursting with charm and heart. You’ll feel for Toadling and Halim, and root for them to defeat the princess in the tower.

“It should have mattered. All that love and all that trying should have changed…something.

My mind wasn’t blown with how much I loved this like it usually is when I read T. Kingfisher novellas, but it was a pleasing tale nonetheless. Bonus points for Muslim representation.

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Book Review: CHLORINE by Jade Song

A classic trait of girlhood—forever confusing your desires with that of an older man’s.

Jade Song’s debut novel, “Chlorine”, is a bit like if you crossed “The Vegetarian” by Han Kang with “The Art of Starving” by Sam J. Miller.

🌿 + 🩻 = 🧜‍♀️

This is YA contemporary fiction about Ren Yu, who has loved mermaids ever since she was a little girl. She took to the water right away herself and now swims competitively on her school’s cutthroat swim team. As one of the school’s top swimmers, she has a parasitic relationship with her touchy-feely, quick-to-anger coach, Jim. She and her teammates follow very specific dietary protocols that vacillate between pasta parties and restricting to snacking on small portions of protein throughout the day. Her father leaves to return to China, she suffers a concussion that threatens her athletic career, and her family expects her to get into an Ivy League school. 🏊‍♀️🥜🥦🤕📑🙇‍♀️👩‍🎓 No pressure, right?

Amidst all this stress from a human life catering to human sensibilities and values, Ren Yu experiences an epiphany: she’s not actually a human after all, but has always been a mermaid herself. She is not afraid to take matters into her own hands in order to complete the transformation for her to transcend to her true form. 🩸🩸🩸

Star athletes had to be delusional enough to think they could withstand physics and gravity enough to fly up onto the first-place podium and shine with the sheer force of athletic ability; there was nothing more bold than a star, after all, visible with the human naked eye despite its death eons ago.

I found this to be a smart novel about the mental gymnastics that can be induced by the pressures and traumas of human adolescence.

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Book Review: THE LIES OF THE AJUNGO by Moses Ose Utomi

There is no water in the City of Lies.

Nigerian American author Moses Ose Utomi brings readers a powerful novella about a boy setting out to save his people, making allies, honing new (supernatural) skills, and uncovering devastating truths.

They knew that all of history was a lie told to instill fear in those whose fearlessness could have rewritten it.

This is the first in The Forever Desert series. I can’t say it has a happy ending, but it does have a hopeful one.

It had been so long since he’d had the freedom to cry. That’s what crying was—freedom. You could only cry when there were no more urgent responsibilities. Only when there was no one watching you who depended on your strength. Only when the people around you wouldn’t take advantage of your tears.

The story has action, magic, and found family, and is delivered like a fable imparting wisdom (as well as a few gut punches). This is the author’s first novella, and his first novel (the YA Fantasy Daughters of Oduma) was also published earlier this year. I’d say he’s worth keeping an eye on, for sure!

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Book Review: HOMECOMING by Kate Morton

“Homecoming” by Kate Morton is literary fiction featuring dual timelines, with a touch of mystery and a dash of family saga.

“Home is where the heart is, and the heart can be a dark and damaged place.”

In 1959, a family in Australia is found dead under suspicious circumstances, the youngest child missing. In 2018 a woman is just learning about this family history that her grandmother wanted to keep secret from her. Not everything was answered satisfactorily back then, but can she put all the pieces together now?

“There was no clear corollary between the two, and yet the first and firmest human addiction is to narrative. People seek always to identify cause and effect and then arrive at meaning…”

The overall story was pretty good (the mystery, the family tensions, the relationships), but honestly the choice to present much of the earlier timeline as a true crime book being read by characters within the story made for some boring reading. It wasn’t until around page 400 that things became more engaging.

“There was a truth observed by all good preachers, leaders, and salesmen: tell a good story, tell it in simple language, tell it often. That’s how beliefs and memories were formed. It was how people defined themselves, in a reliance upon the stories about themselves that they were told by others.”

Decent story, good prose, presentation was a swing and a miss (for this reader, at least)

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Book Review: A FACE LIKE GLASS by Frances Hardinge

We’re going backlist today, readers, but I was enamored with this wonderful and unique 2012 standalone YA Fantasy!

I swam across the torrent of my madness, and pulled myself upon the shore of a new and better sanity.

I think the YA categorization must be due to the protagonist’s age, not the sort of themes and issues it deals with. The overarching story is about a rebellion against an oppressive society. The dark aspects are navigated in a relatively gentle way–people die, but not in ways that are gruesomely depicted.

“Pull on a thread, and you pull the whole web. And then out come the spiders…”

Caverna is a city beneath a mountain. Its inhabitants do business with the outside world, but do not go there themselves. Children born there do not learn to mimic their caretaker’s faces, so they must be taught a repetoire of Faces to use at appropriate times (eg. Face No. 41, The Badger in Hibernation, a look of gruff interest).

Neverfell turned up in the Cheesemaster Grandible’s tunnels at the age of five with no memory of her life before, but it is clear she must have come from the outside because her face is constantly and effortlessly expressing the things she is thinking and feeling. This makes her an object of great interest and curiosity for many of Caverna’s denizens, but also puts her in a uniquely vulnerable position. Everyone else has only poker faces, after all, and you can imagine the court intrigue that ensues.

Neverfell wishes to learn where she came from, but whoever erased her memories the first time is willing to prevent that from happening by whatever means necessary.

This book is like what would happen if someone placed effervescent and earnest ingenue Anne of Green Gables in a world just as fantastical and mad, as whimsical and dangerous as the Tower in the Books of Babel by Josiah Bancroft. I loved the crazy cast of characters, from the Kleptomancer to the Cartographers. My favorite was the Grand Steward, though, who brought to mind Sheogorath of the Shivering Isles in the Elder Scrolls games. The leader of Caverna, the Grand Steward has learned to keep himself alive for centuries, but his body has been preserved at the price of his soul, and time has stolen from him the ability to feel any joy, pain, desire, or sorrow. Always alert for assassination attempts, he only allows one side of his brain to sleep at a time. When the right side of his brain sleeps, his right eye is open (being associated as it is with the left side of his brain), and the courtiers know to expect that Right-Eye will be cold but fair, logical to a fault. Left-Eye is the one responsible for any of their ranks falling into or out of favor on a whim.

Right-Eye was not amused. He had known for centuries that he could trust nobody but himself. Now he was seriously starting to wonder about himself.

The Grand Steward finds Neverfell of particular interest because by watching her face as she reacts to things, it’s almost as if he can feel those emotions for himself once again. She also presents him with a rare opportunity for some self-reflection.

Nobody in four hundred years had dared to look at him with such disappointment and saddened anger.

I found these things about the Grand Steward to be such a fun and spectacular part of the story!

A rollicking adventure that addresses some serious themes, the narration of this story was also very funny at times.

For the first time it occurred to Neverfell that perhaps he did not know what to do with stolen goods that did not stay where he put them but instead screamed, ran around, and threatened to eat his correspondence. Perhaps he did not really know what to do with people at all.

All around I found this to be an original, fun, and touching story.

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Book Review: ONE ITALIAN SUMMER by Rebecca Serle

Well color me pleasantly surprised!

For a while I thought this would be an average 3 star read for me, since some truly insufferable characters were being pretty evenly balanced with how well this book made me feel absolutely transported to Italy 🇮🇹🍝🌊☀️

But then, lo! The story includes the protagonist recognizing what about her life is problematic, and then her decision to address it, making it a more satisfying read.

Katy is 30 years old when her mother, Carol, dies. She is lost without “the love of her life”, the woman who had all the answers, the person she defined herself in relation to. She decides to go by herself to Italy on the trip she and her mother were supposed to take together. While there she meets, among other people…her mother, 30 years ago!

Katy is emotionally stunted, has dysfunctional family relationships, and makes some poor choices while grieving. But by whatever magic her trip to Positano has created to allow her to see a past version of her mother, Katy begins to see that Carol was also only human. She learns that she’ll need to work on herself and learn who she is now that her mother is gone before moving forward.

“She made me in her image, but she forgot the most important part. She forgot that one day she’d leave, that she already had, and then I’d be left with nothing. When you’re just a reflection, what happens when the image vanishes?”

This was a touching story featuring personal growth, set against the flavors of the Amalfi Coast. A great summer read!

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Top Ten Reads of 2023 (So Far)

The year is halfway over, and I’ve been reading more than ever! My goal was 60 books, and I’ve met that already in early July.

In no particular order, here are my top ten of the books I have read so far this year:

  1. “What Moves the Dead” by T. Kingfisher was the first book I read this year, and the first of this author’s work I have ever read, and she has since earned a place as an “auto buy” for me! This is a queer novella retelling of “The Fall of the House of Usher”
  2. “A Good Girl’s Guide to Murder” by Holly Jackson was a book club pick this year, and this YA murder mystery was perfect for fans of true crime
  3. “Remarkably Bright Creatures” by Shelby Van Pelt is heartwarming contemporary fiction featuring found family and a curmudgeonly octopus
  4. “Invisible Monsters Remix” by Chuck Palahniuk is one wild ride about loneliness, boredom, beauty, and attention, conveying important messages through the maddest of methods
  5. “Emily Wilde’s Encyclopaedia of Faeries” by Heather Fawcett is darkly delightful fantasy about a socially awkward academic who must learn to become part of a community, and featuring a charming romance (tbh, I enjoyed the ARC of the sequel even more, but the publish date for that one isn’t until January of 2024)
  6. “The Golden Spoon” by Jessa Maxwell is a cozy mystery that mixes Clue with The Great British Bake-off, with a dash of historical family saga
  7. “The Ferryman” by Justin Cronin is a standalone science fiction novel that deals with climate crisis, dystopia, and what makes for a meaningful life
  8. “Trust” by Hernan Diaz is literary fiction with a very creative structure about whose voices get heard, and what affords the power to effectively shape reality to one’s liking
  9. “The Mountain in the Sea” by Ray Nayler is science fiction that examines communion, consciousness, and control through the lenses of AI and a hyper intelligent octopus species
  10. “A House with Good Bones” by T. Kingfisher is Southern Gothic horror with wonderful characters, amusing narration, and a perfectly spooky vibe

Let’s see what the rest of year brings 📖📚