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Tuesday, April 9, 2024

Book Review: Twin Consequences of that Night by Pippa Roscoe

Twin Consequences of That Night (Harlequin Presents, 4188)Twin Consequences of That Night by Pippa Roscoe
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

I was kind of terrified to read this book, mostly because the last time I tried to read a Harlequin Presents novel, it didn't go well. But when it comes to this book, I enjoyed this one. I loved reading about Nate and Gabi falling in love again for the kids, Ana and Antonio. I felt like we were seeing these two characters that were torn after their one-night stand and then coming back together and working on their marriage of convenience to falling right back in love with each other, even helping each other out with their problems.

My favorite character has to be Gabrielle. She's strong, tough, and cares about her kids, but at the same time thanks to her mother, she has trust issues that stem from her mother teaching her how not to trust people. She was sent to Nate to seduce him, and even though they did, at the end, her mother called her a whore (to her face, which sucks) and once she found out she was pregnant, she moved out of her mother's house, and her brother, Javier, helped her move on so she can think about her kids and put their needs first and not putting what she wants to do. When Nate came in the picture, she laid out the ground rules for their marriage:

1. They must tell the truth to each other, no matter what it is.
2. They must be together until the kids are twenty-one years of age

Those were the rules, and they followed them to the T-well, until Nate hid his illness from Gabi. She started to have terrible thoughts about what he was up to, and when she got that phone call from Hope that Nate was well, she was so confused and kicked him out of the house. Nate was confused about why she was kicking him out, and even the kids noticed that their Papa wasn't there, Ana cried and wanted him, while Antonio was silent and didn't want to add to his sister's pain. When Nate finally explained-to the whole world at the court case against her mother, Renata Casas, she understood and they have been together ever since, since I was glad about.

Another part I liked about this book was when Antonio had that UTI scare. I liked how the both of them came together and took him to the best hospital to make sure he was alright, and Nate didn't even move and kept gently touching Gabi and even looking over her every once in a while.

This book surprised me in a lot of ways, and I'm glad that I read it, and now I wanna try more books by this author.

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Sunday, April 7, 2024

Book Review: Prince of Fools (The Red Queen's War #1) by Mark Lawrence

Prince of Fools (The Red Queen's War, #1)Prince of Fools by Mark Lawrence
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

It took me a week to read it, but I liked it. It was action-packed and it was really fun to read and enjoy. I did like Jalan and Snorri, but to me, Jalan just kept trying to run away and not deal with his problems--all he wanted to do was go back to the Red March or go find one of the DeVeer sisters to chill and have a drink with. I felt like Snorri just took over the battles and fights and whatnot, while he was worried about the women and wine and the food he wanted to eat, all because of his title and what he was comfortable with.

And throughout the book, I felt so sorry for Snorri. He had to deal with Jalan and he was fighting to get back to his family, only for it to turn around and find out that they are all dead, and now he has Asluag in his ear while Jalan has an angel named Baraquel in his. I did like the way the gods were used in the book-it was very interesting, along with the magic system. But other than that...I really was annoyed with Jalan and how he kept running away from pretty much every single thing he could think of, yet he could run to every single girl he saw and bed them without a care in the world. It annoyed me to the point that I really didn't like him as much, and I started to really like Snorri a lot more because at least Snorri did something instead of whining, complaining about him, and doing absolutely nothing to help Snorri in his task to finding his family and killing the man that did it.

So I didn't point out everything wrong with Jalan, but let's turn our attention to Snorri, whom I really liked the most out of the two. Snorri was a gentleman, even though he was a Norseman. He dealt with Jalan, even when he didn't want to, and he forced him to think on his toes instead of with his lower half. I really enjoyed being immersed in the stories that he told about his travels and trials when he was walking towards the Black Keep to save his wife and son, only to turn around and do it again, but with a couple men and his whit about him. I hope he'll be alright in the second book, and I really did enjoy this one. Snorri was my favorite, and Jalan just kept getting on my last nerve throughout the book.

But hey, at least they have a tavern right now, right??? Right??

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Sunday, March 24, 2024

2 Book Reviews: For Butter or Worse & Once Upon a Dream

For Butter or WorseFor Butter or Worse by Erin La Rosa
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

The enemies to lovers were there. It was beautiful. I loved Nina and Leo's banter. But the fake dating just threw me off to the point that it made me mad. I'm sorry, you have to plan out your dates and let the paparazzi and everyone believe that you're dating, and not organically date and fall in love? Um, no. I'm sorry, I don't like the fake dating trope. It is confusing to me and I don't understand why they had to do it.

Now I loved how headstrong Nina was. She tries so hard to stay away from Leo and wants nothing to do with him. She wants to focus on her restaurant. But after quitting her cooking competition show after Leo's digs, her publicist came up with a great, but really stupid idea: why don't you two fake date after the paparazzi caught y'all in a very precarious situation. No. I'm sorry, but no. That is the stupidest idea I've ever heard. But the more I kept reading, the more annoyed I was about this trope and how I felt like it didn't work with the enemies-to-lovers trope as well. It didn't. It just confused me more, like why couldn't they fall in love organically, and then they can go on dates and whatnot? That was what I was hoping for. But instead, they just went on these really cute dates, not gonna lie, and then they fell in love.

Leo just...Leo felt boring. Yes, I felt sorry for him with his anxiety attacks and him just taking care of his father's restaurant, but he felt like cardboard and really wasn't interesting and someone I didn't think would work as Nina's fake boyfriend. I was falling asleep each time his parts came up. I wanted him to do something fun and exciting and do something grand...but I felt like in this book he didn't, which was sad because Nina needed someone like that.

I am glad they got together, but that middle part just...kinda ruined it, tbh. I wanted violence from cardboard Leo, but he just...didn't do anything. It made me upset that he didn't, but then he had the anxiety attack, which let him off the hook. But it did start with Nina sending that text message to the wrong person, and no, I'm not blaming her, but it did start with her.

I'm glad they aren't doing a show together anymore and all that, but I don't like the fake dating trope at all, but I'm going to give it another go to see if it's just this book that made me hate it.

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Once Upon a DreamOnce Upon a Dream by Liz Braswell
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

I'm so glad I FINALLY read this book because I enjoyed it. This is my first time reading a Sleeping Beauty retelling, and I enjoyed it. This one is about Sleeping Beauty (Aurora Rose) and how she was stuck in a dream world she created, but the only way to get out of this world she created, she had to defeat Maleficent. See, in the other world where she is sleeping, Aurora is sleeping and Maleficent is supposed to be dead...or is she? In the dream world that Aurora created, Maleficent is her aunt (weird, I know), they hold balls and dinners and stuff every month, and Maleficent keeps telling Aurora that she cannot go outside to the Outside World because "it's dangerous." Well one day, Aurora starts to realize that things aren't what they seem, and that everyone in the castle is starting to either disappear or act strange.

Disappear is right. One night Aurora goes up a tower and finds her dear Auntie Maleficent killed someone and dips her staff into the blood...and Maleficent gets younger and powerful. So what does Aurora Rose do? She escapes and goes to the Outside World, which was supposed to be poisonous, dangerous, and painful...but is cool, has breathable air, and animals that are alive and well.

It looks like "Aunt Maleficent" was lying to her.

While Aurora explores this Outside World, that's when she meets Prince Philip, and the two decide to team up and fight Maleficent, and also get her memories back. The more she's around Philip, the more she starts to fall for him, even try to remember him, but some parts cracked me up, like when she told him to shut up when she wanted to smack him upside his head....there were many funny parts in this book, but I cannot for the life of me remember. I do remember the parts when the memories of her life outside of the dream world and the Outside World collided and she had headaches. All of that-I got worried that she wasn't going to survive it. Still, she recovers, and the two move on and meet the fairies that were "bad" in Maleficent's world, but in reality, they were Aurora's real aunties, even though she was upset that they didn't tell her about the deal and why they had to take her away from her parents.

Speaking of her parents, they were in the book for a short moment before they were killed by Maleficent, which sucked by the way. But other than that, the fight between Aurora Rose, Maleficent, Prince Philip and the fairies was kind of a let down, tbh. I was hoping for the same thing to happen in the Outside Dreamworld, but instead it just...kinda fell flat because of the fact that it took Aurora to create a spindle, tear the needle off from the thing, and then stab her with it. Yes, it was fun and interesting and a nice twist, but the way Maleficent died...kinda made me a tiny bit sad, but at the end it ended nicely, without Aurora and Philip still together, but not married (thank god, tbh.).

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3 Book Reviews, 1 Post: A Venom Dark and Sweet, Hooky, and My Lady Jane

A Venom Dark and Sweet (The Book of Tea, #2)A Venom Dark and Sweet by Judy I. Lin
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Once again, this had The Apothecary Diaries vibes, but with a LOT of those C-Drama vibes, and it was a really good ending to the duology. I enjoyed the duel POVs with Kang and Ning, and how during Kang's POV, he was struggling with the position of being the Crown Prince, and all he wanted was to be his dad's son and help him rule the country. But thanks to someone leaving messages in a very delicious cake, there is something wrong in the court. Kang tries to find out what's going on, but he can't until he is sent to get an orb that Chancellor Zhang wanted...or so he thought.

Instead, the one who wanted the artifact was none other than the serpent Gongyu himself, who was possessing his father. When it was revealed that it was Gongyu who wanted all of this, Kang was shocked and also knew that everything that happened to Ning was a lie, because he was there when everything went down in the first book.

While all of this is happening, Ning and her sister, Shu, travel with Princess Zhen and her bodyguard/lover, Runyi, along with Astronomer Wu, to stop the poisoning and to stop Gongyu, but after the events of the first book, when Ning saved her sister from the serpent's bite, only to get bitten by the serpent herself, Ning goes around and tries to help people affected by the poison tea bricks and the serpent. One she didn't save, another she did, and when she reunited with Kang, she hated him in the beginning, but then as she works with him to get what the both of them needed and to stop Gongyu from devouring a thousand souls so he can come back to life.

Even though she didn't have her magic, I'm glad that Ning tried her best with what she got, which was fine with what she borrowed, which was something I really liked. I truly enjoyed this book and I'm glad I read it, can't wait to read what else Judy L. Lin writes.

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Hooky (Hooky, 1)Hooky by Míriam Bonastre Tur
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

OMG THIS BOOK WAS SO CUTE.

I really enjoyed the artwork, the colors, and the characters. All of them spoke to me in ways I'd never thought I would like, but I loved every bit of it.

Hooky was really funny and also very cozy. My favorite character in this whole comic was Princess Monica. She knew what she wanted, and even though she was scared and then got brave, she was the best character ever, and I wanted to hang out with her. My second favorite character was Dani, who was very protective of her brother, and she also tried something new, which I enjoyed and also I liked her brother, Dorian.

This comic cracked me up, made me smile when the siblings did something, and this also made me glad that the second one is coming soon because I truly enjoyed where the story was going, and it made me want to pick up book two right now. I do have book three, but I wanna wait for book two to see how all of this picks up and ends.

I really enjoyed this comic, might be one of my new favorite comics that I've ever read in my life, and I need to read more.

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My Lady Jane (The Lady Janies, #1)My Lady Jane by Cynthia Hand
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

My Lady Jane was a fascinating and quick read about Queen Jane Grey, who was queen for nine days. But this book's twist is that her husband, Gifford (call him G), can turn into a horse. That's right, a horse. And Jane? She can turn into a ferret, which I did crack up when I read it. I liked how they kept Edward Tudor in the story turned him into a kestrel, and gave him his happy ending, because yes, dear reader, I was worried that they weren't going to give him that happy ending, but when they did, I was so glad, because now he can live out his best life with Grace and also his dog, Pet, who is with Elizabeth I (who, it turns out, is a cat. That we don't see.)

I liked how Jane was such a bookworm and how she put those book facts to the test, she was slowly but surely falling in love with G, who was in love with her, but each time they had time to be alone or to talk about anything, he'd turn into a horse and have to be a horse until nightfall. The escape from the castle when Mary, Bess and Edward's sister, marched her army and took over the castle and usurped the throne from Queen Jane, she refused to denounce her husband and was locked up in the Tower of London, when she was trying to think about escape when she turned into a ferret and thanks to G and Peter Barrister, the both of them escaped and went to find help, so they can find Edward and take the throne back from Mary.

My favorite thing that the Lady Janies does with these books is make them funny, yes, but also they incorporate history into these books and make it really fun, exciting, and also, make history fun. I learn so many things about the people they're writing about, and it makes me want to learn more about the real people they are writing about, because it was so much fun reading this book. I also like the part when it turns out that Mary was a grey mule and she stayed liked that in the end. I also like that Edward gave up his throne and gave it to Bess, whom it turns out was a cat, but she didn't really show it.

I did love all of the characters, but I loved the grandmother. She cracked me up the most and reminded me more of my grandmother, and it made me miss her. I've read My Plain Jane from these ladies, and I cannot wait to read more of this series from them.

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Tuesday, March 5, 2024

Book Review: A Magic Steeped in Poison by Judy L. Lin

A Magic Steeped in Poison (The Book of Tea, #1)A Magic Steeped in Poison by Judy I. Lin
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

This book had a whole bunch of C-Drama vibes and also a whole lot of The Apothecary Diaries vibes, which I love so so much, which I why when I picked this book up to read, I wasn't expecting it to be this good. I really enjoyed the competition that was going on to find the next Shennong-shi, and I also loved the political intrigue and everything. I'm so glad that I got the second book so I can read more of this series, and also enjoy this book as much as I did the first one.

I liked the concept of magic being used with tea because it was a very interesting competition, and learning about the many types of tea leaves that exist in this world is very interesting to me. Mix in the political intrigue and the love story between Ning and Kang/Bo, and this is a perfect book. I did enjoy seeing the people in the background of the Palace and how they helped with the competition, and how in the end Ning, the girl who came to this palace to compete so she can save her sister from poison, but at the same time, Ning is thrust into a terrible world of political intrigue, and meeting people that would do anything to kill her or thrown into the dungeons forever.

I wasn't expecting Ning to have a relationship with Princess Zhen and her bodyguard/lover, Ruyi. I thought the princess was boring and was just there for show, but when Ning finally met her and actually got to know her, it felt like Zhen could be her friend while she goes on this journey to win the tea competition and get her wish to save her sister, only for it fall in her face when the evil Chancellor decided to get rid of her for good, bringing up her mother and how it was supposed to be her sister that was supposed to compete, not her. Then he sentenced her to a lot of lashes that would kill her. But thanks to the Shadow and Princess Zhen, Ning left Jia, the capital, and went back home, after she discovered that the handkerchief her sister made for her had a recipe for an antidote-and all it took was some crushed pearls that Kang was giving to his soldiers, and it helped her get rid of the poison in Shu’s body.

In the process, she got hurt by the snake that was chasing after her sister, and now they are about to head on a journey to try and stop Prince Kang and save Jia. The whole entire thing kept me engaged and I wanted to read more, to see how this book will end, and I’m so glad that I brought the second book so I can read it, because it was so good that I was sucked into the world, and I didn’t want to leave it. I cannot wait to get back into this world, to see how all of this ends because this book was amazing and I enjoyed myself.

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Saturday, March 2, 2024

Book Review: Moriarty the Patriot vol. 2 by Ryosuke Takeuchi

Moriarty the Patriot, Vol. 2 (Moriarty the Patriot, #2)Moriarty the Patriot, Vol. 2 by Ryōsuke Takeuchi
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Reading the manga after watching the anime and remembering how it all went down was so fun--but also SHERLOCK HOLMES STOLE MY SKULL RING AND HE NEVER GAVE IT THE FRICK BACK.

(before you ask me how...I don't know how he stole it. He just did...darn it.)

Anyway, I read this after DNFing a boring book, and I'm glad I picked this book up. The beginning starts out with William being kidnapped--something I wasn't expecting, but I was wondering why the book started out like this, until I saw where it was going and how it all played out. I'm glad that Albert is now the leader of M16, the new shadow organization. And then once that story was over...we go to the Noathic...and the "werewolf" that ended up killing that guy and then everyone saw.

Seeing that storyline in the manga was pretty damn fun. I hated the Count and seeing Sherlock (WITH MY RING) show up and start to guess and go along with what was going on was so much fun to see, it was like I was watching the episodes all over again. I was waiting on Sherly to call William Liam, but then I realized that I had to wait for the other books to get to that, but I did enjoy how William and the others drove the Count to stab the dead body to make it look like he killed him right then and there. I was glad that he was exposed because I didn't like him.

The next one was basically a Study of Scarlet, but they called it 'The Study of S." I believe, and it was really funny seeing Sherlock and Mrs. Hudson and John getting together and Sherlock pulling a prank to see what John would do (WITH MY RING) and then the ending when he was falsely accused and arrested. Darn it. How will Sherlock get out of this one? I don't know, but I cannot wait to read more to find out.

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Tuesday, February 27, 2024

Book Review: A Touch of Ruin by Scarlett St. Clair

A Touch of Ruin (Hades x Persephone Saga, #2)A Touch of Ruin by Scarlett St. Clair
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

This book was all over the place. I felt like Persephone was making a whole bunch of mistakes and isn't giving a damn about the consequences, and she's not caring for herself. She's not even thinking straight when it came to her friends and her relationship with Hades. She's just doing everything and damning the consequences, which is very bad in my opinion. Every time she and Hades have a conversation, she's either holding back on him, or she's yelling at him, which really doesn't make any sense at all. Why fight him, then turn around and smash him after you get done yelling at him? What kind of relationship is that???

Then the whole thing with Apollo just really...confused me? Like she made a deal with him to be his friend for six months because you wanna save your friend Lexa-which will be my next point of discussion when I get to it-and when he agrees after you nearly take off his penis with your thorns, the first thing he does he take you to a club and forces you to judge a contest that shows how ruthless you can be...like sir? The hell is your damn problem? And he gets mad when she chooses the other guy over you...is you dumb??

The whole Lexa thing was just....plain weird and plain selfish. Lexa wanted to DIE, and yet Persephone tried everything in her power to save her, only for it to backlash in her face...and you want me to feel sorry for her? Really? 'Oh she needed to go through this' BULLSHIT. I felt like Persephone wasn't thinking with her brain or her heart, she just went through it without the consequences. She should've talked this through and not just jumped in, wholeheartedly, into this. If she did that, I think she would've been fine and the book would've been much better. Will I finish this series off? I might, but not for a minute because this book was a hella mess and it's my least favorite one out of the series.

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