I want to start off by saying I really really enjoyed this book but I am but a humble critic and gotta let people know my thoughts. (The whole point of a review...)
It took about 75-100 pages to get fully invested in the plot and then I plowed through the rest of the story. By the end, it definitely felt like the lead up to a second novel - not quite a cliffhanger but definitely set up quite a bit of continuing plot.
This would've been a 5 star read but when you have a story that has prophecies as a plot device, it really forecasts the remainder of the story pretty loudly. It still had some solid twists but I felt like the pacing could have been a bit tighter towards the end. All-in-all, I'm excited for a sequel and would like to see the last two prophecies play out (Rayan/Lettle and Afa)
First read leading into Spooky Season 2024. This was a ghost/waking dream horror narrated by Pedro Pascal. I used to listen to horror podcasts very similar in premise to the radio program in this book so I really enjoyed the caller stories. Overall, the plot was a bit difficult to follow because the uncertainty of the main character's reality left me also trying to determine if what was happening was real or not.
This was a long-form essay on queerness and Dungeons & Dragons. It explored the history of the TTRPG, how it's become an outlet for queer folks depending on who they're playing with, some of it's problematic elements, and how it evolving over time.
As a big D&D fan myself, it suddenly makes sense that I regularly play what my DM and party members describe as a "disaster lesbian" (as a term of endearment of course)...
"The truth is that this was a story about many different things, but most of all about idiots. Because we’re doing the best we can, we really are."
I've always loved the thought of a bunch of characters that's lives overlap and they have no idea and the story slowly unravels from there. This story had that plus a host of other silly characters trapped in a hostage drama on the New Year's Eve Eve.
In a world where all sirens are Black women but not all Black women are sirens, this story tells the story of Travis the siren and her play-sister Effie (who is something else altogether). Maybe this one just wasn't for me. It felt like a combination of genres and blending of real-world issue and fantasy creatures that didn't quite stick the landing on anything in particular.
It's been a while since I've read a book that tells a full story, start to finish rather than a snippet of a character's story. Faustian bargains and immortality are your broad topics. I highly enjoyed this and could barely put it down. It does quite a bit of bouncing between past and present, so it can be jarring if you're not paying attention at the start of a chapter.
Schwab writes an EXCELLENT will they/won't they. It's got the just right amount of tension between that and the plot that quite literally fueled me to devour like 70% of the book in one sitting. Plus, THE ROMANCE IS IN THE PAST in reference to the present of the plot. Noting it's in the past, it's obvious that they will but I was so invested in figuring out how they got there (a well written and plausible enemies-to-lovers) and why it went wrong (further cementing the enemies bit).
If you'd told me at the beginning of the year I'd read two fungal-inspired horror novels, I wouldn't have believed you but here we are...
Very spooky and atmospheric until the last quarter of the book where it feels like a coin flip on whether our protagonist will live or die. Pretty gross descriptions of decay and rot (which I love in a scary story but I get it's not for everyone).
Please note, the first chapter of this book made me so angry that I rage cleaned my apartment for the rest of the evening.
Covering a range of topics from traditional gender roles, household task burden, and the act of taking another last name for example, I found myself re-interrogating a lot of things about heteronormative ideals of marriage.
A lighthearted story about a young woman moving into her uncle's bookshop after a string of misfortune and then helping her uncle once she's back on her feet. Very cozy and sweet.