#bookreview

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Hey so I just remembered this app exists
ALSO I've started doing Book Reviews over on my website!!!! Subscribers get a new book rec in their inbox every month, along with a short story, a sample from my current WIP with 0 context, and updates on what I've been doing this month - you should check it out!

My 1st review is up, & there will be 2 this month, I think - my favourite will be featured in the newsletter!

https://artbooksandmadness.com/f/the-house-in-the-cerulean-sea-by-tj-klune

reviewed A Deadly Education by Naomi Novik (The Scholomance, #1)

Naomi Novik: A Deadly Education (Paperback, RANDOM HOUSE UK) 4 stars

A delicious coming of age magic school fantasy

4 stars

Young-adult fantasy told in first person through the eyes of El, a 3rd year (~16 years old) female student in the ‘Scholomance’, the magic school of the series title. We as reader are thrown directly into her life at the school, which is completely cut off from the outside world of the adult wizards (there are no teachers here). In this first book of the series, we are then taken a-pace through a series of the school’s non-stop horrors as we learn most of the students die in increasingly gruesome ways; there’s magical monsters at every turn, work assignments that turn deadly, contaminated food, bullies and cliques, and a good dose of adolescent angst. In fact, it’s all quite a good deal of macabre fun, and told with much delightful malice. One of the main themes is how much easier life is if you come from a position of privilege, …

I recently finished reading The 7 & 1/2 Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle by Stuart Turto on the recommendation of a friend. It's a whodunit in the time period of an Agatha Christie novel but has elements of The Omega Code crossed with Groundhog Day.

The premise is simple: the protagonist has 8 days to solve a murder, otherwise he'll start over with no memory of his previous attempt and have to try again.

It's quite an interesting way to tell a murder mystery story and without giving away any of the plot devices, the author chooses some interesting ways to integrate past, present, and future into telling the tale.

Part Downton Abbey(ish), part Demolition Man, with a little dash of Live. Die. Repeat thrown in for color, and I found it to be a unique new way to tell a murder mystery story for the modern age. …

Light from Uncommon Stars by Ryka Aoki

Don't read this book if hungry. This author writes about food in the way that Tolkien writes about trees: with exquisite and infuriating detail.

A queen of hell, a demon, a family of aliens, a homeless violinist, a doughnut store, video game music... it's so hard to tie this story down into a single review.

Just go with it. It'll be worth it.

🆕 blog! “Book Review: Somewhere To Be - Laurie Mather”
★★★★⯪

My friend has published their first novel - and it is a cracker! After a calamitous accident, the Fairy realm is cut off from the mundane world. Only one trickster remains, a sprite by the name of Mainder who is now trapped on our side. All seems to be going well in his little corner […]

👀 Read more: https://shkspr.mobi/blog/2024/08/book-review-somewhere-to-be-laurie-mather/