Wednesday, March 26, 2025

Can't-Wait Wednesday: A Drop of Corruption by Robert Jackson Bennett, A Billion Butterflies by Jagadish Shukla, & Strangers in the Land by Michael Luo

 Can't-Wait is a weekly meme hosted by Wishful Endings that spotlights exciting upcoming releases that we can't wait to be released!

A Drop of Corruption by Robert Jackson Bennett
Publication: April 1st, 2025
Del Rey
Hardcover. 480 pages.
Pre-order: Bookshop.org | Amazon

From Goodreads:
"In the canton of Yarrowdale, at the very edge of the Empire’s reach, an impossible crime has occurred. A Treasury officer has disappeared into thin air—abducted from his quarters while the door and windows remained locked from the inside, in a building whose entrances and exits are all under constant guard.

To solve the case, the Empire calls on its most brilliant and mercurial investigator, the great Ana Dolabra. At her side, as always, is her bemused assistant Dinios Kol.

Before long, Ana’s discovered that they’re not investigating a disappearance, but a murder—and that the killing was just the first chess move by an adversary who seems to be able to pass through warded doors like a ghost, and who can predict every one of Ana’s moves as though they can see the future.

Worse still, the killer seems to be targeting the high-security compound known as the Shroud. Here, the Empire's greatest minds dissect fallen Titans to harness the volatile magic found in their blood. Should it fall, the destruction would be terrible indeed—and the Empire itself will grind to a halt, robbed of the magic that allows its wheels of power to turn. Din has seen Ana solve impossible cases before. But this time, with the stakes higher than ever and Ana seemingly a step behind their adversary at every turn, he fears that his superior has finally met an enemy she can’t defeat.
"

I've already read this one (and my review will actually be up soon) but I'm still so excited for it to be released! 

A Billion Butterflies: A Life in Climate and Chaos Theory by Dr. Jagadish Shukla
Publication: April 22nd, 2025
St. Martin's Press
Hardcover. 288 pages.
Pre-order: Bookshop.org | Amazon

From Goodreads:
"From an electrifying new voice in epic fantasy comes The Raven Scholar, a masterfully woven and playfully inventive tale of imperial intrigue, cutthroat competition, and one scholar’s quest to uncover the truth. Let us fly now to the empire of Orrun, where after twenty-four years of peace, Bersun the Brusque must end his reign. In the dizzying heat of mid-summer, seven contenders compete to replace him. They are exceptional warriors, thinkers, strategists—the best of the best. Then one of them is murdered. It falls to Neema Kraa, the emperor’s brilliant, idiosyncratic High Scholar, to find the killer before the trials end. To do so, she must untangle a web of deadly secrets that stretches back generations, all while competing against six warriors with their own dark histories and fierce ambitions. Neema believes she is alone. But we are here to help; all she has to do is let us in. If she succeeds, she will win the throne. If she fails, death awaits her. But we won’t let that happen. We are the Raven, and we are magnificent."

This sounds so interesting! I've never given all that much thought to the history of weather prediction and all that comes along with that, so this sounds like it could be a really informative read. 

Strangers in the Land: Exclusion, Belonging, and the Epic Story of the Chinese in America by Michael Luo
Publication: April 29th, 2025
Doubleday
Hardcover. 560 pages.
Pre-order: Bookshop.org | Amazon

From Goodreads:
"'What history should be--richly detailed, authoritative, and compelling.'—David Grann, author of The Wager and Killers of the Flower Moon

Strangers in the Land tells the story of a people who, beginning in the middle of the nineteenth century, migrated by the tens of thousands to a distant land they called Gum Shan­––Gold Mountain. Americans initially welcomed these Chinese arrivals, but, as their numbers grew, horrific episodes of racial terror erupted on the Pacific coast. A prolonged economic downturn that idled legions of white workingmen helped create the conditions for what came next: a series of progressively more onerous federal laws aimed at excluding Chinese laborers from the country, marking the first time the United States barred a people based on their race. In a captivating debut, Michael Luo follows the Chinese from these early years to modern times, as they persisted in the face of bigotry and persecution, revealing anew the complications of our multiracial democracy.

Luo writes of early victims of anti-Asian violence, like Gene Tong, a Los Angeles herbalist who was dragged from his apartment and hanged by a mob during one of the worst mass lynchings in the country’s history; of demagogues like Denis Kearney, a sandlot orator who became the face of the anti-Chinese movement in the late-1870s; of the pioneering activist Wong Chin Foo and other leaders of the Chinese community, who pressed their new homeland to live up to its stated ideals. At the book’s heart is a shameful chapter of American history: the brutal driving out of Chinese residents from towns across the American West. The Chinese became the country’s first undocumented immigrants: hounded, counted, suspected, surveilled.

In 1889, while upholding Chinese exclusion, Supreme Court Justice Stephen J. Field characterized them as “strangers in the land.” Only in 1965 did America’s gates swing open to people like Luo’s parents, immigrants from Taiwan. Today there are more than twenty-two million people of Asian descent in the United States and yet the “stranger” label, Luo writes, remains. Drawing on archives from across the country and written with a New Yorker writer’s style and sweep, Strangers in the Land is revelatory and unforgettable, an essential American story.
"

This is another one that I think will be incredibly enlightening and will have so much to learn from. Hopefully I'll have a chance to check it out!

Monday, March 24, 2025

Blog Tour + Excerpt: The Keeper of Lonely Spirits by E.M Anderson

 

Welcome to the first of several blog tours stops that I'll be sharing on the blog over the next couple weeks! Today I'm sharing The Keeper of Lonely Spirits by E.M. Anderson, a new cozy fantasy about story centered around a lonely immortal ghost hunter who spends his days helping ghosts cross over. Things change, however, when he discovers that there are people who could actually care about him in this world, and he must grapple with everything that comes with these new circumstances. You can find some more information about the book and author below, as well as an excerpt!
Happy reading!

ABOUT THE BOOK:
Title: THE KEEPER OF LONELY SPIRITS
Author:  E.M. Anderson
Pub. Date: March 25th, 2025
Publisher: MIRA
Pages: 
400
Find it: HarperCollins | Amazon | Barnes & Noble | Bookshop.org


SYNOPSIS:
"For fans of UNDER THE WHISPERING DOOR by T.J. Klune, the sweet comfort of THE VERY SECRET SOCIETY OF IRREGULAR WITCHES is combined with the endearing grump of A MAN CALLED OVE, in this cozy fantasy about an immortal ghost hunter who must forgive himself for his tragic past in order to embrace his found family.

In this mesmerizing, wonderfully moving queer cozy fantasy, an immortal ghost hunter must confront his tragic past in order to embrace his found family.

Find an angry spirit. Send it on its way before it causes trouble. Leave before anyone learns his name.

After over two hundred years, Peter Shaughnessy is ready to die and end this cycle. But thanks to a youthful encounter with one o’ them folk in his native Ireland, he can’t. Instead, he’s cursed to wander eternally far from home, with the ability to see ghosts and talk to plants.

Immortality means Peter has lost everyone he’s ever loved. And so he centers his life on the dead—until his wandering brings him to Harrington, Ohio. As he searches for a vengeful spirit, Peter’s drawn into the townsfolk’s lives, homes and troubles. For the first time in over a century, he wants something other than death.

But the people of Harrington will die someday. And he won’t.

As Harrington buckles under the weight of the supernatural, the ghost hunt pits Peter’s well-being against that of his new friends and the man he’s falling for. If he stays, he risks heartbreak. If he leaves, he risks their lives."



Excerpt:

A spirit was lurking in the stairwell of the historic steps on Savannah’s waterfront.

    For months, the steps had been even more treacherous than usual. Not only tourists but folks who had lived in Savannah all their lives had slipped going up or down—skinned knees, scraped hands, laughed nervously and said they must have missed a stair or misjudged the height. A few accused friends of pushing them, but said friends vehemently denied it, accusing the accusers of clumsiness in turn.
    At last, a tourist had broken a leg and threatened to sue the city. Never mind the signs at either end, warning users the steps were historical and therefore not up to code. The signs probably would have prevented the success of such a lawsuit, but the city, tired of complaints, hung caution tape across the stairwell, and closure signs for good measure, and turned their attention to other things.
    Unbeknownst to them, the unassuming old white man standing before the steps in the wee hours of a mild April morning hoped to solve their problem before the sun rose.
    He didn’t look like a ghost-hunter. He was tall and thin, with blue eyes, a hawkish nose, and thin lips that rarely smiled. Just now, a messenger bag was slung over his shoulder. Dressed in flannel, jeans, and work boots, he looked like a farmer—which he wasn’t but had been in his boyhood some two centuries ago.
    Now he was a groundskeeper. At Colonial Park Cemetery for the present, but not for much longer if all went well this morning.
    He thumbed up the brim of his flat cap, contemplating the stairwell and the spirit therein. No corporeal form, but a haze of color and smell and emotion, a rotted greenish brown that smelled like Georgia’s coastal salt marshes but more. The whole stairwell was mucky with fear. Windows rattled in the buildings on either side.
    The groundskeeper glanced down the street, saw no one, lifted the caution tape and stepped under it.
    A cloud of fear enveloped him. Rot oozed on his tongue, a phantom feeling of sludge. When he’d been young and freshly cursed, the spirits’ swell of emotion had overwhelmed him. He’d drowned in it, unable to separate the feelings of the dead from his own. They’d scared him, the feelings. The voices, not that they were precisely voices. For decades, he’d avoided them when he could, ignored them when he couldn’t. Even Jack had never known about them.
    These days, the dead comforted him: company he didn’t fear losing and never got to know too well. The closest to death he ever came. A reason for him to live, if there were a reason when life had been too long already.
    Of course, there was the curse. But the curse wasn’t a reason to live so much as the thing keeping him alive.
    The windows rattled harder. The rusting metal handrail in the center of the steps groaned.
    The groundskeeper sucked in his cheeks, hoping he at last had good information. He’d spotted the spirit right off, soon as he’d visited the east end of River Street, but he’d had a devilish time finding anything out about it. When his usual hunt through libraries and newspapers failed him, he’d resorted to riding around with the tourists on three of Savannah’s many ghost tours. The last had set him on the right track, after two hours on a cramped trolley beside an Ohio teen who never once let up complaining.
    This ghost tour was nothing, the teen had said. He’d spent loads of time in the cemetery back home, and it was way scarier. He’d seen ghosts at home. He’d thought they were going to see one on the tour, too, and didn’t their guide have any better ghost stories?
    The groundskeeper, of course, had actually seen several spirits on the tour. But in the absence of anyone under age twelve, he was the only one. As the trolley bumped over the cobbles, tilting alarmingly on the steep ramp down to River Street, the tourists saw the still water, the three-story riverboat Georgia Queen docked alongside the quay, the dark windows of the nineteenth-century storefronts lining the near side of the street. The groundskeeper saw the dead.
    Most ghost tours—most ghost stories—were largely hogwash, but they often contained nuggets of truth. In this case, the guide had told the tragic tale of two tween girls who had disappeared less than a year ago. The police had barely bothered looking for them; the disappearance had never been solved. Their ghosts had allegedly been spotted over a dozen times in the last six months, always on the waterfront: they’d ask strangers for help, only to vanish when people tried to take a closer look. Hogwash—partly. The spirit in the stairwell was a newer one, young and scared, so the groundskeeper had investigated any disappearances reported in Savannah in the past year. In a newspaper article dated nine months back, he’d found a small paragraph mentioning the disappearance of two tween girls and instructing anyone with information to go to the police. Less than a week later, one girl had been found, traumatized but alive, at which point all information about the incident had dried up. The other girl, the groundskeeper reckoned, had never been found and was likely dead.
    What there were of the spirit’s memories fit such a story. It remembered neither life nor death, only the confused terror of its last moments. The clearest glimpse the groundskeeper had gotten was the frightened face of a girl: the one who’d been found. This, then, might well be the girl who hadn’t.
    He’d returned to the waterfront this morning to find out. To send her on, if he could, into whatever awaited in the hereafter, before she did something worse than break a tourist’s leg.
    “Layla Brown,” he said.
    The spirit twisted toward him. He let out a soft breath. Finally. The right name. A name alone often wasn’t enough to calm a spirit, but names had power, his mam had always said. This spirit’s name had been buried nearly as deep as his own: Peter Shaughnessy, a name no one now living knew and the last connection he had—aside from an old pocket watch—to his family and the place he’d been born and raised and cursed.
    “Layla Brown,” he repeated more forcefully.
    The spirit shuddered. The nearest window splintered.
    “Sure, there’s no need for that. Ain’t here to bother you none. Here to help, is all.”
    She hung over him like a storm cloud. His heart stuttered, but he reassured himself that she couldn’t touch him. His messenger bag was filled with iron, salt, yellow flowers, various herbs.
    She could bust a window over his head, though. If she was stronger than he thought, she could whip up a wind that’d send him tumbling down the steps, same as if she’d pushed him herself.
    “Died bad, it seems,” he said softly. “Never found. That right?” The rot soured, her fear tinged with regret. She wasn’t strong enough to take form, but a faint whisper echoed in his ears. Even that much took more power than most ghosts had, but speech took less than corporeality.
    Keisha.
    And he knew what she wanted.
    “They found Keisha,” he said. “Whatever happened to you, she didn’t share in it.”
    The spirit wheeled and shifted. Wind moaned, ruffling his shirt and the caution tape behind him. Images flashed before his eyes like a slideshow. That same frightened face he’d seen before: Keisha. A rough hand gripping a thin wrist. The steps, slick with rain. A sudden burst of pain in her temple, a scream, sneakers squeaking. Then, nothing.
    She was remembering her death.
    The wind howled in the stairwell. The groundskeeper slipped, gripped the shaking handrail. Shivered, blinked the images away before they could overwhelm him.
    “Layla!” he shouted. “Layla Brown!”
    A window shattered. The groundskeeper ducked, hoping the building was empty at this hour. Glass rained on his cap. She’d gripped onto his words about what had happened to her, same as she’d held tight to her fear the past nine months. If he didn’t remind her of something else soon, there’d be no calming her.
    He dug into his messenger bag, searching for the beaded bracelet he’d stashed there yesterday afternoon. He hadn’t wanted to use it, if he didn’t have to, aware of its importance and concerned so small a thing might be destroyed or lost in the confrontation.
    “Layla Brown,” he repeated, more forcefully than ever as the wind threatened to swallow his voice. The caution tape fluttered, ripped itself from its fastenings, and blew away. “Look here.”
    He thrust the bracelet out.
    The wind died. The windows stopped rattling. The handrail stilled. A thin, butter-yellow strand of affection threaded through the greenish brown of the spirit’s fear.
    A new memory emerged. Two girls, younger, maybe ten or so, singing loudly and off-key to a pop song as they braided embroidery floss into friendship bracelets. They shouted out the chorus and fell giggling to the ground, pelting each other with lettered beads.
    The bracelet in the groundskeeper’s hand was grubbier now. The embroidery floss was fraying; the lettering on one of the beads had worn away. But it was still legible.
    Best friends 4ever.
    Keisha Adeyemi had tied it to a fence post during the candlelight vigil for Layla Brown held outside their middle school not two days ago.
    “Keisha’s all right,” the groundskeeper said. “Newspaper didn’t say much but that she’d been found, but she left that for you.”
    The spirit softened. The rotten fearful smell lessened, the feeling of sludge on his tongue with it. He breathed deep. Used to it, he was, after dealing with the dead for so long, but it was a relief nonetheless when they calmed down.
    “She’s all right,” he repeated. “But you been scaring people— hurt some of ’em, too. Aye, you have.”
    She rattled a window, not as vigorously as before, annoyed with the accusation. She’d never hurt anyone in her life, she insisted.
    “In life, maybe not. Now you have. Best for you and everyone else if you let go of all that fear and move on, now you know Keisha’s all right.”
    The handrail groaned, swaying back and forth. The nearest support rattled, then ripped out of the ground, bending the rail and leaving a crack behind. For a moment, he thought he was losing her again.
    Then the shaking stopped.
    Eyeing the ghost, the groundskeeper bent to examine the crack. Wedged into the stone was a friendship bracelet matching the one in his hand. More of the lettering was worn away; the braiding was frayed and broken. The groundskeeper plucked it carefully from the stone with a handkerchief, like it was made of diamonds and pearls instead of embroidery floss and plastic beads. The spirit sighed around him.
    “This one’s yours, is it?” She confirmed it. He hesitated. “You understand,” he said, “likely they won’t find who done this to you even if I send it along.”
    She agreed, going gray like the Spanish moss draping Savannah’s many live oaks. Not scared, now. Just sad and regretful, wishing she weren’t dead.
    The groundskeeper ignored that particular wish. His own wants, to the extent he allowed himself any, tended the opposite way. He empathized with the dead, understood them. But he envied them, too.
    “No helping that, now. I’ll make sure whoever you want to have it gets it. Promise. But you got to let go. All right?”
    She twisted over the twin bracelets in his hands, faintly yellow again. Glad to know her friend was okay, if nothing else.
    He wished he could do more for her. Spirits of children were his least favorites. Not because of the spirits themselves—they were no worse, nor better, than any others. He just didn’t like knowing how young they’d died, and so often terribly.
    “Tell me about Keisha,” he said.
    She didn’t speak, of course. Instead, she shared memories. Two girls on the swing set, daring each other to jump off the higher they flew. Painting each other’s nails in a bright purple bedroom. Holding hands, skipping home from school in the rain. In every memory, both of them, together.
    The groundskeeper’s insides twisted. It’d been a long time since he’d been that close with anyone. He said nothing, did nothing, merely stood as silent witness to the ghost’s memories of the friend she was leaving behind.
    The spirit glowed softly gold, shimmering like morning mist.
    As the memories faded, she faded alongside them, until at last she winked out.
    The stairwell was dark and empty, the air clear. Layla Brown’s fear had gone along with her.
    The groundskeeper breathed deep, feeling like a weight had lifted off him. For a moment, he was satisfied. Another spirit sent on, at peace now, he hoped. Living folks saved further trouble, even if none of them realized it.
    Then he looked at the bent handrail, the busted support, the shattered glass, and he sighed. Easier to deal with a haunting’s aftermath when the spirit was confined to a cemetery, where there was less to destroy and destruction could more easily be explained by natural phenomenon.
    He stuck the support back in the stone and reattached the rail, swept the glass to the side. He found the caution tape a ways down the street. Best he could, he hung it back across the stairwell’s entrance before trudging uphill and uptown to tie the two friendship bracelets back on the fence by the school.

Excerpted from THE KEEPER OF LONELY SPIRITS by E.M. Anderson. Copyright © 2025 by E.M. Anderson. Published by MIRA, an imprint of HTP/HarperCollins.


ABOUT THE AUTHOR:
E.M. Anderson (she/they) is a queer, neurodivergent writer and the author of The Remarkable Retirement of Edna Fisher. Her work has appeared in SJ Whitby’s Awakenings: A Cute Mutants Anthology, Wyldblood Press's From the Depths: A Fantasy Anthology, and Dark Horses: The Magazine of Weird Fiction. They have two master’s degrees and a feral passion for trees, birds, pole fitness, and Uncle Iroh. You can find them on Instagram, BlueSky, and Tumblr at @elizmanderson.

Find E.M. Anderson online: Author Website | Facebook | Instagram | Tumblr | Bluesky

















Thursday, March 20, 2025

Review: Once Was Willem by M.R. Carey

Once Was Willem by M.R. Carey
Publisher: Orbit
Publication Date: March 5th, 2025
Paperback. 320 pages.

About Once Was Willem (from the publisher):

"Presenting an enthrallingly dark medieval fantasy – a fable of twisted folklore, macabre magic and the strangest of found families –  from M. R. Carey, author of the million-copy bestseller, The Girl With All the Gifts.

Eleven hundred and some years after the death of Christ, in the kingdom that had but recently begun to call itself England, I, Once Was Willem, rose from the dead to defeat a great evil facing the humble village of Cosham. The words enclosed herein are true.

I speak of monsters and magic, battle and bloodletting, and the crimes of desperate men. I speak also of secret things, of that which lies beneath us and that which impends above. By the time you come to the end of this account you will know the truth of your own life and death, the path laid out for your immortal soul, your origin and your inevitable end. You will not thank me."

Once Was Willem is a medieval, dark fairytale-esque story that blends an atmospheric setting with a self-aware style of storytelling to create a unique fantasy horror set in twelfth-century England. Carey once again demonstrates his ability to craft not just a vivid fantasy world, but an entirely unique and vibrant reading experience.

This story follows Once-Was-Willem, previously known as Willem Turling, a young boy who died at a young age and whose parents grieved him so much that they visited a sorcerer to beg him to raise him from the dead and bring him back to them. The sorcerer did as asked (with his own payment in return, of course), but what showed up on Willem Turling's parents' doorstep was nothing like they bargained for, and they turned the monster that was once their son out. From there, our story begins.

Much like in the Rampart Trilogy, the writing style of Once Was Willem is tailored to match the setting and adopts a more formal, medieval tone while maintaining a highly accessible style. As a result, Once Was Willem was an entirely immersive experience for me and fully drew me into Willem's tragic and compelling journey. 

Once-Was-Willem's voice is entirely captivating. He comes across as both innocent in some ways and deeply wise in others. Much of his experience is shaped by the cruelty of how he has been treated by the world around him--from being shunned and feared by everyone, including his parents--and through this his patience, empathy, and tolerance really shine through. Once-Was-Willem is of course very much the heart of this story, and following him through all of his struggles made for an exceptionally compelling experience. There's also a found family aspect of this book that I think worked really well to show how connections can be formed, and it was nice to see Once-Was-Willem's ability to forge new connections with others who have not turned their back on him.

I also really loved the fairytale/folktale-like quality of this book, which I found only enhanced the entire reading experience and made it feel like something classic in the making. This is a relatively dark journey for a majority of the book, though there are some more positive moments sprinkled throughout that I felt offered a nice balance. We also get to explore some really fascinating themes in Once Was Willem, such as an exploration of power, fate, worth, connections, and much more.

The only thing that didn't work as well for me with this story was simply that I occasionally found my interest flagging depending on what was happening in each chapter. For instance, in some we spend time with Once-Was-Willem in his own journey, whereas others feature Willem relaying happenings of things happening elsewhere to other characters. Although most chapters featured compelling plot points or told us more about different characters, there were times when I just didn't find certain areas as interesting and I found it a little harder to get through them. That being said, I never truly disliked any aspect of this book, and the overall experience was well worth the read. 

Overall, Once Was Willem is memorable tale that features an even more unforgettable protagonist is sure to leave an impression on any reader. If you enjoy dark fairytales, well-crafted characters, and thoughtful and thought-provoking narrative, then be sure to check to out Once Was Willem

*I received a copy of Once Was Willem in exchange for an honest review. This has no affect on my opinions.*

Buy the book: Amazon | Bookshop.org

Wednesday, March 19, 2025

Can't-Wait Wednesday: The Raven Scholar by Antonia Hodgson, The Hollow Half by Sarah Aziza, & Big Chief by Jon Hickey

 Can't-Wait is a weekly meme hosted by Wishful Endings that spotlights exciting upcoming releases that we can't wait to be released!

The Raven Scholar (Eternal Path Trilogy #1) by Antonia Hodgson
Publication: April 15th, 2025
Orbit
Paperback. 672 pages.
Pre-order: Amazon | Bookshop.org

From Goodreads:
"From an electrifying new voice in epic fantasy comes The Raven Scholar, a masterfully woven and playfully inventive tale of imperial intrigue, cutthroat competition, and one scholar’s quest to uncover the truth.

Let us fly now to the empire of Orrun, where after twenty-four years of peace, Bersun the Brusque must end his reign. In the dizzying heat of mid-summer, seven contenders compete to replace him. They are exceptional warriors, thinkers, strategists—the best of the best.

Then one of them is murdered.

It falls to Neema Kraa, the emperor’s brilliant, idiosyncratic High Scholar, to find the killer before the trials end. To do so, she must untangle a web of deadly secrets that stretches back generations, all while competing against six warriors with their own dark histories and fierce ambitions. Neema believes she is alone. But we are here to help; all she has to do is let us in.

If she succeeds, she will win the throne. If she fails, death awaits her. But we won’t let that happen.

We are the Raven, and we are magnificent.
"

My thoughts: I read this one early and absolutely devoured it. This is such a great new fantasy and I can't recommend it enough. I can't wait for it to be released!

The Hollow Half: A Memoir of Bodies and Borders by Sarah Aziza
Publication: April 22nd, 2025
Catapult
Hardcover. 400 pages.
Amazon | Bookshop.org

From Goodreads:
"With the lucidity of a poet and the precision of a journalist, Sarah Aziza embarks on a quest to understand her family legacy, tracing three generations of diasporic Palestinians—from Gaza to the Midwest to New York City, and beyond

In October 2019, Sarah Aziza, daughter and granddaughter of Gazan refugees, is hospitalized for an eating disorder. This brush with death becomes a rupture which brings both her personal and ancestral past into vivid presence. The hauntings begin in the hospital cafeteria, when a cup of apricot yogurt stirs the taste of Sarah's childhood, summoning the familiar voice of her deceased Palestinian grandmother. In the months following, as she responds to a series of ghostly dreams, Sarah unearths family secrets that force her to confront the ways her own trauma and anorexia echo generations of Palestinian displacement and erasure—and how her fight to recover builds on a century of defiant survival, and love.

As silences break, heartbreak opens onto possibility. Sarah begins to grasp the ways her legacies echo and inform one another—through tragedy, and through love. She begins to resist the forces of assimilation, denial, and patriarchy, learning to assert herself in new ways that honor both her ancestors and herself.

Weaving timelines, languages, and genres, The Hollow Half probes the contradictions and contingencies that create “history.” This stunning debut memoir ends in a cri de coeur for a world in which every body has a right to contain multitudes.
"

My thoughts: It sounds like this memoir is going to cover a lot of different incredibly important topics and experiences, and I'm really hoping for a chance to read it soon!

Big Chief by Jon Hickey
Publication: April 8th, 2025
Simon & Schuster
Hardcover. 320 pages.
Amazon | Bookshop.org

From Goodreads:
"There There meets The Night Watchman in this gripping literary debut about power and corruption, family, and facing the ghosts of the past.

Mitch Caddo, a young law school graduate and aspiring political fixer, is an outsider in the homeland of his Anishinaabe ancestors. But alongside his childhood friend, Tribal President Mack Beck, he runs the government of the Passage Rouge Nation, and with it, the tribe’s Golden Eagle Casino and Hotel. On the eve of Mack’s reelection, their tenuous grip on power is threatened by a nationally known activist and politician, Gloria Hawkins, and her young aide, Layla Beck, none other than Mack’s estranged sister and Mitch’s former love. In their struggle for control over Passage Rouge, the campaigns resort to bare-knuckle political gamesmanship, testing the limits of how far they will go—and what they will sacrifice—to win it all.

But when an accident claims the life of Mitch’s mentor, a power broker in the reservation’s political scene, the election slides into chaos and pits Mitch against the only family he has. As relationships strain to their breaking points and a peaceful protest threatens to become an all-consuming riot, Mitch and Layla must work together to stop the reservation’s descent into violence.

Thrilling and timely, Big Chief is an unforgettable story about the search for belonging—to an ancestral and spiritual home, to a family, and to a sovereign people at a moment of great historical importance.
"

My thoughts: I've heard some good things about this one and it sounds like it'll touch on some interesting topics. 

Monday, March 17, 2025

Review: When the Moon Hits Your Eye by John Scalzi

When the Moon Hits Your Eye by John Scalzi
Publisher: Tor Books
Publication Date: March 25th, 2025
Hardcover. 336 pages.

About When the Moon Hits Your Eye (from the publisher):

"The moon has turned into cheese.

Now humanity has to deal with it.

For some it’s an opportunity. For others it’s a moment to question their faith: In God, in science, in everything. Still others try to keep the world running in the face of absurdity and uncertainty. And then there are the billions looking to the sky and wondering how a thing that was always just there is now... something absolutely impossible.

Astronauts and billionaires, comedians and bank executives, professors and presidents, teenagers and terminal patients at the end of their lives -- over the length of an entire lunar cycle, each get their moment in the moonlight. To panic, to plan, to wonder and to pray, to laugh and to grieve. All in a kaleidoscopic novel that goes all the places you’d expect, and then to so many places you wouldn’t.

It’s a wild moonage daydream. Ride this rocket."

When the Moon Hits Your Eye explores the age-old question we've always wondered and joked about: what if the moon was made of cheese? Okay, maybe you haven't always wondered that, but I'm sure we've all at least heard a joke about that once or twice in our lives, and honestly, I welcomed the opportunity to explore it.

In When the Moon Hits Your Eye, the moon, inexplicably and unpredictably, turns to cheese one day. No one knows why, no one knows how, and no one has any idea what to do about it or what it means for humanity–or even what type of cheese it is. All anybody knows is that it's a big globe of cheese up there and the universe no longer acts in any form of a predictable manner, which throws everything else into question about the universe.

I'm generally not someone who is drawn to books that lean in an overtly more humorous nature (for instance, as much as I want to love Pratchett and do love every quote I hear from his books, I have a hard time actually sitting through and reading them through), but I found the premise for this one so enticing that I just had to see what Scalzi would do with this topic. I found the result to be one that has a fantastic blend of humor, commentary, a bit of drama here and there, and a lot more in between that really focused more on what the world would do if something as ridiculous as the moon turning to cheese actually happened.

This book is basically a slew of connected chapters that each visits a different person. Oftentimes we are already familiar with the subject of a chapter because they've been mentioned in a previous chapter, or they are in some way connected to something that's come before, and altogether it felt very much like a series of vignettes. I think my favorite part was that this book travels across people of all different jobs and locations, from astronauts who can no longer fly to the moon because the moon is, well, cheese, to a retired philosopher professor in the middle of the country to the President's reaction and so much more.

It was genuinely fun and quite fascinating to see all the different types of reactions that. may occur as a result of such an event. Fromageries are suddenly swamped with business as tourists are suddenly all about cheese. Books about the moon make their authors new stars. TV and movie execs are receiving a relentless amount of pitches for shows and movies all about cheese has something to do with cheese (with titles most often in the form of some sort of pun, of course). And then some people don't see how it affects them whatsoever and pretty much carry on with their lives. I was most interested to see how and why people would or would not believe it actually happened, especially given how reactions towards science and evidence has been a bit hit or miss among various populations in recent years, and I appreciated seeing this addressed in the boo.

When the Moon Hits Your Eye is a bit irreverent in parts, and I appreciated the break from more serious works sometimes. However, as I mentioned, it's also quite timely and really does dive deep into some interesting political and social commentary as a result of people's reactions to moon's new cheesy makeup. Altogether this made for a sincerely compelling read that left me fully entertained. There were a few chapters as we neared the end of the book that started to feel a bit overdone or repetitive, but all in all there's not too much to complain about with this one as long as you go into it with an open mind and can appreciate that the entire thing is just the slightest bit silly. But we as readers are here for the journey and the experience, not so much the scientific accuracy of it. 


*I received a copy of When the Moon Hits Your Eye in exchange for an honest review. This has no affect on my opinions.*

Buy the book: Amazon | Bookshop.org

Wednesday, March 12, 2025

Can't-Wait Wednesday: Eat the Ones You Love by Sarah Maria Griffin, The Pretender by Jo Harkin, and The Golden Road by William Dalrymple

  

Can't-Wait is a weekly meme hosted by Wishful Endings that spotlights exciting upcoming releases that we can't wait to be released. 


Eat the Ones You Love by Sarah Maria Griffin
Publication: April 22nd, 2025

Tor Books
Hardcover. 288 pages.
Pre-order: Amazon | Bookshop.org

From Goodreads:
"A twisted, tangled story about workplace love-affairs, and plants with a taste for human flesh

During a grocery run to her local shopping center, Shell Pine sees a ‘HELP NEEDED’ sign in a flower shop window. She’s just left her fiancé, lost her job, and moved home to her parents’ house. She has to make a change and bring some good into her life, so she goes inside and takes a chance. Shell realizes right away that flowers are just the good thing she's been looking for, as is Neve, the beautiful florist who wrote the sign asking for help. The thing is, Neve needs help more than Shell could possibly imagine.

An orchid growing out of sight in the heart of the mall is watching them closely. His name is Baby, and the beautiful florist belongs to him. He’s young, he’s hungry, and he’ll do just about anything to make sure he can keep growing big and strong. Nothing he eats – nobody he eats – can satisfy him, except the thing he most desires. Neve. He adores her and wants to consume her, and will stop at nothing to eat the one he loves.

This is a story about possession, and monstrosity, and working retail. It is about hunger and desire, and other terrible things that grow.
"

This sounds delightfully weird and I'm totally here for it.


The Pretender by Jo Harkin
Publication: April 22nd, 2025
Knopf
Hardcover. 496 pages.
Pre-order: Amazon | Bookshop.org

From Goodreads:
"A sweeping historical novel in the vein of Hilary Mantel and Maggie O’Farrell set during the time of the Tudors’ ascent. The Pretender tells the story of Lambert Simnel, who was raised in obscurity as a peasant boy to protect his safety, believed to be the heir to the throne occupied by Richard III, and briefly crowned, at the age of ten, as King Edward the Sixth, one of the last of the Plantagenets.

In 1480 John Collan’s greatest anxiety is how to circumvent the village’s devil goat on the way to collect water. But the arrival of a well-dressed stranger from London upends his life forever: John is not John Collan, not the son of Will Collan, but the son of the long-deceased Duke of Clarence, hidden in the countryside after a brotherly rift over the crown, and because Richard III has a habit of disappearing his nephews. Removed from his humble origins, sent to Oxford to be educated in a manner befitting the throne’s rightful heir, John is put into play by his masters, learning the rules of etiquette in Burgundy and the machinations of the court in Ireland, where he encounters the intractable Joan, the delightfully strong-willed and manipulative daughter of his Irish patrons, a girl imbued with both extraordinary political savvy and occasional murderous tendencies. Joan has two paths available her—marry, or become a nun. Lambert’s choices are similarly stark: he will either become King, or die in battle. Together they form an alliance that will change the fate of the English monarchy.

Inspired by a footnote to history—the true story of the little known Simnel, who was a figurehead of the 1487 Yorkist rebellion and ended up working as a spy in the court of King Henry VII— The Pretender is historical fiction at its finest, a gripping, exuberant, rollicking portrait of British monarchy and life within the court, with a cast of unforgettable heroes and villains drawn from 15th century England. A masterful new work from a major new author."

I have been craving a "sweeping historical novel" so this sounds absolutely perfect. There's something special about sinking into a compelling historical fiction story, so hopefully this one is as good as it sounds. 


The Golden Road: How Ancient India Transformed the World by William Darymple
Publication: April 29th, 2025
Bloomsbury
Hardcover. 432 pages.
Pre-order: Amazon | Bookshop.org

From Goodreads:
"The internationally bestselling author of The Anarchy returns with a sparkling, soaring history of ideas, tracing South Asia's under-recognized role in producing the world as we know it.

For a millennium and a half, India was a confident exporter of its diverse civilization, creating around it a vast empire of ideas. Indian art, religions, technology, astronomy, music, dance, literature, mathematics and mythology blazed a trail across the world, along a Golden Road that stretched from the Red Sea to the Pacific.

In The Golden Road, William Dalrymple draws from a lifetime of scholarship to highlight India's oft-forgotten position as the heart of ancient Eurasia. For the first time, he gives a name to this spread of Indian ideas that transformed the world. From the largest Hindu temple in the world at Angkor Wat to the Buddhism of China, from the trade that helped fund the Roman Empire to the creation of the numerals we use today (including zero), India transformed the culture and technology of its ancient world – and our world today as we know it.
"

I am always up for some more history, and this sounds like it will be fascinating!

Tuesday, March 11, 2025

Review: The Third Rule of Time Travel by Philip Fracassi

The Third Rule of Time Travel by Philip Fracassi
Publisher: Orbit
Publication Date: March 18th, 2025
Paperback. 336 pages.

About The Third Rule of Time Travel:

"Rule One: Travel can only occur to a point within your lifetime.
Rule Two: You can only travel for ninety seconds.
Rule Three: You can only observe. The rules cannot be broken.

In this riveting science fiction novel from acclaimed author Philip Fracassi, a scientist has unlocked the mysteries of time travel. This is not the story you think you know. And the rules are only the beginning.


Scientist Beth Darlow has discovered the unimaginable. She's built a machine that allows human consciousness to travel through time—to any point in the traveler's lifetime—and relive moments of their life. An impossible breakthrough, but it's not perfect: the traveler has no way to interact with the past. They can only observe.

After Beth's husband, Colson, the co-creator of the machine, dies in a tragic car accident, Beth is left to raise Isabella—their only daughter—and continue the work they started. Mired in grief and threatened by her ruthless CEO, Beth pushes herself to the limit to prove the value of her technology.

Then the impossible happens. Simply viewing personal history should not alter the present, but with each new observation she makes, her own timeline begins to warp.

As her reality constantly shifts, Beth must solve the puzzles of her past, even if it means forsaking her future."

I'm not usually a big time travel person, but I’m happy to report that I had a great time with The Third Rule of Time Travel. It's a thought-provoking read that centers around an interesting concept and will keep readers engaged the entire time.

Beth Darlow and her husband, Colson, have together managed to achieve the seemingly impossible and unachievable: time travel. Their discovery allows travelers to visit the past and observe events, but they cannot interact with them or travel into the future. They also cannot choose which moment in their past they visit—this is seemingly selected at random by the machine—or maybe by their own minds. Since the technology is still in its infancy, they have been trying to understand how and why certain moments are chosen and whether there's a way to do more than just observe. There are three rules involved in their time travel: 1) travelers can only visit their own memories; 2) they may travel for a maximum of 90 seconds; and 3) no interacting with the past.

After Beth’s husband dies in a car crash, she’s left to continue their research alone. As tensions rise at work, she begins pushing herself harder and harder, which results in her taking more and more frequent trips in the time travel machine. As a result, the more Beth travels, the more her own sense of reality seems to be getting twisted, and things quickly spiral into something far more complicated.

This was a quick read for me—not because it’s simple or basic, but because Fracassi writes it in a way that almost feels like a thriller. It kept pulling me into the story with each new development, and I had a somewhat compulsive need to just keep flipping those pages in order to continue on this warped journey with Beth.

I found Beth's drive very realistic to her role and therefore her character was extremely believable. She is a determined scientist and, especially after her husband's death, she's desperate to see their invetion succeed. Because of this, she will stop at seemingly nothing to make that happen, and the way she is portrayed made me fully believe that. As the only living test subject now that her husband cannot also travel, she bears the full brunt of what those trips do to a person, and it starts to take an extreme toll on her both mentally and physically--which only adds to the increased pressures from her boss. What I most enjoyed about Beth's character was that she's not a perfect, polite protagonist, but rather someone who is blunt, bold, flawed, and who isn't willing to take anyone's sh*t--and most importantly, she's a very real, flawed human being, which I really appreciated.

Fracassi does a fantastic job of gradually revealing new layers of learning more about this time machine and leading the reader through all of the twists that will you questioning everything you’d been reading. There are a few moments in particular that made me question my own perceptions and understanding of what was happening and what would come next, and I loved that aspect. I also loved the way this book explored memory, reality, and timelines. There’s a lot of mind-bending moments in this that were so incredibly thought-provoking.

I have said many times over the years that I’m not really a big fan of time travel in general. It’s a difficult concept to get right, and there are often too many loopholes and complications that end up leaving the story feeling fractured and difficult to connect with. Some books take a very fantastical and magic-based approach to it, whereas others take a scientific approach. The Third Rule of Time Travel takes a scientific approach, and I have to say that it tackles it via this route extremely well. The general discussions around time travel—its abilities, limitations, purposes, dangers—felt grounded and realistic, like something you’d actually expect normal people to discuss, which made it feel that much more compelling to me.

Overall, The Third Rule of Time Travel is a strong, compelling new time travel-focused book that I think both time travel and non-time travel fans could appreciate. If this sounds like something you might be interested in, I'd definitely add it to your TBR!

*I received a copy of The Third Rule of Time Travel in exchange for an honest review. This has no affect on my opinions.*

Buy the book: Amazon | Bookshop.org