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429 reviews
Cackle by Rachel Harrison
Also, there was SOOO much potential for going deeper into the lore of Sophie’s magic and the history of the town, but none of that was explored. Annie’s powers were never explained or defined. Too many elements felt half-baked and under developed.
2.5
I really like Rachel Harrison’s writing and for the first half of the book I sympathized with Annie as a protagonist, but this didn’t really work for me. It wasn’t particularly scary, thrilling, or interesting. It dragged and felt repetitive in multiple places. There are some good cozy/spooky vibes at the beginning that might suit your October reading, but it gets a little old after a bit. I think Sophie and Annie both start out as likable and as the book goes on their actions get more and more cruel and I felt bad for people around the town, who are seemingly terrorized by them. I needed to be given more of a reason to root for both of them. The development of Annie’s character and her coming into her own happened too slowly and then all at once in a way that was paced very strangely.
Between the World and Me by Ta-Nehisi Coates
4.5
A powerful set of memoir-style essays that explore Nehisi-Coates’ experiences growing up black in America, written to his son. This was so poignant and heartfelt. There were moments when I wasn’t fully following where he was going or the meaning was a little muddied, but I marked up all over my e-copy and will definitely be returning to this again.
“I don’t know that I have ever found any satisfactory answers of my own. But every time I ask it, the question is refined. That is the best of what the old heads meant when they spoke of being “politically conscious” - as much a series of actions as a state of being, a constant questioning, questioning as ritual, questioning as exploration rather than the search for certainty.”
“I don’t know that I have ever found any satisfactory answers of my own. But every time I ask it, the question is refined. That is the best of what the old heads meant when they spoke of being “politically conscious” - as much a series of actions as a state of being, a constant questioning, questioning as ritual, questioning as exploration rather than the search for certainty.”
Blue Sisters by Coco Mellors
Okay, so Avery, the eldest sister, is a lesbian character who cheats on her wife with a man after reluctantly telling her wife they can start trying for a baby. She is supposed to be this high-strung, extremely organized character who suddenly, out of nowhere, destroys her life by cheating on what seems to be a whim. I’m sure the cheating was supposed to be another form that her addictive personality takes, and it seemed to be framed as an escalation of her more “acceptable” coping mechanisms of secretly smoking cigarettes/stealing designer stuff, but to me it came out of nowhere. I get what Mellors is going for, but I hated it. It’s possible to write messy lesbian characters without their messiness manifesting in sleeping with men.That element of representing a lesbian character felt mishandled to me.
It’s also possible to write conflict in romantic relationships WITHOUT USING CHEATING!!!!!
And, let it be known, I would’ve been just as bothered if Avery cheated with a woman. Grief is not an excuse to be a piece of shit. I have lost a sibling, and my grief has never driven me to cheat on my partner. The moment a character cheats on their loving partner, I personally lose all sympathy for them and ability to connect with them. It is my absolute biggest pet peeve in any media and it typically ruins things for me. And then Avery, who is supposedly the intelligent one, leaves the Plan B wrapper in the trash in her house, where her wife FINDS IT? Like, did her brain fly out her skull alongside her morals? Even though the resulting fight was satisfying, mostly because Chiti responded in a completely justified manner, I hated it with a burning passion.
Overall, I really enjoyed the book and I think it was an improvement on Cleopatra and Frankenstein, but I can’t give it 5 stars. I acknowledge that this is mostly a me thing and it will not bother most people because (UNFORTUNATELY) cheating happens all the time and it’s just a fact of some people’s life, and that’s fine. But for me, cheating is usually a deal breaker for me fully liking a piece of media.
4.0
I was a big fan of Cleopatra and Frankenstein because I often love messy, insufferable characters whose lives are the kind of thing I would never want to experience but that I would love to hear someone else dish about over some chips and salsa and margs. Like a Normal Gossip episode in book form. That being said, Blue Sisters is just as dramatic but had an extra layer of depth with discussions of grief and addiction that I genuinely liked. This one, with its more limited cast and scope, felt more focused and less scattered than C&F did. I know a lot of people don’t like Coco Mellors’ prose, but I think it’s effective in the types of stories she’s telling. I think it’s flowery enough to be immersive but not to the point where it impacts the flow of the scene. One of this book’s biggest strengths is its pacing. Mellors excellently weaves flashbacks and memories in with the present and she builds great tension through where she ended off each chapter to swap to the next sister’s POV. I was invested enough in the lives of each sister (mostly Bonnie, tbh) and I needed to know how things would end.
This isn’t the author's fault but WOW I was not a fan of the audiobook narrator. I swapped back and forth between reading with my ears and my eyeballs and I would definitely recommend reading a physical/ebook copy rather than listening to it, if that’s an option for you. Her delivery was so dry and the accents were painfully inconsistent.
If not for the treatment of one of the characters in this book being so awful, this could have been a 5 star read. I hated everything about how this character was handled. Spoilers below.
It’s also possible to write conflict in romantic relationships WITHOUT USING CHEATING!!!!!
And, let it be known, I would’ve been just as bothered if Avery cheated with a woman. Grief is not an excuse to be a piece of shit. I have lost a sibling, and my grief has never driven me to cheat on my partner. The moment a character cheats on their loving partner, I personally lose all sympathy for them and ability to connect with them. It is my absolute biggest pet peeve in any media and it typically ruins things for me. And then Avery, who is supposedly the intelligent one, leaves the Plan B wrapper in the trash in her house, where her wife FINDS IT? Like, did her brain fly out her skull alongside her morals? Even though the resulting fight was satisfying, mostly because Chiti responded in a completely justified manner, I hated it with a burning passion.
Overall, I really enjoyed the book and I think it was an improvement on Cleopatra and Frankenstein, but I can’t give it 5 stars. I acknowledge that this is mostly a me thing and it will not bother most people because (UNFORTUNATELY) cheating happens all the time and it’s just a fact of some people’s life, and that’s fine. But for me, cheating is usually a deal breaker for me fully liking a piece of media.
My Sister, the Serial Killer by Oyinkan Braithwaite
3.0
The pacing of this story is excellent - I flew through it. I enjoyed the writing and the commentary on sisterhood, jealousy, and toxic family dynamics, but I just didn’t feel connected to the characters.
Nicked by M.T. Anderson
Did not finish book. Stopped at 0%.
Did not finish book. Stopped at 0%.
My brain felt like soup listening to this on audiobook, definitely need to read this one with my eyeballs.
Small Things Like These by Claire Keegan
4.5
short, bittersweet, and powerful.
alexa play take me to church by Hozier.
alexa play take me to church by Hozier.
Celestial Monsters by Aiden Thomas
Theo is the protagonist, but I think Xio is the heart of the story. Xio was a really likable character for me, even when they were in their lil villain era. In my personal perfect world, we could’ve had an entire trilogy where Xio gets to be evil for an entire second book before having their redemption in the third book. Celestial Monsters takes place over the course of a few weeks, and that’s just too quick of a time frame for Xio to realistically turn evil AND turn good again. But I get the time constraints of a duology so I’m trying not to let that bother me too much.
Okay, indulge me as I rant about how I might have fixed this problem:
I think maybe a time jump between the first and second book, where the semidioses are in captivity for much longer (say like 3-4 months?). Maybe the Obsidians are treating the semidioses even worse than we see in Celestial Monsters, but they promise Xio they’re being taken care of and refuse to let Xio see how rough the group is. Xio obviously wants revenge, but they’re shown to be someone that was uncomfortable with the semidios’ suffering. Maybe we have a way that the Obsidians can steal the semidios’ power or use them as an energy source? Something evil without being too dark - this is still YA. This not only adds to the “badness” of what Xio has done, but it also raises the stakes for Theo, Niya, and Aurelio with an urgency to save them. I even think that having a couple Catra/Adora-esque encounters where Xio is embracing their new alliance with the Obsidians could have added to the complexity of their redemption and provided some really cool moments for them to clash with the main trio. This set-up also gives us the opportunity for a dramatic reveal for Xio. As an audience, it wouldn’t be shocking to us that the semidioses are actually being treated like garbage, but for Xio, who has a vested interest in believing the lies that their new family is telling them, it would be foundation-shaking to find out that they are being lied to and they are directly contributing to the suffering of their former peers (and this would also mirror the way that Xio felt by being lied to about who they are their whole life). If they finally see how badly the semidioses are being treated in captivity, that can be their breaking point to finally leave the Obsidians and commit to the double cross.
Obviously, things don’t have to play out exactly like that. BUT I kept thinking about what I would’ve done to give Xio more time to be the bad and also make their redemption more satisfying. I would be curious to see how other people felt about their character arc, because I think it was the most interesting in the book and I mostly just wanted more time for them to have really cool and satisfying moments as someone who becomes more powerful but also. in the end, uses that to do what’s right - and embrace their found family that was built in the first book.
Anyways, all these thoughts don’t mean that I didn’t enjoy the book or Xio’s arc. I typically have the most to say about books that are on the CUSP of 5 stars for me but had just one or two things that bothered me and I wanted to be better. This duology has soooo much good going for it but I think it could have been a 5 star (and even among my all-time-favorites) if it had just gone a little bit further with the depth of Xio’s arc.
adventurous
emotional
funny
hopeful
inspiring
tense
fast-paced
- Plot- or character-driven? A mix
- Strong character development? Yes
- Loveable characters? Yes
- Diverse cast of characters? Yes
- Flaws of characters a main focus? No
4.0
Absolutely THRILLED to report that this book is just as good, if not better than the first. Aiden Thomas does an amazing job of building upon the groundwork that was laid in the Sunbearer Trials.
The thing I’m most impressed by is how much ground is covered in this book. There is so much action, expansion of the world, and beautiful character moments. The plot moves at a BREAKNECK pace, but even then we still got quiet moments between our main cast and moments of reflection for our more complex villains. The romance between Theo and Aurelio doesn’t take up too much time, but is still a welcome aspect of the book and very wholesome. I maintain that this series could not be more perfect for a TV or movie adaptation because Thomas’s writing played in my head like a movie. He’s just that good.
The thing I’m most impressed by is how much ground is covered in this book. There is so much action, expansion of the world, and beautiful character moments. The plot moves at a BREAKNECK pace, but even then we still got quiet moments between our main cast and moments of reflection for our more complex villains. The romance between Theo and Aurelio doesn’t take up too much time, but is still a welcome aspect of the book and very wholesome. I maintain that this series could not be more perfect for a TV or movie adaptation because Thomas’s writing played in my head like a movie. He’s just that good.
Something I love about Aiden Thomas’s books is how subtle and mature his incorporation of queerness and queer themes are. Our characters are grappling with the desire to belong, the feeling that you were made to be “bad” or “wrong” and the struggle to figure out who you are. These are, obviously, things that anyone can relate to, but I know the queer kiddos out there who read this will especially connect with Theo and Xio’s internal struggles. I do think in some parts the discussions surrounding the power structure of the world and the political elements of the Golds being in charge were a little heavy handed, but this is a YA so I can let that slide. There are enough genuinely well developed themes in here for teens to grapple with.
That being said, I wanted MORE! Though I think Thomas did as good as he could with giving each member of the core cast as much development as he could within the constraints of 400~ pages, there were definitely still moments where things felt rushed (specifically with Xio, but I’ll get to that in the spoiler-y section). Thomas has given us an entire cast of lovable, complex characters to follow and I wanted more time for everyone to breathe and grow. Also, I do think our main big bads were a little underdeveloped. In comparison to other characters, their motivations seemed a bit flat.
Overall, these books are just FUN. The action was addictively written, the characters are complex and lovable, and the magic system/mythology was impressively developed for how short these books are. If anything about the description of the first book interests you, this duology is definitely worth your time.
Time for rambling, spoiler-filled thoughts below. If you haven’t read both books, stop here.