Showing posts with label book review. Show all posts

 Hiya lovelies,

I may or may not be back in the swing of writing and posting again (hallelujah). It has been a hot minute since I shared a book review, and to be honest, it has been a hot minute since a book moved me enough to write a book review. 

Alas, a book has shaken me to the core. I actually came across this book in the Feel Good Club in Manchester. They had a small collection of books, and this one caught my attention: Bodies Are Cool by Tyler Feder.


This wholesome short read was absolutely refreshing. Bodies Are Cool is a cheerful love-your-body picture book for preschoolers, but I believe every person who has ever had a negative thought about their body would benefit from this gem. I have since bought myself a copy and plan to read it to all my nieces and nephews. 

The beautiful illustrations show bodies of all types, shapes and sizes. The book is filled with unique individuals and truly celebrates all bodies. The representation in this book is phenomenal and just beautiful. I even found myself in the pages:


I absolutely adored reading this book with my partner; it is so wholesome and genuinely made my soul happy. I simply want everybody in my life to read this book!


Bodies Are Cool

Saturday 24 August 2024

Hiya loves!

The first book review of 2024 is Legends & Lattes by Travis Baldree, and what a book to begin the year with! I have seen this book everywhere, finally bit the bullet, and decided to read it; once again, I am sad for waiting so long to pick up this gem of a book. 

 Legends & Lattes is a novel of high fantasy and low stakes. It tells the story of a retired Orc swordswoman who decides to build a coffee shop, and we witness her make it from scratch with some wholesome characters who help her along the way.

It's a cosy fantasy book, a coffee shop with a side story of a cute woman-loving woman romance. If you're looking for something chill, not too dramatic, but enough drama to carry the story, this is the one for you. 

The story is from Viv's perspective. We see her dream of opening a place that sells coffee. She first tried coffee in a distance gnome shop and decided she wanted to make her own place. That's when she comes to the riverside city of Thune and buys the residents of an old stable with a mission to open her own coffee shop. 

Viv meets Cal, a handyman who helps her build the coffee shop from the ground up. He becomes one of her dearest friends and helps her expand and rebuild the shop. He later becomes a close friend. Viv introduces the citizens of Thune to the goodness that is coffee, and she, with the help of her succubus assistant, Tandri, makes a positive reputation for themselves. Tandri and Viv run the business together, falling in love in a slowly-paced romance that gives all the feels. 

Running the coffee shop has downsides, like local mafia-esque Madrigals come knocking for rent as they do everyone in that area. Additionally, in one of Viv's previous adventures, she finds herself getting her hands on a   Scarlvert's stone, a rarity that is said to bring good fortune. A once close friend and now nemesis causes some issues over the stone.

The story is wholesome, to say the least, a tale of friendship, cosiness, and a fantasy world galore. I don't want to give too much away, but it was a lovely read, and I've already started the next one, Bookshops & Bonedust. 


Legends & Lattes

Friday 19 January 2024

Hello, lovelies!


This week I’ll review the second book in the Mousai series: Dance Of A Burning Sea by E.J Mellow. I read the first book in the series Song Of The Forever Rains at the beginning of the year and thoroughly enjoyed reading it! Each book in the Mousai series is standalone and tells the story of one of the three sisters. After enjoying the first book, I naturally had to buy the second and third. 



So, the premise of Dance Of A Burning Sea is that Niya Bassett is kidnapped by pirates and faces her true identity (being a powerful third of the Mousai) and those of her sisters revealed to the world. Niya is kidnapped by Alõs Ezra, an infamous pirate lord who was once her lover and is used as leverage to remove the bounty off his head and allow him and his crew back in the Thief Kingdom. We follow them on a journey of discovery, pirate adventures, a battle of powers and a story of the enemy to lovers. This book has it all. 


To say the book is firey would be an understatement, especially since Niya’s powers are around fire and energy. Niya loves to bet, maybe a little too much! When she is threatened by Alõs Ezra, she makes a binding bet that her sisters will save her within three days. If the bet comes true, she is free, and the identity of the Mousai stays hidden. However, if the bet falls flat, she has to stay on the ship and serve on the Crying Queen boat as a pirate under the control of Captain Alõs for a year. Niya is bound to the Crying Queen for a year because her sisters don’t arrive on time. Niya has a journey of self-discovery and finally learns to reign in her temper, which she’s struggled with for years. On this journey of discovery, she finds out there is more to the Pirate lord than meets the eye. More bets are placed, and more lives are at stake. 


This book had a lot of action. I was simply gripped with anticipation! This was a lot spicer than the first book, and the action jumped up many notches. The book is told from two POVs: Niya & Ezras. I liked the contrast between the characters; hearing each of their thoughts as this slow-burn romance took place was delightful to read. I loved how their powers reacted to one another (fire and water). 


However, As much as I was happy to have them together in the end, there is a part in the book that made me quite uncomfortable; the idea that Ezra keeps Niya as a pet he can use, so she’s been kidnapped, and he requires her to dance for a crowd of people and lure answers from another person, I feel it was a bit like he could her at his disposal which doesn’t sit right with me. He just expected her to use her body to pleasure others to get answers for him. Yikes. There is an unpleasant scene where Niya is whipped in front of the other pirates as punishment for spelling them. There was a little too much sadistic joy with Alõs. For him to think he went easy on her whilst she’s quite literally bleeding red raw, and scarred for life is quite disgusting. Like from the whole book, those were my only issues. Also, he only slept with her four years ago to steal her secret, which is a huge red flag. I don’t know how she forgave him because if someone used me for a secret and threatened to out my family, I’d have banished all feelings for them then and there. 


Otherwise, I lived for the lesbian pirates Kintra and Saffi. The pirate adventures gripped me and were so fun to read. I haven’t read a pirate story forever, so I welcomed this one with open arms. The romance was a hot, slow burn, but it was a good read! I rated the first five stars and rated this one the same. I love the Mousai, three powerful women taking vengeance on the world and being the most powerful. I’m really looking forward to the next book!


So, this book is dark in terms of romance. It’s questionable at times, but the pirate adventures are epic. I enjoyed this one, even if I don’t believe Alõs deserves redemption. The five stars were definitely for Naya, she’s my favourite sister so far, and I’m really looking forward to adequately meeting the third sister Arabessa in Symphony For A Deadly Throne.


Thank you for reading my review, and the next post you'll see on the blog is about my Zadar trip!

Dance Of A Burning Sea

Saturday 19 August 2023

Hello, lovelies!

If you've been around a while, you may have seen my book review for The Ex Hex last year. I also may have mentioned it multiple times throughout different blog posts, as it was my favourite read of 2022.

I was visiting Waterstones with my dear friend Meg in March, and what did I find? The Kiss Curse by the same author as The Ex Hex- Erin Sterling. I jumped instantly to buy this book. I liked her writing and have been eager to read more of her work. I was even more thrilled to find out this book is set in the same world as The Ex Hex- number two of the book!! 

I devoured this book! It was steamy, had a rival to lovers kinda plot and witchy adventures. It was a delicious read.

In The Kiss Curse, we follow the story of Gwyn Jones, the owner of a tourist witchy shop, Something Wicked. She's part of a powerful coven whose power runs through their town of Graves Glen. The town used to be powered by the Penhallow family. We witnessed the switchover in the first book, and this book is set a year later. A Penhallow son comes back to town from a quaint town in Wales and rocks Gwyn's world. 

The book is filled with baby witches (teens who Gwyn takes under her wing), magic in the blink, and a hot romance between Gwyn and rival Llewellyn Penhallow. 

Gwyn is a magical force to be reckoned with. I loved her in the first book and even more in the second. I like how this second book was about her, I was eager for more of her character in the first book, and this one delivered perfectly. 

The book feels like a slow-burn romance, and that takes over the majority of the book. The action doesn't really begin until the last couple of chapters. I didn't mind, though, as I was enchanted by the chemistry between the characters. I do think more could have happened sooner. I didn't find the action all that exciting and felt the focus was majorly on the character's relationship rather than saving the town- the plot didn't feel urgent. 

It was a cosy read, something lighthearted and witchy. There is talk of a third book, but I'm unsure what it could be about. I am excited nonetheless. I guess the Penhallow father will be the focus of the next book as he tries to sabotage the Joneses in The Kiss Curse. Whatever is ahead, all I know is that I'll be buying that book ASAP!

Erin Sterling: you have me enchanted with these books.  

The Kiss Curse

Tuesday 11 April 2023

This week I'm back with a book review.

Hiding in Plain Sight is the first of three books in the Ganestown Crime Series written by Eoghan Egan. I was kindly sent this book by City Stone Publishing to read and give an honest review. So, let’s begin! This review may contain spoilers, so please read at your own discretion. 

I'll start by saying crime and thrillers aren't my usual genre, so I was stepping into fairly new territory with this book. Having said that, I enjoyed reading Hiding in Plain Sight, the suspense was right, and I liked how we saw different perspectives. I think that had the story stayed in the serial killer's perspective, it may have gotten too much, but it did not, and I liked the change of pace between the different characters.


Throughout this story, we follow a serial killer, an art scammer, a cheating wife and a laid-off manager navigating life in a small Irish town. Immediately you’re dropped into the drama from the serial killer’s perspective, which is unnerving, to say the least. At first, switching points of view was jarring, and it was hard to really understand who was who. However, once I learned the different characters and their dynamics, the narrative and storylines started to make sense and became enjoyable. I think the jarring aspect was that it's not always clear when or who the perspective is jumping to. It doesn't have the typical indicator of ' so so's POV,' but once the characters are established, you can easily tell who is who as the story unfolds.


I liked how the writer kept the serial killer's identity away from us for most of the book. Through his point of view, we witnessed the attacks he made and how he prayed on his victims. We got to see how he did things so closely whilst most of the time not knowing his name. It added a great deal of mystery to his story. The crimes were gruesome, and the descriptions were sometimes too much. But that is what you'd expect from a serial killer's perspective.


I enjoyed reading Hugh’s point of view the most, he’s made redundant from a managerial role, and we follow him as he navigates through life trying to pick himself up. We see him come to terms with his dear mother’s Alzheimers and watch him become heartbroken as his wife leaves him, and we then witness him fall back in love with an old classmate. His story is endearing and, quite frankly, my favourite part of the book. 


When I first started reading, I couldn’t understand how these people’s lives were linked. And as the story unfolded, it was really clever of Egan how he put it together. The art scammer Jana works for the serial killer trying to make enough money to fund her art gallery to support her and her son moving and living their dreams. Her story of almost getting away with it was really interesting to follow. She ends up being caught and arrested. She almost becomes a victim of the serial killer as he tells us in much detail how much he despises her. It’s through her faked paintings we meet Sharon Winters. She helps uncover the truth about the forged paintings and becomes the serial killer's next victim. Sharon and our good guy Hugh go way back, and he saves the day. It’s all brilliantly linked.


Overall, Hiding in Plain Sight was really entertaining and dramatic. It is fast-paced, and despite the very long chapters, I didn’t find it too difficult to read. At times I found myself (especially in the second half) putting it down and wanting to pick it right back up immediately. This isn’t my usual genre to read, but I enjoyed it nonetheless! So, if you're looking for something with plenty of action, I'd recommend grabbing yourself a copy when it's released on February 23rd. You can buy it on Kindle or paperback here on publication day.

Hiding in Plain Sight

Monday 20 February 2023

 Hello, lovelies,

This week I am back with my first book review of the year. A really good friend of mine gifted me this book for Christmas and let me tell you, I have thoroughly enjoyed reading it!

Song Of The Forever Rains by E.J Mellow is one of three books about the Mousai. The Mousai is a trio of revered and feared sorceresses. Each book is standalone so you don't need to read the whole series, but spoiler: after this book, you will definitely want to. 

In this book, we follow the youngest sister in the trio: Larkyra Bassette. Her power is her voice, she has the ability to slay monsters, enchant minds and more with her beautiful singing. The books take place in the world of Aadilor. A world that once belonged to the lost gods. The lost gods blessed beings with magic but not everyone in the world has powers. The Bassette family is an old family of Jabari blessed with incredible powers, powers that no one outside of the magical kind knows about. The three women have spent their lives training their powers.

We first meet Larkyra in her Lierenfast, this is a task where the month before her birthday she has to struggle and survive in the Midnight Market without the use of her powers. Once she's achieved this she celebrates her Eumar Journe. After each sister turns eighteen they're sent on an adventure, a standalone task they must complete. We follow her story of penetrating Lachlan to see where there is a poisonous drug leak and detect the riches the city holds. 

Her journey includes lots of snooping, a fake marriage and unexpected love. Larkyra carries a heavy heart, through the book we learn that as she took her first breath her mother took her last. She carries this heartache with her as she feels as though her entire family resents her for this. This subplot broke my heart, I cried a lot as we see Larykra grow as a person and learn how valued she is by her family. There is a part in the book where she enters The Fade, a place souls and spirits go to die, and she reunites with the soul of her mother.  She learns the truth of her death and she finally can move on with her life knowing her mother and her whole family love her.

I absolutely love the magic element of this book. The Mousai especially, no one beyond or inside The Thief Kingdom (a highly magical place in Aadilor), know who the Mousai are. They're beautifully masked as they perform for the kingdom, a performance that captures the minds and consciousness of its listener and viewer. The trio are a magical force not to be reckoned with. The three team up to save Lachlan's people from poverty pushed onto them by Lord Hayzar, a sour old man who is bringing ruin to Lachlan. We join them on the adventure of exploration, survival, and magical action.

When I started the book, I did not expect there to be a fabulous subplot of romance. A steamy romance if that. We see Larkyra fall in love with Lord Hayzar's stepson Darius. They share similar vulnerabilities and end up saving each other. It's beautiful but what I liked more, is the love element wasn't overpowering. The book was very much about the magic, adventure and unity of the sisters. The romance between the pages was a nice addition.

The next book in the Mousai series is Dance of the Burning Sea which follows Niya Bassette, the middle woman of the trio. Mellow describes the second Mousai book as an enemy to lovers' pirate odyssey. I'll definitely be adding this to my TBR!

As always, thank you for reading this week's blog post! See you next week with a poem or two :) 







Song Of The Forever Rains

Tuesday 10 January 2023

Hello!

This week I'm back with an audiobook review, yes you read that correctly. The wonderful author Albion Byrd reached out to me to review his horror audiobook, and I have lots to say! Albion himself is impressively producing the entire audiobook, from writing to recording and it's done brilliantly.

Firstly, let's give a little story synopsis. Skandinavien is an episodic horror audiobook that follows the life of Conrad, who lives a life of solitude in an ancient windmill in a remote area of Scandinavia. What's so interesting about Conrad, is that he has zero memory of being a functional cog in the machine we call society. Conrad's day job is disposing of dead bodies. We follow the story of how important politician Albert Finz winds up on Conrad's autopsy slab. It's a story of discovery, the unravelling of truths, and intense drama. 

The first instalment includes three parts, and predominantly follows Albert and the crooked things he gets up to as a politician. The instalment is 18 chapters long including the beginning and end credits, it's about an hour long and is voiced by Albion and Jane Banks.

The element I enjoyed the most was the sound effects that were added to the narrative, it really made the story feel more intense. It felt like I was listening to a film. This first instalment of the series was a brilliant introduction to the series and it ends with a cliffhanger. I'd like to see more of Conrad in the upcoming parts as his characters fascinated me the most. Equally, it will be interesting to see how Albert winds up dead. 

As a writer myself, I struggle with dialogue and I am in awe of how effectively Albion uses dialogue to push the narrative. It feels natural and every word is necessary. There's a great balance of narrator-to-character dialogue. 

Prior to listening to Albion's audiobook, I had only ever read horror books, however, this has changed the entire experience for me. Listening feels similar to watching a horror film, and I now prefer listening to a horror book to reading one. It makes the atmosphere more intense and brings the narrative to life more.

Since listening, I have reached out to Albion for some extra information about the series. The next instalment is currently in production and will be released in the next six months. I'm very excited to continue following the story. 

You can access Skandinavien via most audiobook platforms!


Skandinavien

Monday 7 November 2022

Guess who has her reading spark back? I am back to reading and writing book reviews!
 
So, I recently read Delilah Green Doesn’t Care by Ashley Herring Blake. I came to write the review as soon as I finished but all I could fathom was: wow!

A day later, I can string a sentence longer than that together. I just have to say, I loved every second of this book. I went looking for this book months back, I saw the hype online and knew I’d love it. I’ve been feeling a little off about reading recently but this book has left me wanting to read more WLW books! 

This book tells the story of single photographer Delilah Green, she heads back to her to home town Bright Falls to be the photographer at her estranged sister's (Astrid Parker)  wedding. This is where she meets Claire Sutherland, again. Claire is one of  Astrid's closest friends, she has a daughter called Ruby and throughout the story, she struggles with abandonment due to her baby daddy constantly leaving them. Delilah and Claire hit it off, and we follow them through a secretive, steamy queer romance.
 
I love Delilah Green, she reminds me a lot of Shane from L Word (the OG series) but more femme. I loved reading her point of view more than Claire's but the stories were told well side by side.  Claire is fun, sexy and curvey. I cannot fathom how happy it made me feel seeing bigger women in romance novels especially getting her happy ever after! It took me a little while to really understand Claire, but once I did she easily became such a fabulously relatable character.

The build-up between Delilah and Claire was intense, steamy, and always left me wanting more. I have never wanted a couple to be together more than I did these two. I finished the book in one sitting because I couldn’t put it down. I had to know what happened in the end.

I read the book for some woman-loving-woman romance and I got so much more than that. I really liked the dynamic between Delilah and her step-sister Astrid. At first, I didn’t like Astrid but I loved how they worked things out and really managed to bond and be there for each other in the end. I love the whole sister helping sister bond and being strong for it (RE: Elsa & Anna). 

I cried at several points in the book, at one point it was Delilah bonding with Ruby and they are a moment together where Delilah introduces her to photography and they really connect, I cried so much. It was the fact that Delilah could really see herself in Ruby, and Claire observing it was so great. I also cried at the breakup, it had me bawling. The story really takes you on an emotional rollercoaster but nothing too exhausting. 

There isn't a single fault I have with this story, it was beautiful, steamy, and just fabulous. If you haven't read it yet, you really should!

Delilah Green Doesn’t Care

Sunday 16 October 2022

 Hello!

This week I am sharing a book review for Jessie Burtin's Medusa. This story is a retelling of the Greek mythology tale of Medusa. Before we jump straight in, I thought I'd give a trigger warning: this post mentions sexual assault. 

The cover and the illustrations within this copy were stunning! I really enjoyed the imagery side by side with the story. The artwork by Olivia Lomenech Gill is beautiful. The contents of this book were visually pleasing.

The story was overall interesting. I've recently found myself rewriting fairytales and thought this sounded interesting and good for research purposes. I really liked that this was a feminist retelling. It was engaging and an overall really good read.

The story deals with assault, and victim-blaming. Medusa was assaulted by Poseidon in Athena's temple. It was heartbreaking to read as she shared her experience with the reader. Athena, and the rest of the village, refused to believe Medusa. Athena punishes Medusa and her sisters, and they flee the village together. Medusa was once a 'beautiful' young woman (her own words) and was viciously turned into a woman with snakes in her hair. Arguably, a different kind of beauty.

After reading the part of her assault I felt a little guilty for my previous annoyance towards Medusa, much before talking of her assault she tells the story of how when growing up she was bullied and cast out by villagers due to her beauty and it felt very "oh-no poor me I'm pretty". It felt somewhat unrealistic, especially in today's society beauty is praised for no reason. I found it unrealistic that someone was being bullied because of them being too attractive, but maybe in another lifetime this was common. That being said, no one deserves to be assaulted or bullied. There's no one to blame but the attacker. 

I loved reading about Medusa and Perseus falling in love. I even more loved it when Medusa defended herself against him and turned him into stone. His selfishness taught her to love herself and be exactly who she is. She's inspiring to say the least. I enjoyed this retelling of Medusa. It was similar to the original but definitely sheds a more positive light on Medusa! In the end, she came out the winner, embracing her snakes, and ultimately loving herself. 

If you're looking for some female empowerment, owning her tragedies and coming out on top, then this is the book for you.

This was one of my favourite myths. So, what's your favourite myth?

 

Medusa by Jessie Burton

Monday 25 April 2022

 Hello! 

This is my first post of February. I hope you're all living your best lives! I have just finished reading Witch by Finbar Hawkins, and I have to talk about it. I feel so impacted after reading the book I knew I just had to write a review for it. I had seen the cover for this book floating around online for a while, and I just had to have it. I got the book around the end of last year and just managed to read it within the last week or so. 

Before I dive right in and tell you all of my favourite parts, I will give you  a little brief summary of the book:

Two daughters witness their mother's murder by witch hunters, and the older of the two Evelyn swears to look after her little sister Dil. The story is set way back in the olden days of Old English. We join the protagonist Evelyn of Birds on her journey of dark revenge-seeking out the hunters that broke up her family.

Firstly, the cover is stunning. Secondly, this book is very dark. It's quite hard-hitting at times, but the raw realism is part of what makes this story brilliant. Admittedly, at first, I found it difficult to get into because of the speech being in Old English. However, after the first couple of chapters, I got used to it and couldn't put the book down. I couldn't help but read over 100 pages every time I picked the book up, as the story goes on you're completely sucked into the narrative.

I have been reading quite a few witchy books lately and they've been set in modern times. So, it was refreshing to read a book about witches that really connects with nature. The imagery of the woods, the birds throughout, and the overall ethereal description of the settings was very pleasing to read. But very in contrast to the violence that occurs throughout. I love the protagonist's journey. I like how Hawkins shows us the dark parts of her brain, the parts where she enjoys putting her sister in her place, taking a precious item from her. The protagonist wasn't sugar-coated. She was believable. I liked the journey of self-discovery where she realises she is a witch like her mother and sister, and she realises her adoration and needs for her sister more than anything. Too often writers try to make their characters appear to be perfect, whereas Hawkins wasn't afraid to really flesh out Evelyn with faults as well as strengths. The character development arc was phenomenal. I loved how the hunted became the hunter. Reading her revenge story was sweet and empowering.

There was a plot twist that was so wickedly brilliant it made my stomach turn. It caused frustrations from the pits of my soul, and it was just pure brilliance. I have never felt so much emotion in such a short space of time. Witch was a powerful read, and I will be looking out for more of Finbar Hawkins' work in the future. Next on my reading list is Medusa by Jessie Burton!



Witch

Monday 14 February 2022

Hello!

This week I come to you with a book review of Erin Sterling's The Ex Hex! I had seen this book everywhere, and I was very eager to read it. I love anything witchy and just knew I’d love this book and blog post spoiler: I do!


The Ex Hex is a contemporary paranormal romance novel. The main character is a witch called Vivienne Jones, and the novel begins with her at the age of nineteen suffering heartache after a break-up with Rhys Penhallow. Vivi and her cousin Gwyn do the one thing they've been warned not to: never mix vodka and witchcraft.


In a rage of drunken heartache, Vivi jokingly curses her ex. Nine years later he revisits the town of Graves Glen to refresh the town’s magic, and all is not well! The curse hits upon his return and chaos follows. We join the pair in tackling a curse, trying not to let Rhys die, and witnessing them fall in love. This book is brilliant, steamy, and truly magical.


My favourite character is Gwyn. She's queer, has bright hair, and has a wild personality. She works in her mother's shop, Something Wicked, a little store that sells fun witchy things. I absolutely fell in love with the town of Graves Glen; the small witchy town where humans also reside oblivious to magick. If it was possible, I would have dived right into the book.


I wanted to engulf the book in one sitting because it was just so delicious, but I decided to pace myself to enjoy it and savour it. I haven't been a fan of romance novels in the past, but I thoroughly enjoyed this book. I love everything about this book. Magick, paranormal activity, and romance? Yes, please.  The whole witchy element of the book was my favourite thing as well as how humorous the book was. I found myself laughing quite a lot, this book was pure joy to read!


Next on my reading list is the first book in The Morganville Vampire series! I am currently three books into the year, what are you currently reading?

The Ex Hex

Monday 17 January 2022

Hello!

I am starting the week with a book review! A Conversation With The  Sages by Sara Ahavah.  I was kindly gifted this book by Dr Shelah Harris, who goes by the pen name Sara Ahavah.  I cannot thank her enough for the insights she has bestowed upon me. It seems this book arrived during a time when I especially needed it the most. 


A Conversation With The Sages is a self help book that shares Sara’s experiences of life and instils the reader with knowledge and insights from her conversations with the Sages.  I believe there's a stronger force in the world and this book delves into that providing us with well-needed advice and guidance. This isn’t a particularly heavy read, but you should be in the right frame of mind to read it. There's a lot to take in. 


I didn’t read this in one sitting, when I was feeling a particular way I was more drawn to reading certain chapters. I think it's vital that you approach this book with an open mind. I don't particularly believe in a god, I do believe there is something, if that be a collection of forces or Nature. This book delves into what's amiss with humanity as we know it; the author's exploration of this is super interesting. I loved reading what the Sages had to say, I also found it grounding when the writer provided her life experiences in correlation to the advice and teachings.

The first chapter: What is the purpose of life? Shares with us insights on how to live again. Sometimes when we are living we aren’t really living, we work and move around with little connection to people and to feel more alive, we need connection. I really liked this quote from the chapter:


“Everyone wants to be loved unconditionally but rarely wants to give the same type of love.”


I found this so powerful, as the type of person who gives everyone my all when I love them I find that not everyone has that same mindset. Not only this but the chapter really pushes on the importance of sharing as much love in the world as possible, which is an amazing message to share. 


In this book, the author addresses the things Sages can help you with. Careers aren’t one of them, I found this chapter particularly interesting. I especially liked the positive message of telling us that you’ll know when the job is right for you and your nature and the forces of your soul will support you in your career endeavours. 


I found that this book is more than just a one-time read. I can see myself returning to it time and time again for reassurance. I liked how the author included pages to take notes, however, much to my better judgment I can’t write in a book. Instead,  I’ve made notes in my journal as I’ve progressed through the chapters.  


A Conversation With The Sages was a thought-provoking read. I found the chapters on love & happiness to be most insightful for myself, but I think as time goes on and life happens this will change. I don’t believe that the book will affect every person the same; there’s so much to take in that I think everyone will come away feeling or thinking a different thug depending on their personal journey. 


Overall, I found this a refreshing read. Not my usual type of book,  I found it insightful and I think it has definitely helped me on my own spiritual journey. I would highly recommend it to anyone looking for guidance in their life, if whether be life's purpose, love or just simply wanting to broaden your reading. This is definitely one to add to your TBR list. You can find the book here to purchase.

A Conversation With The Sages

Monday 20 December 2021

 Hello! 

Over the last few weeks, I have been rereading the Divergent books by Veronica Roth. It’s taken me a little longer than I had anticipated but at the weekend I finished the final book!  This was my first reread of the trilogy since I read them when I was sixteen. I have been putting off reading them in case the magic wasn't there. I was worried I had grown up and fallen out of love with the faction fictional world. 

Spoiler: that was definitely not the case. I am glad I still love the books is that after reading them the first time around a little while after I got the factions tattooed on me as the start of my book sleeve.

What sparked the reread? Before picking the books again up I was watching the films and it was weird because I felt as though scenes were missing. I then realised the books and films had merged in my brain.  Just to put this out there, I don't think the films were completely awful. I actually adore the first film as that got me into the books when it was released back in 2014. I knew the books had more to them and I thought to differentiate the films and books a reread was necessary. 

In this post, I will talk about each book, including the extra book Four and will discuss what I liked about each etc. Mini book reviews if you will.

Divergent  - ★★★★★

In this book we meet the protagonist Tris, who is contemplating leaving her faction Abnegation, we join her on Choosing Day as she decides to transfer to Dauntless. The faction system is made up of five factions: Abnegation, Dauntless, Candor, Erudite and Amity. Throughout this book, we see Tris struggle and strive through the rigorous Dauntless initiation. Tris discovers she is Divergent and has to hide this to stay alive. On the way, she gains amazing friends and begins a love interest with Four. As the book goes on we find out that Erudite is hunting Divergent and planning to take over Abnegation. 

This book will always hold a special place in my heart. I cannot fault a single thing in this book, it's definitely my favourite one out of the trilogy.  My favourite part of this book was the fear scapes, if you only watched the films you will only know about the physical training and the simulation mind training, in the books, there is a third stage where the initiates enter Lauren's fearscape. I love this whole concept!

I also really loved getting to know and meet the Dauntless born initiates in this book, they're not really present in the films but in particular, I really liked Zeke and Uriah. Dauntless and daring to the bone, their relationship is one of love and playfulness. I love the dauntless compound, I think if I was in this world I would love to be Dauntless but I definitely wouldn't pass initiation. Maybe Erudite or Amity?

I watched the film before reading the book so I already had an image of the characters in my head before reading but the majority of characters matched up. With the exception of Eric, the film Eric appearance-wise is very different to book Eric. Book Eric was covered in piercings! When I first watched the film and read the series, I was obsessed with Eric. He isn't the nicest of characters but I adored him. Is this still the case? Yes and no. I still like him as a character, I think his role especially in the first book was needed for the narrative but I don't think he is a nice guy at all. 

Insurgent - ☆☆☆

The plot of this book is life after Tris, Four, Peter, Caleb and Marcus flee from the Dauntless compound and head to Amity. Dauntless traitors and Erudite team up to hunt Divergents as well as capture the fugitives Four and Tris. There is the return of Four's mother Evelyn, who was previously presumed dead, she wants to overthrow Janine and the Faction system with her team of Factionless. Tris and Four try to seek out the other Dauntless, who are safe in Candor. Both of them undergo the truth serum letting out all their secrets, Four's abuse, Tris' killing her friend etc. It is very intense. Janine sets out attacks on the none Divergent, which Tris hands herself into Euridite where we find out her brother Caleb is a traitor. 

 I cannot stand Tris's brother Caleb, which only gets worse in the next book. This book is my least favourite out of the three, I find it incredibly frustrating at times. This book is probably the biggest out of the three, a lot happens! It ends with Tris being rescued and a video explaining that the faction system is an experiment and that there is life beyond the wall.

I think this book is frustrating because the characters like Four's parents are so infuriating. Marcus is horrible and I despise that he holds the important information that everyone needs to know, he is a horrible character!  Marcus tries to redeem himself but I don't think abusers deserve redemption. I wish he didn't play an important role in the second book, but he does.  Eric dies in this book, I remember being a little upset when I first read it but the second time around it was justified. He was a sadistic murderer who had zero redeeming qualities. I do think it would have been interesting seeing how he would react to the information about the people outside of the wall.

The film went weird with this film and took an unnecessary tangent, if I am honest I pretend the films stopped after the first one.

Allegiant - ☆☆

In this book, Tris and Four take a team beyond the wall. The majority of this book is set in the compound, which is a weird place, I remember being so shocked when I first read the book. It is in the compound where we learn that their world is split into Genetically Pure (Divergent) people and Genetically Damaged (none Divergent). This book is action-packed, Every chapter has you on the edge of your seat. There is rebellion and explosions. Johanna creates an army called the Allegiant to go against Evelyn's army, this causes issues in the compound and the leader of the compound demands a factory reset of the entire experiment. Tris sacrifices herself in order to wipe out the compound's memory and let the Chicago experiment have freedom.

I liked that there were a few different literary techniques used in this book, from switching perspectives (Tris and Four) to reading diary entries. My favourite part of this book is the diary entries from Tris' mother, I really liked reading about her entering the experiment.  I thought this was a lovely way for Tris to connect with her dead mother and see what she was like before having children.

This book is definitely the most emotional of them all, my feelings were a wreck whilst reading the final book. I had to take breaks in between chapters just to gather my thoughts and settle my feelings.  This book was filled with tragedy.

Major SPOILER: Tris’ death broke me. Granted not as dramatically as it first had when I read at 16 but I cried every chapter after she died too. Not to be rude but it should have been Caleb, she deserved a happy ending with Four!

The ending didn't sit right with me, life after Tris just felt sad and tragic. I think it's because we start the trilogy with Tris and we go through everything with her step by step and for her to just die and the book go on without her felt wrong. Tris sacrifices herself to reset the compound's memory so there is no superiority between the genetically pure and the genetically damaged. Once the compound is reset the experiment is over, people have the option to live wherever they please. 

Four - 

I love this book,  a collection of chapters from Four's life. Roth almost written the series from Four's perspective but later decided Tris was the right character to tell the story. Some of the chapters in this book are what you would have found if Roth hadn't changed her mind.

This entire book is from Four's perspective whereas the trilogy is from mainly in Tris’ perspective. The extra details and scenes are an exquisite read. We got to see deeper into Four's life and initiation. We also got to see how he and Eric came to hate each other and it’s juicy! You don’t need to read the book for the plot but it’s very nice extra content! 




Overall? I’m glad I reread the books. They were magnificent and still hold the top spot for the favourite trilogy in my eyes. I love the world so much, Tris, Four and even Eric will forever hold a special place in my heart! I think I’ll be due another reread when I hit my thirties, that should give me enough time to emotionally recover! 

The Divergent Trilogy

Monday 18 October 2021

Hello!

This week I am sharing a book review of Stephen King’s The Green Mile. You may have seen the blog post: To Post or not to post. I talked about if I should post this review, I decided after much editing that I will.


Before I start I’d like to put out a trigger warning, in this post, there will mention Rape, Murder & Violence. This post will also contain spoilers. 


Synopsis: Head Officer of The Green Mile Paul Edgecombe tells us of his time working in prison. A ward they refer to as The Green Mile, only dealing with prisoners on death row. The book's set in 1932. He tells us the stories of various men that walk the green mile: Del, Wharton, Chief & Coffey. In particular, John Coffey. A man who has the ability to heal which he helps the narrator, a loved mouse & warden’s wifey who is on death’s door. 


The novel was a lengthy one of 430 pages, it had been a while since I read a book that long! It was originally published serially over 6 months when it was first released, I’m reading a single book with all parts included. 


This is the second book I have ever read by King and truth be told it wasn't what I had expected. 


My favourite character would have had to be Mr. Jingles the mouse, most of the parts with him were the best bits of the book. There was something that stuck out to me, I felt sorry for one of the prisoners: Del. He becomes quite a likable character with his cute little pet mouse but I had to remind myself that he did a horrible thing and hurt many people. It was very conflicting. His death is brutal, the electric chair is a horrible way to die but his death was even more horrific as a rogue guard Percy Wetmore decides to take matters into his own hands and makes the death more painful and gruesome than needed to be. 


I tried to like the book but there were things I just couldn't look past. 


First issue: I understand the narrator guard Paul Edgecombe had a UTI but there are so many unnecessary references to it. Every other paragraph at the beginning of the novel talked about his infection. I think that could have been toned down, it was very unnecessary.  At one point he spends a whole page talking about his penis & the UTI- how it throbs etc. It felt very unnecessary and uncomfortable to read. During a pretty action-packed scene of Wharton entering the prison, he almost kills a guard and Paul has to pull a gun on him and low and behold talks about his penis in the middle of the scene. I understand the pain but at every chance given the narrator talked about his penis. Which I didn’t understand because he talks about his memory not being great and not remembering dates but he can talk about his penis hurting in every scene/page? He also later has the audacity to say this: like every awful pain it is forgotten. Clearly not Paul, clearly not.


I knew that John Coffey was going to heal him, I learned this from the film but I think it was overkill to mention it so frequently. I was relieved when Coffey healed him, in hope of it meaning there won’t be more penis paragraphs. After 141 pages and being healed he stops talking about the UTI as much. Although whenever any pain is mentioned he still refers to it even hundreds (literal) pages later and in every single chapter at least. 


I somewhat understand that the book was released in parts maybe he talked about it so much to refresh the reader’s memory, not a significant detail really. Before the story starts he talks about editing the parts to create the book, King had taken parts out but how did he not feel the need to take out at least some of that excessive UTI/penis talk. I honestly think the book would have been shorter if he had taken it out, it would have lost easily by 10-20 pages. 


With the repetition about the UTI, there were also many references to sex. I understand talking about the crimes and the necessity of referring to rape but there seemed to be an excess of sex talk. For example, when The Chief was dying in the chair it was compared to a man’s orgasm, which felt like a very inappropriate description. I had to stop reading at this point and walk away, I was shocked. A man dies in such a horrific way and you’ve somehow made it about sex? Make it make sense. The narrator talks about a memory of himself being a younger man and missing his partner, he says his head and heart missed her as well as his balls. Talking about his balls felt unnecessary and really takes away from the story. Something heavy-hitting would occur in the narrative then the narrator would mention sex, it was very weird to read. 


The comparisons made in the book weren't great. The one I  mentioned previously wasn't the only one that shocked me, there were more uncomfortable comparisons made as the book went on. 


A character has to write a report on a prisoner and he describes and compares this process to be similar to rape.  Yes, you read that correctly. You can imagine how annoyed this made me. It even made me wonder does this reflect King’s point of view? Does he think so little of a violent act? It’s disgusting. Also on this note, there is a horrific part in the story where we are being told by a police officer that  Wharton assaults a very young girl, during this conversation they say it’s not rape because it wasn’t his dick he used, like what the fuck?! On top of this they give the assault a little nickname like it was some form of a game, I thought this was weird and gross. The whole ordeal makes my skin crawl. I understand that rape & assault are horrific experiences but at times I found the descriptions were overbearing. It could be argued that King did this to show how severe these crimes were but it felt too much at times. 


The overall plotline, issues aside, was a really good one. It was interesting seeing the life inside of prison especially those on the green mile. Not sure how true the depiction is but it was a good storyline. I particularly liked the friendship between the guards, Paul and Brutus' friendship was enjoyable to read, I liked how they all shared the same dislike towards Percy but they respected each other.


I thought the ending was interesting with the narrator being in an elderly home, there was a dodgy care assistant Brad Dolan. I liked how the book showed that in most professions you can get bad eggs, not everyone has good intentions nor do they do their job correctly to protect the people in their custody. It was also enjoyable to see bad characters like Dolan and Wetmore get their karma handed to them, bad people shouldn't be able to get away with things.


Having reflected a few weeks or so after reading: what stuck out to me? 


The narrator is a pervy old man obsessed with his own penis & sex. He encounters a healer John Coffey.  John's story was so sad, such a pure soul. I almost cried when he was sharing about the pain hurting. His story was tragic. 


I didn't enjoy the vibes I was getting from the book. The tones of sexism, racism, and homophobia made me incredibly uncomfortable. I didn’t feel comfortable reading slurs and them being used so freely. Before anyone says it was the sign of that time or it was used to show ignorance,  I do not agree because when these slurs were being thrown around no one corrected them or said it was wrong? They just agreed and let it be. If you are showing something is wrong in a book you need to point that out. 'Sign of the times' is a stupid excuse that I won't accept for ignorance. King managed to depict how wrong it was to have bad eggs in the prison and care system, so why couldn't he make his characters stand up against these things too? 


Finally, I don't think I will be reading this book again. Overall, not a great experience and if I'm honest I liked the film way better. Skip the book and watch the film! 


What book do you feel strongly about?

The Green Mile (Book Review)

Friday 20 August 2021