Spring started properly early here, but then it slowed down into a stall. What’s that got to do with reading, you ask? Well, only that while we did go on a couple longer strolls with the dogs on some particularly nice days, the outdoors didn’t entice us out and about too much, thus keeping me indoors, reading. I did spend an hour or so maybe twice on our deck, reading in the sun, where my hanging egg-chair is sheltered from the wind.
So anyhow, 18 books, 6125 pages, average book length 340 pages – a mix of quite long ones, a couple of 120-150 page snack books, and everything in between.
- Kingdom of the Cursed and Kingdom of the Feared (Kingdom of the Wicked 2 and 3), by Kerri Maniscalco – Love, family, demons, witches, and goddesses, a plot twist or two, and every story has two sides, as usual. Delicious, dark, and spicy, but love wins in the battle of power over the circles of Hell. Satisfying reading, great trilogy!
- Lumenlaulaja, by Emmi Itäranta – A bit of Finnish mythology, the story of the great witch Louhi from Kalevala, told from her point of view, sort of capsizing the entire male-centric pov of Kalevala. Here the female witch is not an evil to be controlled and slain (well, she IS), but rather a strong woman trying to protect her own. And what could be more threatening to men than a woman not in need of one? Fascinating book.
- Pohjolan jumalattaret, by Karolina Kouvola – Bit of a snack book after Lumenlaulaja, with a short article about the old deities of Finnish mythology. They are legion, many of them overlapping each other, variations of the same in different areas.
- Adenashire books 1-5, by J. Penner – Five cozy feel-good fantasy romance books, a sixth one will be out in March next year. The books:
- A Fellowship of Bakers & Magic – Where it all begins, with Arleta and the baking contest that leads her to Theo (or rather, Theo leads her to the contest, but you know), and new friends who all follow her back to Adenashire, each for their own reasons.
- A Fellowship of Librarians & Dragons – Doli, the Dwarf with a huge heart, the one who originally pulled both Arleta and the reluctant Fennex Jez into their fellowship of hearts, finds her own happy romance in Adenashire.
- A Fellowship of Games & Fables – When Jez inadvertedly throws herself and the High Elf baker-and-fellow Taenya into a whirlwind of winter games and fake-dating, the world may be frozen by mid-winter, but that doesn’t keep hearts from melting.
- A Fellowship of Curses & Cats – Theo gets his own book. He has some issues and fears that surface when he’s about to become a father, and then his mother shows up, not helping anything at all. Or… is it, actually? At least Theo has Arleta and the rest of the fellowship for comfort, and don’t forget all them cats!
- A Fellowship of Academics & Arts – It’s a tense night at the bakery, where the fellowship is waiting for word while Arleta is at the midwife’s, giving birth to her and Theo’s baby. What better way to while away the time than with a story? So, Verdreth is coaxed into recounting the story of how he and Ervash found their love and ended up in Adenashire with Arleta’s family.
- David Bowie, by Marc Spitz – The life and music of David Bowie, extremely detailed but not. Seemingly crammed with everything the author managed to dig up, but only as far as they interested him, I think, what with skimming through some events and collaborations with barely a mention. Not that good of a bio, imo.
- The Fox and the Devil, by Kiersten White – The daughter of Van Helsing chasing the woman she believes killed her dad, only to get obsessed and entangled with her and find out the world is full of monsters – but what makes a monster, after all?
- Love and Friendship, by Jane Austen – A shortie with short stories from Austen’s youth, most of the stories incomplete. Satire and downright farce, I tell you! She was sharp and observant of the society, pouring it into these outlandish stories at first, it seems, then honing her storytelling into what we then have come to know as the style of Jane Austen. Fun snack book!
- The Impossible Garden of Clara Thorne, by Summer N. England – What happens when a kid is unloved and abused, and what happens when they finally let themself to love and be loved. A story of magic and evil and love being the strongest power of them all. Queer romantacy, loved it!
- Storm Over Camelot (Morgan le Fay 3), by Sophie Keetch – The conclusion of the saga of Morgan and Arthur, and all those close to them. The entire trilogy is an intense, excellent retelling, from the pov of a(nother) woman deemed an evil witch simply because she would not succumb to the control of men. Long live the once and future king!
- Trappin perhe (orig. The Story of the Trapp Family Singers), by Maria Augusta von Trapp – The real story of the family von Trapp, written in 1949 by Maria von Trapp herself. Amazing resilience, amazing resourcefulness, just a rather amazing family all in all!
- The Auction, by Sadie Kincaid – Dark mafia romance that left me with conflicted feelings. I liked (maybe even loved?) it per se, but got annoyed by the amount and extent of sex – felt like the middle third of the book was nothing but. Don’t get me wrong, the smut doesn’t bother me, it just kinda bores me… I want action that takes the stroy forward, not only into the bedroom (or whatever room or not-room, but you get the drift). Still, preordered book 2, for I do need to see the story to its end.
- The Book Witch, by Meg Shaffer – Sweet and wonderful twisty kind of tale where we get to zip in and out of books with Rainy March and the Duke, where fiction and the real world mix in unexptected ways. I don’t cry with books too easily, but this one had me in tears with this beautiful scene in a library (no, won’t tell you more, read and figure it out for yourself!).
- The Antiquarian’s Object of Desire (Love’s Academic 3), by India Holton – Ah, Amelia and Caleb and the fake-hating scheme of life-long best friends in this friends to lovers (or is it fake-enemies to lovers?) romance where things literally explode around when emotions run amock. Quirky, witty, funny, trademark Holton. Superb!


April 10, Finished (speed-)reading the bio of David Bowie (by Marc Spitz) today. It’s a highly detailed bio, at least about the parts that interested the author, while skating past many other events with barely a mention. Too much detail about a lot, detours and side-quests to the lives of some related people, barely a mention of others.
The whole book felt like it was as much about the author and their obsession as it was about Bowie himself. Like the author focused all interviews and research on what was meaningful and interesting to them, but didn’t bother with whatever wasn’t. So no, not one of the best bios I’ve ever read, not by far.
April 19, Snack book: Jane Austen’s Love and Friendship, ie. a collection of her unfinished writings from early years (teens, I think). In a very familiar kind of teeny way, she tried her hand at full-blown farce writing before settling on the style that later got her published. Outlandish stuff, quite fun reading 😄
April 25, I have loved The Sound of Music ever since I first saw it as a kid, though back then I always could’ve stopped watching at the point of the wedding – the romantic in me felt like that was the high point, the climax of the story so why bother with the disruptive war stuff, you know, just let them live happily ever after.
Of course I knew even then the story was based on a true one. I’ve had the book The Story of the Trapp Family Singers (in Finnish, “Trapping perhe”) by the mom, Maria Augusta von Trapp, in my library for years (and have no idea where it came from, maybe my grandparents’ library?) but never have I gotten around to reading it, until now.
How much more there is to the von Trapps! I really enjoyed getting to know the real von Trapp family and what their storied life actually was like, especially their time after they left Austria, ie. where the movie left off. I mean, just those ten years or so that the book covers, are full of adventures and escapades and humorous moments, paired with resilient labor to make a life, a good life at that, and not just their own life, but others too, by ways of music and post-war charity and whatnot. What a family!
April 25, The beautiful cover (of the special edition I saw) and intriguing RuNyx-y kind of plot description lead me a bit astray with The Auction (by Sadie Kincaid). It even started promisingly, and held it for almost half the book, but then the plot just kinda became secondary in the storytelling, fading into the background of sex and obsession and violence, but mostly descriptive sex. I mean, I’m not disturbed by descriptive sex and/or violence per se, but when one or the other or both become the main event, eclipsing the plot, I get bored. Obsession isn’t my favorite trope either, really.
So I got a bit annoyed and disappointed. And then everything just had to turn upside down in the last 50 pages or so and end with a crash bang cliffhanger. I had already decided not to continue the series (or rather, duology, as it is), but, hunh. I’m undecided now.