May reads, 2026

So, May. Still only once or twice was the weather supportive of reading outside, but that’s just circumstances. While I made several book orders from Adlibris at the end of April and beginning of May, there was a week or two where I was waiting for new books to arrive, giving me the incentive to read something that’s been patiently waiting in my shelves instead (oh, I have a LOT of those, waiting for the mood to hit!). I ended up finally reading one of the great Finnish classics, Täällä Pohjantähden alla (Under the Northern Star), a trilogy that I happen to have as one slighlty intimidating brick tome volume (beautiful edition with prints of classic paintings for illustrations, and a fake leather binding 😄), and I really enjoyed it!

All in all I read 17 books, a total of 7362 pages. There were some real long books (like the aforementioned tome), but a few shorties in the mix too – I was kinda disappointed that the long-awaited new TJ Klune book “We Burned So Bright” was actually only 160 pages or so, making it a snack book rather than a full meal. Loved it though.

  • That Time I Accidentally Took Over the Mafia, by Rebekah Sinclair – So funny, a total wild ride from start to end! Action, speed, wild chased, a surprise (or not) in the end, and of course the hot sex. Polyamourous relationship plot, with multipartner sex too – granting that there were some a bit hmm, surreal moments that kinda bypassed biology and physiology 😄
  • Nocticadia, by Keri Lake – This was a bit of a slow start for me and for a while I thought it’d be a drag, but then it pulled me straight into its web and I couldn’t put it down! The entire book has a sinister and charged atmosphere, charged with secrets and evil, heightened by the romance. And an ending that leaves room for a book 2, while not exactly suggesting there will be one. So leaving one in some more suspence, sort of 😂
  • Emma Watson, by Joan Aiken – A shortish novel based on the unfinished beginnings of Jane Austen’s “The Watsons”. I was a bit disappointed to be honest. I expected the book to take the original and continue from there; instead the book was built on top of it, yes, but somehow missed the Austen style and ambiance by a mile.
  • That Time I Accidentally Became a Serial Killer, by Rebekah Sinclair – My least favorite of this series (three books, at least so far), mainly because I couldn’t handle the total breach of privacy (and consensuality) by the stalker, good intended as it may have been, nor the protagonist just somehow being ok by it all (with minor struggle) because the stalker was sexy – her background making it all the more unrealistic.
  • That Time I Accidentally Killed the Wrong Guy, by Rebekah Sinclair – Back to a wild ride full of (a bit gortesque) humor in this book, which I again loved. An unlikely partnership, betrayal (or was it?), and plot twists that you kinda could see coming from afar, but then they hit you in the face anyway.
  • Harrison Ford: Imperfect Hero, by Garry Jenkins – A bit of an old bio, but a good one, in general. Just kinda funny moments reading some opinions and conclusions of a life that has been moving on for more than two decades since the book was written. Biographers of people who’re not dead yet, should really remember not to write conclusive statements about anything; it just makes the book age bad.
  • The Ether Witch: The Divining of a Devil (The Ether Witch 3), by Delemhach – I had so been waiting for this! I preordered the Kindle version as soon as it was available for preorder – and was puzzled but happy when I downloaded to my Kindle immediately and not in late June. Apparently a glitch in the process, making it available immediately, but I was not sorry. Great read, great ending for Tam and Eli’s story, though a bit sad to bid goodbye to the House Witch world and characters for good (I think).
  • Hidden Springs (Moonlight Springs 6), by Lula Ward – The finale for the Moonlight Springs saga, bringing toghther all the stones and resolving the threat of unraveling for good. These books seem to me like written by (or at least heavily assisted by) AI, but be that true or not, the writing is a bit clumsy and redundand, especially in the first books – it got a bit better towards the end – which bothered me to an end, but I still liked them enough to read them all.
  • Books 1-3 of the Seven Suitors for Seven Witches, by Amy Boyles – Funny, witty romantacies with a bit of a mystery in each. Seven sisters who each need to marry in order to restore/save the family magic. As it happens, they all seem to (accidentally) stumble into deals with someone they deem enemy but find “true love” with in the end. Yes, enemies to lovers, kinda, but then a bit more nuanced than that. And spiced up just so, the way I like best. Currently we have three books, but I would assume there’s four more to come 😏
    • How to Fake It with a Fae – The eldest witch who believes that she’s really not a witch at all since she appears to have no magic, gets accidentally bound into a magical engagement with the fae king living in the spooky castle at the edges of the village. One who’s out to get the Thornrose family for reasons of his own.
    • How to Outwit a Wizard – He cheated on her in high school, breaking her heart. Or did he? He became a playboy, or so it would seem, but it’s more complicated than that. Good intentions and roads to hell and all that unravel in this one where the second daughter is reunited with her high school boyfriend as a means to an end. Just that the end may be different than planned.
    • How to Negotiate With a Nightmare – The third sister is hellbent on getting out of any marriages, yet finds herself married to the Nightmare King in a snap of fingers, finding her own happy ever after in an unlikely place, with an unlikely husband. Is it a nightmare or a dream come true?
  • Täällä Pohjantähden alla (Under the Northern Star, full trilogy), by Väinö Linna – A epos of love and war and social and political struggles of a country being born. The story follows the family of Jussi, the servant who becomes a crofter, dreaming of owning the land some day, and the village he lives in. It spans over several decades, staring in the late 1800’s where Finland is an (autonomous) part of Russia, flowing through the declaration of independence, the civil war that followed, and the first decades of a country trying to resolve the political division of people to reds and whites, all the way to the end of the WWII. The story colors the outlines of history, approaching it all from the very heart of issues: the class divide, the wish to have a better life, the oppression inside the country, explaining why we are now who we are and why certain attitudes and structures exist. Excellent read. Hands down. Something for every Finn to read.
  • We Burned So Bright, by TJ Klune – A short novel, or a long novella. A beautiful story about life with all its colors. Sorrow, regret, pain, unspoken and carried alone while together. Joy, love, happiness, a past and a future that won’t be. Absolution at the end of the world.
  • Strange Familiars (The Seamere College 1), by Keshe Chow – It’s a world where magic powers everything, but no one can use it for free, as it’s harvested, controlled, and distributed by corporations, and corporations mean greed, even at the expense of human lives. Gwendolynne and Harrisford come from the very opposite ends of society, are sworn enemies fighting for the first place in a graduating class, but that naturally is a fertile breeding ground for romance, and when they are sort of accidentally thrown together to investigate the magical anomalies, they find a magic of their own. And then things go kinda haywire and there’s not even a peep about the second book anywhere yet 😭
  • Impractical Magic (Oak Haven Witches 1), by Emily Grimoire – Cozy mystery where the home and an entire existance of the witches of Oak Haven is under threat. Three sisters who lost their Papa in the previous attack a good ten years before, leaving the family broken, the middle child having left and sworn off magic altogether, with a guilt that is or isn’t entirely warranted. She returns, there’s the old “will they or will they not” best friend, and there’s the “oh for fuck’s sake, pull your head out of your ass already” frustration for the reader. All in all, lovely sweet read.
  • Thistlemarsh, by Moorea Corrigan – One of the best reads of this year, this is a fairy tale much the likes of Emily Wilde’s adventures. Mouse finds herself in an impossible situation, the inadvertedly freed fae sees an opportunity, it is supposed to be a win-win, and in the end it is, but first it’s all turned upside down because the unsuspected Fae King is full of surprises. Simply superb!
  • Jingle Spells (Oak Haven Witches 2), by Emily Grimoire – Christmas time in Oak Haven, old rituals leave the witches vulnerable and old enemies take advantage. Delilah, the oldest of the sisters, is the protagonist of this book, returing from her globe trotting of the past year to help save her home and perhaps find love, while at it.

May 3, I was so excited to read Emma Watson (by Joan Aiken), the finished story of Jane Austen’s The Watsons, but I have to say I was somewhat disappointed. The book started where The Watsons left off, which in itself is sort of ok, but seeing as the original is just some 50 pages of a rather unknown beginnngs of a story, I would’ve expected it to be included in this book. Aiken did do a relatively good job of recounting the events of the original, but I can’t help but feel the original set of characters fell short and lacking of their depth in this book.

The narrative of Emma Watson was not exactly what I’d call Austen-y, especially not the latter half. It was a bit all over the place, characters were too many and flitting through, events that Austen would have made the center of the story, were delivered with a sentence or two, after the fact. This book was a hoolabaloo of events and everything rolled too fast for anything to have real weight. It wasn’t a bad book, it just wasn’t what I expected and not really faithful to Austen at all. Pity.

May 9, So, this Accidentally series by Rebekah Sinclair. I loved the first one (That Time I Accidentally Took Over the Mafia), well for the most part anyway. It was a wild ride! As is the third book, That Time I Accidentally Killed the Wrong Guy). Both have longer sex scenes than I generally have patience for, but still, fun and quirky in a delightful way, and the polyamory of the first book totally was the cherry on top of the cake (disregarding the last bit where science and biology were totally ignored).

The middle book, though. The “legally blonde” that everyone gushes about. That Time I Accidentally Became a Serial Killer. I loved to hate it and hated to love it, and was not able to rate it, because while kinda sorta awesome, the invasion of privacy and integrity and the Stockholm Syndrome of sorts totally icked me out. Creeped me and disgusted me. Everyone for their own, I figure, but still, the non-consent from the start was too much. Other than that, I enjoyed it.

May 20, I used to read a lot of historical fiction when I was young. Then I kinda burned out on it. It’s still not a favorite (and political history even less so), but I have a generally relatively well-hidden socio-political bone, that finds certain works of historical fiction extremely nourishing.

Like Täällä Pohjantähden alla (Under the Northern Star) by Väinö Linna. A Finnish classic for sure, but simply an epic saga of how Finland as it is today, was born. The story brings reasons, causations, and people to life and to light in an excellent manner, in a way no school history book or class ever could. It’s not just a story, it holds the seeds of our current society and how and why it all unfolded as it did, in its pages.

I loved Linna’s classic Tuntematon sotilas (Unknown Soldiers) as a teen, but apparently had to live to be 50 before having the courage to tackle this opus of 1200 pages (it’s a trilogy, but I just so happen to have it in a single bind, making it an intimidating tome 😄), and now this experience is prompting me to start reading the Hovimäki series, which I kinda inherited from my grandma (minus book 5 – for some reason that is missing 🤨 need to hunt it down). It takes the reader even further down in Finnish history.

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