Saturday, January 23, 2021

Spacetime Reading Challenge 2021


Home post for the 2021 Spacetime Reading Challenge. Eligible books are space and time-travel based books.


year participating: 1st
rules/limitations: anthologies (and books?) must be 30k words or longer.
hashtags: #spacetimereads

5 books: Planet Hopper
10 books: Interstellar Explorer
20 books: Galactic Navigator
40 books: To Infinity and Beyond


books completed: #/#
date completed:

A RAD Reading Challenge 2021

  


Home post for the RAD Reading Challenge.

year participating: 1st
rules/limitations: rules
hashtags: #aradreadingchallenge
  • a book of poetry:
  • a random library grab:
  • a one-word title
  • a teenage fave
  • a book in your fave color
  • a book by a black author
  • a book longer than 500 pages
  • a book shorter than 200 pages
  • a backlist read from a favorite author

books completed: 0/9
date completed:

Thursday, January 14, 2021

Book Review: Winter (Signs of Love #0.5)

Winter (Signs of Love, #0.5)Winter by Anyta Sunday

rating: 2 stars ★★☆☆☆
format: ebook
genre: contemporary, new adult, romance (m/m)

summary:

Caspian is a college student who has dated men in with every star sign except Leo. As he hunts for love under this feline sign, his best friend Eli, who is a Virgo, falls for him.

pros:

✔ Anyta Sunday is a very skilled and talented writer when it comes to her style.

✔ The cover is beautiful.

✔ The fluff was cute when it was believable and the sex scene was well-written.

✔ I enjoyed the text messages from each failed relationship with a different sign. It added some creative fun to the chapter breaks and I liked the little graphics for the signs.

cons:

✘ Most of this story was so far-fetched that I debated whether or not to continue. We're supposed to believe that Eli and Caspian are "clueless" best friends, but they act like they are dating from the start. Look, I've never been a gay man, but I'm pretty sure if I were, I wouldn't call "platonic" male friends "babe", sneak across a ladder from my bedroom to his (yes, these are college students who are able to use each other's front doors) to sleep cuddled with him in his bed every night, share tender head kisses, or frequently wrap my legs around him. Eli and Caspian are both caught off guard when Eli's girlfriend leaves him because she feels like a third wheel.


✘ A continuation of the previous point that I thought deserved its own bullet: Caspian asks Eli to check him out before he goes on a date with "Leo", which entails... looking at his dick. Yes, he actually asks Eli to look at him naked to see if he's "ready" to go on his date.


✘ Caspian whittles everyone down to one trait, their sign, and ignores any other personality traits that fall outside of designated signs. He believes that since it didn't work out with one (insert any sign besides Leo), it is doomed to fail with another. He even referred to Flynn in his head as "The Leo" on their date, which ended early because Caspian was completely ignoring him to daydream about his gay-affirming kiss with Eli. But it's okay, because Flynn ships Caspian/Eli! Which leads me to...

✘ Everyone freaking ships Caspian and Eli. Except, apparently, Eli's now-ex-girlfriend. Their moms practically fangirl over the prospect of their son's hooking up.

✘ Dialogue between Caspian and his mom mostly consisted of Caspian relaying his woes to her, and her responding sadly with different pet names. I think all she said in the entire book was "Oh, honey/darling/dear/sweetheart/etc." I wanted her to say something else, literally anything else.

Caspian and Eli's mothers, circa 2021

overall thoughts:

I'm going to be honest, this book almost ended up on my DNF shelf several times, and once or twice I almost threw my phone. I pushed through because it was only 64 pages long. I would read more by this author as long as the other novels in this series make more sense, because her writing style really is good and I really was looking forward to reading the full Signs of Love series books.

review cross-posted: Skyler St. Clair on Goodreads & Skyler's Bookshelf Reading Blog

applicable challenges:
none

Book Review: The Feast of the Drowned (Doctor Who: New Series Adventures #8)

The Feast of the DrownedThe Feast of the Drowned by Stephen Cole
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

rating: 4.5 stars, rounded up ★★★★★
format: audiobook
genre: science fiction

disclaimer: For some reason, I repeatedly typed the title out as "The Feast of the Damned" which is why the url is like that. Sorry!

summary:

If you ever wanted an episode of Doctor Who, but every character is played by David Tennant, this audiobook is for you! The Feast of the Drowned is a short adventure about the Tenth Doctor and his companion Rose, who investigate a sunken Naval ship that Rose's friend's brother was on when disaster struck. After the sinking, ghostly apparitions of the victims begin appearing to their families, begging for help before "the feast."

pros:

  • The audiobook is narrated by David Tennant, who reads the story with all of his enthusiasm and David Tennant-isms. It's funny listening to him jump from his native Scottish accent, to the Doctor's British accent, to a minor character's American accent, and back again. I think it would be impossible to be bored during anything read by him. I'm sure I would have gotten much better grades in school had my textbooks been narrated by him.

  • I liked the spooky, mysterious story. It was a bit gorier than an episode of Doctor Who, though not in an overwhelming, horror way.
  • There was a strong cast of new supporting characters.

cons:

  • There wasn't much I could find wrong with this, except for my normal amount of annoyance at Mickey. It seemed like he was just sorta there, and that they plot could have been carried easily enough without him.


Sorry, Mickey.

overall thoughts:

This was a short, fun listen! I did pay $4.99 for it on iTunes, and while it was worth it, the price for such a short audiobook does not have me in too big of a rush to buy the rest of the books in the series, but I'm sure I will continue to listen to these in the future.

review cross-posted: Skyler St. Clair on Goodreads & Skyler's Bookshelf Reading Blog

applicable challenges:
Pick Your Poison Reading Challenge - Borrowing (a book with a character from a different book - The Doctor)
SFF Virtual Badge Collection - The Monster Badge

Wednesday, January 13, 2021

Imposter Syndrome & Discount Books

 A sense of reader/reviewer imposter syndrome due to only reading ebooks led me to a discount bookshop.

(Impostor syndrome (also known as impostor phenomenon, impostorism, fraud syndrome or the impostor experience) is a psychological pattern in which an individual doubts their skills, talents or accomplishments and has a persistent internalized fear of being exposed as a "fraud".) - Wikipedia

(from top to bottom w/links to Goodreads pages) Contact by Carl Sagan, Ruins (The X-Files #4) by Kevin J. Anderson, The Cruel Stars (The Cruel Stars #1) by John Birmingham, & It Devours! (Welcome to Night Vale #2) by Joseph Fink and Jeffrey Cranor)

I've been feeling bad recently as I try to make my way into the book blogging world. I see posts with beautiful pictures of books that readers have collected, check my bank account, and return to my Kindle Unlimited and free ebooks I've received. I'm envious of the bloggers with their stacks of books (I am, of course, happy for them) and artsy social media photos. I know that I don't need paperbacks or hardcovers to be a book blogger, but that sneaky imposter syndrome crept up on me once again.

So I decided to venture out to my favorite book shop, Half Price Books, which I haven't been to in years, since before I moved back to Illinois. The nostalgia of the store helped relieve some of the stress, and I was able to find a couple of books that have been on my "to read" list for a while, plus a few books I was learning about for the first time (who knew the X-Files had a book series?). With four books for about $20, I left feeling satisfied and excited to read my new books.


One of those books was Contact, which I admit that I bought because of my favorite drag queen biological woman (and provider of 20% of my serotonin), Katya Zamolodchikova.


You're welcome.

If you are unfamiliar with Katya's Contact obsession and Trixie Mattel's exasperation, I bless you with this video, "Katya CONTACT Compilation".


Now that that is all settled and I have some brand new used books, my only question is, what book to read first? Let me know if you've read any of these, I'd love to hear your opinions!



Saturday, January 9, 2021

Book Review: The Fantastic Fluke

The Fantastic FlukeThe Fantastic Fluke by Sam Burns
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

rating: 3 stars ★★★
format: ebook
genre: fantasy, paranormal, romance (m/m)


Whew, I've been putting off writing this review for a long time. In the almost-month it took me to sit down and write about how I felt about this book, I was just as conflicted as I was during the three months it took me to read it. It had everything I wanted: magic, ghosts, an adorable fox. I expected an immediate page-turn, but unfortunately, it fell a little flat for me. I found myself putting it down for weeks at a time, not connecting to any of the characters enough to really care what was going on in their lives.

Highlight the words in parenthesis for spoilers. (like this)

summary:

Sage is a level 2 mage and an epic disappointment to his recently-deceased father, who is a mega-asshole and now haunts the bookshop that he left to Sage in his will. Sage saves a fox familiar being beaten by some guys in an alley (what asshole beats a fox??). He soon meets Gideon, a hot ghost gunslinger who is back from the dead once again after a super-special mage is killed. Sage learns that he himself is one of these super-special mages that has an untapped power within himself that he can access by using the ley lines that converge under his town. It's not clearly explained how the ley line magical battery charging works, and 50% into the story, I don't think Sage understands much either. The story follows Sage, Gideon, Fluke the fox, and a supporting cast of quirky characters as they try to solve the mystery of who is killing magic-users and why the convergence keeps resurrecting Gideon to train new mages.

pros:

  • FLUKE. Oh my god, Fluke. That little fox familiar stole the show, as well as my heart. His huge personality shone through in every scene he was in, which was fortunately most of them. I found it impossible to not smile at that tricky, dorky fox.



  • There is a lot of potential for the sequel. I was very curious about the Convergence, what the hell was "living" down there, and what Sage is going to do with his newly-discovered powers.
  • I thought Sage's friendship with Baz was very sweet.
  • The idea of a (witch hunt within a magical community was very unique to me. Magic is something that is common in day-to-day life, but certain types of mages are considered "witches" due to the nature of their powers and a heaping dose of religious fanaticism.)
  • I liked how much of a snarky-sweet asshole Gideon is. Sage's dad sent me into a blind rage every time he appeared, but Gideon's interactions with him made some of those infuriating scenes worth it (ex: taunting Sage's father by being able to sit on furniture - which isn't explained at all in the book and adds to the usual confusion about spectral physics).
  • Sage had a brief moment of badassery when (he raised not only Gideon, but Gideon's horse familiar.)
  • Sage was very relatable, and he addressed mental illness in a humorous way. I definitely use humor and sarcasm to cope when I'm having a rough time. Ex: "I wasn’t sure thirty-year-olds were supposed to be exhausted all the time, but maybe I was just ahead of the curve on the whole aging thing." & "Because clearly my gender was related to my ability to brush off trauma." Sage said fuck gender stereotypes and mental illness stigma.
  • Sage's grandmother was the sweet, precious grandmother I wish I had. Her shipping of Sage and Gideon, while a little awkward at times, was pretty entertaining. She definitely wins Best Wingman of 2020.
  • "You’re not the savior of everything just because you were born with a high capacity for magic.” The Chosen One trope: subverted.
  • I love the writing style. Although sometimes crammed where it shouldn't have been crammed, the humor of Sage's internal monologue had my laughing out loud at times.
  • The cover is lovely.

cons: 
  • I felt like the tone of the book was far too lighthearted for all of the dark shit that was happening around Sage. People were being murdered, some mysterious entity lived in the ley lines under the earth, and yet everyone seemed rather chipper and spent their time discussing the bookstore and what colors to paint the walls. Someone was hunting down mages and Sage and Gideon were on a dangerous time crunch, and when Sage's grandmother gifts him important and presumably old and valuable magical books, Sage tosses them on the floor and doesn't open any of them except the one that will make Gideon corporeal so he can get laid. Yes, Sage learns how to bring people back from the dead and instead of bringing back any of the murdered mages (one of whom is his own mother), he brings back a guy he's known for just a few weeks cause he wants that dead cowboy dick. Priorities.
https://media2.giphy.com/media/VgaGt3eXHSxGmOsXWY/source.gif
  • Sage's immaturity. This ties into the above rant about the tone of the book, but I felt it deserved its own point. Sage is thirty years old, and instead of taking anything seriously as people around him are being hunted and killed, Sage continues to joke (to himself or out loud) how pervy "convergence link" sounds. Or touching the convergence. Or literally anything to do with the convergence. Am I missing a hilarious double entendre? I just don't get it.
  • The "everyone is queer" trope. I'm pretty sure the only straight character in this book is Sage's father. But then again, who knows? Maybe his repressed feelings are why he's so grumpy all the time.
  • The Big Baddie: (was some lady who owned a coffee shop. I know the author was going for a twist but this lady was the polar opposite of intimidating. Her motives were also unclear. She was sucking the life out of mages to become more powerful in order to... brew better coffee? Get more customers? Who knows.)
  • Sage thought in memes, which, while amusing, I can't see holding up for long.

Yes, "Ok, boomer" was actually used in this novel.
Although I am grateful for any opportunity to use a Trixie & Katya gif in a review.
  • The finances of Sage were a bit confusing. He just inherited a bookshop, says that he has just a few hundred dollars in his budget for groceries each month and therefore can't buy vegetables. Look, I've lived paycheck-to-paycheck more often than not, and I am still able to afford more than just ramen and PB&J sandwiches with a few hundred dollars a month. Either a) food is incredibly expensive in this world and there isn't an Aldi in sight or b) Sage is stockpiling ramen and peanut butter for a hypothetical apocalypse, much like my father does, but I won't go off on that wild tangent.
  • Sage has the thickest freaking skull, and everyone around him is patient and seems to find his cluelessness endearing. It was, at first, but when I was 60% into the book and Sage still didn't realize Fluke was his familiar, I felt like throwing my phone.
  • This one is very minor, but it get a bit confusing to have a class called "dead mages" in a book with multiple mages that are, you know... actually dead.
overall thoughts:

I think this is the bitchiest review I've written in my short time writing reviews. It's either because I had such high hopes for this book, or because I've already had my before-bed smoke. Probably both, although any glaring, absurd typos are likely due to the latter. The storyline had me interested but there was too much filler and the plot moved slowly. I do fully intend on reading the future sequel. Sage's story has enormous potential, and I hope that is explored more.

Review cross-posted: Skyler St. Clair on Goodreads & Skyler's Bookshelf Reading Blog

Thursday, January 7, 2021

Book Review: Norse Mythology

Norse MythologyNorse Mythology by Neil Gaiman
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

rating: 5 stars ★★★★★
format: audiobook
genre: fantasy, mythology, short stories

REVIEW COMING SOON


Applicable challenges:
Books in Wonderland Fantasy Reading Challenge - January (a fantasy book inspired by mythology)
Pick Your Poison Reading Challenge - Occupations (a book written by a college professor - professor of the arts at Bard College)
SFF Virtual Badge Collection - The Big Battle Badge