Audiobook: Soul Searching

by Lyla Sage
Read by Jason Clarke and Samantha Brentmoor
Support your local independent bookstore: buy it there!
Or listen at Libro.fm
Content: There is on-page sex, plus lots of swearing, including many f-bombs. It’s in the Romance section of the bookstore.

Collins Cartwright has come back to her hometown of Sweetwater Peak to help her family. Or so she says. In actuality, she’s lost her ability to talk to ghosts and she’s run out of photography gigs, and she’s unhappy. So, she’s come back to find herself. What she ends up doing is working for Brady Cooper, a new resident in Sweetwater Peak. And what starts out rough turns into something… more.

First off: the narration on this one is fantastic. They did Lost and Lassoed together, and were honestly one of the best parts of that book. I adore their voices, and they have fantastic chemistry. This was another dual narration, which I’m not terribly fond of, but I liked it in this instance. And while this is a super slow burn – it lacks the usual three-act romance structure – I enjoyed getting to know Brady and Collins. I liked the town that Sage created, and her take on ghosts was quite interesting. It’s a non-spooky ghost story, with a bit of a mystery that Collins solves by the end.

And Sage knows how to write a good romance. I’m definitely on board to see where she goes next with this series.

Someone You Can Build a Nest In

by John Wiswell
First sentence: “Each year when Shesheshen hibernated, she dreamed of her childhood nest.”
Support your local independent bookstore: buy it there!
Content: There is a lot of gore and a high body count, plus a lot of swearing, including f-bombs. It’s in the Science Fiction/Fantasy section of the bookstore.

Shesheshen is a shapeshifter, residing outside the town of Underlook. Sure, she kills people once in a while, but a monster has got to eat. But, one day she is rudely awakened by monster hunters who gravely injure her. (Rosemary. Who knew?) She rushes off (after killing one of them, of course) and finds Homily, a human who is extraordinarily kind. Unfortunately, Homily believes that the monster of Underlook has cursed her family, and so is hunting it. Shesheshen is sure she hasn’t cursed anyone, but since she’s coming to like Homily, she decides to stay and help. Things unravel from there.

This is a hard plot to summarize, because not much happens. On one hand, it’s a simple love story: two characters coming to love themselves and each other and figure out ways to stand together against the world. (Ah, the villain of the story is a doozy.) It’s very simple, but it’s also very weird. To make the monster – to make someone as odd, weird, and potentially scary – the main character is a remarkable thing. Sure, people are dying, people are scared of Shesheshen, but she just wants to live her life. It’s weird, it’s sweet, it’s violent, and it’s charming.

I adored it.

The Bookshop Below

by Georgia Summers
First sentence: “
Support your local independent bookstore: buy it there!
Review copy pilfered from the ARC shelves at work.
Release date: November 18, 2025
Content: There is a lot of violence and swearing, including many f-bombs. There is also one closed-door sex scene. It will be in the Science Fiction/Fantasy section of the bookstore.

Cassandra Fairfax never expected much out of her life once she left Chiron’s bookshop. She was a thief – dealing mostly in the magic books that had once been her livelihood at the bookshop- and, with one bad night, she was a killer. But then she got a letter from Chiron willing her his bookshop – again, something she never expected. Except, he was murdered. And the magic bookshops on the river are failing. And maybe Cassandra isn’t cut out to live a non-criminal life. Then again: maybe she’s the only one who can save the magic from disappearing from the world altogether.

I thoroughly enjoyed this one. I really liked the magic system – there are magic books (not ones with instructions, but regular books that just happen to have magic properties) that can be bought (not necessarily with money) in bookshops that you can only find if they are needed. There are readers – Cassandra is one – who can read from the books and make the power come out. It’s dangerous – there’s an instance early on when a reader read a sleeping-beauty-like book, and it was taking over the house and the owners had to go in and fix it. It wasn’t hard to follow, and Summers did a good job implementing the benefits and detriments as she went along, so by the final conflict, there was a lot at stake.

And it kept me interested. I liked the characters – and there are many intriguing characters to like and dislike – and while I thought for a while that Summers wasn’t going to be able to wrap the story up, she did in a very satisfactory way.

I’d love another book in this world, not because it needs one, but because I’m fascinated with the world she created.

Highly recommended.

Last Night at the Lobster

by Stewart O’Nan
First sentence: “Mall traffic on a gray winter’s day, stalled.”
Support your local independent bookstore: buy it there!
Content: There is swearing, including multiple f-bombs. It’s in the adult fiction section of the bookstore.

In a rundown mall complex in a rundown town in the Northeast, employees at a Red Lobster are having their final night. Corporate decided to shut the restaurant down, and the manager – Manny – was forced to let go of everyone but five that are coming with him to Olive Garden. Most of his employees don’t show up for the last shift, four days before Christmas, which is fine, since a blizzard set in. They’re slow, they’re shorthanded, but dang it, Manny is going to see this last shift through.

It’s a short, reflective novel, taking place over the course of 12 hours or so. Manny is regretting the end of his affair with a waitress, juggling all the employees who didn’t show up, and wondering if he chose the right people or did the right thing. Not much happens – there are customers, and anyone who has worked a service job recognizes them. But, it’s a beautifully written book, and so I didn’t mind the lack of plot so much.

It’s set at Christmas, but I’m not sure it’s a Christmas book. It’s very melancholy, and it shows the effects of decisions made by suits in faraway places. It makes you think about capitalism and the working class and the way we treat service workers. It’s a good book, even if I don’t think I truly loved it.

Audiobook: Busted

by Dan Gemeinhart
Read by: Mark Sanderlin
Support your local independent bookstore: buy it there!
Or listen at Libro.fm
Content: There is some implied swearing (cleverly “quacked” out), minor crime, mafia dealings, and disobeying of parents. It’s in the Middle Grade section of the bookstore.

Oscar Aberdeen is a good kid. He’s got lots of grandparents to make sure he’s a good kid, since he lives at Sunny Days retirement home. He doesn’t want anything to change; he’s happy the way it is. But a new owner comes in, and raises the rent on Oscar and his grandpa. And so when new resident (and possible “bad news”) Jimmy Deluca asks Oscar to help him escape Sunny Days (he’s restricted) and accomplish his bucket list for $10,000 to help Oscar stay at Sunny Days, Oscar doesn’t refuse. That’s what starts the worst (and best) day of Oscar’s life.

This was an absolute delight to listen to. Gemeinhart knows how to write to middle grade readers, and knows how to make a story fun. It’s got heart – it’s about being a good person and doing the good thing and being a good friend – and it tackles tough issues like cancer and dying and deadbeat parents and losing one’s home. But it’s fun, entertaining, and thoroughly enjoyable to listen to.

Highly recommend this one. (Maybe I should get around to reading his other books, too!)

Monthly Round-Up: September 2025

Someone tell me where September went, because I have no idea.

My favorite this month:

If only because I watched the entire 1995 Pride and Prejudice immediately after finishing this book. It’s an excellent work of literary scholarship.

As for the rest:

Adult Fiction:

The Kiss Curse
Discontent (audiobook)
Rose in Chains (DNF) (audiobook)
Miss Winter in the Library with a Knife
The Everlasting
A Witch’s Guide to Magical Innkeeping (audiobook)

YA:

Hekate
Guardians of Dreamdark: Windwitch
Joy to the Girls

Graphic Novel:

Dream On
Winging It

Non-Fiction:

Paper Girl

Now if I can only get time to slow down a little bit.

Paper Girl

by Beth Macy
First sentence: “It was June 2023, and Silas James had just graduated from Urbana High School, forty-one years after I wore that same insignia.”
Support your local independent bookstore: buy it there!
Release date: October 7, 2025
Review copy pilfered from the ARC shelves at the bookstore.
Content: There is swearing, including multiple f-bombs, and mention of sexual abuse. It will be in the Biography section of the bookstore.

When Beth Macy graduated from Urbana High School in 1982, she was able to go to a four-year college on a Pell Grant, since she came from a poor household. She used it as her ticket out, moving first to Georgia and then to Virginia. But, 40 years later, as divisions in her family and between her high school friends grew, she returned to find out why the graduation rate dropped, the addiction rate soared, and it’s harder than ever to get out of the poverty people find themselves in.

It’s a good story, as Macy recounts her troubled childhood with an alcoholic father, interspersing that with the stories of some of the students and people she met over the course of the year and a half she researched this book. She talked to many of the kids she went to school with, trying to understand where they were coming from politically, even as she found them on ever-widening divides. She explores the ways in which poverty makes life challenging and the ways that trauma continues to affect people. She is staunchly anti-Republican, detailing all the ways the Republican party hurts the people it claims to help, but she is not pro-Democrat, faulting them for not reaching out to the poor working class in order to help. It’s a challenging read at times, but it’s a good one: Macy is a good writer, and she has empathy for the people she’s writing about.

It’s an excellent, and important, book.

Audiobook: A Witch’s Guide to Magical Innkeeping

by Sangu Mandanna
Read by Samara MacLaren
Support your local independent bookstore: buy it there!
Or listen at Libro.fm
Content: There is swearing, including multiple f-bombs, instances of emotional child abuse, and one fade-to-black sex scene. It’s in the Romance-Fantasy section of the bookstore.

I know: I said a few posts ago that I don’t do romantasy. Let’s put it this way: a slightly magical book set in contemporary times is NOT romantsy, and I think I prefer the latter.

Sera was an up-and-coming, talented witch when she was younger, but when she was 15, her great-aunt, whom she loves and lives with, died. Sera was talented enough to bring her aunt back from the dead, but she lost most of her magic and was exiled from the British Guild of Magic as a result. Now, 15 years later, running an inn full of wayward people (both magical and non-), she finds the resurrection spell, something that will help her get her magic back. It’s a historian, Luke, who happens (sort-of) to be stopping in at the hotel with his younger sister, that puts Sera on the right path, and maybe together they can get her magic back.

This was absolutely delightful, especially on audio. The narrator was perfect (Luke is Scottish, and her accent for him was delightful), and the story just silly enough and charming enough to make me happy. It was exactly what I needed, and I can’t complain.

Joy to the Girls

by Rachael Lippincott and Alyson Derrick
First sentence: “I push through the heavy wooden doors out of the Cathedral of Learning, my last exam of the term finally complete.”
Support your local independent bookstore: buy it there!
Review copy provided by the publisher.
Release date: Sept 30, 2025
Content: There is some swearing, including multiple f-bombs, and some fade-to-black sex. It’s in the YA Romance/Holiday section of the bookstore.

Alex and Molly are nearly done with college, and they both have plans for the future. The problem is that neither one of them has talked to the other about said plans. Alex wants to move in together; Molly wants to go to King’s College in London for an MFA. On top of that, it’s winter holiday, and their friend May has invited them and their other mutual friend, Cora (who has a crush on May), to her hometown, which happens to be all-in on Christmas. Can Alex and Molly make it through the trip with their secrets and their relationship intact (while also setting Cora and May up).

I’ll admit up front that I haven’t read the book that this novella is a spin-off of, and so maybe I’m missing something when it comes to character development. Because while this was cute, it was lacking. I was constantly annoyed that Alex and Molly just DIDN’T TALK TO EACH OTHER, and I felt not quite enough was spent on Cora and May getting together. (Also, there was a definite lack of figure skating.) It was cute, but not cute enough to make me really love it. Maybe if I were the intended audience (read: a fan of the first book) it would have sat differently.

The Everlasting

by Alix Harrow
First sentence: “It begins where it ends: beneath the yew tree.”
Support your local independent bookstore: buy it there!
Release date: October 28, 2025
Review copy provided by the publisher.
Content: There is a lot of violence and swearing, including multiple f-bombs. There is also some on-page sexytimes. It will be in the Science Fiction/Fantasy section of the bookstore.

This one’s plot is hard to tell, if you don’t want to give too much away. Let’s put it this way: it’s a time loop, it’s vaguely Arthurian, it’s talking about the stories we tell ourselves and the stories countries tell their people, it’s a strong case against colonialism, and it’s about love and power. The rest, I think, is immaterial.

I liked it well enough; I’m not fond of time-travel books, and I struggle with time loops. But, Harrow did this one well, and she managed to close it in a satisfying (and mostly logical) way. I do enjoy her writing, though I have not read much by her, and I was intrigued enough to keep going, even through my confusion. It’s a clever book done well.

(As an aside: this is fantasy with a side of romance, and I enjoy these MUCH more than a romance with a side of fantasy.)

Maybe I should get around to reading her other books.