I’ve already talked about my conflicting feelings towards romance novels, which I shall not recap right now. Point is that I always know I’m being manipulated emotionally, but I can never help the warm fuzzies of reading about true love and destiny and all that. If there’s one author I’ve always wanted to hate, but … Continue reading Message in a Bottle, by Nicholas Sparks
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To All the Boys I’ve Loved Before, by Jenny Han
Now that everyone—excepting myself, naturally—has seen the movie, time to look at the book. Much like with John Green’s The Fault in Our Stars, I didn’t read Jenny Han’s To All The Boys I’ve Loved Before until people went gaga over the movie. You’ll quickly notice, if you haven’t already, that this is a pattern … Continue reading To All the Boys I’ve Loved Before, by Jenny Han
Sea Witch, by Sarah Henning
By now, you all know my obsession with retold fairy tales. I’ve reviewed a few of them on here, but I have a special case in Sea Witch. Which is to say it came to my attention at a time when I was a little bored with the genre in question (it was bound to … Continue reading Sea Witch, by Sarah Henning
The Little Prince, by Antoine de Saint-Exupery
Perhaps it’s time I took a break from being a grown-up and talked about The Little Prince. Much in the case with the Lord of the Rings books, I didn’t know about this classic story until its movie adaptation happened upon the world. So many YouTube reviewers were falling in love with it, so I … Continue reading The Little Prince, by Antoine de Saint-Exupery
Practical Magic, by Alice Hoffman
I don’t want to give Practical Magic a bad review. The movie, starring Sandra Bullock and Nicole Kidman, is a fluffy Halloween staple for many, and I love stories about witches trying to balance magic and love in their lives. And no doubt, Alice Hoffman can craft an intriguing fantasy; just look at Green Angel … Continue reading Practical Magic, by Alice Hoffman
A Discovery of Witches, by Deborah Harkness
Witches are old hat (no pun intended), and vampires are cliché: many a reader today holds these things to be true. If those two things are the main components of a story, then you probably have a recipe for disaster, especially in the hands of a debut writer. I put up my nose at these … Continue reading A Discovery of Witches, by Deborah Harkness
Alabama Rain, by Aila Stephens
Alabama Rain has two great distinctions: it is the first Southern Gothic book I’ve ever read, and it is the first ARC I’ve had the privilege of reviewing. So I’ll extend an extra big thank-you to Aila Stephens for this opportunity. She has worked very hard to get this book where it is, and I … Continue reading Alabama Rain, by Aila Stephens
The Faerie Path, by Frewin Jones
There are books you like, and then books you’ll love forever—books that truly proved the eternal magic of reading. Here is another book that I’ve read more times than I can count, and I’m glad to show it to you guys here. I know what you’re thinking: Stephanie, another book about fairies and romance and … Continue reading The Faerie Path, by Frewin Jones
A Kiss in Time, by Alex Flinn
Whoever began the trend of fairy tale retellings is a mystery to me. All I know is that Alex Flinn’s books, especially Beastly and A Kiss in Time, were nice training wheels toward what is now a full-on obsession. I pick them up time and again when I need some fluffy fairy tale predictability, and … Continue reading A Kiss in Time, by Alex Flinn
The Wolf Princess, by Cathryn Constable
Little as I know about Russia, its mythology keeps finding its way into my reading. First, the two books of Katherine Arden’s Winter Witch trilogy blew me away, and now, another tale of snow, danger, and magic happened upon my reading pile—only this time of a more middle-grade sort. Orphan girl Sophie Smith and her … Continue reading The Wolf Princess, by Cathryn Constable
