Dear Sunday: Hello 2018!

Dear Sunday is my weekly post participating in the Caffeinated Book Reviewer series.

Can you believe it? I can. 2017 was a good, busy year. I turned 24, finished my second year of grad school, got a second job, had a bunch of my college friends come visit me, submitted my first scientific paper, was the photographer for my friend's wedding, wrote a novel, and spent the holidays seeing family.

But now a whole new year beckons. I don't really do yearly goals; I prefer to break them down into more attainable monthly goals which I still manage to forget about. However, one of my yearly goals for 2017 was to read more books than I did in 2016-- a goal I soundly achieved [[58 books in 2017 vs 24 books in 2016]]. For 2018 I don't necessarily need to read even more books, but I do hope to keep up blogging regularly. For more nostalgia and goal-setting check out my yearly wrap up post this Thursday! 


  • Top Ten Tuesday: Favorite new-to-me authors I discovered in 2017
  • 2017 reading wrap-up
That's it for me! What about you? Are you a New Year's resolution type of person? Any bookish resolutions you're hoping to keep? 

Review: The Bookshop on the Corner

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The Bookshop on the Corner by Jenny Colgan 
Genre: Fiction, Romance
Rating: 7 / 10

Nina is a librarian at a time when libraries are downsizing and people are losing their jobs left and right. When the inevitable rolls around she decides that she can still pursue her love of matching the perfect book for each person, and she opens a traveling bookshop.

So.

This book. It was a disappointing but not overly bad read. First off, Nina learns that she needs to stop READING books and instead LIVE her LIFE because apparently those two things are mutually exclusive?

As every bookworm loves hearing, this book ironically rambles on about how REAL LIFE is so wonderful why would one bury oneself in READING? Of course the point the author is trying to make (I suppose) is that there needs to be a balance between life and reading. However, it mainly came across as a long story about a woman whose life became so much more FULFILLING once she put those darn books down. [[Seriously. There's an entire scene where the best friend comments on how much better Nina is doing now that she no longer carries books around with her]]

If you ignore the recurring theme which insults the reader (why aren't you LIVING your LIFE already??) the book was a pleasant read. The romances didn't really make sense-- they didn't really click with my understanding of the main character.

It was cute to read someone live out what I'm sure is many of our dream-- living in the beautiful countryside selling books? Sign me up! Once again, the book was a bit heavy handed on how absolutely AWFUL cities were-- so crowded and dark and dank and horrible and smelly and why in the world would anyone choose this?-- and how AMAZING the Scottish countryside was. Like. Okay. I get it. You don't have to hit me over the head with how horrible my city-dwelling life now is and how much improved it would be if I moved to the countryside.

Overall: a cute, slightly disappointing read. Good for a quick read but it would not be the first book I recommended to a friend looking for a light romance featuring  a bookish character.

Hm. That sounds interesting though. Let me know: what is your favorite light romance featuring a bookish character?

Dear Sunday: Merry Christmas!

Dear Sunday is my weekly post participating in the Caffeinated Book Reviewer series.

It is Christmas Eve and this is a wonderful season to spend time with family, so my weekly post will be a bit short! It has been great spending time at home and seeing relatives, exchanging gifts, well, you get the idea. 

It has been a lovely year for me in many ways and hopefully next month I will write a post looking back at 2017. But for now I'm going to put the laptop away and spend time with family. 


  • This will be another 'discover as you go' week for me! I don't foresee me having enough time to get a top ten tuesday post up-- at least, not on Tuesday itself. If for some reason I find enough time to write a review ((I have a short one planned about a book I did not finish)) then I will post that later on in the week. In short: stay tuned. ;) 

That's it for me! Merry Christmas :) Even if you don't celebrate this holiday, I hope you have some time off to spend with your loved ones. 

October + November Recap

I'm linking up with The Book Date  and Feed Your Fiction Addiction for this monthly review!


This monthly review is sorely late, so let's jump right into it!

My favorite October memory: My parents happen to visit me the weekend of my choir concert! This is the first official choir I've sung in, so it was cool that they got a chance to hear us.

My favorite November memory: Seeing my nephew (1 1/2 years old) at Thanksgiving. It had been nearly a year since I last saw him and man babies change a lot in a year.

These past two months have not been good reading months for me. Sadly I was swamped with work and life and somehow only managed to read two books in two months! I mean I expected that to happen in November, when all my free time was thrown at the crazy endeavour of writing a novel but still, they are sad numbers to look at. Here's to hoping that December is better! I'm really looking forward to Christmas break and alllll the reading that will happen then. Theoretically.




The Raven Boys by Maggie S

Vigil by Angela Slatter



This Side of Murder by Anna Lee Huber

The Oyster Catcher by Jo Thomas 

The Beautiful Ones by Silvia Moreno-garcia

The Raven Boys by Maggie Stiefvater 




I know it's odd to pick a favorite and a least favorite out of a pool of two. However, I felt very strongly about each book! The Raven Boys was amazing and I really was disappointed by Vigil.

Whew; that's it! And the award for the latest monthly wrap up goes to...me!

TTT: 5 Books I hope Santa Brings

This post brought to you by the Top Ten Tuesday series over at The Broke and the Bookish.


This week's top ten tuesday is a bit odd for me. As you may or may not now, I don't really buy books. I don't like collecting tons of books-- I would much rather get them at the library and then return them. Or, if I do buy one, I always try to give it away/donate it after reading it.

However there are some books that I don't mind owning (such as poetry books) so I've rounded up five books that I wouldn't mind finding under the Christmas tree this year.



2351334933019790  A Brush with Shadows is the latest book in a murder mystery series I feel in love with years ago.

I never read poetry books, but Milk and Honey looks really interesting.

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Abundant Beauty: Marianne North is a botanist who traveled the globe to study the plants and I've been meaning to read her book for a while now.

The Bear and the Nightingale: I've heard such good things about this book!


32802595Annd of course, the book I am dying to read: Record of a Spaceborn few. It really would be a Christmas miracle if this book ended up underneath my tree seeing how it won't be officially published until next summer.


What about you? What are you hoping to unwrap on Christmas?

Dear Sunday: Christmas Break

Dear Sunday is my weekly post participating in the Caffeinated Book Reviewer series.

I was quite pleased with my wrapping this year :) 
It's happened! In exactly two days I will be on the road heading home for the first time in a year. I have survived this busy holiday/finals season only barely, having to miss my choir performance (y'all a six hour practice + two performances just did not fit in with my two jobs). Anyhow, I'm hoping to devote more time to this blog once I'm home (I'm also hoping to read, craft, draw, relax, hang out with family, friends, do holiday stuff, final present shopping, oh and a little work). So. We'll see what happens ;) 






  • great question! who knows. with the traveling and the packing and the unpacking I don't want to make any promises....


That's it for me! What about you? Are you taking time off? Are you over planning your vacation like me? 

5 Reasons to Read Song of a Captive Bird

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Song of a Captive Bird by Jasmin Darznik 
Expected Publication Date: February 13th 2018
[[thanks Netgalley for letting me read this book!]] 

The bare bones: Song of a Captive Bird is a fictionalized memoir of Iranian poet Forugh Farrokhzad and I picked it up on Netgalley a month or two ago. It was a beautiful haunting read, and I have five reasons why you should put it on your TBR list immediately.


Reading diverse books is something I struggle with. After all, it can be easy to get stuck in a reading rut-- I loved this historical fiction so I look for more books just like that and so on and so forth.  When I saw this title pop up on Netgalley I knew it was the perfect addition to spice up my reading life. Not only is it about the life of an Iranian poet, the author is also Iranian.


Memoirs, even fictionalized memoirs like this one, just aren't really my cup a tea. Every now and then I'll read an autobiography but only if the person is a comedian. It's hard for me to get into nonfiction which is why I was shocked at how riveting this book was. Obviously it is fictionalized but it still reads like a memoir. Even so, it is lyrical and beautiful and kept my attention from page one.


Iranian history is not my strong suit. I know a smattering of information-- mostly vague words like oil, dictators, veils, revolutions, green-- but apart from that I got nothing. This novel introduced to me a tumultuous, beautiful, contradictory country before and during a time of political upheaval.

"Whatever Iran wanted to be, I loved it. I'd found my life's purpose here. Every poem I'd ever written was entangled with my country's story. I loved its downtrodden, small-minded, generous people. I loved them; I belonged to them. They were my people, and I was theirs."


Interspersed in this novel were lines of Farough's poetry, translated into English. It was nice to hear her actual voice woven into the story.

We found truth in the garden
in the shy glance of a nameless flower,
found eternity in the moment
when two suns faced each other. 
-- from 'Conquest of the Garden' by Farough


This is a fictionalized piece. In some ways it is the story of Farough Farrokhzad. In some ways it is the story of any of the nameless Iranian women born into those harsh times. It is specific and universal but most of all it is beautiful and heartbreaking. It is educational without feeling pedantic; it shows a life that is difficult without feeling hopeless, a struggle that is at times tortuous but not unbearable.


Have I convinced you yet? What are some of your favorite books by diverse authors that I should check out next? 

Top Ten Tuesday: 5 favorite reads of 2017


This post brought to you by the Top Ten Tuesday series over at The Broke and the Bookish.

So I realized as I was writing this that in July I wrote a 'best of 2017' post! It was interesting to see that some of the same books ended up on my list again; but there are also some new additions. 




  • Shades of Grey by Jasper Fforde. As I said before: If 1984 and Catch-22 had a child, and that child went through a rebellious teenage phase, then the result would be this stunning, witty, and expansive novel. Part dystopian, part political satire, all amazing, this novel kept my eyes glued to every one of the 400 pages.  It's hilarious and depressing and fascinating all rolled into one.This type of novel was what Jasper Fforde was made for-- I can't imagine what it would be like to be in his mind.
  • Binti by Nnedi Okorafor. As I said before: I'm not sure where I first heard about this short story. Maybe a John Green recommendation? Either way I'm so glad I stumbled upon this sci-fi tale. I love my science fiction to be inventive, to think of other civilizations and technologies so different from our own, and then to craft a story out of their foreignness and Binti was all of that and more. Clearly taking it's roots from the author's own Nigerian roots it is both wildly inventive and universal in all the right ways, as a young woman leaves her village to travel thousands of miles through dead space to claim her spot at a prestigious university.
  • The Stars for a Light by Lynn Morris and Gilbert Morris. This is a fun historical fiction about a woman doctor back in a time when those two words did not go together. It's not the best book in the world but I enjoyed it, and I loved watching the characters evolve over the long series. 
  • The Long way to a small angry planet by Becky Chambers. Check out my review for the whole story but in short: HOLY COW THIS IS AMAZING. 
  • The Darkest Part of the Forest by Holly Black. Check out my review but in short: HOLY COW THIS IS AMAZING.

Whew! That's it! What about you? What were your favorite reads of 2017?? 

Dear Sunday: almost Christmas break

Dear Sunday is my weekly post participating in the Caffeinated Book Reviewer series. This week I'm also linking to Stacking the Shelves!

a pretty fall photo from a couple weeks ago :) 
Last week was: choir practice-- our concert is literally in a week and we're performing like ten pieces for no good reason AND we haven't had time to even go over all the pieces and we'll see how that all turns out; Christmas party with my church group, white elephant gifts and pizza, I scored a cute beanie; first Advent service of the season; church Christmas party with holiday games that ended with me having to do charades so that my teammates would guess the holiday song "Thistle Hair the Christmas Bear". Yeah. Let that one sink in. Charades. Suffice it to say my team did not win. But that's alright! 

This coming week promises to be almost as busy as last week (oh Christmas break you can't come soon enough) so my upcoming posts will be more of a suggestion than a promise. But onto the books! Oh! And because I clearly don't own enough books I need to read, I bought another one at the dollar tree. I literally can't pass up a dollar book. 

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A Reunion of Ghosts by Judith Claire Mitchell
((I just read the goodreads synopsis which I didn't do in Dollar Tree and I'm not longer quite as excited for the book...the synopsis on the book cover is very different from what goodreads has! Has anyone read this?))

  • Top Ten Tuesday: Favorite 2017 Reads
  • Monthly Review: October + November

That's it! With any luck I'll be able to juggle my research projects, finishing work for the silliest class I've ever had the misfortune to enroll in, writing those posts, AND all the choir rehearsals scheduled for this week. What about you? Are you like me, and your holiday season is far too busy??

Why Vigil by Angela Slatter left me disappointed




I had such high hopes for this novel. To begin with this novel is really hard to find in US libraries and when I requested one through inter-library-loan, my library informed me that instead they were just going to buy a copy and put me on hold. Fast forward probably months and I get an email telling me that the book was in.

The first paragraph of this novel got my hopes up and I read the rest of the 350 pages hoping to recapture that feeling. And in some bits and pieces, I did. There were parts of this novel I really enjoyed.

Vigil features the struggles of a woman as she walks between two worlds-- the normal and the magical-- and attempts to keep peace in both and figure out why murdered sirens keep turning up.

This novel is a hybrid of urban fantasy and modern fantasy; blending original elements with the reimagining of classic fantasy tropes (fairies and sirens etc). What excited me about a novel is the originality of it, I'm such a sucker for innovative urban fantasy. However this was a more traditional fantasy novel, with a few sparks of originality thrown in.

This novel features a strong female lead who is tough and caring, overworked and smart. The plot is interesting and the magic isn't dull. The novel is not bad. It just isn't great and halfway through I completely lost interest and the book sat on my table for weeks. Eventually-- solely because I knew I wanted to review it here-- I picked it up and forced  myself to finish it, even though I had forgotten the fine details of the plot, and couldn't manage to convince myself to care about the characters.

Overall I expected more originality than the novel was prepared to give me. It runs a tad bit too long. If you are a fan of a more traditional fantasy novel set in modern times, then you might enjoy Vigil!

Let me know-- what is your favorite urban fantasy novel? (I'm obsessed with Madness of Angels by Kate Griffith) What should I check out next?

TTT: 5 Dreamy Book Locations

Top Ten Tuesday is a meme hosted by The Broke and the Bookish.

For this week's Top Ten Tuesday I want to share five books set in beautiful locations. 

A Lady's Life in the Rocky Mountains by Isabelle L. Bird -- I know I've mentioned this book like a hundred times on my blog but it's just so interesting! Isabelle travels through Colorado on horseback in the late 1800s and her gift for description had me wanting to travel through the mountains as well except for I would have cell phone service and antibiotics.

Two Women Abroad by Adaline S Hall-- I've mentioned this really cool, rare, travel log on my blog before. I stumbled upon a copy in my college library and fell instantly in love. It describes the journey two self-proclaimed spinsters took through Europe right at the turn on the century and it's really cool.

The Lost Girls by a bunch of people-- Here's a switch to a very modern travel log; several college friends take a year to travel the globe. While I wasn't very tempted by their tales, it did make me want to travel.

Into The Wilderness by Sara Donati-- I adored this novel, set in New York state in the late 1700s. It was beautiful and atmospheric and made me want to journey through rural New York.

When Calls the Heart by Janette Oke -- This novel about a posh young woman who goes to teach in the middle of the wilderness in the late 1800s was a fun little read. Once again I felt the tug to travel through rugged rural country forgetting my deathly fear of spiders, bugs, and my deep love of indoor plumbing. Oh well. Maybe one day.

That's it for me! Five books in lovely locations I would not mind finding myself in. :) What about you? What's your favorite bookish location?

Dear Sunday: I'm back!

Dear Sunday is my weekly post participating in the Caffeinated Book Reviewer series.


my november life :) 
It's been so long since I last wrote a blog post I feel the need to introduce myself again! You see, I attempted to: (i) write a novel (ii) write posts for this blog (iii) do course work (iv) do research and (v) have a life ALL in the same month and surprise, surprise, it didn't work out. The obvious thing to take a break on was this blog (who's kidding I would have much preferred skipping out on the class I'm in because it's 10 types of pointless). 

However, on November 30th I officially 'won' NaNoWriMo clocking in at barely over 50,000 words in my novel! I'm refusing to even look at my novel during the month of December (ideally revisions will start in January...) which means, in theory, I finally have time to get back to this little hobby of mine.

I mean if I kept up my NaNo pace and wrote 1,667 words a day devoted solely to the blog holy cow would I be able to get so many posts out! But considering how this is my month of rest (from writing) that crazy pace won't happen.

Anyway I just wanted to apologize for the long and sudden absence on my blog and to assure you that I'm back and excited to write about some cool books I've been reading.  :)


  • Top Ten Tuesday: Book Destinations 
  • Review: Why The Vigil by Angela Slatter left me feeling disappointed 

That's all from me; I look forward to getting back into the blogosphere and catching up on everyone's blogs!