Monday, September 5, 2022

Alchemy, Arsenic, and Alibis by Shea MacLeod – Book Review


Alchemy, Arsenic, and Alibis is my first read for Shea MacLeod and it’s the fifth book in her Deepwood Witches Mystery series.

Blog banner featuring a book cover and text saying Alchemy, Arsenic, and Alibis by Shea MacLeod


Synopsis

Deepwood is a cozy town, but every town has its secrets.

As a witch, Edwina Gale has been tasked with keeping those secrets. Purloined donuts, coven meetings, and ancient Egyptian gods run amok are all in a day’s work as far as she’s concerned. But all her carefully laid plans unravel when the chief of police blackmails her into helping him solve a mystery, and she finds herself on the wrong end of magic gone awry.


The book opens with “Edwina Gale was not a witch to be trifled with, especially at six o’clock in the morning.”

I’m not sure how I got my copy of Alchemy, Arsenic, and Alibis but I think it may have been for signing up for her newsletter at some point. And I’m sure happy I got this book!

It’s short, filled with magic – including Ancient Egyptian magic! – action, a mystery and lots of humor. Plus, I loved Edwina!

“If you’re trying to decide whether to play dumb or be honest, I suggest the latter. I know you’re a witch.” 

I liked that the main character is a 60-year-old strong and super confident woman. Edwina comes from a military background and she’s not the person you get piss off and run. You’re done for!

I finished Alchemy, Arsenic, and Alibis in one sitting and immediately picked up another book I’d downloaded as part of Shea MacLeod’s newsletter. It’s Potions, Poisons, and Perils, the first book in the series. 

There aren’t many – if any – memorable quotes in the book but I’ll attribute that to it being a novella-sized paranormal cozy mystery.

So, if you’re looking for a quick, fun, and fast-paced cozy read, then grab Alchemy, Arsenic, and Alibis by Shea MacLeod. It’s a must-read and can easily get you out of a reading block.

 

Overall rating for Alchemy, Arsenic, and Alibis: 5 stars.

Note: I got a free copy of Alchemy, Arsenic, and Alibis for being part of author Shea MacLeod's newsletter.


Thursday, September 1, 2022

With Fire in Their Blood by Kat Delacorte – Book Review

 

With Fire in their Blood by Kat Delacorte Tour Banner


 

Today, I'm featuring a book review for a different kind of read. This post is part of a blog tour but that did not affect my review in any way!


“Trust is an illusion in this city. Our hatreds run too deep.”

 

With Fire in Their Blood by Kat Delacorte is a modern young adult fantasy set in a medieval Italian town. It’s got magic, very strange relationships, political intrigue, and tons of twists and turns.

The book opens with Lilly, who lives with her father after her mother killed herself a few years before. From the first page, we see Lilly refer to her parents by their first names, Jack and Carly, not mum and dad. It shows the clear distance that has built up between them over the years.

book cover of With Fire in their Blood by Kat Delacorte

Lilly tells the reader how her relationship with her mother was never a good one and how she felt like her mother didn’t want her. She also says her father was a different man before Carly’s death him hard.

With Fire in Their Blood is narrated in Lilly’s first-person perspective so we see everything through her eyes. There are no other narrators in the book. Despite that, the reader can clearly see Lilly’s misgivings and naivety even if she can’t.

“The more I thought about this city, the more unsettling it became.”

Now Jack is more of a zombie, who decides to take Lilly to a distant off-the-beaten track town in Italy called Castello, claiming a new start.

But Castello…Castello is literally a beast of a town. Medieval looking. It catches your breath the moment you lay eyes on it. But then… you discover that it’s not what it seems.

Castello is a town that has been ravaged by warring clans for centuries. Now a man – only referred to as The General – controls the city and has divided the clans, the Marconis and the Paradisos.

Lilly finds herself on the Marconi side, which is like the poor side of the city. Mingling with the Paradisos is forbidden except for one day of the year.

This distinguishing reminded of Utopia, a dark post-apocalyptic Arabic novel by renowned Egyptian author Ahmed Khalid Tawfik. While the books’ premises and settings are worlds apart, the idea of a country (or town) divided into poor and rich is the common factor.

In Castello, the Saints are evil. Bad people with magical abilities. But reportedly all dead.

When I picked up With Fire in Their Blood, I wasn’t sure what to expect. What I was definitely not prepared for was the political intrigue Kat Delacorte had penned in this book. If there’s anything I loved above all else in this book, it’s the political intrigue.

It’s relatable (no I won’t elaborate) and done really well. It reminded me of the tactics used by the pigs in George Orwell’s Animal Farm. While the stories are entirely different, the methodology is the same. (If you haven’t read Animal Farm, then go pick it up now!)

Like many army-led political regimes, we see how The General has ingrained certain beliefs in people’s heads. Slowly, Lilly learns who the Saints were and what they did. How the last war started and how The General came to power.

“The Saints were the children of hell. Born blighted and unnatural with fire in their blood. Stained dark by sorcery and loathsome in the eyes of the light.”

And like any army-backed regime, The General emerged with his Enforcers who ensure that there are no Saints and that no one breaks The General’s law.

Though With Fire in Their Blood wins in imagery, foreshadowing, and political intrigue, it isn’t successful with characterization. I honestly couldn’t like Lilly. I tried but I couldn’t.

While there are many characters in With Fire in Their Blood but there aren’t any likable ones. And that put me off a bit. I didn’t hate Lilly but I didn’t like her either.

“The girl staring back at me was pale and shadowed, her dark hair a tangling mess. Something feral about her, difficult to tame. I was glad of that, because it hid how brittle I felt on the inside. Like there was another girl, a scared, lost one, locked below my ribcage, threatening to claw her way to the surface if I didn’t watch out.”

What I did like is that Delacorte created a truly broken main character. As a reader, I don’t see that often in books.

But Lilly isn’t the only broken character. Like the town of Castello, everyone is broken – in a way. I think this brokenness – along with Castello’s regime – has made the characters too shallow.

Another thing I disliked about Lilly is how she literally falls for half of the characters in the book! It was annoying. While I realize she’s 16 and discovering herself and sexuality, I felt it was too much. If it breathes, she’ll fall in love with him/her/it. For me it was forced. Kind of like when Netflix wants to force down certain ideas in its productions.

Another thing that stood out for me – not in a good way – was that some scenes weren’t logical to me. The trial was one of them.

On another note, something I hadn’t realized it before, but while writing this review, I noticed that Delacorte added lots of imagery and foreshadowing in the early chapters. Foreshadowing always gets extra points from me.

“After the dreams, I’d feel jittery and unsettled all day, my skin hot, my headache building behind my temples. It was as if there was a storm brewing inside me – like my body was rebelling against the town.”

I must say I found the book cover quite pretty and dark at the same time.

Overall, I found With Fire in Their Blood by Kat Delacorte an interesting and fairly fast-paced read with interesting political intrigue and imagery. The characters needed more work but it was a good read.

 

Overall rating for With Fire in Their Blood by Kat Delacorte: 3.5 stars

 

Note: I received a free copy of With Fire in Their Blood by Kat Delacorte as part of The Write Reads blog tour.


More images to come here and on Instagram

 


Monday, August 8, 2022

Parts of Me: Lost and Found by Cisel Ozbay – Poetry Book Review

Blog cover feature a book cover of a poetry collection titled Parts of Me: Lost and Found by Cisel Ozbay

Today, I'm featuring one of my really late and overdue book reviews. I first received a copy of Lost and Found from its author Cisel Ozbay in March 2021 and I did read the book a month later. But 2021 was the year of book blogger's block for me and I couldn't write any reviews for months on end. 

So without further ado, here's the book synopsis followed by my review for Cisel Ozbay's Lost and Found, a poetry collection featuring 71 short, free-verse poems.  

Synopsis:

Lost and Found is a poetry book which contains a compilation of short philosophical poems. The book attempts to capture the author's personal journey: all the ways she has lost herself and the lessons that she has found in doing so.

The author deploys a simple writing style, as she believes a lot can be expressed by saying little. This is a deeply meaningful book with many ideas relating to the human experience.


Book Review of Parts of Me: Lost and Found

 

Parts of Me: Lost and Found opens with “Find,” which is something many people talk about today. It's short and Ozbey says a lot in a few words. 

“To be yourself, you need to find yourself.

And that is all life really is –

Finding yourself.”

“All” is one of the longer pieces in the collection but one of the most beautiful. It’s personal and emotional. Similarly, “Heavy” is a long, dark, and personal piece that I enjoyed.

“Futile” hit home for me because it reminds me of someone who doesn’t see the futility of their ‘lack of efforts’ or the they’re going about their work.

The poem “Contrast” is a good read but it didn’t feel poetic to me. And there were a few poems that were vague to me such as “Ash,” “Consciousness,” among others.

Some of the pieces in Lost and Found read like thoughts, ideas, and quotes. Many pieces had ‘big words’ you normally wouldn’t see in a poem, while others had really formal language. It was the first time for me to see ‘Firstly’ and ‘secondly’ in a poem!

Overall rating for Parts of Me: Lost and Found by Cisel Ozbay: 3 stars.

Note: I received a free copy of Parts of Me: Lost and Found from its author Cisel Ozbay in exchange for an honest review. This did not in any way affect my review.

Note 2: The collection is written in British English.


About the Author:

Cisel Ozbay is an author from London who began writing during her time at university in Aberdeen. She was inspired by her own life experiences and the turbulent times in her life.

Acknowledging the benefits of writing on her own self growth she now writes regularly. Her Parts Of Me: From Me to You, and Parts Of Me: Lost of Found books contain poems written during this same period in her life.

Connect with Cisel and read more of her poetry via Instagram.

 

Friday, August 5, 2022

Stanley Park by Sapphira Olson – Poetry Book Review

Stanley Park by Sapphira Olsen book review with a book cover and black background


Today, I’m featuring a poetry collection book review. This is one of my late book reviews from 2021. I had received a free copy of Stanley Park from its author Sapphira Olson in exchange for an honest book review.

I had originally planned to read and review Stanley Park for National Poetry Month 2021 or 2022, but due to a severe case of book blogger’s block, this didn’t happen.

So here’s the synopsis for Stanley Park:

A sorrow has taken root in my heart, and although it hurts every day I know there is a place where we laugh together under an open sky.

To that sanctuary, I am travelling.

This is that story. 

Stanley Park is a collection of 35 poems from PARABLES author Sapphira Olson charting the story of two lovers through history as they are separated and then reunited all within the island of Stanley Park in Vancouver. Olson weaves a beautiful and poignant narrative through a progression of emotional poetry taking the reader on a journey of hope driven by love.

Incorporating poems inspired by Squamish Nation history & legends, the collection explores themes of immortality, love, loss, the nature of consciousness and culture.

Stanley Park itself is a beautiful 405-hectare public park that borders the downtown of Vancouver in British Columbia, Canada and is mostly surrounded by waters of Burrard Inlet and English Bay. The park has a long history and was one of the first areas to be explored in the city.

"What shall it profit you if you turn the whole world into a gasometer and lose your own souls?" Thomas H. Mawson about Stanley Park in his 1912 address to the Canadian Club.

Book Review of Stanley Park


Stanley Park by Sapphira Olson is a poetry collection comprising 35 poems of varying lengths. Sapphira's poems are mostly free verse but they paint a vivid picture and setting.

The collection opens with a few famous quotes. And I liked that 😊

The first poem in Stanley Park is “Arboretum,” a beautiful piece with lots of visual imagery along with some religious and mythological references.

I loved this stanza from “Arboretum”


I also loved the piece titled “Awkward Motion Towards a First Kiss.” I read it twice to let it sink in. The poem starts with long lines and slowly the lines grow shorter as the emotions grow stronger. 

As you read Stanley Park, you’ll notice a few recurring themes such as finding a lost love, connecting and getting back together, and finding the person you love. 

“The Great World of Womanhood” is a long but stunningly beautiful story. I didn’t feel it was poetic, more like prose than poetry but I loved it all the same.

“The Hollow Tree” was another piece that didn’t feel poetic for me. I didn’t understand the story in it but wanted to know more about it. It’s a sad piece.

At the beginning of the book, Olson includes a map of Stanley Park, which Olson clearly has a strong connection with. However, as a reader with no knowledge of the place or background about the author, I felt a bit lost and confused with some pieces, especially those that focused on Stanley Park as a location with memories for Olson.

“The Love of Silent Replies” is a poem that combines reality with mythology. Enjoyable and beautiful.

There were a few pieces in Stanley Park that I didn’t understand. I guess the author had something specific in mind while writing them or that they related to something personal of hers. They weren’t clear to me.

“The Women of Sagalie Tyee” is a beautiful story within a poem that gives this feeling of transcending. Meanwhile, “The Secret of Eternal Flight” is one of those non-poetic pieces, in my opinion. This was made even more so by the use of long and big words like ‘morphological.’

“If Ever a Woman Lost a Throne” is one of the longer but most beautiful pieces in Stanley Park. It celebrates womanhood and offers a stand against the ‘white man’ theme. 

I absolutely loved “When the Whole World Was in Bloom,” which opens with:

“We fashioned ourselves from a treasure house of stories,

When the whole world was in bloom.

A moment of ascension: just the two of us,

A fertile soil over sandstone and shale.”

 

Other highly recommended poems in Stanley Park:

  • “We Fall in Love with Stanley Park”
  • “The Journey”
  • “The Roses Bloom in June”
  • “The Storm”
  • “A Supernatural Footnote”
  • “A Land of Splendid Beauty”

 

Overall, I thought Stanley Park by Sapphira Olson was a beautiful and visual poetry collection. Though I found some of the pieces to be confusing, I enjoyed many others (mentioned above). 


Overall rating of Stanley Park by Sapphira Olson: 3 stars

Note: I received a free copy of Stanley Park from its author Sapphira Olson in exchange for an honest review. This did not in any way impact my review.

Add Stanley Park by Sapphira Olson on Goodreads. 


Monday, August 1, 2022

Did you know you could get book blogger’s block?

Did you know you could get book blogger’s block


When I first started blogging about books, I wasn’t familiar with the term ‘book blogger.’ But that was in 2011 or so. Fast forward a decade (wow! All that time has passed!) and I’m a book blogger with an oversized and highly-unlikely-to-finish reading list.

But come 2021 and something rather odd happened to me.

I enjoyed reading books but I just couldn’t sit down and write the reviews. I know my book reviews are detailed. I like to cover many aspects of a book to give it a fair rating and to tell readers what I liked and disliked about a book.


Read: 8 Ways to Write Powerful Book Reviews


I also know that it takes me a while to sift through my notes and write the review. Recently, I’ve added a small task of creating a couple of images on Canva to go with the review.

I’ve gotten faster at this. But still the whole process of writing the review, adding images, uploading both, and ensuring the fonts are the same throughout… all of this takes at least 2 hours. Sometimes longer with non-fiction books.

But…

But last year, I just couldn’t sit down and write. As a poet and writer, I know what writer’s block is. But book blogger’s block? What was that? Did you know you could get book blogger’s block? Did I know that?!

What is book blogger’s block?

Put simply, book blogger’s block is when you are unable to get your words and thoughts about a book on to a page. It’s a lot like writer’s block, but unlike it, book blogger’s block doesn’t need a ton of inspiration.

You write your notes about a certain book – whether as sticky notes or e-notes if you’re using a e-reader like a Kindle or Nook, and then you compile them into something intelligible.

But even with writing a review that involves some copying here and there, it turns out you can get put off or blocked too.

Image via Pexels

There’s another case of book blogger’s block where you’re not in the mood to read books – especially those that land in your inbox as review requests.

Sometimes you want to get back to your own books, the ones collecting dust on the shelves. And sometimes you’re in the mood for binge-watching Netflix or any other streamer’s series. And sometimes life just gets too much and you can’t do anything.

That’s what book blogger’s block is. At least, that’s my personal definition of it. I’d like to hear what other book bloggers have to say.

My book blogger’s block in 2021  

So for the most part, I barely published any reviews – or writing for that matter – in 2021. I didn’t publish a single post between June and December 2021. 

I only started posting reviews again in 2022. Though I was shocked that all that time had passed and I was unaware of my delayed posting.



I do know that one of the reasons I haven’t been able to write reviews as before is that I’d been too focused on my freelance writing business. Which is a good thing because now I have name – more-or-less – in the B2B copywriting sphere.

But at the same time, all my work is about researching and writing. So with book reviews, there’s even more writing. And my reviews are long. I’ve tried to trim them but I’ve not gotten there just yet.

 

Have you experience book bloggers’ block before? Do you have a different definition you’d like to share (and I’d love to add it).


Friday, July 29, 2022

The Little Grave by Carolyn Arnold – Book Review

I was excited to get my hands – and eyes – on Carolyn Arnold's newest book and newest series when it was first published. However, due to a writer’s – or rather a book blogger’s block (I didn’t know that was a thing till I experienced it!) I’m over a year late in posting my review.

I was unable to post reviews for over 6 months, due to what I’m calling bookblogger’s block. I had received an advanced reader’s copy (ARC) of The Little Grave but only managed to sit down and write the review a year-and-a-half later.

So without further ado, I’d like you to meet Carolyn Arnold's The Little Grave, the first book in The Amanda Steele Series.

 

Text saying book review along with the book cover of The Little Grave by Carolyn Arnold

Synopsis

Detective Amanda Steele stops just inside the doorway, recognizing the victim’s face instantly. He seems so vulnerable in death; soft, human, even harmless. But she can never forget the evil he has inflicted. Her heart is hammering as she remembers her precious daughter, with her red curls and infectious laugh, and how she was lowered into that little grave…

It’s been five years since Detective Amanda Steele’s life was derailed in the path of an oncoming drunk driver. The small community of Dumfries, Virginia, may have moved on from the tragic deaths of her husband and daughter, but Amanda cannot. When the driver who killed her family is found murdered in a motel room, she can’t keep away from the case.

Fighting her sergeant to be allowed to work an investigation with such a personal connection to her, Amanda is in a race to prove that she can uncover the truth. But the more she digs into the past of the man who destroyed her future, the more shocking discoveries she makes. And when Amanda finds the link between a silver bracelet in his possession and the brutal unsolved murder of a young exotic dancer, she realizes she’s caught up in something darker than she ever imagined and suspects that more girls could be in danger.

But as Amanda edges toward the truth, she gets closer to a secret as personal as it is deadly. Amanda has stumbled upon a dangerous killer, and she must face some terrible truths in order to catch this killer – and save his next victim as she couldn’t save her own daughter…

A gripping, page-turning thriller full of mystery and suspense. Perfect for fans of Rachel Caine, Lisa Regan and Robert Dugoni.

Book Review of The Little Grave

The Little Grave by Carolyn Arnold is the first book in a new mystery thriller series published by Bookouture. And it's amazing!

If there was ever a thrilling opening worth remembering, it’s Arnold’s opening lines for The Little Grave. The story opens with:

“Five and a half year ago, January

Her past didn’t sit and stay like an obedient dog. It was more a wolf that stalked her every move, breathed down her neck, and inched closer with every passing second.”

The Little Grave is a multi-layered thriller. Amanda Steele is an FBI agent who investigates murders. But her life has been a mess for the past five-and-a-half years after she lost her daughter in a tragic accident.

Then a call arrives for a murdered victim. An lo! And behold! It’s the man who had been drunk behind a wheel and claimed her family’s lives!

Amanda shouldn’t be investigating this crime. It’s too personal. And because it’s too personal, Amanda joins the investigation for as long as she can.

“She didn’t see Palmer as human–he was the monster, the boogieman who had taken her family.”

While it’s a good riddance that Chad Palmer, the man who had killed her daughter, was dead. The investigation leads to a ton of questions and many suspects, some even hitting closer to home.

book quote from The Little Grave by Carolyn Arnold. The quote reads “Could the only thing that had kept Palmer alive been the fact he was behind bars?”

Like most mysteries, we don’t see a lot of character development in The Little Grave. But we do get to see Amanda from all sides, not just her police-side. We see the darker side, where Amanda isn’t the law-abiding citizen she should be.

“Tendrils of anger twisted through her, squeezing, gripping, like vines to brick, working to pry the stone loose and destroy the structure.”


There many things I enjoy about Carolyn Arnold’s mystery thrillers:

-     They read like a CSI TV show but they go deeper into the characters’ lives and motivations

-        The characters are deep, flawed, and realistic

-        Carolyn’s word choice and imagery is vivid

-        The author plays on the reader’s senses and emotions

And The Little Grave ticks each of those boxes.

“Amanda’s head pounded like a tiny man with no sense of rhythm was playing steel drums in her skull.”

Another reason why The Little Grave is such a beautiful but painful story is that hits really close to home for the main character Amanda Steele. 

Overall rating for The Little Grave by Carolyn Arnold: 5 stars.


For more book quotes from Carolyn Arnold’s The Little Grave and other books, follow me on Instagram. 


Other books by Carolyn Arnold reviewed on the Nadaness In Motion blog:

Book reviews of psychological thrillers by Carolyn Arnold
FBI series, psychological thrillers:

On the Count of Three

Past Deeds

What We Bury

 

Historical fiction and adventure:

The Secret of the Lost Pharaoh, Book 2 in The Matthew Connor Series

The Legend of Gasparilla & His Treasure, Book 3 in The Matthew Connor Series

Cozy mysteries:

Coffee Is Murder

Halloween Is Murder

Exercise Is Murder 

Money Is Murder