Showing posts with label Review. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Review. Show all posts

Monday, September 26, 2022

Bound, Book 1 in The Doyle Witch Mystery Series by Kirsten Weiss – Book Review

  

Bound by Kirsten Weiss book review

Bound by Kirsten Weiss is the first book in the Doyle Witch Cozy Mystery Series.

I’d been postponing reading this book for a while because I wanted to pick it up when I was free so I could get immersed in it. Then… I picked it up on a whim and couldn’t put it down!

I was literally skipping on sleep because I was enjoying Bound.

Bound has all the elements of an amazing book: Magic, mystery, action, adventure, humor and a great story!

“Why are well still single?”

“Because [Jayce wants] to date everyone, Lenore wants to date no one, and the man I want to date doesn’t exist.”

Bound is narrated in the first-person perspective of Karin, the middle sister of “triplets, three Scorpios born exactly three minutes apart.”

“Jayce, the oldest and the wild child, had never been able to resist a good sin. Lenore, the youngest, was a bookish introvert. I was the middle child, a worrier by age five who imagined disaster whenever Jayce played in the forest alone, who spent sleepless nights in feat of losing my aunt as we’d lost our parents.”

Each of the three sisters has a talent. And though Karin is the middle sister, she doesn’t seem to be the strongest.

I wanted to know more about each sister’s ability. Though Karin, as the narrator, explains what each of them can do, we don’t see those abilities in action much.  

book quote from Bound, a paranormal cozy mystery by Kirsten Weiss

One of things I liked about Bound is the presence of two mysteries. Come to think of it – several mysteries. Jayce is accused of murder and at the same time, a curse seems to plague the sisters and their bloodline. There are also the mysteries of the disappearing hikers and the women appearing out of nowhere.

How many of these mysteries might be connected?

“The sense of wrongness intensified. There was magic here, a magic I’d never felt in these woods before.”

A large part of Bound focuses on their aunt Ellen, who is dying from cancer. This pained me personally because someone really close to me was recently diagnosed.

Before Ellen passes, she tells the three sisters about the family curse and how she’d been trying to break it.

Another thing I liked about Bound was the references to other books, movies, and series. When Ellen talks to Karin about her “knot magic,” it reminded me of Diana Bishop in A Discovery of Witches. I watched the series but it was quite similar.



In one of the scenes, we see Lenore reading “a novel about a paranormal museum” to Ellen. It references Weiss’ Perfectly Proper Paranormal Museum series, of which I’d read two books.

I was surprised to find Jayce, the “wild child,” who is accused of murder to be passive about the accusation, letting the police take care of it when it was clear they weren’t looking for other suspects.

While reading Bound, I came across a reference to ‘the rose rabbit.’ Though Bound ends with no explanation of what the rose rabbit is, I remembered reading a poetry collection by Kirsten Weiss titled Tales of the Rose Rabbit. At the time, I hadn’t read any books in this series.

I think it’s time to revisit that poetry collection.

I was surprised to learn that the second book Ground is narrated from Jayce’s perspective. Honestly, I didn’t like her. But I hope to see a better side to her in Ground.

Overall, I fell in love with Bound and can’t wait to get my hands on the rest of the series, which I recently discovered has transformed from a trilogy to a 9-book series! That’s excluding supplements and in-between books and crossover books!


Overall rating for Bound by Kirsten Weiss: 5 stars!

Warning: If you start, you won’t leave the book until it’s finished!


Want to explore more paranormal cozy mysteries?

Here are a few recommendations: 


Saturday, September 17, 2022

Big Shot by Kirsten Weiss – Book Review

New – though slightly belated – book review for one of my favorite authors! It’s Kirsten Weiss with a new mystery series. Now, I can proudly say, I’ve read books from 3 of her many cozy mystery series!



 

“Can you think of anyone who wanted to kill Donald?”

“Aside from the entire town?”

 

Big Shot by Kirsten Weiss is the first book in the Big Murder Mystery Series.

The book opens with Alice, a woman body guard, who wakes up half-way through a job, only to discover that her client had drugged her and stolen her car. She jumps into an Uber and – in her pjs – pursues the rogue client, who gets themselves killed by running into a truck.

Now Alice is wanted for the murder of her client – a mob boss.

To get away from the media frenzy, Alice goes back to her hometown of Nowhere. But the town she left behind seems to be a lot different from the one she comes back to.

Add in that as soon as she arrives, she stumbles on a dead body!

“Unbelievable. You bug out of Nowhere, and when you finally decide to come back, you dig up a body?”

Big Shot is narrated in Alice’s first-person perspective. She’s sarcastic, funny, and super resourceful. She’s also in a line of work that rarely features women – being a body guard.

But Alice isn’t perfect. And I loved that about her. Throughout the novel, she’s hopeful that her ex-husband, Buck, who owns the surveillance company will clear her name. But as a reader I could clearly see he wasn’t doing anything and the situation keeps getting worse for Alice. I like that she's honest, fairly realistic, and practical.

“You deal with many murders as a body guard?”

“No. We try to keep our clients from getting dead.” 

Other characters include Alice’s brother, Charlie, his friends – lots of friends, and an old mobster who seems hell bent on killing Alice in the funniest and craziest of ways!

Though Big Shot opens with Alice’s predicament, she’s quickly thrown into a bigger problem: Her brother being a suspect in a murder in her hometown of Nowhere (where she was hoping to hide from the public eye).

book quote from Big Shot, a cozy mystery by Kirsten Weiss


My biggest problem with Big Shot was the long chapters. But otherwise, I enjoyed the book.

Overall, I found Big Shot to be an intriguing cozy mystery with memorable characters, and lots of sarcasm. I look forward to reading more books in the Big Murder Mystery Series. 

Overall rating for Big Shot by Kirsten Weiss: 4 stars.

 

Note: I received an Advanced Reader’s Copy (ARC) of Big Shot from its author Kirsten Weiss in exchange for an honest review. This did not in any way impact my review or rating.

 


Monday, September 12, 2022

Potions, Poisons, and Perils by Shea MacLeod – Book Review

Today, I’m sharing a book review for another paranormal cozy mystery I read this year. I’m on a roll with paranormal cozies it seems but they can be lots of fun!

image showing a book cover with the book title Potions, Poisons, and Peril by Shea MacLeod



Synopsis:

Welcome to Deepwood, Oregon, a cozy town of witches, magic, and now, murder...Emory Chastain loves her herbs and spices. So much so that when she's not baking self-confidence into chocolate chip cookies, she's in her shop selling everything from love potions to herbal tea blends. She's also one of the most powerful witches of the modern era.

When a strange madness afflicts seemingly unrelated people in her funky little town, turning ordinary citizens into raving beasts, Emory and her friends are convinced there's more to the mystery than a simple virus. Turns out they're right. Somebody is using a magic spell to poison people, and if they don't stop the killer, there will be more death in the town of Deepwood.

Book details:

Book title: Potions, Poisons, and Peril

(Book 1 in the Deepwood Witches Mysteries)

Author: Shea McLeod

Genre: Paranormal cozy mystery

Number of pages: 212 pages

Publication date: 10 August 2019

Publisher: Independently Published 


Potions, Poisons, and Perils by Shea MacLeod is the first book in the Deepwood Witches Mystery series. However, my first read for MacLeod was book 5 in this series called Alchemy, Arsenic, and Alibis.

Potions, Poisons, and Peril by Shea MacLeod
The book opens with Emory Chastain readying her tea shop for the day. Emory is a witch. And I liked the way she calms herself with her teas and herbal concoctions. It’s something I do personally sometimes. (Though I avoid chamomile unless I’m going to bed!)

“That was the thing Deepwood. It wasn’t just a quaint, charming town. It was a town of witches. Mostly.”

There are several points of view in the book, though all are in the third person.

Bit by bit, we meet the characters, learn about their magic – or rather different types of magic – and it works. We also learn that Edwina – from book 5 – came to her magic ‘later in life,’ as opposed to Emory and the others who are “natural-born” witches.

Though I found the different types of magic and how each one works interesting, it was also quite confusing. For example, Emory is both a portal witch and a spellwalker, while her friend Lene is a deathwalker.

“Lene wasn’t just any witch. She was a deathwalker, a type of witch near as rare as a spellwalker. She sensed when death was near, which meant she could find bodies people didn’t want found.”

In Alchemy, Arsenic, and Alibis, the main view point was Edwina’s, another Deepwood witch. But book 1, surprisingly, opens with Emory Chastain and her point of view, which isn’t as enjoyable as Edwina’s (sorry, Shea!)

Since starting Potions, Poisons, and Perils, I was on the lookout for any references to Edwina Gale from book 5. Naturally, I loved the way she is introduced and how Emory sees her:

“Edwina Gale was an Amazon of a woman, at least six feet tall with the shoulders of a linebacker and build of solid muscle. Her hair, once a rich dark brown, was now streaked with iron gray and tied back in a think braid. Her gray eyes were bright and intelligent. At sixty-something, she had more strength and energy than Emory had at thirty.”

Having started with book 5, I felt that the book was clearer and more fun. When I started – and finished – Potions, Poisons, and Perils, I felt that Emory wasn’t a smart or witty character like Edwina. I instantly – and involuntarily – compared the two different characters. And you can tell I like one more than the other.

book quote from paranormal cozy mystery Potions, Poisons, and Perils by Shea MacLeod


I know that Shea MacLeod has launched a new spin-off series starring Edwina Gale. And I’m looking forward to getting my hand on the first book Day of the Were-Jackal.

Unlike Alchemy, Arsenic, and Alibis, Potions, Poisons, and Perils has several memorable lines, conversations, and quotes. However, the book is longer and much slower.

“Do you believe in…Do you believe in visions?...I’ve been having them lately. All the time.”

“What do you see?”

She glanced around. “This shop.” She eyed Emory. “You.”

“And a dead body?”

“Yes.”

In terms of characters and development, Emory maneuvers the whole mystery thing very slowly. She even calls in Edwina for help. Edwina, on the other hand, is a fully-developed character – I think. In this book, she’s a secondary character.

The book offers a touch of romance but there’s more focus on the magic, which is something I like when I read paranormal cozy mysteries.

 

Overall rating for Potions, Poisons, and Perils by Shea MacLeod: 3.5 stars.

 

Note: I got a free copy of Potions, Poisons, and Perils for being part of author Shea MacLeod's newsletter. This didn't affect my review in any way. 




Sunday, September 11, 2022

Dewey Decimated by Allison Brooke - Book Review & Blog Tour

 

Today I’m re-featuring author Allison Brook. You may have met Brook from book review of Buried in the Stacks in 2019. This post features her newest book in The Haunted Library Mystery Series. Don’t forget to enter the giveaway! (Ends 15 September)

 

Here’s a bit about the book

Book title: Dewey Decimated

Series: Book 6 in The Haunted Library Mystery Series

Genre: Paranormal cozy mystery

Publisher: Crooked Lane Books

Publishing date: 6 September 2022

ISBN-10: 1639100903
ISBN-13:
978-1639100903
Digital ASIN:
B09N6M1SNP



Synopsis:

Librarian Carrie Singleton is back on the case, alongside library ghost Evelyn, in the sixth installment of Agatha Award nominee Allison Brook’s Haunted Library mysteries.

Carrie Singleton is just off a hot string of murder cases centered around the spooky local library in Clover Ridge, Connecticut. She could really use a break—but no such luck, as she; Smoky Joe, the resident cat; and Evelyn, the library’s ghost, are drawn into another tantalizing whodunit.

First, a dead body is found in the basement of the building attached to the library, and it turns out to be Carrie’s fiancé’s Uncle Alec, who Dylan hasn’t seen in years. But Alec has no intention of truly checking out, and his ghost makes itself at home in the library, greatly upsetting the patrons. 

Carrie and Evelyn work hard to keep Alec out of sight, but what was he doing in Clover Ridge to begin with? And why was he killed? 

Meanwhile, the town council, of which Carrie is also a member, is embroiled in a hot-headed debate over the fate of the Seabrook Preserve, a lovely and valuable piece of property that runs along Long Island Sound. Turn it into an upscale park? Sell it to a condo developer? Or keep it as protected land?

As the dispute rages, there’s another murder, this time involving a council member. Could the two murders be connected? And could Carrie be next on the hit list?


Book Review of Dewey Decimated

 

‘Trish came bursting through the door, her face alive with excitement. “Guess what? They found a body in the old building next door.”’

Dewey Decimated by Allison Brook is the 6th book in The Haunted Library Mystery Series. It’s my second read for both Brook and the series. My first read in this series was book 2, Buried in the Stacks.

When Carrie Singleton, head of programs at the Clover Ridge Library, learns of a dead body in the building the library recently acquired for expansion, she says she won’t be looking into it.

Carrie has racked a reputation for solving crimes in her local community. And everyone expects her to take part in this investigation.

“Why all the questions? Are you planning to look into the case?”

“Just natural curiosity. I want no part in this investigation.”

“Music to my ears.”

It is not clear why but Carrie can see ghosts. Including Evelyn whom she met in the library when she first joined a year earlier. Together, Carrie and Evelyn solve murders one book after the other. 😊

Despite her supposed-disinterest in the murder, Carrie is slowly dragged into it. The victim turns out to be her fiancé’s distant uncle.

But that’s not the only problem. Soon it’s not just Evelyn that Carrie can see but there’s a second ghost with no recollection of who he is or how he died.

Bit by bit, Carrie is dragged into solving the murder. Add in a nosy reporter who is dying to break a story and feature Carrie in it.

“Why aren’t you afraid of me?”

I laughed. “Because Evelyn’s a ghost, and she’s a good friend of mine.”

Dewey Decimated welcomes a few familiar faces and names and adds more people to The Haunted Library Mystery Series cast.

In addition to the murder mystery, Carrie is now part of her town’s council. And though they are just 5 people, there’s much debate over a major project in the town. Carrie soon discovers that there are politics and money at play in the council.


And as soon as she solves one mystery, a new one emerges with the death of a council member.

Dewey Decimated is a fun and calming read from Allison Brook. One of my problems with Buried in the Stacks was the amount of repetition Carrie had to do to tell the different people what has happened. While this remains a part of Dewey Decimated, it’s much less than Buried in the Stacks.

“The last thing I needed was a ghost having a meltdown in my office.”

The only thing I didn’t get about the book was the title ‘Dewey Decimated.’ But that could just be me.

In terms of imagery, there wasn’t a lot of it but that didn’t bother me. I also love the book covers in this series.

Overall rating for Dewey Decimated by Allison Brook: 4 stars

 

About Allison Brook:

A former Spanish teacher, Marilyn Levinson writes mysteries, romantic suspense, and novels for kids. Her books have received many accolades. As Allison Brook, she writes the Haunted Library series. Death Overdue, the first in the series, was an Agatha nominee for Best Contemporary Novel in 2018. Other mysteries include the Golden Age of Mystery Book Club series and the Twin Lakes series.

Her juvenile novel, Rufus and Magic Run Amok, was an International Reading Association-Children's Book Council Children's Choice. And Don't Bring Jeremy was a nominee for six state awards.

Marilyn lives on Long Island, where many of her books take place. She loves traveling, reading, doing crossword puzzles and Sudoku, and chatting on FaceTime with her grandkids.

Connect with Allison via her website, Facebook page, Twitter, Goodreads, and Bookbub.

Buy Dewey Decimated via Amazon  Penguin Random House    B&N    Kobo    Google Play 

Keep up with the rest of the blog tour featuring spotlights, book reviews, author interviews, and character interviews.

6 September: Spotlights via Ruff Drafts, Brooke Blogs, and The Book Diva's Reads

7 September: Spotlights via Celticlady's Reviews and Maureen's Musings and a book review via Baroness Book Trove

8 September: Spotlights via Angel's Guilty Pleasures and The Mystery Section and a book review and author interview via I Read What You Write

9 September: Book reviews via View from the Birdhouse and Cozy Up With Kathy and a character interview via Read Your Writes Book Reviews

10 September: Spotlights via I'm All About Books and #BRVL Book Review Virginia Lee Blog, along with a book review via eBook Addicts

11 September: Book review via Nadaness In Motion and spotlight via FUONLYKNEW

12 September: Book reviews via Christy's Cozy Corners and Books a Plenty Book Reviews

13 September: Spotlights via Sapphyria's Book Reviews and Satisfaction for Insatiable Readers and a character interview via Ascroft, eh?

14 September: Book review via Reading Is My SuperPower and spotlight via Literary Gold

15 September: Book review via MJB Reviewers, spotlight via Socrates Book Reviews, and an author interview via Escape With Dollycas Into A Good Book

 

 

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