Book List 2021

Countown to A Stranger in Town by Kelley Armstrong with A Darkness Absolute

Title: A Darkness Absolute

Author: Kelley Armstrong

Series: Rockton (Book 2)

Genre: Mystery, Horror

Buy: Indigo here.

Kobo

Summary:

When experienced homicide detective Casey Duncan first moved to the secret town of Rockton, she expected a safe haven for people like her, people running from their past misdeeds and past lives. She knew living in Rockton meant living off-the-grid completely: no cell phones, no Internet, no mail, very little electricity, and no way of getting in or out without the town council’s approval. What she didn’t expect is that Rockton comes with its own set of secrets and dangers.

Now, in A Darkness Absolute, Casey and her fellow Rockton sheriff’s deputy Will chase a cabin-fevered resident into the woods, where they are stranded in a blizzard. Taking shelter in a cave, they discover a former resident who’s been held captive for over a year. When the bodies of two other women turn up, Casey and her colleagues must find out if it’s an outsider behind the killings or if the answer is more complicated than that…before another victim goes missing.

Continue reading “Countown to A Stranger in Town by Kelley Armstrong with A Darkness Absolute”
Book List 2021

Countown to A Stranger in Town by Kelley Armstrong with City of the Lost

Title: City of the Lost

Author: Kelley Armstrong

Series: Rockton (Book 1)

Genre: Mystery, horror

Buy:

City of the Lost on Kobo

Summary:

Casey Duncan is a homicide detective with a secret: when she was in college, she killed a man. She was never caught, but he was the grandson of a mobster and she knows that someday this crime will catch up to her. Casey’s best friend, Diana, is on the run from a violent, abusive ex-husband. When Diana’s husband finds her, and Casey herself is attacked shortly after, Casey knows it’s time for the two of them to disappear again.

Diana has heard of a town made for people like her, a town that takes in people on the run who want to shed their old lives. You must apply to live in Rockton and if you’re accepted, it means walking away entirely from your old life, and living off the grid in the wilds of Canada: no cell phones, no Internet, no mail, no computers, very little electricity, and no way of getting in or out without the town council’s approval. As a murderer, Casey isn’t a good candidate, but she has something they want: She’s a homicide detective, and Rockton has just had its first real murder. She and Diana are in. However, soon after arriving, Casey realizes that the identity of a murderer isn’t the only secret Rockton is hiding—in fact, she starts to wonder if she and Diana might be in even more danger in Rockton than they were in their old lives.

read more, tw blood
Book List 2021 · Reviews

Review: Spoiler Alert by Olivia Dade (Read by Isabelle Ruther)

Title: Spoiler Alert

Author: Olivia Dade

Read by: Isabelle Ruther

Trope: Sort of enemies to lovers

Buy: Chapters/Indigo click here. (Affiliate link)

Summary: Olivia Dade bursts onto the scene in this delightfully fun romantic comedy set in the world of fanfiction, in which a devoted fan goes on an unexpected date with her celebrity crush, who’s secretly posting fanfiction of his own.

Marcus Caster-Rupp has a secret. While the world knows him as Aeneas, the star of the biggest show on TV, Gods of the Gates, he’s known to fanfiction readers as Book!AeneasWouldNever, an anonymous and popular poster. Marcus is able to get out his own frustrations with his character through his stories, especially the ones that feature the internet’s favorite couple to ship, Aeneas and Lavinia. But if anyone ever found out about his online persona, he’d be fired. Immediately.

April Whittier has secrets of her own. A hardcore Lavinia fan, she’s hidden her fanfiction and cosplay hobby from her “real life” for years—but not anymore. When she decides to post her latest Lavinia creation on Twitter, her photo goes viral. Trolls and supporters alike are commenting on her plus-size take, but when Marcus, one half of her OTP, sees her pic and asks her out on a date to spite her critics, she realizes life is really stranger than fanfiction.

Even though their first date is a disaster, Marcus quickly realizes that he wants much more from April than a one-time publicity stunt. And when he discovers she’s actually Unapologetic Lavinia Stan, his closest fandom friend, he has one more huge secret to hide from her.

With love and Marcus’s career on the line, can the two of them stop hiding once and for all, or will a match made in fandom end up prematurely cancelled?

Continue reading “Review: Spoiler Alert by Olivia Dade (Read by Isabelle Ruther)”
Reviews

Review: The Rise and Falls of the Dinosaurs by Stephen Brusatte

Title: The Rise and Fall of the Dinosaurs

Author: Stephen Brusatte

Genre: Non-Fiction, Science

Buy: Chapters/Indigo click here. (Affiliate link)

Summary:

The dinosaurs. Sixty-six million years ago, the Earth’s most fearsome creatures vanished. Today they remain one of our planet’s great mysteries. Now The Rise and Fall of the Dinosaurs reveals their extraordinary, 200-million-year-long story as never before.

In this captivating narrative (enlivened with more than seventy original illustrations and photographs), Steve Brusatte, a young American paleontologist who has emerged as one of the foremost stars of the field—naming fifteen new species and leading groundbreaking scientific studies and fieldwork—masterfully tells the complete, surprising, and new history of the dinosaurs, drawing on cutting-edge science to dramatically bring to life their lost world and illuminate their enigmatic origins, spectacular flourishing, astonishing diversity, cataclysmic extinction, and startling living legacy. Captivating and revelatory, The Rise and Fall of the Dinosaurs is a book for the ages.

Brusatte traces the evolution of dinosaurs from their inauspicious start as small shadow dwellers—themselves the beneficiaries of a mass extinction caused by volcanic eruptions at the beginning of the Triassic period—into the dominant array of species every wide-eyed child memorizes today, T. rex, Triceratops, Brontosaurus, and more. This gifted scientist and writer re-creates the dinosaurs’ peak during the Jurassic and Cretaceous, when thousands of species thrived, and winged and feathered dinosaurs, the prehistoric ancestors of modern birds, emerged. The story continues to the end of the Cretaceous period, when a giant asteroid or comet struck the planet and nearly every dinosaur species (but not all) died out, in the most extraordinary extinction event in earth’s history, one full of lessons for today as we confront a “sixth extinction.”

Brusatte also recalls compelling stories from his globe-trotting expeditions during one of the most exciting eras in dinosaur research—which he calls “a new golden age of discovery”—and offers thrilling accounts of some of the remarkable findings he and his colleagues have made, including primitive human-sized tyrannosaurs; monstrous carnivores even larger than T. rex; and paradigm-shifting feathered raptors from China.

An electrifying scientific history that unearths the dinosaurs’ epic saga, The Rise and Fall of the Dinosaurs will be a definitive and treasured account for decades to come.

Continue reading “Review: The Rise and Falls of the Dinosaurs by Stephen Brusatte”
Bookish Things

Things I Learned to Love in 2020: Audiobooks

Screenshot of Libby containing book cover for Spoiler Alert by Olivia Dade

I was never a huge fan of audiobooks, or audio CDs I guess they would’ve been when I was younger, cluttering shelves in the Chapters nearest to myself. I didn’t have a need for them, or a want to listen to them. I was willfully, and youthfully ignorant and insensitive.

Yet one of my fondest memories is from high school, hanging out in the dark room, developing photos while a friend and I listened to Harry Potter, as read by Stephen Fry. He did it well.

So when it was suggested I give audiobooks another go later on in life (much later), I was not really ready for it. Until I was also informed that they could be found on Libby, an app I love, and it was pointed out that I could “read” while cross stitching.

It was like everything stopped, and the world became full of possibilities. I knew I could watch TV and cross stitch, but I seemed to have forgotten that audiobooks exist. This is what started my love for them, from Lin-Manuel Miranda reading Aristotle and Dante Discover the Secrets of the Universe, to Joe Jameson regalling me with Boyfriend Material, one of my favourite books of 2020.

The more I listened, the more I wanted to listen, and then the thing happened.

In the beginning of December I was diagnosed with Type 2 Diabetes, and with that diagnosis, and my new medications my vision began to fail.

I couldn’t cross stitch because I couldn’t see well enough to do so, Facebook, Twitter, Tumblr and WordPress all became an exercise in frustration. Trying to work, to read emails and write emails and keep up the pace, which I normally have no problem with became tasks ruined by tears and the anxiety at trying to use accessible programs.

But Libby and audiobooks were there. I could close my eyes, take a deep breath and sink into a story as easy as I used to be able to read it on a page.

And that is why I love audiobooks. So buy them, listen to them, support your favourite authors, support the people who read those words aloud, and those who listen to them.

Reviews

Review: Well Played by Jen DeLuca (Contains spoilers)

Title: Spoiler Alert

Author: Olivia Dade

Read by: Isabelle Ruther

Trope: Sort of enemies to lovers

Buy: Chapters/Indigo click here. (Affiliate link)

Summary:

Stacey is jolted when her friends Simon and Emily get engaged. She knew she was putting her life on hold when she stayed in Willow Creek to care for her sick mother, but it’s been years now, and even though Stacey loves spending her summers pouring drinks and flirting with patrons at the local Renaissance Faire, she wants more out of life. Stacey vows to have her life figured out by the time her friends get hitched at Faire next summer. Maybe she’ll even find The One.

When Stacey imagined “The One,” it never occurred to her that her summertime Faire fling, Dex MacLean, might fit the bill. While Dex is easy on the eyes onstage with his band The Dueling Kilts, Stacey has never felt an emotional connection with him. So when she receives a tender email from the typically monosyllabic hunk, she’s not sure what to make of it.

Faire returns to Willow Creek, and Stacey comes face-to-face with the man with whom she’s exchanged hundreds of online messages over the past nine months. To Stacey’s shock, it isn’t Dex—she’s been falling in love with a man she barely knows.

Continue reading “Review: Well Played by Jen DeLuca (Contains spoilers)”
Announcemet

Welcome to 2021!

Hello everyone!

Welcome to 2021. Here is hoping we can at least manage mediocre this year.

My goal is to spend less time thinking about doing things and more time doing them which means you may be getting some non-book content and a new name for this blog.

I will be talking about life, crafts, photography, living with a new diabetes diagnosis, books, television, movies and whatever I’d like, really.

Here’s hoping you and your families are safe, and that we all have a better year this year than we did the last.

~ Ashley

Book List 2020

Review: Boyfriend Material by Alexis Hall

Title: Boyfriend Material

Author: Alexis Hall

Genre: Contemporary Romance

Representation: LGBTQIA+

Trope: Fake Dating, Enemies to Lovers-ish

Buy: Indigo/Chapters click here. (Affiliate link)

Summary:

Wanted:
One (fake) boyfriend
Practically perfect in every way

Luc O’Donnell is tangentially–and reluctantly–famous. His rock star parents split when he was young, and the father he’s never met spent the next twenty years cruising in and out of rehab. Now that his dad’s making a comeback, Luc’s back in the public eye, and one compromising photo is enough to ruin everything.

To clean up his image, Luc has to find a nice, normal relationship…and Oliver Blackwood is as nice and normal as they come. He’s a barrister, an ethical vegetarian, and he’s never inspired a moment of scandal in his life. In other words: perfect boyfriend material. Unfortunately apart from being gay, single, and really, really in need of a date for a big event, Luc and Oliver have nothing in common. So they strike a deal to be publicity-friendly (fake) boyfriends until the dust has settled. Then they can go their separate ways and pretend it never happened.

But the thing about fake-dating is that it can feel a lot like real-dating. And that’s when you get used to someone. Start falling for them. Don’t ever want to let them go.

Continue reading “Review: Boyfriend Material by Alexis Hall”
Book List 2020 · Reviews

Review: Serious Moonlight by Jenn Bennett

Title: Serious Moonlight

Author: Jenn Bennett

Genre: YA, Romance

Buy: Indigo/Chapters click here. (Affiliate link)

Summary:

After an awkward first encounter, Birdie and Daniel are forced to work together in a Seattle hotel where a famous author leads a mysterious and secluded life in this romantic contemporary novel from the author of Alex, Approximately.

Mystery-book aficionado Birdie Lindberg has an overactive imagination. Raised in isolation and homeschooled by strict grandparents, she’s cultivated a whimsical fantasy life in which she plays the heroic detective and every stranger is a suspect. But her solitary world expands when she takes a job the summer before college, working the graveyard shift at a historic Seattle hotel.

In her new job, Birdie hopes to blossom from introverted dreamer to brave pioneer, and gregarious Daniel Aoki volunteers to be her guide. The hotel’s charismatic young van driver shares the same nocturnal shift and patronizes the waterfront Moonlight Diner where Birdie waits for the early morning ferry after work. Daniel also shares her appetite for intrigue, and he’s stumbled upon a real-life mystery: a famous reclusive writer—never before seen in public—might be secretly meeting someone at the hotel.

To uncover the writer’s puzzling identity, Birdie must come out of her shell…discovering that the most confounding mystery of all may be her growing feelings for the elusive riddle that is Daniel.

Continue reading “Review: Serious Moonlight by Jenn Bennett”
Book List 2020 · Reviews

Review: Don’t You Forget About Me

Title: Don’t You Forget About Me

Author: Mhairi McFarlane

Genre: Self-Discovery, Romance

Trigger Warning: Sexual abuse

Buy: Indigo/Chapters here. (Affiliate link)

Summary:

If there’s one thing worse than being fired from the grottiest restaurant in town, it’s coming home early to find your boyfriend in bed with someone else.

Reeling from the indignity of a double dumping on the same day, Georgina snatches at the next job that she’s offered – barmaid in a newly opened pub, which just so happens to run by the boy she fell in love with at school: Lucas McCarthy. And whereas Georgina (voted Most Likely to Succeed in her school yearbook) has done nothing but dead-end jobs in the last twelve years, Lucas has not only grown into a broodingly handsome man, but also has turned into an actual grown-up with a business and a dog along the way.

Meeting Lucas again not only throws Georgina’s rackety present into sharp relief, but also brings a dark secret from her past bubbling to the surface. Only she knows the truth about what happened on the last day of school, and why she’s allowed it to chase her all these years…

Continue reading “Review: Don’t You Forget About Me”