Showing posts with label 2025 reads. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2025 reads. Show all posts

Friday, 9 January 2026

Kindle Unlimited Free Trial Wrap Up

Remember back in October of last year, I activated a three month free trial for Kindle Unlimited because I wanted to see if it would be worth spending £9.49 a month to have access a sea of titles (mainly from indie authors). No? Here is the link to that article for your reading pleasure. Come back once you’ve read it.

You’re back? Right. Now those three free months are up, decision time. What titles did I read? Are there any that I put on my list that I haven’t read and am going to buy/continue my Kindle Unlimited for a month or so to read and, is it worth it? 

As you remember, these were some of the titles I had on my Kindle Unlimited radar:

Wednesday, 7 January 2026

Reindeer Readathon 2025 Wrap-Up

 It was that time of year! Yes, this is my wrap-up of 2025’s Reindeer Readathon!


For those who don’t know about the Reindeer Readathon, this is competitive Readathon with the theme of Christmas at its heart. It was created by Erik from Breakeven Books (here is the links to their YouTube, Instagram and Goodreads). 

I should put all the prompts down below so you can see the challenges. However, I am me and I’m a slow reader at the best of times so I’m going to do is list the prompts I achieved throughout the month of December, then chat briefly about the book/audiobook that completed each task. 

Shall we begin?

Monday, 5 January 2026

2025 Reading Reviews


My reviewing last year on the blog was non-existence. I just struggled with blogging last year for some unknown reason. I do think this year will be my final year as I picked reads and read for enjoyment rather than reviewing purposes. Because of that, most of my reviews were put on Goodreads and Storygraph, I’m going to link them in this purse and, maybe, create a tab with them in order of when I read them for ease. 

So, shall we begin?

Rescuing the Writer by Nora Phoenix (Goodreads & StoryGraph)
Designing Terry Pratchett’s Discworld by Paul Kirby (Goodreads & StoryGraph)
The Magician’s Guild by Trudi Canavan (Goodreads & StoryGraph)
The Eye of the World by Robert Jordan (Goodreads & StoryGraph)
The Decagon House Murders by Yukito Ayatsuji (Goodreads & StoryGraph)
Hungerstone by Kat Dunn (Goodreads & StoryGraph)
The Notorious Virtues by Alwyn Hamilton (Goodreads & StoryGraph)
The Eagle and the Hart: The Tragedy of Richard II & Henry IV by Helen Castor (Goodreads & StoryGraph)
Where There’s Smoke by Jodi Picoult (Goodreads & StoryGraph)
Alanna (Song of the Lioness Graphic Novel Adatation Series) by Tamora Pierce, Vita Ayala & Sam Beck (Goodreads & StoryGraph)
The Summer Guests by Tess Gerritsen (Goodreads & StoryGraph)
Sunrise on the Reaping by Suzanne Collins (Goodreads & StoryGraph)
Brighter Than Scale, Swifter Than Flame by Neon Yang (Goodreads & StoryGraph)
The Book of Three by Lloyd Alexander (Goodreads & StoryGraph)
The Pocket Pride (Goodreads & StoryGraph)
A Natural History of Dragons by Marie Brennan (Goodreads & StoryGraph)
My Instructor Won’t Yield by Deme Kingyobachi (Goodreads & StoryGraph)
Winning the Dad by Nora Phoenix (Goodreads & StoryGraph)
The Talented Mr Ripley by Patricia Highsmith (Goodreads & StoryGraph)
My Swordhand is Singing by Marcus Sedgwick (Goodreads & StoryGraph)
The Diviners by Libba Bray (Goodreads & StoryGraph)
The Hotel by Kit Duffield (Goodreads & StoryGraph)
The Kiss of Death by Marcus Sedgwick (Goodreads & StoryGraph)
Mortal Engines by Philip Reeve (Goodreads & StoryGraph)
Black Coffee by Agatha Christie & Adapted by Charles Osborne (Goodreads & StoryGraph)
We Were Liars by E. Lockhart (Goodreads & StoryGraph)
Among The Burning Flowers by Samantha Shannon (Goodreads & StoryGraph)
Beach Hut 512 by Dorothy Koomson (Goodreads & StoryGraph)
Handy by K. M. Neuhold (Goodreads & StoryGraph)
The Mirror Crack’d From Side To Side by Agatha Christie (Goodreads & StoryGraph)
Predator’s Gold by Philip Reeve (Goodreads & StoryGraph)
A Is For Alibi by Sue Grafton (Goodreads & StoryGraph)
Give Him To Me by Dorothy Koomson (Goodreads & StoryGraph)
The Last Death Of The Year by Sophie Hannah (Goodreads & StoryGraph)
The Secret Life of Owls by John Lewis-Stempel (Goodreads & StoryGraph)
Good Pucking Luck by Riley Hart (Goodreads & StoryGraph)
We Fell Apart by E. Lockhart (Goodreads & StoryGraph)
Death In Ambush by Susan Gilruth (Goodreads & StoryGraph)
Everyone Here is Lying by Shari Lapena (Goodreads & StoryGraph)
Boyfriend Without Benefits by Riley Hart (Goodreads & Storygraph)

Some of these titles are eBook exclusives, so can only be found either direct from the author’s website or via online retailers (yep, Amazon). But you can buy most either via your bookshop of choice (local/indepdant/Waterstones/etc). I did create a shelf on my affiliate Bookshop.org for some ease for some ease (but if any titles grab your eye, borrow from your local library and buy where you feel happy spending your money!)

So, while I might not be blogging as much here, I will still be reading and audiobooking, so please keep your eye on my socials (Hi Instagram/Goodreads/Storygraph) and I will try and be more uptodate on tthe Facebook and the Bookshop (affiliate). 

Happy 2026 Reading!

Monday, 8 September 2025

Rereading Surprises

Something strange happened the past few weeks. Barring the whole “I killed my NetGalley account so make my reading/blogging easier as I might be saying Goodybye in the next 12 months or sooner…”, I starting making plans on rereads. And yes, I impulsively reread a book or two. 

And, even more shockingly, I actually enjoyed them. HARD TO BELIEVE, I KNOW! (Ok, I will explain this outburst shortly). 

Now, I know I wrote about my NeverEnding Reread TBR, but I have so many books/audiobooks/ebooks fighting for my attention, I didn’t truly think I would have gone hard on my rereads over the past few weeks since I wrote that post. SURPRISE!

Monday, 24 March 2025

NetGalley Review - Hungerstone

I bet you saw the word hunger and thought this was going to be a Hunger Games post, didn’t ya? 

Ok, backstory time. Book blogger pal Luna’s Little Library has been pestering me to read the vampire novella, Carmilla by J. Sheridan Le Fanu for YEARS! YEARS! And though I wanted to, I’ve always held off or put it further down my reading list for a mix of reasons: vampire burnout, it’s a classic and I never feel smart enough to read classics, you get the idea. I think they’ve given up on me ever reading it. 

Why is that important, I hear you ask? Well, this book is inspired by Carmilla. Look, Luna, I’m one step closer to actually reading/audiobooking it!

Title and Author:
Hungerstone by Kat Dunn
Publisher: Manilla Press/Bonnier
Bought, Borrowed or Gifted: eProof gifted by UK publisher via NetGalley in exchange for an honest review, though listen to audiobook via library’s audiobook app. 
Buy From (Affiliate): https://uk.bookshop.org/

Lenore has been married to steel magnate Henry for ten years, but the marriage was a marriage of convenience, not love and with no child. Henry decides to move to Sheffield and host a hunt to celebrate his steelworks and its future. But Lenore remembers what happened the last time Henry attended a hunt and is shocked that he would consider hosting one. 

On the way to their Sheffield estate, they discover carriage accident and bring the injured party to their estate to rest and recover. But Carmilla isn’t who anyone expects. She is weak during the day, but vibrant at night. She doesn’t eat meals with her hosts and is unsettled by churches. She unnerves Lenore, but stirs things up with Lenore. A hunger, a desire that Lenore has ignored for so long but now refuses to be ignored any more…

Saturday, 22 March 2025

NetGalley Review - The Decagon House Murders

I’m not sure, at the time of writing this, if this is going to be a post for one eProof I got from publishers via NetGalley or two. So, excuse me while I ramble and I can figure out. 

Let’s start with this Japanese crime classic, shall we? 

Title and Author: The Decagon House Murders by Yukito Ayatsuji (Translated by Ho-Ling Wong)
Publisher: Pushkin Veritago
Bought, Borrowed or Gifted: eProof gifted by UK publisher in exchange for honest review/reaction, though listened to audiobook via Audible Plus
Buy From (Affiliate): https://uk.bookshop.org

In this Japanese cult classic (a loving nod to Agatha Christie’s And Then There Were None), the island of Tsunojima is the setting for strange, unsolved murders. So when a group of students from K-University Mystery Club go there for their annual trip, they think it will be great inspiration for the crime fiction magazine.

But when one of their member is murdered, the others realise that they are trapped on the island with no way to escape or call for help. And the murderer has made it clear to them that all of them won’t survive by the end of the trap. 

At the same time, back on the main land, poison pen letters have been sent, accusing the receivers of the tragic death of a young woman who died of alcohol poisoning. But how is that connected to the terror that’s unfolding on the island?

Saturday, 22 February 2025

Musings over Magician’s Guild & Eye of the World

I told you guys in my 2025 Reading Resolution post that I was going to try and read books/audiobooks that I find fulfilling by not rushing or forcing myself to read them to a timetable (funny that as I’ve started a book that I need to read and review by the beginning of April for a blog tour. Oh yes, I am a walking contradiction). 

Well, I have done that with my first two reads of 2025 and I decided to slam my thoughts and feelings over these two together in one post as they are quite similar and yet, very different. They are, as you know if you have read my previous posts on here (or on any of my socials - since deleting the hellscape known as Twitter/X, I am far more active on the others!), The Magician’s Guild by Trudi Canavan* & The Eye of the World by Robert Jordan*. 

FYI, the reason both the titles above have a * is because they are affiliate links to my Bookshop.org* page so you have been warned.

Sunday, 2 February 2025

January 2025 Reading Wrap-Up

As I am blogging less (burnout? Laziness? The slow death of the blog?), I thought I would chat to you guys about my reading last month (maybe touch on my December 2024 reads as I am taking my time on reading lately, but seeing as I mentioned my reads that month in an earlier post, maybe not as there was a LOT of quitting reads that didn’t bring me joy!).

But as you can see the pic, I included the December reads of How to Catch A Boss by Ana Ashley and the Audible Drama of The Mysterious Affair at Styles by Agatha Christie (mainly because I only touched on them previous so wanted to show them one more time before I speak January reads).  

Now, I did finish this in January (and both Goodreads and StoryGraph class this as January Reads), but seeing as I audio the majority of this in December, I do class this as a December read, and that was Rescuing the Writer by Nora Phoenix. This is a short story in the Forestville Silver Foxes MM romance series and, yes, I know this is a short story so things have to move much quicker, but I felt so underwhelmed and, the more I think about it, the more icky I feel. Maybe if this was a novella or a full length novel, this could have been explored and lessen, but I just felt very underwhelmed and it’s put my off trying out this series. 

Now, the big mamas: The Eye of the World by Robert Jordan & The Magician’s Guild by Trudi Canavan. These are still my Currently Reading. I knew these would be my “Take Your Time” reads as these are longer than my normal reads, but I didn’t realise these would take me this long. At the time of writing, I am currently 59% into Eye of the World audiobook, read by Rosamund Pike (19 hours 18 minutes into a 32 hours 56 minutes, for those of you curious!) and 68% into my ebook of The Magician’s Guild. Now, both are longer fantasy than I normally go towards, and both are so much slower paced than my normal reads in general (you guys know me, I love my books to move at a nippy speed), but I am weirdly enjoying myself. 

Now, I can’t tell if I am enjoying self with these because I am allowing myself to sink into these worlds, or for another reason but I know I will need to talk to you guys about these when I am finished to keep eyes peeled on the blog as these will be long posts (and, hopefully, I will figure out if I will read the next book in both these series…)

Now, the book I am classing my January read is Designing Terry Prachett’s Discworld by Paul Kidby. Now, he took over as cover artist for Pratchett’s books when the original artist, Josh Kirby, died in 2001 and most of his artwork is cemented as fan folklore for Discworld. I loved reading Kidby ideas on how he designed the characters and Terry’s world and the poking fun over his parodies (there’s one I knew vaguely which was his parody of the Mona Lisa, The Mona Ogg because of that smile/teeth. It’s only when I read his write-up, I found myself cackling and going “I get it now”), as well as loving the little details (as Granny Weatherwax is in the background, disapprovingly glaring, in several Nanny Ogg’s parody, the loving nod towards Josh Kirby in the original cover design for Night Watch and the chess pieces in Check Mort where Pratchett was playing chess with Death [and winning] as this was released while Pratchett was battling Alzheimer’s.)

I’m going to put some of my favourite art below, but I am going to try and read more arty books and going to more museums (I am going to try and be a cultured b***h, even though I will be pretending most of the time!). Or maybe I am just going to read more things and not feel guilty about it! Either way, let’s continue the weird reading into February, shall we?

Saturday, 11 January 2025

First Post of 2025

First blog post of 2025! Can you believe we’re in 2025!? I can’t and it’s boggles my brain a little. 

So, while I am binge-watching the newest series of the Traitors (my guilty pleasure as I am not a huge fan of reality TV), I thought I would share a few titles I am holding space for this year (something I rambled about in my last 2024 post). And yes, most of these are LONG (pray for me!)


Now, there are several titles I have my eye on, which I’m not going to share with you guys. Let me build the mystery on those (maybe I will make a shelf on my Goodreads & StoryGraph…). On some others that I have my beady little eyes on, shall we? (Oh, before I go further, I am going to put affiliate links for Bookshop.org but I will put a * next to it so you know where it is).