From a Book Lover



Book Review: The Graces

 tháng 10 30, 2016     No comments   

The Graces (The Graces, #1)Author: Laure Eve
Publication Date: September 6, 2016
Publisher: Amulet Books
Series: The Graces # 1


Everyone loves the Graces.

Fenrin Grace is larger than life, almost mythical. He’s the school Pan, seducing girls without really meaning to. He’s biding his time until someone special comes along. Someone different, who will make him wonder how he got along all this time without her. Someone like me.

Fenrin’s twin, Thalia, is a willowy beauty with rippling, honey-colored hair. Wherever she goes, Thalia leaves behind a band of followers who want to emulate her. She casts spells over everyone she encounters, just like Fenrin—even if they both deny it.

Then there’s Summer. She’s the youngest Grace, and the only one who admits she’s really a witch. Summer is dark on the outside—with jet-black hair and kohl-rimmed eyes—and on the inside. It was inevitable that she’d find me, the new girl—a loner with secrets lurking under the surface.

I am River. I am not a Grace. But I’ll do anything to become one.


She had power. Of course she used it.

Magic didn’t seem to make things easier.


They haven’t seen a fucking thing yet. (Last sentence of the book!)

This book felt somewhat creepy and eerie all the way through and the ending took me by surprise, I must say. I wanted something huge and tragic to happen about midway through – and I didn’t get that until towards the end of the book. River, our protagonist, has a very convincing and edgy voice. I was hanging on every word she said, especially when it came to the Graces. The Graces are a group of three siblings that allegedly have “powers” and everyone at school both fears them and wants to be one of them at the same time. They are mysterious and wild and anyone who gets too close to them for too long ends up going stir crazy. River makes it her ultimate mission to be a part of their “group” and find a way into their inner circle. I loved learning the history of the Graces the most and trying to understand the stigma that followed their family name.


The book does have a creepy feel that makes you question what outlandish thing will happen next. Each of the Grace siblings has such a different personality and it is nice to see their stories unravel. You learn small secrets about each of them as the story progresses – books like this are always my favorite. By the end of the book, we are left with a cliffhanger where I must say that I am unsure if River will be evil or good by the time the series is over? I feel like she wants revenge and I am so stoked for the next book in the series. I have such high hopes for the next book. Such a perfect book for Halloween!



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Carnegie Medal Nominations 2017

 tháng 10 22, 2016     awards, book award, carnegie juno dawson, malorie blackman, non pratt, robin stevens, sarra manning     No comments   

First, to anyone at YA Shot in Uxbridge today, have a great day! Second, if anyone here's going to be at the UKYA Blogging Awards at Uxbridge tonight, yay! I'll see you there.  On with the post!

photo from CILIP website

It seems to to come round quicker and quicker every year, Yesterday, the nominations for the CILIP Carnegie and the Kate Greenaway medals were released. Due to my being at uni now, I sadly don't have the brilliant booklet my school librarian produced which had all the blurbs of the books recommended, so this post is based upon a)the bits I've heard from social media over the year and b)when I googled the things with interesting titles. But here- a list of the books that I am glad to see on the list, and would totally bump up a reading pile if I had time to do any reading for pleasure right now.




  • Crush by Eve Ainsworth. I've heard people say how well written Ainsworth's characters are in both this and 7 Days, so  even with the heavy subject, it should be good.
  • Chasing the Stars by Malorie Blackman. Othello in space with a girl as the lead? I've had this on my pile at home for ages, but the concept of this is great and so is Blackman.
  • Twenty Questions for Gloria by Martyn Bedford. I like thrillers when I read them, I just haven't really read that many. I should though. 
  • What's A Girl Gotta Do? by Holly Bourne. I'm sorry, I haven't read any in this feminist trilogy/series (not sure which...) but so many people say good things about it.
  • Why I Went Back by James Clammer. Myth and magic and mystery? And maybe a better version of Skellig? 
  • Monsters by Emerald Fennell. The atmosphere of  an Enid Blyton story (which I loved when I was little) plus murder? Yep.
  • The Bone Sparrow by Zana Fraillon. From the blurb, the story of a refugee in a detention centre, and a girl with a notebook of family history, it looks beautiful. 
  • Wolf by Wolf by Ryan Graudin. Alternate history and fantasy and a badass main character. Looking forwards to it.
  • Radio Silence by Alice Oseman. So many people have told me to read Oseman's work. Some day, hopefully.
  • Unboxed by Non Pratt. Loved Remix and Trouble, hoping for more good things. 
  • Salt to the Sea by Ruta Sepetys. Again, loved Between Shades of Grey, and hoping for another book of similar quality. 
  • Jolly Foul Play by Robin Stevens. Murder Most Unladylike and Arsenic for Tea were just fun reads-mystery, friendship, and a Chinese main character. I should catch up on this series.

And also, the things I have read and think totally deserve to be here!
  • All Of The Above by Juno Dawson. About finding your identity, and with some pretty good poetry.
  • George by Alex Gino. A middle-grade story about a transgirl, which just left me feeling happy.
  • London Belongs to Us by Sarra Manning. I read this book about my favourite city in on sitting and it's full of great characters and adventure. 
That's not to say the other books are undeserving! There's 114 of them, as well as 93 nominated for the Kate Greenaway award, and I applaud the judges who will read ALL of them. But even more applause goes to all the creators who made the books. Congratulations on the nomination, and good luck!
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Book Review: Stalking Jack The Ripper

 tháng 10 16, 2016     No comments   

Stalking Jack the Ripper (Stalking Jack the Ripper, #1)Author: Kerri Maniscalco
Publication Date: September 20, 2016
Publisher: Jimmy Patterson Books
Series: Stalking Jack The Ripper # 1


Seventeen-year-old Audrey Rose Wadsworth was born a lord's daughter, with a life of wealth and privilege stretched out before her. But between the social teas and silk dress fittings, she leads a forbidden secret life.

Against her stern father's wishes and society's expectations, Audrey often slips away to her uncle's laboratory to study the gruesome practice of forensic medicine. When her work on a string of savagely killed corpses drags Audrey into the investigation of a serial murderer, her search for answers brings her close to her own sheltered world.


“Roses have both petals and thorns, my dark flower. You needn’t believe something weak because it appears delicate. Show the world your bravery.”

“Fear is a hungry beast. The more you feed it, the more it grows.”

“There’s nothing better than a little danger dashed with some romance.”


“It was a great night for hunting Jack the Ripper.”

I have never been a huge fan of Jack the Ripper. I really hate stories where women are brutally murdered; however, I must say that this book was written exceptionally well. I am so intrigued after finishing this book that I believe I am going to find myself reading and researching more about Jack the Ripper. This story follows seventeen-year-old Audrey Rose, the daughter of a Lord and a young lady fascinated with dissecting cadavers. She becomes completely wound up in the case that soon becomes known as the Jack the Ripper serial killings. Audrey Rose was everything I could ever want in a female lead! When I tell you that I squealed a little when I found out this was a serious, I literally squealed…OUT LOUD.


I do not have what I consider a “weak stomach”; however, there were moments in reading this story that I had to look away and jump a few paragraphs forward. The author does a great job with imagery and fine detail – almost too good. Some parts are very graphic and the descriptions WILL make you cringe, which is perfect for a Halloween read. The end became predictable about three-fourths of the way through the book, but the writing is so superb that I was still hooked and wanted to see how Audrey reacted when she found out who, in fact, Jack the Ripper actually was. I am so excited for more from this author and more in this series!


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Book Review: The Gilded Age

 tháng 10 12, 2016     No comments   

The Gilded CageAuthor: Lucinda Gray
Publication Date: August 2, 2016
Publisher: Henry Holt and Co. BYR


After growing up on a farm in Virginia, Walthingham Hall in England seems like another world to sixteen-year-old Katherine Randolph. Her new life, filled with the splendor of upper-class England in the 1820s, is shattered when her brother mysteriously drowns. Katherine is expected to observe the mourning customs and get on with her life, but she can't accept that her brother's death was an accident. 

A bitter poacher prowls the estate, and strange visitors threaten the occupants of the house. There's a rumor, too, that a wild animal stalks the woods of Walthingham. Can Katherine retain her sanity long enough to find out the truth? Or will her brother's killer claim her life, too?



John frowns, and I know he isn’t fooled. But, tapping his horse smartly with the reins, he does as I say. I am, after all, the lady of Walthingham Hall.

“You won’t catch me going outside after dark again,” one mutters. “Not now that the Beast of Walthingham has claimed another.”

The Beast of Walthingham preys on the wicked, they say…


Then I see the gaunt, dark figure watching me silently from the other side of the rise.

For the month of October, I am trying to read books that are either gothic themed or have a creepy storyline. This book had a very gothic feel, but in the end fell short for me. The main character Katherine, along with her brother, come into a huge fortune when a relative suddenly passes away. When they move to Walthingham Hall they are impressed by a lavish and grandiose lifestyle, far different from they have ever known, but their lives are soon changed because of the mysterious and even fatal occurrences that happen in and around the manor. The novel had all the necessary elements to be a spooky, haunting read, but it lacked something that I find very pivotal for a novel to be at the top of my shelf: characterization.


Katherine was not what I expected in a female heroine. She was a very flat character and was not characterized very well. The mystery fell flat for me as well. I had the “who-dun-it” figured out about halfway through, and I was pretty disappointed when I realized there were not going to be any more interesting twists and turns. The setting was absolutely magical; the estate was gothic, creepy, and everything you hope an 19thcentury manor would be. The story line sounds perfect for Halloween, but the plot left me wanting more and left me unsatisfied by the end of the book.





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National Coming Out Day 2016

 tháng 10 11, 2016     lgbt, lgbtq     No comments   

National Coming Out Day is the celebration of people coming out as lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, an ally to the LGBTQ community, or something else-however you want to define yourself. In coming out, you can increase the representation of LGBTQ people in your community, reduce the silence which can help perpetuate negative stereotypes and hatred because there's no-one to speak out against them, or to remind perpetrators that queer people are real, and everywhere, and not some other alien concept. It can also help you just be happier with yourself and acknowledge who you are for you.

photo credit: trec_lit MmmmmMmmm via photopin (license)
For some people, due to their personality and their surroundings and other things, this is easy. For others, it's difficult.  But there's  books about it, both by showing characters who do so, or by helping you deal with it yourself.  (I'm sorry this preface was not meant to be  this serious in tone but it just happened that way).

Coming out isn't the be-all and end-all of a queer person's life. But it's also kind of a thing that happens whenever you meet new people and you need to judge whether they're going to accept you if the fact that you want a girlfriend ever comes into conversation, or (more likely) when you want to correct them about you getting married to a man.

I'm not especially a fan of books with coming out as the -only- plot line. I live in very liberal societies, where everyone I know of is accepting or at least tolerant, and I've come to expect more exciting things from my books.  But then they can be necessary for those who aren't comfortable comfortable in their societies or to themselves, or who don't know how to go about doing so, or who want reassurance that it won't be awful. Also, they are useful to particularly focus on how different societies may treat people coming out. And like any story, they have the  potential to be amazingly told, and 

Simon vs The Homosapiens Agenda by Becky Albertalli
Will I ever write a post about lgbtq books that doesn't feature Simon? Probably. But today is not that that day. Cute, with some excellent points about coming out in the emails between Blue and Simon, and overall giver of happy feels.

All of the Above by Juno Dawson
This one proves that labels aren't always necessary, which is an important thing to note if you're trying some on for size. In addition, overall giver of intense feels, and a few pieces of brilliant poetry.

Read Me Like a Book by Liz Kessler
Featuring a few queer people in varying stages of outness to themselves and society, I liked following Ashleigh's journey, and the way it resolved. In addition, loved seeing other people's different issues in life, issues I don't see much in YA.

This Book Is Gay by Juno Dawson 
Non fiction, an advice guide, written in a fun friendly style not just about coming out, but about love, sex, friendship, discrimination, and other things for everyone.

This post was kind of a mix of everything and I know I missed off books at some point. Comment below- what books would you recommend with coming out as a theme?

Also, if you are coming out today, at all, or especially for the first time, remember only do so if you're safe and happy to do so- and may it all go well!







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Book Review: The Thousandth Floor

 tháng 10 08, 2016     No comments   

The Thousandth FloorAuthor: Katharine McGee
Publication Date: August 30, 2016
Publisher: HarperCollins
Series: The Thousandth Floor # 1


New York City as you’ve never seen it before.

A thousand-story tower stretching into the sky. A glittering vision of the future, where anything is possible—if you want it enough.

Welcome to Manhattan, 2118.


A hundred years in the future, New York is a city of innovation and dreams. But people never change: everyone here wants something…and everyone has something to lose.

Leda Cole’s flawless exterior belies a secret addiction—to a drug she never should have tried and a boy she never should have touched.

Eris Dodd-Radson’s beautiful, carefree life falls to pieces when a heartbreaking betrayal tears her family apart.

Rylin Myers’s job on one of the highest floors sweeps her into a world—and a romance—she never imagined…but will her new life cost Rylin her old one?

Watt Bakradi is a tech genius with a secret: he knows everything about everyone. But when he’s hired to spy by an upper-floor girl, he finds himself caught up in a complicated web of lies.

And living above everyone else on the thousandth floor is Avery Fuller, the girl genetically designed to be perfect. The girl who seems to have it all—yet is tormented by the one thing she can never have.

Amid breathtaking advancement and high-tech luxury, five teenagers struggle to find their place at the top of the world. But when you’re this high up, there’s nowhere to go but down…


“Maybe that's all that praying was, she thought, just wishing good outcomes on other people.”

“Sometimes love and chaos are the same thing.” 


“If you aren't sure, then you definitely aren't in love.”

This book gave me the biggest book hangover ever. No book that I read after this one was going to compare and I knew that about halfway through. The premise behind this book was so enchanting and after seeing so many people rave about it on YouTube, I decided that I had to give it a try. The book was full of drama and I loved learning more about the tower; I hope that in the series we learn more and more about the different floors. I will say, without spoiling the novel, that the higher to the top you are the more money and power you have. I just loved the idea that all of New York was in this thousand floor tower and even the modes of travel to get from one floor to the next were futuristic.

My favorite thing about this book was all the different perspectives that we are given. We get to read from the point of view of about five or six different characters which makes the world all the more entertaining because they all come from different backgrounds. Each character has something very interesting to add the story and reading from the different point of views allow you to feel like you are reading more than one story wrapped into one. The ending of the book answered enough of my questions to be satisfactory, but of course I am anxious to know where things are going from here. This is definitely a great book to pick up for Fall!



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What I'm Taking to Uni

 tháng 10 02, 2016     classics, french, life, personal     No comments   

So this past few months, many exciting things have been happening for me, which have been better documented on instagram and twitter. I had another packed Edinburgh Fringe, full of brilliant comedians, poets, and theatre pieces. I've had some great times with my friends, which is just as well because we're now scattered across the country and the continent,  because we're all off to uni! I can't believe I was in Year 8 when I started this blog and I now I've got a place at my first choice university to study Classics and French, but hey, time flies!

Along the many bags of clothes and equipment I have packed before I move into the college tomorrow, obviously, I have books, and I thought I'd share what I'm taking. But first, exciting news... 


I got nominated, alongside Sally of The Dark Dictator, and Andrew of The Pewter Wolf, in the UKYA Blogger Awards for Champion of Diversity! Thank you for everyone who nominated me, in despite of the fact that my championing of diverse books, at least this past couple of years, hasn't really been via my blog, more in person- see my TEDx Talk on why you should read diversely, which I might vlog some day seeing as I'm not sure what happened to the footage, the We Need Diverse Books board we put up at my school that stayed in a main corridor for over a year, and anyone who has read Simon vs The Homo Sapiens Agenda because they asked me for a recommendation and that's been my go to book to pass on. I hope to be able to step up both my blog and my promotion of a range of books in the future, and it's nice to have a little spur to do so. And congrats to everyone else who got nominated, in all categories! You can find a list of all categories and nominees here (until it gets buried when they tweet other things).


The main post is under the cut- the books I'm  taking-and hopefully keeping up there, if they fit on whatever shelving they give me!




My Course Books

The books that I'll be studying. I've read all the required bits, so here's a summary of what they're about  and what I thought of them.


  • The Poems of Catullus, translated by James Minchie. My copy of this is falling apart, so I put it in a binder ring. I love most of Catullus' works-it's often funny or emotional or both- he crosses the line a lot though!
  • Juvenal's Satires, translated by Peter Green. Using anecdotes, it reads like a long list of complaints about Roman society, pointing out all the various moral failings that have come through.
  • En Attendant Godot (Waiting For Godot) by Samuel Beckett. It's a play of two men who are waiting for Godot. They contemplate life, meet a handful other people, and wonder why they do so. It feels like Rosencrantz and Guildernstern, a lot of talk, less things happening, good to study, probably boring to watch.
  • Supplement au Voyage de Bouganville (Supplement to Bougainville's Journey) by Denis Diderot, I liked the depiction of Tahitan society, and also the way it contrast Tahitian and European society and ideals.
  • The Poems of Propertius, translated by H. E. Butler, of which I read Book 1. Mostly love poetry, describing his relationship with Cynthia, but there's a couple of poems for friends too.  
  • Essais (Essays), of which I read Des Cannibales by Michel de Montaigne, Again contrasting  European society with another. I liked the challenge of reading the 16th century French.
  • The Satyricon by Petronius. A pair of lovers go wandering around the continent, meeting the weirdest of society. Ends abruptly, though probably due to losing the text, but the various episodes, satirising different figures in society, are...interesting.
  • Cicero's Defence Speeches, of which I read Pro Caelio. Here Cicero is trying to defend Caelius against charges of violence andmurder, which he does by presenting Caelius as a young man of outstanding virtue, even if he has made some mistakes, and by presenting Clodia Metelli, whose evidence would be important to the case, as a whore. It's funny in some places, misogynistic in many more, and is basically blaming a woman for anything a man does wrong.
  • The Aeneid by Virgil. Following Aeneas, a Trojan noble who flees Troy after its defeat, as he wanders, searching for a new place for his people to settle down. A fair bit of travelling gives way to some really graphically battles. I have a lot of love for Camilla, the warrior woman who's featured in book 11.
  • Phedre by Jean Racine. The mythological story of a queen who falls in love with her stepson and the husband/father's rashness is presented here in a play. I enjoyed the rhythm of this as I read this aloud, and I liked how it didn't completely villainise Phedre (ok, the blame all shifts on to the Nurse but I feel Phedre gets presented in a worse light in Euripedes' and Seneca's versions so it's nice she gets a little more sympathy here)

Supplementary Books 

Books kind of relating to Classics and French, but not directly relevant (this term)- intended for when I want to do something different but also feel productive! 
  • Les Femmes Savantes by Moliere
  • Les  Fleurs de Mal by Charles Baudelaire
  • Les Mains Sales by Jean Paul Sartre
  • World Mythology by Mark Daniels
  • Bisexuality in the Ancient World by Eve Cantarella
  • The Latin Love Poets by R.O.A.M. Lyne
  • Frangine by Marion Brunet (and then I can finally give this back to Caroline- sorry for keeping this so long!)
  • Goddesses, Whores, Wives, & Slaves by Sarah Pomeroy

Fun Books

The ones that will be for pleasure, for review, and for hopeful enjoyment!

  • The Hypnotist by Laurence Anholt. Set in 1960s America, this historical thriller plus hypnotism looks intriguing.
  • Life: A User's Manuel by Georges Perec. I picked this up for the title. I'm hoping for good things from the many many characters.
  • The Sun is Also a Star by Nicola Yoon. I haven't read Everything, Everything yet either, but I've heard lots of people enjoyed it.
  • Girl Trouble by Carol Dyhouse. A looking at how society perceives women and what they do throughout the 20th century.
  • Daughters of Time - A History Girls Anthology. I love how there's a range of time periods the women at the centre of each story is drawn from, and a range of things they do. 
  • The Genius and the Goddess by Alduous Huxley. I got this as a surprise gift, so I don't know what to expect. I didn't mind Brave New World, and I'm hoping i like this as much as I did that, or more.
  • As I Descended by Robin Talley. This is the one book I've been waiting for all year, and I'm slightly scared to read it with such high expectations (lesbian contemporary Macbeth!). I'll get to it soon though.
  • Salt to the Sea by Ruta Sepetys. Between Shades of Grey was such a beautiful book, I have high hopes for this one as well.
  • Unspeakable by Abbie Rushton. A mute girl falls for the new girl. I remember getting excited for this, but never getting round to it.
  • The Republic of Thieves by Scott Lynch. I love this fantasy series with the detailed world building and the clever characters (especially the ship of lady pirates introduced in book 2). I also hear we get to meet the main character's lost love in this book, something I've been waiting for.
I know I'm being very overoptimistic with my for fun books here, considering I have eight weeks and a lot more reading I'll get once I'm there, but at least I won't be running out of things to get through!  What books would you suggest I get through first? And what would you take from a packed to-read shelf to last you for a couple of months?
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Book Spotlight: The Wild Unknown Journal

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Nhãn

  • 1800's
  • 39 Clues
  • a darker shade of magic
  • a e rought
  • a kiss in the dark
  • a little in love
  • a midsummer nights dream
  • A. J. Hartley
  • abbie rushton
  • action
  • Adam Gidwitz
  • Adam Rex
  • adaptation
  • adolescence
  • adventure
  • age limits
  • Alcatraz
  • alchemy
  • Aldo Zelnick
  • Alethea Kontis
  • Alex Rider
  • aliens
  • alison cherry
  • allan heinberg
  • Allan Jones
  • alphabet adventures
  • alternate worlds
  • amanda sun
  • amy mcculloch
  • Amy Plum
  • andrew smith
  • Angela Cefalo
  • angels
  • Angie Sage
  • animal fantasy
  • animals
  • Anne Ursu
  • Annette Cascone
  • Anthony Horowitz
  • anthony mcgowan
  • anti-bullying
  • april genevieve tucholke
  • archaeology
  • Area 51
  • aristotle and dnate discover the screts of the universe
  • Artemis Fowl
  • ashes
  • assassin
  • assassins
  • audio
  • Audiobook
  • Audiobooks
  • Audiofile Magazine
  • author interview
  • autobiography
  • awards
  • Axel Avian
  • baking
  • Ballet
  • banished
  • Baron Specter
  • beastologist
  • because youll never meet me
  • becky albertalli
  • bejamine alire saenz
  • bethany griffin
  • between the devil and the deep blue sea
  • Bianca Turetsky
  • birds
  • blameless
  • blog event
  • blog tour
  • blood and feathers
  • blood magic
  • Bloody Jack
  • blue is the warmest colour
  • bombs
  • book
  • book to film
  • book award
  • book of shadows
  • book review
  • book to film
  • books
  • brainwashing
  • Brian Keaney
  • British Intelligence
  • broken
  • Bryan Chick
  • Bryan Perro
  • bryony pearce
  • Bullying
  • C. Aubrey Hall
  • C. J. Hill
  • C. J. Omololu
  • Cahills vs Vespers
  • cakes
  • camp
  • Canada
  • carnegie juno dawson
  • carrie jones
  • castle
  • cat clarke
  • catching fire
  • Cate Tiernan
  • cecelia roberts
  • cello
  • cemeteries
  • censorship
  • changeless
  • changeling
  • chapter bok
  • chapter book
  • Characters
  • chemical garden
  • children's lit
  • chris dlacey
  • chris f holm
  • Chris Grabenstein
  • Christmas
  • Cinderella
  • circus
  • claire mcfall
  • classics
  • Claudia Black
  • clues
  • codes
  • Coilt Shore
  • comedy
  • Comic novel
  • coming of age
  • conspiracies
  • constellations
  • contemporary
  • Cori McCarthy
  • coriolanus
  • Cornelia Funke
  • Costa Rica
  • Cotswold's
  • Cotwolds
  • countdown
  • country club
  • cover reveal
  • crime
  • crowns
  • cruelty
  • curses
  • cyborgs
  • dance of the red death
  • dancing
  • Daniel Nayeri
  • darkly dreaming dexter
  • David Baldacci
  • david levithan
  • dead
  • dead harvest
  • Deadtime Stories
  • death
  • death and co
  • death and mr right
  • Deborah Heiligman
  • delete
  • demon
  • demonic
  • demons
  • derek landy
  • dexter
  • Diane Zahler
  • discussion
  • discworld
  • disease
  • distopian
  • divergent
  • doctor who
  • doll bones
  • dominoes
  • Donada Peters
  • doomsday
  • dragonlord
  • Dragons
  • drama
  • dreams
  • dystopia
  • dystopian
  • dystopian romance
  • e lockhart
  • E.D. Baker
  • ede bell
  • egyptian mythology
  • Elizabeth Norris
  • Ellen Potter
  • elves
  • Emily Rodda
  • Emily Whitman
  • enchantments
  • end of year lists
  • end of year survey
  • England
  • environment
  • environmental
  • Eoin Colfer
  • EPA
  • epic
  • epic novel
  • essence
  • etiquette and espionage
  • Eva Wiseman
  • events
  • exploring
  • fae
  • Faelin Chronicles
  • fairies
  • fairy
  • Fairy tale
  • Fairytale
  • faith
  • fall of giants
  • family
  • fantasy
  • fashion
  • fast-paced
  • Faust
  • FBI
  • fearsome dreamer
  • feminism
  • fencing
  • Fey
  • film
  • films
  • fime travel; vintage fashion
  • fire and flood
  • firestarter
  • firewallers
  • Flamel
  • fleeced
  • foster homes
  • Fractured faiy tale
  • francesca zappia
  • Francisco Goya
  • frank wedekind
  • Frankenstein
  • french
  • friendship
  • Frog prince
  • from bard to bookshelf
  • futuristic
  • gail carriger
  • Gay bashing
  • gay boy crush; prom
  • geek girl
  • gender
  • Gennifer Albin
  • Georgette Heyer
  • ghosts
  • giveaway
  • Glass Swallow
  • glassmaking
  • glaze
  • glossary
  • Goblins
  • golf course
  • Goosebumps
  • gothic
  • gove
  • grace
  • graphic novel
  • grasshopper jungle
  • graveyard diaries series
  • Great Tree of Avalon
  • greek mythology
  • gregg olsen
  • grief
  • griffin
  • Grimm
  • guardian fiction prize
  • guest post
  • guest review
  • gypsies
  • half fairy
  • half-Martians
  • Halloween
  • Hannah Barnaby
  • Hannah Moskowitz
  • Hansel and Gretl
  • HarperCollins
  • Heather Dixon
  • heaven and hell
  • hedgehog
  • Helene Boudreau
  • hell
  • Henry H. Neff
  • Herbie Brennan
  • high fantasy
  • historical
  • history
  • Hocus Pocus Series
  • holly black
  • holly smale
  • horror
  • hostages
  • hotel
  • hugh howey
  • humor
  • humour
  • hunting
  • ill give you the sun
  • illusions
  • ilsa j bick
  • immortal
  • in translation
  • ink
  • Inkheart
  • Ireland
  • issues
  • Italy
  • iw gregorio
  • Jack and the Beanstalk
  • Jack the Ripper
  • jackson pearce
  • James Dashner
  • james dawson
  • James Patterson
  • Jane Austen
  • Janet Lee Carey
  • japan
  • jeff lindsay
  • jen williams
  • Jennifer Ann Kogler
  • Jennifer E. Smth
  • jennifer latham
  • Jessica Verday
  • Jewish
  • Jews
  • joe hill
  • Joelle Charbonneau
  • Julia Golding
  • Julia Karr
  • julia wills
  • julie maroh
  • Juliet Marillier
  • kameron hurley
  • Karla Oceanak
  • Kat Heckenbach
  • Katie Honaker
  • kavanah
  • Keith McGowan
  • ken follett
  • kendra l saunders
  • Kenneth Oppel
  • keren david
  • kevin brooks
  • kidnapping
  • kim curran
  • King Arthur
  • knights
  • Kristin Cashore
  • L. J. Smith
  • L.A. Faber
  • land development
  • Laruen DeStefano
  • last god standing
  • Laura Amy Schlitz
  • laura lam
  • laure eve
  • lauren kate
  • Lauren Oliver
  • leah thomas
  • lenore applehans
  • les miserables
  • level 2
  • lgbt
  • lgbt+
  • lgbtq
  • Lian Tanner
  • librarian
  • lies
  • life
  • lisa anne okane
  • Lisa Graff
  • lisa williamson
  • liz de jager
  • loki
  • london
  • long long post
  • looms
  • lou mora
  • lou morgan
  • louise oneill
  • love letters to the dead
  • love triangle
  • luck of the draw
  • lucy christopher
  • luke hollands
  • lysistrata
  • M.C. Beaton
  • macbeth
  • magic
  • Magicians
  • malinda lo
  • malorie blackman
  • manga
  • Manhattan
  • maps
  • margaret atwood
  • marieke nijkamp
  • Marissa Burt
  • Marissa Meyer
  • marjane satrapi
  • marriage
  • marvel
  • Mary Robinette Kowal
  • masque of the red death
  • matt whyman
  • Maureen Doyle McQuerry
  • Max Chase
  • Medieval
  • memoir
  • mental health
  • mermaids
  • meteor
  • Michael Dahl
  • Michael Scott
  • Michelle Harrison
  • Michelle Knudsen
  • middle grade
  • MIddle reader
  • military
  • Milo Ventigmiglia
  • mini review
  • mirrors
  • model misfit
  • monsters
  • monstrous regiment
  • Moshe Sipper
  • mosnters
  • much ado about nothing
  • muder
  • Murano
  • murder mystery
  • Museum
  • musicals
  • mystery
  • mythology
  • n non pratt
  • Nancy Werlin
  • Napoleon
  • necromancer
  • need
  • never the bride
  • Newfoundland
  • news
  • night terrors
  • nikki sheehan
  • non fiction
  • non pratt
  • nonfiction
  • Norse Gods
  • Norton Juster
  • Nostradamus
  • Oberon
  • obsession
  • only ever yours
  • orphans
  • orwellian
  • other world
  • painting
  • pantomime
  • paranormal
  • paranormal romance
  • Paris
  • Patrice Kindl
  • patrick ness
  • paul magrs
  • Penguin Audio
  • percy jackson
  • peregrine harker and the black death
  • persecution
  • persepolis
  • personal
  • Pete Hautman
  • phil earle
  • Phillip Roy
  • pilots
  • plane crash
  • planets
  • poaching
  • Polly Carlson-Voiles
  • polygamy
  • post-apocalyptic
  • powers
  • prejudie
  • prince
  • Princess
  • Princess and the pea
  • programming
  • prophecies
  • prophecy
  • prostitution
  • purity
  • quest
  • R. L. LaFevers
  • Rabbi
  • Rachel Hartman
  • Rae Carson
  • rainbow boys
  • rainbow rowell
  • Random House Audio
  • rant
  • Rating: dragon
  • Rating: fairy
  • Rating: griffin
  • rating: wizard
  • reapers novice
  • rebellion
  • red
  • red dragon
  • regency
  • reincarnation
  • rem
  • renegade theatre company
  • reread
  • revenant
  • reviews
  • rick riordan
  • rituals
  • Robin Bridges
  • robin stevens
  • rod duncan
  • Roderick Gordon
  • romance
  • romcom
  • rosie best
  • Rumpelstiltskin
  • run
  • russia
  • rusty fischer
  • saga
  • Sage Blackwood
  • Sarah J. Maas
  • sarah sky
  • sarra manning
  • sasquatch
  • say her name
  • scary books
  • science
  • science fiction
  • seance
  • secret agents
  • Secret Garden
  • secret society
  • self confidence
  • Septimus Heap
  • ser
  • series
  • Sevenwaters
  • sex
  • shades of grey
  • shadowplay
  • shadows
  • shakespare
  • shakespeare
  • shakespeare. richard iii
  • Shannon Messenger
  • shapeshifters
  • shift
  • Simon and Schuster
  • simon packham
  • simon vs the homosapiens agenda
  • singing
  • Six crowns series
  • skulk
  • skullduggery pleasant
  • skyscraper throne
  • slavery
  • Sleeping Beauty
  • Sleepy Hollow
  • smooth faced gents
  • snapshot review
  • Snow queen
  • Snow White
  • sorcery
  • soulless
  • souls
  • Spain
  • Spanish Inquisition
  • spies
  • Spinsters
  • spireseeker
  • spring awakening
  • spy
  • steampunk
  • stephen king
  • stereotypes
  • storm maker
  • strength 2
  • strength 3
  • strength 4
  • strength 5
  • Submarin Outlaw series
  • submarine
  • suitcases
  • supernatural
  • survival
  • susan fletcher
  • Susanne Gervay
  • suzanne collins
  • swans
  • swords
  • t s easton
  • T. A. Barron
  • tainted
  • talent
  • talent contest
  • tanith low
  • tattoo
  • teardrop
  • teenage pregnancy
  • telepathy
  • terry pratchett
  • tessa gratton
  • the art of being normal
  • the bubble wrap boy
  • the bullet catcher's daughter
  • the bunker diary
  • the childrens crusade
  • the collected
  • the collector
  • the copper promise
  • the crane wife
  • the finishing school
  • The Girl of Fire and Thorns
  • the glass republic
  • the hunger games
  • the killing woods
  • the knots sequence
  • the letter G
  • the lightning thief
  • the lost and the found
  • the mirror empire
  • the oathbreakers shadow
  • the parasol protectorate
  • the penelopiad
  • the pillars of the earth
  • the savages
  • the unicorne files
  • the weight of souls
  • the young avengers
  • theatre
  • theatre review
  • thief
  • this book is gay
  • this is not a love story
  • this is where it ends
  • thomas harris
  • thrill me
  • thriller
  • tim clare
  • tim waggoner
  • time travel
  • Titanic
  • titus andronicus
  • Toby Forward
  • tom pollock
  • Tommy Donbavand
  • Tony Abbot
  • tragedy
  • travesti
  • trilogy
  • trolls
  • trouble
  • true crime
  • Tui T. Sutherland
  • Tween
  • two boys kissing
  • ukya
  • under my skin
  • underground
  • urban fantasy
  • v e schwab
  • Vampire
  • vampires young adult
  • veronica roth
  • victor hugo
  • Victoria London
  • victoria scott
  • Victorian
  • video games
  • vocabulary building
  • W.A.R.P.
  • waiting on wednesday
  • we were liars
  • weather
  • weaving
  • well survey
  • who framed klaris cliff
  • wiccan
  • wilderness
  • willy's bitches
  • witches
  • wizard
  • wizards
  • wndb
  • wolves
  • wool
  • world war one
  • writing
  • ya
  • Yelena Black
  • Young Adult
  • Young readers
  • Zoe Marriott
  • zombie
  • zombies
  • zombies dont cry
  • zoo

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