Showing posts with label TSS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label TSS. Show all posts

Friday, September 12, 2025

Weekly Mews: Bookish Mewsings and a September Birthday

I am linking up to the Sunday Post hosted by Kim of Caffeinated Book Reviewer and The Sunday Salon (TSS) hosted by Deb Nance of Readerbuzz  where participants recap our week, talk about what we are reading, share any new books that have come our way, and whatever else we want to talk about. I am also linking It's Monday! What Are you Reading? hosted by Kathryn of Book Date where readers talk about what they have been, are and will be reading.



  

 

This week, I finally finished reading Small Island by Andrea Levy. I was a little disappointed that no confetti fell from above when I read the last line. I also was able to fit in Sweep With Me (Innkeeper Chronicles #4.5) by Ilona Andrews. 


I currently am reading The Midnight Feast by Lucy Foley for my upcoming Mystery book club meeting and Nikki Payne's Pride and Protest


What are you reading right now?


My TBR List is hosted by Michelle at Because Reading. The 1st Saturday of every month, I will list 3 books from my TBR pile I am considering reading and let you vote for my next read during that month. My review will follow (unfortunately, not likely in the same month, but eventually--that's all I can promise).  

Thank you to everyone who voted in this month's TBR List Poll! The winning book stayed in the lead all week, although it was a close contest. 


The two books that did not win were tied most of the week, but Murder at the Wham Bam Club (Psychics & Soul Food Mystery #1) by Carolyn Marie Wilkins came in second with six (6) votes in the end, with Zomromcom (Supernatural Entanglements #1) by Olivia Dade receiving four (4) votes. Winning with seven (7) votes is The Bewitching by Silvia Moreno-Garcia!  I enjoyed Mexican Gothic by Moreno-Garcia and look forward to reading The Bewitching this month.


Thank you for voting!



Tuesdays with Morrie: An Old Man, a Young Man, and Life's Greatest Lesson
by Mitch Albom
(Random House Audio, 1997; 3hr, 51m)
Source: Library

Am I the only parent who, upon hearing my daughter is reading a book for a class that I haven't read yet, picks up said book to read too? I have not done this every time (I still haven't gotten around to reading Holes) but I did reread The Outsiders last year because she was reading it in class. And this quarter, I decide to read Tuesdays with Morrie since she was reading it for school, especially since my library had a copy of the audiobook I could borrow. 
Maybe it was a grandparent, or a teacher, or a colleague. Someone older, patient and wise, who understood you when you were young and searching, helped you see the world as a more profound place, gave you sound advice to help you make your way through it.
Mitch Albom had not seen his college professor Morrie Schwartz for almost twenty years, but when he saw an interview of him on television in which Morrie talked about his Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis (ALS, also known as Lou Gehrig's Disease) diagnosis, Mitch decided to reach out to Morrie. The two began meeting regularly on Tuesdays, Mitch armed with his recorder to capture every word of Morrie's lessons on how to live. Morrie knew he was going to die but was not done teaching. His words, in part thanks to Mitch's memoir, would go on to inspire and offer comfort to generations of people, young and old.

The memoir, Tuesdays With Morrie, is sad in that it documents the final months of Morrie's life through Mitch's eyes (Lou Gehrig's Disease is cruel).  But it is also an inspiring story. Morrie had so much life and was so positive up until the end, even as he struggled to eat and could no longer care for himself. Mitch shares a little bit about his own experience, seeing his mentor deteriorate before him, but does not linger on those aspects long.

In the afterward of the 25th anniversary edition of the book, Mitch Albom explains that he wrote the book to help pay for Morrie's medical costs. The book ends with audio clips from conversations Mitch had with Morrie. It was very moving, hearing Morrie share some of his lessons in his own words.

My daughter's class is still working their way through this short memoir, and so she has not voiced an opinion on her reading experience yet. I look forward to hearing what she takes away from it when she is finished with it.
"Be compassionate," Morrie whispered. "And take responsibility for each other. If we only learned those lessons, this world would be so much better a place." 

He took a breath, then added his mantra: "Love each other or die." [excerpt from Tuesday with Morrie]

A Silence in Belgrave Square
(A Below Stairs Mystery #8) by Jennifer Ashley
(Berkley, 2025; 311 pgs)
Source: Thank you to the publisher for sending me a e-copy via NetGalley for an honest review

I settled right into Jennifer Ashley's 8th book of the Below Stairs mystery series and it felt like coming home. This is by far one of my favorite historical mystery series. I am very attached to the characters and enjoy every moment spent with them, and this time was no different.
Valiant cook and amateur sleuth Kat Holloway must uncover the secrets of Victorian London’s most elite noblemen to save the man she loves.
It is not like Daniel McAdam to be so open with Kat about his upcoming mission, but with the stakes so high, Daniel hopes Kat will realize just how dangerous the situation is and stay far away. This is supposed to be his last mission for his boss, whose relationship with Daniel is contentious at best. Daniel should know better than assume warning away Kat will have any effect. But then again, he probably does know she will not be able to help herself. Kat enlists the help of an old friend to keep an eye on Daniel in a way she cannot. In the meantime, Kat has her own job as head cook to worry about, not to mention those blackmail letters that several of her friends and colleagues have been receiving. With a blackmailer to catch, a threat against the Crown to thwart, and now a murderer to catch (because there indeed was a murder), Kat and Daniel have their work cut out for them.

I especially enjoy seeing Kat put her connections to good use in getting into places and finding the answers she seeks. She's resourceful and well-respected among many across different classes. She doesn't see herself as better than those whose situation is not as good as her own. She knows all too well what it is like to be down on one's luck. In A Silence in Belgrave Square, we're reminded of some of those strong loyal friends Kat has made, whether it's them putting their trust in her, doing her a favor, or looking out for her.

Kat and Daniel's relationship through the series has been a slow burn romance, which I have enjoyed seeing unfold. The ever mysterious Daniel clearly adores Kat and will do anything for her. Even Grace, Kat's daughter has come to enjoy Daniel's visits when the three of them are able to be together. We have watched Grace grow over the course of the novels. She's growing into quite the young lady.

A Silence in Belgrave Square is full of moments that made me sigh in delight and gasp in concern as trouble came. This book felt like a turning point in the series, and I am eager to see the direction the author will take her characters in future books. 


Sweep with Me
(Innkeeper Chronicles #4.5) by Ilona Andrews

(NYLA, 2020; 146 pgs)
Source: Own TBR

I feel like I am spoiling myself, reading books in two of my favorite series back to back. The Innkeeper Chronicles by Ilona Andrews is my favorite of this husband and wife writing team's books. In my dream life, I would be an Innkeeper to a sentient and magical house like Gertrude Hunt too.

It is Dina Demille who is, in fact, Innkeeper of Gertrude Hunt, a bed and breakfast in Red Deer Texas, along with her wolf shapeshifter boyfriend, Sean Evans. Gertrude Hunt is one of several special inns that serve as safe havens and portals between worlds. Treaty Stay is a special holiday for Innkeepers, one that celebrates the ancient treaty that united the Inns and set the rules for the Inns in an effort to protect them, their intergalactic guests, and those on Earth, most of whom are unaware of the planets and worlds beyond their knowledge. This time of year, on Treaty Stay, Innkeepers are unable to turn away guests, and so it is with open, however reluctant, arms Dina and Sean welcome their latest guests, and, of course, everything goes array. Or, at least some things do. Seeing Dina in her element is one of my favorite parts of the series. She has to put out several fires, get creative in helping her guests find solutions to their problems, including her own chef Orro, who loses faith in himself when he cannot make a fast food hamburger taste as bad as the real thing. Then there is the human determined to get into Gertrude Hunt to confront one of Dina's more distinguished guests--the lengths his hired help go through and the trouble they face was quite entertaining! Dina has her own worries, concerned that her connection with Gertrude Hunt is not as strong as it once was. Sweep with Me was full of humorous moments (space chickens, anyone?) and several touching ones too. I hated that Sweep with Me was so short. I am never ready to leave Dina's world.


Small Island
by Andrea Levy
(Picador, 2004; 441 pgs)
Source: Own TBR

Although I was not able to read Small Island with my Historical Fiction book club in June, I decided I still wanted to read it on my own. Now I wish I could go back in time and attend the meeting because there is so much to discuss! 
Hortense Joseph arrives in London from Jamaica in 1948 with her life in her suitcase, her heart broken, her resolve intact. Her husband, Gilbert Joseph, returns from the war expecting to be received as a hero, but finds his status as a black man in Britain to be second class. His white landlady, Queenie, raised as a farmer's daughter, befriends Gilbert, and later Hortense, with innocence and courage, until the unexpected arrival of her husband, Bernard, who returns from combat with issues of his own to resolve. 
Told in these four voices, Small Island is a courageous novel of tender emotion and sparkling wit, of crossings taken and passages lost, of shattering compassion and of reckless optimism in the face of insurmountable barriers---in short, an encapsulation of the immigrant's life.
I confess I was not sure I would finish this book at first. The slow pacing combined with a character I did not connect with right away made me doubtful this would be a book I would enjoy, but then it happened and I was invested and found my heart aching for these characters, each with their own struggles, disappointments, and heartaches. The novel takes the reader back and forth in time, before World War II, during the war, and after, jumping back and forth as we get to know each of the four main characters.

Hortense and Gilbert Joseph hope for a better life in England, the "Mother Country," when they emigrate from Jamaica. Hortense has dreams of living in a big house with a real door bell and getting a job as a teacher. Gilbert wants to be a lawyer. The reality of their situation hits them full force when they arrive (separately) in London, trading life on one "small" island for another. Not only do they face the struggle of putting together a life in a new place with doors closed in their face and opportunities limited, but also with the classism and racism of a society that looks down on them because of their situation and color of their skin. Hortense especially has a hard time adjusting, her expectations of a better life dashed and being completely unprepared. While Gilbert may have been my favorite character through most of the novel, Hortense stands out as my favorite now that I have finished it. I did not care for her much at first, I admit, finding her haughty and somewhat dismissive, but the more I got to know her, instead I saw an unfaltering confident and courageous woman. 

Queenie and Bernard Bligh, white and privileged, offer their own perspectives of life during a tumultuous time in English history. Queenie is a particularly interesting character, a farmer's daughter, who gladly left that behind to live in the city. She married Bernard more for security and stability than love, I feel. I got the impression she was always wanting more out of her life, never quite satisfied and is often lonely. During the war, she helps families who have been displaced from the bombings in London and later takes in boarders to help with the bills during her husband's long absence during and after the war. Her neighbors are not too keen on the idea that she takes in Black boarders, but Queenie does not care. And then there is her husband. Bernard's experiences in the war have left him with many deep scars. He seemed to be the most stuck and the least likeable of the characters. He clearly has some deep-seated prejudice against non-whites.

Andrea Levy's Small Island is a multi-layered and thoughtful book that is at times subtle and other times more hard hitting. Having the four different perspectives only enhanced this nuanced novel. There was much sadness in this novel given the struggles and hardships the characters faced, but there is also hope, even when things seem impossible.
"Listen to me, man, we both just finish fighting a war - a bloody war - for the better world we wan' see.  And on the same side - you and me. We both look on other men to see enemy. You and me, fighting for empire, fighting for peace. But still, after all that we suffer together, you wan' tell me I am worthless and you are not. Am I to be the servant and you are the master for all time? No. Stop this man. Stop it now. We can work together, Mr. Bligh. You no see? We must. Or else you just gonna fight me till the end." [excerpt from Small Island]
If you have ready any of these, I would like to know your thoughts! Do any of them sound like books you would like to read?


Following in the footsteps of Deb of Readerbuzz, who shares three good things in her Sunday Salon posts, I thought I would try to do the same. With all the worries and stressors in life, I want to highlight some of the good, even the seemingly small stuff. 

This week every year is always a mix of joy and sadness. There's my birthday (yay!), followed by the anniversaries of the deaths of my grandmother and my father. Let's focus on the good stuff: 

1. A nice birthday lunch at the Old Spaghetti Factory with my family (my mom, husband and daughter)! We also stopped by the bookstore and mall (Mouse needed new shoes) before heading home. 

Gifts from my mom: 
Shakespeare playing cards, a reading journal, and bookish-themed socks! 
No picture of the bird feeder as we still need to put it together
 
2.  My husband and daughter surprised me with an ice cream birthday cake on my actual birthday. My favorite kind of cake (mint chocolate chip ice cream and chocolate cake)! 


3. 
Being able to open the windows and enjoy a breeze coming through the house Friday morning. In the early evening I was able to open them again, and enjoyed listening to my neighbor's music filtering in. My work day was done and I enjoyed being in that moment.

What have you been up to this past week? 

I hope you have a great week! Let me know what you have been reading!

© 2025, Musings of a Bookish Kitty. All Rights Reserved. If you're reading this on a site other than Musings of a Bookish Kitty or Wendy's feed, be aware that this post has been stolen and is used without permission.

Saturday, September 06, 2025

Weekly Mews: August Wrap Up & September is Here (Please Vote in My TBR Poll!)

I am linking up to the Sunday Post hosted by Kim of Caffeinated Book Reviewer and The Sunday Salon (TSS) hosted by Deb Nance of Readerbuzz  where participants recap our week, talk about what we are reading, share any new books that have come our way, and whatever else we want to talk about. I am also linking It's Monday! What Are you Reading? hosted by Kathryn of Book Date where readers talk about what they have been, are and will be reading.



  



Books Read in August

I was able to fit in 8 books this past month. It was another heavy book club month, which was not a surprise. I managed to attend all five of my book clubs! 

I shared my bookish mewsings on the four books I read the first part of the month. You can find those thoughts here

Fat Chance, Charlie Vega by Crystal Maldonado 
Trouble with the Cursed (The Hollows #16) by Kim Harrison 
The Berry Pickers by Amanda Peters, narrated by Aaliya Warbus and Jordan Waunch
The City of Stardust by Georgia Summers, narrated by Kitty Parker 

The second half of month included a  mix of historical fiction, a classic and a mystery/thriller:

A Queer Case (The Selby Bigge Mysteries #1) by Robert Holtom 
The American Daughters by Maurice Carlos Ruffin, narrated by Lynnette R. Freeman 
Kills Well With Others (Killers of a Certain Age #2) by  Deanna Raybourn
1984 by George Orwell, narrated by Simon Prebble 


A Queer Case (The Selby Bigge Mysteries #1) by Robert Holtom 
(Titan Books, 2025; 320 pgs)
A gripping 1920s-set whodunnit, this debut features a queer sleuth who must solve a murder in a mansion on London’s Hampstead Heath without revealing his sexuality, lest he be arrested as a criminal.
Author Robert Holtom pays homage to the Golden Age of detective fiction in A Queer Case about a bank clerk who gets himself entangled in the family drama of an old college chum and crush. Selby makes due with loveless trysts while what he really longs for is a meaningful relationship. When Patrick, the son of a banking millionaire, asks for his help, Selby sees it as an opportunity to get closer to his old friend. Patrick is sure his father's new wife is a gold-digger and wants Selby to help him prove it. Selby steps into the world of money and privilege, where everything is not quite as perfect as it seems. The next thing he knows, Selby is at the center of a murder investigation. And everyone's a suspect. 

A Queer Case was the mystery book club selection for August, and while the feedback was mixed, most everyone enjoyed it. It is a mystery that does not take itself too seriously on the one hand, with humor and nods to Golden Age mysteries; and on the other, the novel offers the reader a glimpse into the struggles Selby, a gay man in 1929 London, experiences. Being queer is not only strongly frowned upon, it was illegal at the time. His trying to keep his sexuality a secret while uncovering the secrets of those he suspects of murder is quite the challenge. I read an interview with the author in which he mentioned wanting to create a character who was not weighed down by shame or self-loathing but who celebrates his queerness, and Holtom succeeds there. Holtom also includes a character who is the opposite of those things, one who hates themselves and feels deep shame. I liked that the author included both portrayals, each from contrasting perspectives.

I loved Selby's energy and he seems like a genuinely well-meaning and nice person. But my favorite character of the novel was Theodora/Theo. Actually, she/he was the favorite of my entire mystery reading group, and we all hope will be a regular character in future books. Smart, charming, and a good influence on Selby. They kind of keep him grounded, I think. Oh, and there's also Octavia Stubbs, crime writer, who I have to mention. She has only bad things to say about her contemporary, Agatha Christie, which was hilarious. I thought this was a fun addition, given how Agatha Christie was Holtom's, who is a Christie fan, inspiration.

A Queer Case was an entertaining read overall. It's a fairly quick read. I ended up giving it a 3 paw rating, meaning that I thought it was good (liked it). I cannot quite put my finger on what it was that was a miss for me; perhaps it did not pull me in as much as I would have liked or the characters weren't as fleshed out as I generally prefer. I think both. It was a fun time though, and I am glad I read it.


The American Daughters by Maurice Carlos Ruffin, narrated by Lynnette R. Freeman 
(One World, 2024; 9hrs 56m)
A gripping historical novel about a spirited young girl who joins a sisterhood of Black women working together to undermine the Confederates.
I hesitated in using the above description of the book because it is misleading (the longer summary is no better, I'm afraid). I read The American Daughters for my August Historical Fiction book club, and we all went into it with similar expectations, looking forward to a novel about the sisterhood of Black women called the Daughters whose goal was to undermine the Confederates. Only, that is not quite what we got. They do get a little page time, but it is very limited, which was disappointing. Another element of the novel that fell short for me was the execution of the meta story, framing the primary story. It might have worked for me, but then it lost me at the epilogue (to say more would be a spoiler). 

With that out of way, there was much I liked about The American Daughters. The writing is beautiful. I was completely engaged with the first half or so of the novel which focused on a young Ady and her mother, Sanite, who were enslaved together to a businessman in the French Quarter of New Orleans. Ady loves listening to her mother share stories of their family's origins and picks up on the lessons her mother passes down to her. The mother and daughter have an inseparable bond. Their relationship was one of my favorite aspects of the novel, their moments alone together among my favorite scenes. 

As with any novel about enslaved people and their experiences, it was not always an easy book to read. Author Maurice Carlos Ruffin's words paint a vivid picture of what life must have been like for Ady and her mother and writes too about the differences among the enslaved working in the house versus those in the fields. I more often come across books about "slave labor camps also called plantations" than I do about the enslaved who live in cities like New Orleans. In Ady and Sanite's case, they seemed to have a bit more freedom, if you can call it that, to run errands for their owner. Although, even that was risky, given they only had one pass between the two of them. There were also free Black people who had free movement in the city, and yet even they often faced discrimination and the ever present threat of being captured by slave catchers looking hoping for a bounty. 

Despite her circumstances and what she endures, Ady never loses her sense of self--even after her mother is gone. I was not quite as smitten in the second half of the novel, admittedly, although I was still invested in Ady's story. Ady befriends a free Black woman who runs her own business, the Mockingbird Inn. Ady longs for the confidence her new friend has, standing up to the oppressors and carving her own path. Lenore is a force to be reckoned with and so is her friend Alabama, who behind Sanite, was one of my favorite characters in the novel. And yet their lives have not been easy either as they face their own struggles. The novel is full of strong women whose will to survive is fierce. They all longed for a better life. It is through Lenore we learn about the Daughters and their goal to undermine the Confederates when she invites Ady to join the movement. 

This was an emotional read, one full of sadness and heartbreaking moments. The reader gets to see Ady come of age, fall in love, and find her voice in a world that would rather she remain subservient and silent. Lynnette R. Freeman's narration of the novel made it all the more compelling, as she captured the voices of the characters so well.  


Kills Well With Others (Killers of a Certain Age #2) by  Deanna Raybourn
(Berkley, 2025; 359 pgs)
Four women assassins, senior in status—and in age—sharpen their knives for another bloody good adventure in this riotous follow-up to the New York Times bestselling sensation Killers of a Certain Age.
I really enjoyed Killers  of a Certain Age and was happy when the second book in the series, Kills Well with Others won August's TBR List Poll (thank you again to all who voted!). This latest book picks up in just over a year since the last. Billie, Helen, Mary Alice, and Natalie are called out of retirement to eliminate a European gangster targeting Museum agents like themselves. From safe house to safe house, a cruise ship and a trip to Venice, our favorite assassins must not only find their target but avoid being targeted themselves. 

In some ways, this second book in the series wasn't quite as good as the first, but in other ways, I thought it was just as good. Reading the first book is a must before taking the plunge into this one, if only to get a good feel for the characters and their relationships. I enjoyed the twists in Kills Well With Others and the building tension as the story evolved. I was happy to see Taverner again (Billie's love interest and an all around great guy) and wish there had been more of Minka (who I think should be a more regular part of their team). I also wish more time had been spent on the women's relationships with each other, but I appreciated the insights into the villain's backstory. Overall a fast paced and tension filled read. I hope there will be more!


1984 by George Orwell, narrated by Simon Prebble
(Blackstone Audio, originally 1949; 11hrs 22m)
A masterpiece of rebellion and imprisonment where war is peace, freedom is slavery, and Big Brother is watching. Thought Police, Big Brother, Orwellian - these words have entered our vocabulary because of George Orwell's classic dystopian novel 1984. The story of one man's Nightmare Odyssey as he pursues a forbidden love affair through a world ruled by warring states and a power structure that controls not only information but also individual thought and memory. 1984 is a prophetic haunting tale. More relevant than ever before 1984 exposes the worst crimes imaginable the destruction of truth freedom and individuality.
I first read 1984 in college and caved into the pressure to read it again this year, or rather listen to the audiobook this time around. Simon Prebble did an excellent job narrating. The novel itself is even better than I remember. Orwell is such a good writer. What made this book hard to read right now, in 2025, isn't that it did not stand the test of time as a classic, but rather I could not help but wonder if the current administration is using it as a handbook, just not from the perspective it was intended. So many of the ideas and concepts the government in this dystopian novel are believed and/or practiced by those in power today. 
A monthly feature in which I l share the books I read this month ten years ago. 
(Rating Scale: 5 Paws=Outstanding; 4 Paws=Very Good; 3 Paws=Good; 2 Paws=Okay; 1 Paw=Didn't Like)
The titles are linked to my original reviews of each book when available. 

My two top reads last month are at opposite ends of the spectrum in terms of genre and the feelings they evoked in me. Fat Chance, Charlie Vega by Crystal Maldonado, a young adult romance, was a surprise hit for me. And not so surprising was George Orwell's dystopian classic, 1984.
I think this is the first time in my reading history that audiobooks out number digital and print books read. 
It's always interesting to see how my reading is reflected in moods. Emotional and reflective seem to come up a lot in my reading these days. I blame the book club books. Although, I know it isn't all their fault. 

What was your favorite book read in August? Have you made progress with your reading challenges? Did you have a good reading month?




This week I finished reading A Silence in Belgrave Square (Below Stairs Mysteries #8) by Jennifer Ashley and listened to Tuesdays with Morrie written and narrated by Mitch Albom. I will be sharing my thoughts on both next weekend. 


I had hoped to finish Andrea Levy's Small Island this week as well, but it was not meant to be. I have about a hundred or so pages left and should finish it this coming week, if not this weekend. Up next on my TBR are Pride and Protest by Nikki Payne and Sweep with Me (Innkeeper Chronicles #4.5) by Ilona Andrews.


September's Book Club Reads:
James by Percival Everett (Cellar Door Book Club)
Pride and Protest by Nikki Payne (Diverse Romance Book Club)
The Midnight Feast by Lucy Foley (Mystery Book Club)
How High We Go in the Dark by Sequoia Nagamatsu (Science Fiction/Fantasy Book Club)
We are Green and Trembling by Gabriela Cabezón Cámara, narrated by Robin Myers 
(Historical Fiction Book Club)

I read James last year and plan to re-visit it via audiobook this time around. The rest are new to me. I am not sure I will make the Science Fiction/Fantasy Book Club this month. Marching band season is well underway and that may keep me away, but I hope to still fit in How High We Go in the Dark, which is a short story collection. Of all the book club selections this month, I am most excited to read The Midnight Feast by Lucy Foley. I have not read anything by her before but have been wanting to. I am a little nervous about We are Green and Trembling if only because the writing is described as surreal storytelling. 

What are you reading right now?


My TBR List is hosted by Michelle at Because Reading. The 1st Saturday of every month, I will list 3 books from my TBR pile I am considering reading and let you vote for my next read during that month. My review will follow (unfortunately, not likely in the same month, but eventually--that's all I can promise).  

Fall is not quite in the air in my part of the world, but tis the season and I am in the mood for something witchy or maybe zombies and vampires or a historical paranormal mystery . . . I can't decide, and so this is where you come in. Please help me select my next read!  

Zomromcom (Supernatural Entanglements #1) by Olivia Dade
Teaming up with your neighbor during a zombie outbreak is a no-brainer, but if it turns out he’s a vampire . . . the stakes couldn’t be higher, in this infectious new paranormal romance from the USA Today bestselling author of Spoiler Alert.

When Edie Brandstrup attempts to save her sweet, seemingly harmless human neighbor from the first major zombie breach in two decades, she’s stunned to be saved by him—and his ridiculously large sword—instead. As it turns out, he's actually a super-old, super-surly vampire. But for all her neighbor's newly revealed cynicism and lethality, Gaston "Max" Boucher (yes, Gaston) is unexpectedly protective. He wants her to stay in his safety bunker until the breach is resolved. Edie can’t risk more innocent people getting killed, though—and Max won’t let her save them alone.

As they unravel a sinister conspiracy to set zombies loose on the world (again), the duo meet a host of lovable allies and discover they're not the only ones willing to fight for the future of humanity. Despite the awful timing, Edie finds herself falling for the vampire who’s helping her save the world . . . but all their dangerous plans could end their future before it even begins. As she and Max battle side by side, Edie must decide whether having a love worth living for also means having a love you'd die for—and, in a world that grows deadlier by the minute, whether that’s a risk she’s willing to take.
[Publisher's Summary]

The Bewitching by Silvia Moreno-Garcia
Three women in three different eras encounter danger and witchcraft in this eerie multigenerational horror saga from the New York Times bestselling author of Mexican Gothic.

“Back then, when I was a young woman, there were still witches”: That was how Nana Alba always began the stories she told her great-granddaughter Minerva—stories that have stayed with Minerva all her life. Perhaps that’s why Minerva has become a graduate student focused on the history of horror literature and is researching the life of Beatrice Tremblay, an obscure author of macabre tales.

In the course of assembling her thesis, Minerva uncovers information that reveals that Tremblay’s most famous novel, The Vanishing, was inspired by a true story: Decades earlier, during the Great Depression, Tremblay attended the same university where Minerva is now studying and became obsessed with her beautiful and otherworldly roommate, who then disappeared under mysterious circumstances.

As Minerva descends ever deeper into Tremblay’s manuscript, she begins to sense that the malign force that stalked Tremblay and the missing girl might still walk the halls of the campus. These disturbing events also echo the stories Nana Alba told about her girlhood in 1900s Mexico, where she had a terrifying encounter with a witch.

Minerva suspects that the same shadow that darkened the lives of her great-grandmother and Beatrice Tremblay is now threatening her own in 1990s Massachusetts. An academic career can be a punishing pursuit, but it might turn outright deadly when witchcraft is involved.
[Publisher's Summary]

Murder at the Wham Bam Club (Psychics & Soul Food Mystery #1) by Carolyn Marie Wilkins
As Prohibition era speakeasies and Jazz Age excitement reign supreme throughout a deeply divided country at the height of the Roaring 20s, a young psychic in small town Illinois helps the Black community fight crime and corruption in this thrilling historical mystery written by a real-life psychic medium and jazz pianist.

After the death of her brave Harlem Hellfighter husband during the First World War, young widow Nola Ann Jackson returned to her hometown of Agate, Illinois, to live with her Aunt Sarah, a known local psychic. Under her aunt’s care and tutelage, Nola has been learning how to tap into her own intuitive gifts and communicate with the spirits. And she will rely on their insightful guidance when she’s asked to help investigate a woman’s disappearance.

Lilly Davidson, the missing woman, was living at the Phyllis Wheatley Institute for Colored Girls where young ladies are educated and prepared to follow bright futures. But she vanished after a night at the Wham Bam Club where jazz music swings, prohibition is defied, and other vices are encouraged. Lilly was seen fraternizing with Eddie Smooth, trumpeter and leader of the St. Louis Stompers—and a notorious pimp. Nola finds Lilly at the club alive and well, supposedly engaged to Eddie. That same night, the Wham Bam is set afire and Eddie is killed by gunfire, leaving Lilly on the run, a suspected murderer.

Eddie Smooth had shady dealings with Agate’s wealthy elite, Black and white, making plenty of enemies with motives for wanting him dead. He was also a notorious womanizer who left several broken hearts in his wake. To prove Lilly’s innocence, Nola must listen to her spiritual instincts to unravel political schemes and personal vendettas to find a killer desperate to cover up a scandalous conspiracy . . .
[Publisher's Summary]


Thank you for voting!


Following in the footsteps of Deb of Readerbuzz, who shares three good things in her Sunday Salon posts, I thought I would try to do the same. With all the worries and stressors in life, I want to highlight some of the good, even the seemingly small stuff. 

1. We celebrated my mom's birthday in August with brunch and a trip to the local independent bookstore. We topped off the afternoon with cupcakes. Yum!

2. We recently attended Mouse's Back to School Night and met her teachers. She performed with the marching band at the welcome/opening. They performed music from their upcoming field show. The best part of the evening was being able to sit in on part of the field show rehearsal, which was taking place that same night. I cannot wait to see the final show.

3. My husband got me hooked on Duolingo, a language app, quite a while ago and I have been faithfully doing a lesson or so every day. I am up to a 1029 day streak. I recently started a second language so I would at least be familiar with some basic words in French since my daughter is taking it in high school. The other night I was complaining about  the we/they verb conjugation and "why can't it be as easy as it is in Spanish" (because that is what I'm more familiar with), and Mouse offered to help me. She pulled out her notes from French class and went over the -er present tense verb conjugations with me. I am not sure I have it down yet, but with her help, I may get there yet. It was a special mom and daughter moment (for me, at least).

What have you been up to this past week? 

I hope you have a great week! Let me know what you have been reading!

© 2025, Musings of a Bookish Kitty. All Rights Reserved. If you're reading this on a site other than Musings of a Bookish Kitty or Wendy's feed, be aware that this post has been stolen and is used without permission.

Sunday, August 17, 2025

Weekly Mews: Back to School & My Recent Bookish Mewsings

I am linking up to the Sunday Post hosted by Kim of Caffeinated Book Reviewer and The Sunday Salon (TSS) hosted by Deb Nance of Readerbuzz  where participants recap our week, talk about what we are reading, share any new books that have come our way, and whatever else we want to talk about. I am also linking It's Monday! What Are you Reading? hosted by Kathryn of Book Date where readers talk about what they have been, are and will be reading.

I fit in quite a bit of reading time this past week, finishing three books and making more progress in Andrea Levy's historical fiction novel, Small Island. I was not sure about the book at first, but I am fully invested now. I just started reading Kills Well With Others (Killers of a Certain Age #2) by  Deanna Raybourn, this month's TBR List Poll Winner, and am eager to read more. 


On my reading list this week are two books I need to read for upcoming book club meetings. I have the audio version of The American Daughters by Maurice Carlos Ruffin, narrated by Lynnette R. Freeman queued up and ready to go, and, in print, I will be reading Robert Holtom's A Queer Case (The Selby Bigge Mysteries #1).


What are you reading right now? 


This past week I finished three books. Let's take a look!

I imagine being kissed about a hundred times a day.
~ Opening of Fat Chance, Charlie Vega

Fat Chance, Charlie Vega
by Crystal Maldonado
Holiday House, 2021; YA Romance, 352 pgs
A sensitive, funny, and painfully honest coming-of-age story with a wry voice and tons of chisme, Fat Chance, Charlie Vega tackles our relationships to our parents, our bodies, our cultures, and ourselves.
Fat Chance, Charlie Vega was this month's Diverse Romance Book Club selection. Contemporary YA Romance is not one of my usual go to genres, but I liked the group's last YA pick and was open to trying another. I took to Charlie instantly. I could relate to her on so many levels, from her love for writing, body image issues, insecurities, an overly critical parent, and wanting to fit in. Perhaps not so much the longing for romance part, but that is okay. Charlie's best friend Amelia is everything she is not: athletic, thinner, lighter skinned, and with supportive parents (not to mention having a love life). Charlie had been very close to her father, and he was the glue of the family. Since his death, life has not been the same. Charlie's mother, once overweight herself, is now thin and trying to live her best life, dating and wishing for Charlie all the things she longs for herself. Charlie only wants to be accepted for who she is. She is happy in her own skin and wishes others, especially her mother, could see and accept that too. 

After a humiliating incident with a boy she liked, Charlie has reservations about getting into another relationship, but Brian is better than the dream. He truly seems to like her and see her. But will Charlie's insecurities get in the way of her finding happiness, is he just using her, or has she finally found the romance she was looking for? 

Fat Chance, Charlie Vega was such a delightful read. The romance was sweet. Charlie gets in her own way, and very painfully so. Not just with Brian, but in her relationship with her best friend too. It was one of those "throw arms up in the air" reading moments, but then, stopping to think about it, author Crystal Maldonado's depiction of teenagers and the intensity of their emotions was actually fairly realistic. The parent-child drama and how it played out was believable. I do not think any of us at the book club liked Charlie's mom much though, even taking into account how hard it must have been losing her husband and adjusting to being a single mother. Charlie really is such a great character who came into her own over the course of the novel. I love the way the author focused on body confidence and being happy with who we are. Overall, this was a great book and I am glad I got the chance to read it. 


In Paris, a child goes missing. ~ Opening of The City of Stardust
The City of Stardust by Georgia Summers, narrated by Kitty Parker
Redhook, 2024; Fantasy, 13 hours, 6 minutes
A young woman descends into a seductive magical underworld of power-hungry scholars, fickle gods and monsters bent on revenge to break her family's curse in this spellbinding contemporary fantasy debut.
The City of Stardust was this month's Science Fiction/Fantasy Book Club Selection. I decided to listen to the audiobook due to time constraints.

The author brought the settings alive with her writing. The world she created is complex and multilayered, a mix of modern and fantastical. A generational curse has long plagued the Everly family, and Violet will be the latest victim if she isn't able to break the curse.

When the novel opens, Violet is a young girl, being  raised by her uncles. She remembers well the visit from the mysterious woman and the boy, but her uncles keep the secret of the ultimatum--10 years to find Violet's long absent mother or Violet will become Penelope's instead--until time is nearly out. And now Violet is an adult and realizes she must search for her mother on her own if she is to try to find out more about the curse and how to break it. 

I was taken with the the author's writing and the descriptions of the places and world Georgia Summers had created. The villain of the novel, Penelope, intrigued me the most of all the characters, and I wanted to know more about the mystery of this curse she cast almost as much as Violet did. Penelope is beautiful and frighteningly powerful and cruel, a goddess who walks among the people. 

I would have liked if the author had written more about Violet's time among the scholars and her attempts to find her missing mother. Perhaps the author did not feel it was worthwhile since just about every avenue Violet tried was met with a door slammed in her face, but I felt like it might have only made the novel even better and added more depth to Violet's  character. Not to mention I wanted to know more about the scholars in general. Alas, this was not their story. 

The second half of the novel was stronger than the first, I thought, as the pieces of the puzzle came together and tensions grew even higher. Violet is a capable and resourceful woman. Aleksander, who is studying to be a scholar, is an interesting character in his own right. Throughout much of the novel, the reader is left wondering whether his intentions are good or evil. It is obvious Violet and Aleksander share a connection, but is it in Violet's best interest? Like Violet, I wanted to trust him, but I was not sure we should. One of my favorite characters in the novel was Caspian, a bit of a rogue, and the son of a well respected and affluent family. He doesn't get nearly enough page time, in my opinion. 

Kitty Parker's narration hit all the right notes, drawing me into the world created by Georgia Summers. Overall The City of Stardust was an enjoyable fantasy novel. While this is a standalone, should the author ever want to revisit the world she's created here, I would consider reading it.


It wasn't even ten yet, and the cicadas were already screaming in the hot, muggy air.
~ Opening of Trouble with the Cursed

Trouble With the Cursed
(The Hollows #16) by Kim Harrison
Ace, 2022; Fantasy, 464 pgs)  
Rachel Morgan, witch-born demon, has one unspoken rule: take chances, but pay for them yourself. With it, she has turned enemies into allies, found her place with her demon kin, and stepped up as the subrosa of Cincinnati—responsible for keeping the paranormal community at peace and in line.
It is always a pleasure to spend time in the Hollows. In this 16th book of the series, Rachel's new position of subrosa of Cincinnati is threatened when an old dead vampire from D.C. comes to town to question who is really in charge. And then there is the little problem of Hodin, the demon Rachel vowed to protect from the other demons. He appears to be up to something, even though he denies he has any ill intentions.

As often happens when I read one of the Hollows' novels, once I hit the half way mark, it's next to impossible to put the book down. Rachel, as always, finds herself in over her head, juggling too many crises at once. Let's not even mention that she let Vivian, the head witch of the Coven of Moral and Ethical Standards, talk her into teaching a demonology class at the local university. Her friends seem to have their own problems to take care of and so she seems to be on her own, but she is nothing if not determined and this way they will be safe. Don't fret though! There's plenty of Jenks, Trent and Al. Ivy is back too, but not as much, sadly. And Pike, who is growing on me, is back too. In Trouble with the Cursed, we get to know more about what caused the rift between Al, Dali and the other demons and Hodin. The odds may not be in Rachel's favor as she tries to hold onto her city, but if anyone can do it, Rachel can. 

Action packed, full of magic, and a bit of mischief, Trouble with the Cursed was a satisfying and entertaining addition to the series. This is a series best read in order.


Catching up from the the week before: 

I sit with my back to the wall, my pillows flat. ~ Opening of The Berry Pickers

The Berry Pickers by Amanda Peters, narrated by Aaliya Warbus and Jordan Waunch
Recorded Books, 2023; Historical Fiction; 8 hours, 44 minutes
A four-year-old Mi’kmaq girl goes missing from the blueberry fields of Maine, sparking a tragic mystery that haunts the survivors, unravels a community, and remains unsolved for nearly fifty years.
The year is 1962 when four year old Ruthie goes missing while her family picks blueberries during the summer season. Like so many migrants, her family travels each year from Nova Scotia to Maine for the work. Six year old Joe, Ruthie's brother had been the last to see her. While the local authorities shrug off the disappearance of the young girl, the migrant community rallies together to search for her only to come up empty handed. The Berry Pickers is told from the alternating perspectives of Joe, the brother who blames himself for his sister Ruthie's disappearance, and Norma, raised by a distant father and an overprotective mother, both of whom seem to be keeping secrets from her. I listened to the audiobook, narrated by Aaliya Warbus and Jordan Waunch, both of whom did a great job of bringing their characters to life.

The Berry Pickers is not really a mystery in that it's obvious from the first chapter in the book what the connection is between Norma and Joe. This is more an intergenerational story about two families and the challenges they face and the repercussions of their own and others' actions. This is a story about white privilege and prejudice, indigenous and migrant life, loss and grief, lies and guilt, and of hope and healing. 

I found Joe's narrative to be the most compelling of the two. I felt his heartbreak and struggle. His grief and guilt over his sister's disappearance and later the death of his brother shaped the direction of his life, including the choices he made. Even at his worst, my my heart ached for him. Joe and his family never gave up hope that their Ruthie was out there somewhere, even decades later. I wanted so much for their family to get the reunion they deserved.  

For Norma's part, I felt a great sadness for her as well a sense of loss. Her memories are few and were so often dismissed when she was a child that she believes they were just dreams. For many years, she doesn't really realize  all she lost, but the reader knows, and, in her own way, she senses it. Every time she asked about the past, why her skin is darker than her family's and about her memories, they come up with a ready excuse. She is robbed of her culture and identity and of a family that loves her. I have probably said too much, venturing into spoiler territory.

My book club met last weekend to discuss The Berry Pickers and we had a meaningful discussion about the various themes and characters as well as the cultural aspects--including discrimination against people of color, particularly those of indigenous ancestry, then and now. It was another good choice for our club. 

A monthly feature in which I l share the books I read this month ten years ago. 
(Rating Scale: 5 Paws=Outstanding; 4 Paws=Very Good; 3 Paws=Good; 2 Paws=Okay; 1 Paw=Didn't Like)
The titles are linked to my original reviews of each book when available. 

Looking back over my reading in August of 2015, I leaned heavily into mysteries, branching off a little into romance. In the pages, I went back in time to 1975 New York City as a crime reporter in the thick of a murder investigation that isn't as cut and dry as it seems. I spent time in the beautiful but harsh Falkland Islands searching for three missing children. I unraveled the history behind a Époque apartment that had been kept secret for decades until the death of its owner bequeathed it to a stranger in America, finding romance along the way. I followed the local police around as they investigated a brutal murder at a hotel in Pont-Aven, France, hoping to catch the killer before the summer tourist season began. I joined a research project of a 129 year old murder on an island off the coast of Connecticut only to suddenly find myself in that very past, in the body of someone else, and the only way back to the present was to solve the century's old murder. I visited London, England where I met a woman on a train, a woman on a deck, and a mother and wife who is not as secure as she once was in her marriage. I dodged the government's black ops Sigma operatives on their mission to wipe out anyone with psychic abilities. I also read a book of poetry that month, one expressing grief in many different forms, including that of love lost and and of lost opportunities. Just thinking about my August adventures in 2015 has me out of breath! 

Do you remember what you were reading ten years ago? Have you read any of these books, and if so, what did you think? 


Mouse's friends had begging her to watch KPop Demon Hunters since it first came out, but she kept putting it off. When even her friend's mom was telling both of us we needed to see it, I put on the pressure too. It was really good! From the music to the characters and storyline, it's got it all. There's action, humor, romance, and the strength of women and friendship. It's worth watching if you have not seen it already. And again, if you have. 


Anjin and I have seen a couple of episodes of the second season of Andor, which is part of the Star Wars franchise. We enjoyed the first season quite a bit. This second one is good so far. 

What have you been watching lately? 

Following in the footsteps of Deb of Readerbuzz - With all the worries and stressors in life, 
I want to highlight some of the good, even the seemingly small stuff. 

1. Mouse survived her first week of high school. We worked out the kinks for drop offs and pick ups, turned in last minute paperwork, and have begun to settle into the school year routine. Mouse attended the first thespian club meeting of the year and is looking forward to exploring that more. 

2. Sunday morning doughnuts . . . I know they aren't the healthiest of breakfasts, but occasionally my husband will make a doughnut run, bringing back doughnuts, peppermint hot chocolate for Mouse and I, and a coffee for himself. Today was one of those days!

3. It is funny and cute watching Gracie come into the room, looking for me. She will lazily make her way around the perimeter of the room, stopping to visit with Anjin and Mouse if they are there (lifting one of her hindlegs straight out to signal she wants pets from them), and eventually making her way over to me. When I invite her onto my lap, she has to refuse at first, of course, and make a show of not being sure she wants to by making another trip around the room, but she always comes back, hops up and settles on my chest or lap. If I fail to invite her up in a timely manner, she will just jump up regardless of whether I am ready or not and instantly takes her place on my chest. If I am working on my laptop, like now, it makes it hard keep working, but how can I refuse? 
 

I hope you have a great week! Let me know what you have been reading!

© 2025, Musings of a Bookish Kitty. All Rights Reserved. If you're reading this on a site other than Musings of a Bookish Kitty or Wendy's feed, be aware that this post has been stolen and is used without permission.