top ten tuesday

Top Ten Tuesday: Books that Could be Crayola Colours

Top Ten Tuesday was created by The Broke and the Bookish in June of 2010 and was moved to That Artsy Reader Girl in January of 2018. It was born of a love of lists, a love of books, and a desire to bring bookish friends together.


Was it just me or did last week feel super long? It was one heck of a rough one for me so maybe thatโ€™s why the days felt like they dragged. I hope this one starts off well for you all.

Todayโ€™s TTT is all about colours, particularly crayola colours. Did that bring any flashbacks to childhood for you? I remember colouring with them as a child for every art project I had (and apparently my teachers thought I didnโ€™t colour very well but thatโ€™s just their opinion). I still have a box full of these colouring crayons on my desk so this was a bit of a fun task to do.

I have picked some titles I feel have succinct and colourful-sounding names that seems to impress a certain colour in mind when I read them. Let me know what you think about these titles, or if youโ€™d give a different colour to them!

1. Golden by Jessi Kirby

I suppose this one is a bit of a cheat but I couldnโ€™t help but think of this book since it screams brilliant warm yellow hues on skin in the summer and the rays of sunlight filtering through curtains. I also really loved this book when I read oh, a decade ago, and just wanted to highlight it.

2. Magnolia by Kristi Cook

I know, I suppose this is also a colour of some sort. I think of beautiful fuchsia/warm pink on buds of flowers as spring grows, particularly in the South of America. Which is fitting since this book is featured in the South and is a beautiful enemies-to-lovers story of two teens whose mothers wanted them to get together forever but they absolutely detested the other.

3. Just Dreaming by Kerstin Gier

The conclusion to a trilogy about a girl who can enter dreams of others, I imagine a nice sky blue colour for this title. If I were lying on the grass and looking up into the sky on a sunny day, Iโ€™d dream under a canvas of blue with the odd white cloud floating by.

4. Frostfire by Amanda Hocking

While the words seem to of opposing effects (fire and frost), this brings to mind the white/blue centre of flames which is the hottest part. I think itโ€™s particularly beautiful and fitting for book 1 of the Kanin Chronicles set in wintry Canada (yay!).

5. Sword and Verse by Kathy MacMillan

I absolutely adored this book that featured the importance and beauty of language. Its title draws a deep golden colour to me that can be found on scrolls (for which verses are written) and the hilts of swords.

6. Snow like Ashes by Sara Raasch

There are other titles in this series that could fit into this pattern but this one stuck out to me. I think of an ice gray colour or even a more muted gray akin to a rainy, overcast sky. You know, just things that fall out of the sky.

7. Cinder by Marissa Meyer

Hopefully not a title unfamiliar to most, I think of a fiery orange from its name, the spark that lives on and fights to become ablaze. It also reminds me of the titular girl in this book characterized by her survival instincts in New Beijing, a populated city that do not look kindly on people like her.

8. The Glittering Court by Richelle Mead

I think many colours may come to mind depending on the person for this title, just anything that glitters right? While diamonds may be the first thing to pop up for some, I think of a nice rosy hue like that of a rose quartz. Iโ€™m not sure why, maybe โ€˜cause it somewhat rhymes?

9. Thorn by

This is a book I have yet to read but its title makes me think of dark obsidian. Like something shiny enough to entice you and draw you close but dangerous when you actually get in its vicinity.

10. Starflight by Melissa Landers

It sounds and obviously reminds me of space so I think of the darkest, deepest black of the void but maybe with a sprinkling of yellow in it so itโ€™s not complete blackness. After all, sci-fi space books are fun and all, but not if you canโ€™t see anything around you, right?


Thatโ€™s my list for this week. Whatโ€™d you think of my colours and titles? Let me know! Would love to hear if any differ for you.

Happy Tuesday everyone! Hopefully itโ€™ll be filled with more peace and rest for all of us.

4.5 star, YA

Review: Hunting Prince Dracula by Kerri Maniscalco

Stalking Jack the Ripper #2

Following the grief and horror of her discovery of Jack the Ripper’s true identity, Audrey Rose Wadsworth has no choice but to flee London and its memories. Together with the arrogant yet charming Thomas Cresswell, she journeys to the dark heart of Romania, home to one of Europe’s best schools of forensic medicine… and to another notorious killer, Vlad the Impaler, whose thirst for blood became legend.

But her life’s dream is soon tainted by blood-soaked discoveries in the halls of the school’s forbidding castle, and Audrey Rose is compelled to investigate the strangely familiar murders. What she finds brings all her terrifying fears to life once again.

In this New York Times bestselling sequel to Kerri Maniscalco’s haunting #1 debut Stalking Jack the Ripper, bizarre murders are discovered in the castle of Prince Vlad the Impaler, otherwise known as Dracula. Could it be a copycat killer…or has the depraved prince been brought back to life?


Kerri Maniscalco does it again! It is honestly rare for sequels to be as good as their predecessors, but I can truly, truly say that this sequel is every bit as good as the original. It perfectly picks up from where we left off, and characters keep moving forwards in their lives, ready to solve the next mystery thrown at them with their powers of deduction. In fact, Andge rates this as a 5 Drink Me Potions, and she actually enjoyed this even a little bit more than book one!

I think I would almost agree that it is better, but there’s just a little bit of the ending that I didn’t find quite as satisfying as I did in the first book. That being said, Maniscalco always manages to surprise me and lead me on this fantastic mystery-solving journey while providing deep and rich characters, and setting it on a very well-researched backdrop of late nineteenth century Europe.

Hunting Prince Dracula once again follows our dynamic duo, Audrey Rose Wadsworth and Thomas Cresswell, as they journey to the famous castle of Dracula in Romania, vying for spots in one of the top schools for forensic medicine. While it is initially a dream scenario, everything goes drastically downhill (as usual), as bodies are discovered, killed in very peculiar and haunting fashions.

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2 star, adult

Review: Ten Rules for Faking It by Sophie Sullivan

What happens when your love life becomes the talk of the town?

As birthdays go, this yearโ€™s for radio producer Everly Dean hit rock-bottom.

Worse than the โ€œtonsillectomy birthday.โ€ Worse than the birthday her parents decided to split (the first time). But catching your boyfriend cheating on you with his assistant?

Even clichรฉs sting.

But this is Everlyโ€™s year! She wonโ€™t let her anxiety hold her back. Sheโ€™ll pitch her podcast idea to her boss.

Thereโ€™s just one problem.

Her boss, Chris, is very cute. (Of course). Also, he’s extremely distant (which means he hates her, right? Or is that the anxiety talking)?

And, Stacey the DJ didnโ€™t mute the mic during Everlyโ€™s rant about Simon the Snake (syn: Cheating Ex).

Thatโ€™s three problems.

Suddenly, people are lining up to date her, Bachelorette-style, fans are voting (Reminder: never leave house again), and her interest in Chris might be a two-way street. Itโ€™s a lot for a woman who could gold medal in people-avoidance. Sheโ€™s going to have to fake it โ€˜till she makes it to get through all of this.

Perhaps sheโ€™ll make a list: The Ten Rules for Faking It. 

Because sometimes making the rules can find you happiness when you least expect it.



โ€œIf you happen to find a man who looks like Chris Pine, acts like Chris Hemsworth, smiles like Chrisโ€™s Pratt, and has a body like Chris Evansโ€™s, Iโ€™ll rethink things. But until then? I am officially off the market.โ€

From this quote alone, it is rather telling of everything that comes in Ten Rules for Faking It. Rather than focusing on romance – as is its genre – this story is more about conquering fears related to social anxiety while finding love somewhere along the way in between those moments. If I had known this book coming in that the focus is less on meet-cute rom-com kind of plot, maybe then Iโ€™d feel differently, but this one just slid past what I was looking for.

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