anticipations

Anticipated Books Coming June 2021

Welcome to June everyone! As it is also my official last day of my day-job, this particular post really does signify the end of a chapter and the beginning of a new one! As it finally starts to warm up here in Canada, it really does feel like summer is just around the corner, and with it the hope that the pandemic will be over soon and that we can hopefully enjoy the beautiful weather together.

Seems like we have a lot of anticipated reads this month, with multiple awaited books coming out every single week, including tomorrow. Without further ado, let’s go!


June 1

Sunny Song Will Never Be Famous by Suzanne Park
For the Wolf (Wilderwood #1) by Hannah F. Whitten
The Witch King (The Witch King #1) by H.E. Edgmon

June 8

We Can’t Keep Meeting Like This by Rachel Lynn Solomon
Heartbreakers and Fakers by Cameron Lund
Fire with Fire by Destiny Soria

Continue reading “Anticipated Books Coming June 2021”
wrap up

May 2021 Wrap Up and TBR

Hi friends! I hope May brought warmth and hope to your part of the world. I know itโ€™s been tough at times but I hope youโ€™ve been able to spend some time in a good book to be reminded that we share this world and its experiences together as long as weโ€™re open-minded to learning. In this vein of thought, I had a post sharing some great quotes about why I read and hopefully you would find some comfort in them too. You can read that here.

Now onto the main point of this post. May was a decent reading month. I had this week off as I transition between jobs so it was a nice time to just decompress, catch up on sleep and read some good books.


What did I read this month?

4-5 Drink Me Potions

Continue reading “May 2021 Wrap Up and TBR”
2.5 star, YA

Review: Whatโ€™s Not To Love by Emily Wibberley and Austin Siegemund-Broka

An academic enemies-to-lovers YA with all the nerdy drama, high school antics, and heartpounding romance of the Netflix original series Never Have I Ever

Since high school began, Alison Sanger and Ethan Molloy have competed on almost everything. AP classes, the school paper, community service, it never ends. If Alison could avoid Ethan until graduation, she would. Except, naturally, for two over-achieving seniors with their sights on valedictorian and Harvard, they share all the same classes and extracurriculars. So when their schoolโ€™s principal assigns them the task of co-planning a previous classโ€™s ten-year reunion, with the promise of a recommendation for Harvard if they do, Ethan and Alison are willing to endure one more activity together if it means beating the other out of the lead. 

But with all this extra time spent in each otherโ€™s company, their rivalry begins to feel closer to friendship. And as tension between them builds, Alison fights the growing realization that the only thing she wants more than winningโ€ฆis Ethan.



While enemies to lovers trope is one that many people thoroughly enjoy, I found Whatโ€™s Not to Love just a tad bit over the line in the enemies territory for comfort. Ethan and Alison have spent their high school years with a rivalry thatโ€™s borderline toxic for not just themselves but those around them. If one can handle their constant arguments and one-upping one another, then by all means this is a novel for you.

Continue reading “Review: Whatโ€™s Not To Love by Emily Wibberley and Austin Siegemund-Broka”