book tag

The Outstanding Blogger Award Book Tag

It’s that time again to do another book tag. You may have seen Fives do one recently, so now it’s my turn.

Thanks Virginia @ The Sassy Library Fox for tagging me on this one! I loved her answers for this tag so please check that out.

Rules:

  1. Provide the link to the creatorโ€™s original award post. (very important: see why in step 5)
  2. Answer the questions provided.
  3. Create 7 unique questions.
  4. Nominate 10 bloggers. Ensure that they are aware of their nomination. Neither the awardโ€™s creator, nor the blogger that nominated you, can be nominated.
  5. At the end of the year, every blog that ping-backs the creatorโ€™s original post will be entered to win the Outstanding Blogger Award!

My Answers:

1. If you could be a bookish villain for a day, which one would you choose and why?

Oh wow, starting it off hard, isn’t it? If I absolutely had to pick, I would have to choose Sebastian from The Mortal Instruments series. Is that bad of me? He was SUPER awful but he was also interesting as a complex character and not so easily written off as the “bad guy”. He had immense power so it’d be interesting to be in his shoes for one day, and one day only.

2. Any underrated book that should be known by more readers?

Definitely Starfall by Melissa Landers. It’s the sequel (companion novel?) to Starflight which had some more readers, but I enjoyed this one more with the main leads who had more chemistry in my opinion. It only has <4,000 ratings on Goodreads but it’s one of the space books that has cemented this genre into my reading repertoire and I think any wary reader into space sci-fi should definitely give this a try.

3. Translate the title of your favourite book into emojis.

Oh boy, this is super hard to guess so Iโ€™ll put two favourite books, one harder than the other. Here goes.

1) ๐Ÿงโ€โ™‚๏ธ๐Ÿ’

2) ๐Ÿฆ 

4. Name a book series you would have wanted to read more of!

There are a number of them but for the most part I feel these series have ended well where they are. However, the first one I can think of at the top of my head I wouldn’t mind seeing more of the world is Bloodlines by Richelle Mead (in the same universe of Vampire Academy, of course). I just think there’s so much potential for this hidden vampire world within our own that I would love to see more. Plus, have lots of cameo appearances of beloved characters!

5. Whatโ€™s the last book you bought and why did you buy it?

Debbie Tung’s Book Love. I just finished her debut illustrated comic book on her life for the second time (I’m not skimming it at the bookstore while I was technically on shift this time) so I wanted to see what else she has made since. Super excited for this one which seems to be an amazing collection of comics that fits any book lover!

6. The most beautiful book cover you have ever seen?

Wow, that’s a hard question to answer. I am notoriously picky for what I consider “beautiful” covers. I tend to like more abstract artwork (with exceptions, of course) that features no visible character on it because I like to imagine them for myself (thank you very much). If I really had to just pick one?

It’d have to be The Kanin Chronicles. Yes, all 3 of them. And yes, these are some of the exceptions to the no visible character on the cover rule. I can’t pick the best out of them all. But the gorgeous contrast of the backdrop against the protagonist, Bryn, at the foreground is just PERFECTION. I can’t-

7. Which kind of hobbies do you have aside from reading?

I cross-stitch! Yet another lonely hobby that I do by myself. At least I can sit in front of the TV and cross-stitch at the same time. I made this gift for a friend last year for her birthday (I generally cross-stitch to make presents). It’s so time consuming that I have yet to dive back in, but I do have aspirations to make some more presents from designs I have collected recently.

My Questions:

  1. Which book universe would you want to live in for the rest of your life?
  2. If you had to pick, what mystical, non-human being would you date (e.g. hobbits, dwarves, fae, werewolves, etc.)?
  3. How has your favourite author inspired you in some way?
  4. What is a retelling/reimagination (of a classic, fairytale, etc.) that you would recommend to anyone who would listen?
  5. What book did you enjoy that a lot of others didn’t?
  6. Do you read in pitch silence or with music?
  7. Would you rather dog-ear the page or use whatever is lying around to mark your place in a book?

TAG:

Kaya @ A Fictional Bookworm

Marta @ Monogamist Reader

Amber @ Escape Life in the Pages

Kristin @ Kristin Kraves Books

Aria @ Snow White Hates Apples

Suhani @ Random Reader’s Rambles

Leslie @ Books Are The New Black

Louise H @ Life in the Book Lane

Nehal @ Quirky Pages

24hryabookblog


Whatโ€™d you think of my answers? Can you guess #3? Iโ€™m looking forward to seeing some of yours!

4 star

Review: The Hunting Party by Lucy Foley

Everyone’s invited…everyone’s a suspect…

For fans of Ruth Ware and Tana French, a shivery, atmospheric, page-turning novel of psychological suspense in the tradition of Agatha Christie, in which a group of old college friends are snowed in at a hunting lodge . . . and murder and mayhem ensue.

All of them are friends. One of them is a killer.

During the languid days of the Christmas break, a group of thirtysomething friends from Oxford meet to welcome in the New Year together, a tradition they began as students ten years ago. For this vacation, theyโ€™ve chosen an idyllic and isolated estate in the Scottish Highlandsโ€”the perfect place to get away and unwind by themselves.

They arrive on December 30th, just before a historic blizzard seals the lodge off from the outside world.

Two days later, on New Yearโ€™s Day, one of them is dead.

The trip began innocently enough: admiring the stunning if foreboding scenery, champagne in front of a crackling fire, and reminiscences about the past. But after a decade, the weight of secret resentments has grown too heavy for the groupโ€™s tenuous nostalgia to bear. Amid the boisterous revelry of New Yearโ€™s Eve, the cord holding them together snaps.

Now one of them is dead . . . and another of them did it.

Keep your friends close, the old adage goes. But just how close is too close?



I loved the last Lucy Foley so much, I simply had to see what this other one was about. Unfortunately it really fell short of my expectations. It was still pretty good, and I did enjoy it overall, but I feel like it didn’t quite have the same impact on me as The Guest List did. But it’s also one of those weird situations where I’m not sure if I objectively feel like its worse, or if it’s just in comparison.

The Hunting Party is a story of old friends who went to Oxford together, gathering for their yearly New Years trip. This time they have chosen a idyllic estate in the Scottish Highlands, which is all but great until they get (predictably) snowed in by a large blizzard. In total isolation, tensions mount and old grudges surface. We find out a body has also been found and it doesn’t look like an accident. With only so many suspects, just who was it who was responsible?

Continue reading “Review: The Hunting Party by Lucy Foley”
top ten tuesday

Top Ten Tuesday: Books I Enjoyed and Rarely Mentioned On the Blog

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.


Iโ€™ve been blogging on and off for a few years now. What started as a personal library of reviews became so much more. I love the community Iโ€™ve found here and the sense of shared love for reading and books I loved too.

So with this weekโ€™s TTT, it really begs the question of what book I havenโ€™t gushed about. If I enjoyed it, itโ€™s probably here somewhere. Even if I didnโ€™t love it, itโ€™s probably here somewhere.

Yet I did manage to scrounge up some contenders. These books are ones Iโ€™ve read and enjoyed prior to my blogging days. Itโ€™s not that I didnโ€™t want to spread the love, itโ€™s more like I never had the time to play catch up.

So here are ten books/series I enjoyed yet rarely mentioned. Itโ€™s about time I suppose.

1. Divergent by Veronica Roth

This is obviously a classic and a beloved book, coming out in the height of YA dystopia. I liked book one more than the rest of them (I can’t even remember if I read Allegiant?) because the world building was so interesting and thought out. I would most definitely NOT be in Dauntless, just saying. Probably an Erudite, knowing me. Let’s just say teen Andge was very into the factions.

2. Across the Universe series by Beth Revis

Is it weird to say I got into this series because an actress on the show Castle was promoting it on social and I wanted to read it ’cause of her promotion? Probably weird, right? Regardless of how I found it, I really enjoyed the writing and storyline. I’m not the biggest fan of space books, but this was the first one that opened my eyes to the potential of such a genre. I was also super into my writing phase at the time so I was analyzing how the author wrote to gather tips for my own stories.

3. Scarlet Nights by Jude Deveraux

This is what happens when young Andge buys bargain books on the Costco book tables. She finds lovely romance reads that may contain mature-ish scenes here and there. Anywayyy. I loved the romantic angst of this book, which happens to be book 3 in the series. I enjoyed the romance more than book 1 – never read book 2 – and felt the pacing of the underlying mystery only added to how much I liked everything. I guess it’s not like the movies where I can close my eyes as a child through certain scenes but at least I was initiated by a great story.

4. The Bride Quartet by Nora Roberts

Not what I typically advertise on this blog because I’m generally not just a straight-up romance reader, but I do feel the mood for such books occasionally. One of my favourite romance series to date still is this quartet of books featuring 4 friends who run a wedding business. Young Andge never dreamt much about weddings – I still don’t even as an adult although I’m probably going to get married within the next year or so – but this tackled all the different ways to cater the dream wedding that it’s hard not to get lost in it a bit. Plus, the romances are absolutely top notch with some of the best tropes around. I will admit book 3 is my favourite of the 4 because it features falling for the best friend’s brother, someone she’s known for forever.

5. Shopaholic series by Sophie Kinsella

Yep, all the romantic reads I’ve hidden from you all are coming out. I believe this series is still ongoing – I had so much fun with Christmas Shopaholic not that long ago – but I absolutely fell in love with the OG books that started it all. While I liked book 1, is it weird that I fell more in love with Becky the crazier things got with her relationship and life? Book 4 and 5 were probably my favourites featuring the family drama of a long-lost sister who’s nothing like Becky and the ex that keeps hanging around her fiancรฉ, respectively. The angst and drama were for real!

6. Golden by Jessi Kirby

There’s just something so real about Jessi’s writing, but I particularly loved the exploration of life, love and growth featured in this book of hers. It does try to explore a lot but it all worked out so well together. I remember finishing this book and needing to tell someone how I felt because the protagonist felt so much like where I was in life. Instead of writing a review (I didn’t think about that back then), I wrote the author instead, this longgg email that she actually kindly replied to. Here’s a snippet below:

Me: I feel like this story is a mirror’s reflection. I don’t know how you did it, but you were able to capture so much in Parker that I see in myself, probably the biggest part of me. Her inner thoughts were like my own, her reactions and situations similar to what I see my life as at this moment. I wanted to tell you that you did an amazing job capturing a mindset of a young girl who doesn’t know her way in life, her one wild and precious life, and you made it so that readers like me can connect with it to such a deep level.

Jessi: I’m so happy that you were able to relate to Parker and the story–that kind of connection is the best possible thing I could hope for as an author, so it warms my heart to know that you felt that! It sounds like you’re at that critical point in life where it’s all laid out in front of you and it’s up to you to choose which way you go, and I hope you go with your heart and your gut!

7. Shrinking Violet by Danielle Joseph

Less known fact: this was the book the Disney movie Radio Rebel was based on. I was quite a shy, introverted teen girl (hmm, possibly still am in certain situations if I’m being honest), so this book also related to me a lot. I wanted to become the confident, sexy girl who could say and do whatever she wanted with full confidence, much like the protagonist. I liked how the story explored these things and made me feel seen as the quiet one who usually let the louder people overtake her voice. I found my voice eventually – see how I have a blog now? – but it’s books like these that helped validate my feelings and opinions.

8. Meg Cabot books

I mentioned a few series I love from Meg Cabot on the blog before (and no, not her popular Princess Diaries, sorry). So I will take this time to mention a number of her other books I loved. I loved Avalon High, which the Disney movie was based on, and the premise of the Airhead series was fun and thought-provoking at the same time. Honestly, pre-teen Andge was Meg’s hugest fan and I still own so many of her books today. I liked the variety in her writing, from some paranormal elements to your every day contemporary romances, every story had its unique spin. She was my first auto-buy author and I have no regrets at all.

9. Thunder Road series by Katie McGarry

I’ve blogged about Katie’s other series but I find that I never wrote review on these ones. It’s not to say I didn’t like them because I really did. Walk the Edge is probably tied as one of my favourite reads from Katie. Perhaps it was a mix of laziness to catch up on reviews and needing time to process my thoughts. Anyway, I love the romance and realistic exploration of teens at such a complex time in their lives mixed with the drama of growing up in dysfunctional families. I feel no one’s done it as well as she has in the books I’ve read since.

10. Alaska Twilight by Colleen Coble

I grew up reading mysteries, and Colleen is no stranger on my blog, but this was the first book of hers I’ve read before blogging began. I loved the wilderness feeling, the danger lurking in the shadows and no help in sight. The romance was great too, but it’s really the atmosphere in her writing that makes for such a great read. I will definitely continue reviewing her other and future books here, but there’s no better place than wrapping up this list to highlight one of the first wholesome mysteries I was exposed to when I was young.

Whoa, didn’t mean to make this post so long, but I hope you enjoyed getting to see some different book content than I may typically post on the blog these days. In a way, a lot of these books shaped my reading today and I have to give them credit for doing so.

I hope you have a lovely Tuesday! I’m always happy to hear from you in the comments below. Did you read any of these books I’ve mentioned? (I know, these totally date me, don’t they?)