anticipations

Anticipated Books Coming August 2021

Welcome to the final month of summer everyone! I know, I know, time flies so quickly and soon it’s back to school for many of us and just general plans for everyone starting in September again. This month we have a short little list for you all of anticipated books for August. We had a few overlaps this month, and an ever growing TBR list, so short and sweet it is for this month. See if any interest you!


August 5

As Good As Dead (A Good Girl’s Guide to Murder #3) by Holly Jackson

August 10

Rise Up From the Embers (Set Fire to the Gods #2) by Sara Raasch and Kristen Simmons
The Devil Makes Three by Tori Bovalino

Aug 17

How We Fall Apart by Katie Zhao

August 24

Vampires, Hearts & Other Dead Things by Margie Fuston
Bad Witch Burning by Jessica Lewis

Who would like to see another buddy review for the sequel to Set Fire to the Gods? That’s one I’m definitely interested to read. Let us know what you’re anticipating in the comments below!

discussion

Let’s Talk Bookish – What Makes a Book a 5 Star Read?

Letโ€™s Talk Bookish is a weekly meme, hosted byย Rukky @ Eternity Booksย &ย Dani @ Literary Lion,ย where they discuss certain topics, share their opinions, and spread the love by visiting each othersโ€™ posts.

JULY 30: WHAT MAKES A BOOK A 5 STAR READ? (SUGGESTED BY M.T. WILSON @ THE LAST BOOK ON THE LEFT)

Prompts:ย How do you decide whether a book should get 5 stars? Do you try to keep 5 stars rating prestigious, or do you give them generously? Do you have a checklist of things a book must accomplish to be 5 stars? Are 5 star books perfect, or just very good? What are some of your favourite 5 star reads? What made them stand out?

Penultimate day of July, welcome everyone! This week’s topic is a classic, as everyone will have a different view on what is a max rating for them. Can’t wait to see what everyone else says, but for now, here are my own thoughts:

Obviously here at DTRH we have our Drink Me Potions rating, and Andge has so kindly set up a page just to explain all that in great detail. There Andge explains a 5 Drink Me Potions rating as: a masterpiece, something she would read and re-read, and definitely recommend to everyone.

For me, in general I think this aligns with what I also consider my max rating. Although re-readability may not always be feasible for the thriller/mystery genre, since suspense and novelty is a huge part of it. Both of us here at DTRH definitely do try to keep our 5 star rating prestigious. Of course we award it to any book we find to be that level, but in general also do try to keep 5 stars to a minimum. After all, not everything can be our favourite. I feel like this tends to leave many good books at a 4.5 star rating as well – but here at DTRH, anything 4.5 or 5 is a definite recommend from us!

I myself do not have a checklist. Whether something is 4.5 or 5 star really is just a feeling. Now some might consider that a bit nebulous, but I mean ratings are subjective are they not? I almost want to say that 5 star books just have that little bit something extra, something sparkly that sets them apart from the other 4.5 stars. That usually pushes it over the edge for me. Or in other cases, books that are almost 5 star except for one tiny little thing that I didn’t like – that usually leaves it at 4.5 stars. I would say in general good plot, good characters and character development, as well as good pacing/emotional value will often add up to the big 5.

5 star books aren’t always perfect. Perfection is also subjective. But in my mind if I give a book 5 stars it’s not necessarily that it was written very well or that it had certain elements (though it most often does). It usually means that I myself personally enjoyed it to the maximum level that I can enjoy a book. It probably took me on an emotional journey, I probably got super attached to the characters, I probably got lost in the fantasy world, all these things add up to give me a super magical experience reading – the thing we all chase after when we read books, no?

As I may have mentioned before, my two favourite books are Memoirs of a Geisha and The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo. I would say the big reason these two are my favourites was the true sadness and anguish that it was able to evoke in me whenever the protagonist faced unfavourable or unequitable conditions. The emotional journey that I was taken on of someone’s life was truly something so magical and these are ones that I will definitely re-read one day.

What are your all-time favourite books? Let me know in the comments below!


wrap up

July 2021 Wrap Up and TBR

Hello friends! It is a gloomy, rainy day here but I am so glad itโ€™s Thursday and almost the end of the week. However, where has July gone?? I feel like the summer season has only just begun and yet itโ€™s already halfway over.

July was a crazy month for me. If you read some of my other updates this month, youโ€™ll know that we brought in a new puppy into our home and she has been both a source of joy and pain. Still figuring out the biting and potty training stuff, but I love her to bits already. If anyoneโ€™s ever interested, maybe I can post some stuff about her here somewhere – though not 100% sure what thatโ€™ll have to do with books but oh well.

Okay, now onto the books, which is what youโ€™re all here for! This month was such a good reading month. Not because of the number of books I got through, though I am happy the additional puppy training and walks didnโ€™t take away from my reading too much, but because of the quality of books I read. I loved SO many of these, and they blew me away with their characters, plots and author writing styles. Letโ€™s break it down, shall we?

What did I read this month?

5 Drink Me Potions

If Iโ€™m Being Honest by Emily Wibberley & Austin Siegemund-Broka

  • If youโ€™re looking for a mean girl falling in love with a Shakespearean twist, look no further! I loved Cameron Bright as our protagonist as she balances changing her character for herself instead of for someone else while holding true to who she is that didnโ€™t have to changed for anyone. The romance was the cutest enemies-to-lovers Iโ€™ve read and I just couldnโ€™t stop smiling through it all! Definitely a perfect summer read.

Good Girl, Bad Blood by Holly Jackson

  • The sequel to the hit A Good Girlโ€™s Guide to Murder is just as amazing as the first, which is a super high bar to follow. Amateur sleuth Pip wanted to leave behind murders after the ordeal that came crashing down in book 1, but a mystery and potential crime comes to her and this one may leave more scars behind. It was a little eerie, especially reading at night, but I couldnโ€™t put it down or look away as Pip and friends navigate another challenge, but this time in front of a large audience who are watching their every move and/or misstep.

4 Drink Me Potions

Kingdom of the Wicked by Kerri Maniscalco

  • The world building was great and the descriptions of Sicilian food made my mouth water half the time (donโ€™t read this on an empty stomach!), but what made this book so great was the tense relationship forming between Emilia, the twin who survived some dark magic attack on the witches in their area, and a Prince of Hell. It was slow burn and drove me crazy as they hunted down Emiliaโ€™s twinโ€™s killer together. But of course, when dealing with the devil, one cannot trust them, can they? Or even worse, love them?

The Inheritance Games by Jennifer Lynn Barnes

  • With twisty riddles at the heart of the story, who can resist diving into this book that asks the million (or should I say billion?) dollar question: how did a nobody like Avery Grambs inherit billions from a man she never met or knew? Shoved into the spotlight and the Hawthorne family/home, Avery navigates relationships with the 4 Hawthorne brothers and extended family as they all wonder why she was chosen in their place. Sometimes it focused less on the big puzzle and more on the characters and their backstory, but overall this was a unique gem of a read.

Heartbreakers and Fakers by Cameron Lund

  • Fake dating with a twist! Unsure why she kissed a guy she hated most of her life – and unfortunately her best friendโ€™s boyfriend, Pennyโ€™s social life takes a dive unless she could convince everyone she did it for love instead of a drunken mistake. I love the fake dating trope when done well, and this was such a fun ride as Kai and Penny fake thingsโ€ฆuntil it doesnโ€™t seem so fake after all. Can people who annoy one another actually make this work? Maybe thereโ€™re more things in common between them than they ever knew. This was another great summer read!

2 Drink Me Potions

Bone Crierโ€™s Dawn by Kathryn Purdie

  • The only book to fall short in my list this month, I wanted to adore Bone Crierโ€™s Dawn so much since I loved book 1. However, the set up from book 1 didnโ€™t make this one as dramatic or action-filled as I wanted, with a weird love triangle taking place between the boy Ailesse fell in love with and the boy she was fated to be with. I had hoped for more romance (not quite there), and an epic finale (also not there). The world building was solid as we learn more about bone criers (who call themselves Leurresses) and their role to guide dead souls, but it alone canโ€™t carry the story. I had high hopes for this one and it just fell flat.

Current reading list

  • Made in Korea by Sarah Suk
  • A Taste for Love by Jennifer Yen
  • Someone We Know by Shari Lapena

TBR list

  • Where Dreams Descend by Janella Angeles
  • Witchshadow by Susan Dennard
  • Theyโ€™ll Never Catch Us by Jessica Goodman

And thatโ€™s a wrap on July! Hereโ€™s hoping August is just as beautiful for you all. If you can, go out and breathe the fresh air, say hello to friends and read a good book.