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Paladin's Strength (The Saint of Steel #2)by T. Kingfisher

OFFICIAL BOOK BLURB: When Maggie wakes up cold, filthy, and naked in a gutter, it doesn’t take her long to recognize Kair Toren, a city she knows intimately from the pages of the famously unfinished dark fantasy series she’s been obsessively reading and re-reading while waiting years for the final novel.
Her only tools for navigating this gritty world of rival warlords, magic, and mayhem? Her encyclopedic knowledge of the plot, the setting, and the characters’ ambitions and fates. But while she quickly discovers she cannot be killed (though many will try!), the same cannot be said for the living, breathing characters she’s coming to love—a motley band that includes a former lady’s maid, a deadly assassin, various outrageous magical creatures, and a dangerously appealing soldier. Soon, instead of trying to get home, she finds herself enmeshed in the schemes—and attentions—of dueling princes, dukes, and villains, all while trying to save them and the kingdom of Rellas from the way she knows their stories will end: in a cataclysmic war.
FORMAT/INFO: This Kingdom Will Not Kill Me is 480 pages long divided over four named parts with forty-three chapters, and an epilogue. In this book, narration is in the first-person, exclusively via Maggie Haley. This Kingdom Will Not Kill Me is the first volume of in the Maggie The Undying epic fantasy trilogy.
March 31, 2026 will mark the North American hardback, e-book & audiobook publication of This Kingdom Will Not Kill Me via Tor Books. Cover illustration is done by Andrew Davis.
OVERVIEW/ANALYSIS: There are authors and then there are storytellers, there are fantasy stories and then there are epic fantasy sagas. There are books which readers read and stories that become embedded in the readers’ minds & hearts. This Kingdom Will Not Kill Me by Ilona Andrews introduces us to Maggie the Undying and easily is one of the (if not THE) top read of 2026 for me (I’ve read it five times already as I write this review). This book is dedicated to readers who dreamed about getting lost in a book. I must congratulate house Andrews for the thrilling & immersive read which I experienced as I want the sequels & moar….
The story begins with our main character Maggie Haley walking up wet and naked in the city of Kair Torren, capital city of Rellas. The weird thing is until today, this was a secondary fantasy world featured in an unfinished fantasy series titled The Rise Of Kair Torren (with two published books called THE THIEVES OF THE NORTH, & THE LORDS OF THE EAST) that Maggie has been besotted with since her teenage years. Now she finds herself in that very same world and has to figure out:
- Is this real or is she hallucinating?However Maggie has a few, aces up her (currently non-existent) sleeves, she has an encyclopedic knowledge of the events that have occurred and are yet to occur within this land. Plus she knows a lot about the characters’ motivations, & thoughts: both regal & commoner, and POV & non-POV ones. This cerebral Rellaspedia will be one of her main strengths as she tries to assist certain folks to avert a huge & bloody crisis. There’s also her other magical ability to come back from death wholly no matter the manner of her passing. She doesn’t quite know the “how and the why” of her strange ability, but she will use it to her advantage whenever she can. Maggie wants to stop the tragedy that’s set to unfold within Rellas. As she realizes that she cares deeply about the people & characters who have inhabited within her mind for the last decade or so. With everything knowledge wise at her disposal, Maggie decides to tamper with the flow of events and change the fates of hundreds (if not thousands) of people.
There are many things that I could tell you as to why I’m in love with this book (and fantasy series “I say series because while the deal is for three books but I think this story can go beyond 3 books”). Primarily it’s the authorial writing style, from their Kate Daniels saga to the Hidden Legacy series to the Innkeeper volumes. Every series of theirs has given the readers fantastic characters that they can root for or rail against. The dialogue is snappy, the prose is tight and lastly their stories are the type that entertain and become epic along the way.
(TKWNKM UK Cover)Maggie The Undying is in many ways a quintessential Ilona Andrews story but it is also a different story than they have ever written before. It is EPIC, it is magical and if I had to do an elevator pitch for it, it would be ASOIAF meets Alice in Wonderland but without the grimdark edges. It’s a testament to the authors’ skills who can flesh out multiple characters within a singular POV story. Speaking of characterization, almost all the characters who get introduced within this first volume, are fully fledged and three dimensional. Coming from a singular POV story and especially from a first-person narrative, this facet of the story is exceptional. Books such as Assassin’s Apprentice, Kushiel’s Dart, Prince of Thorns, Name of The Wind, Blood Song, Kings of the Wyld, etc. are few and far in between. All these aforementioned titles have narrators who are charismatic and fall on all shades of the moral spectrum. Herein the authors do something akin to these stories while also providing a side character cast that is as fleshed out as the main character and have their own motivations to play out.
While Maggie has such a fascinating narrative voice, she’s still human and has her blind spots. To cover these blind spots, she has new allies and found family beside her. I could talk more about Raymond Karis or Solentine Dagarra or Clover or even the main antagonist but I suspect the authors have plans for almost all characters. I can’t wait to see who takes bigger roles in the future sequels. I suspect quite a few of these characters will become fan favourites and I hope akin to the Kate Daniels, Innkeeper & Hidden Legacy books, the authors provide more stories from their viewpoints.
“When the Eight Families went to war, the world burned. The Great Families had been playing musical chairs with the throne of Rellas for the last eight hundred years, and how long each dynasty lasted depended on how good they were at pitting the other seven families against each other…. the current king, had been teetering on the edge of a full psychotic break for a decade, and the tensions among the Great Families were at an all-time high.”Another beguiling aspect of this book was the worldbuilding. In this regards, this reminded me a lot of ASOIAF & Codex Alera with its varied geographical details, the royal houses that govern the various regions & the powers they possess. The authors brilliantly provide a medieval world that’s as complex as ours and then there’s the fascinating small touches with toilet paper, clothing details, LGBT/non-binary folks inclusion and naming nomenclature. I recall when I first read A Game Of Thrones, how immersive the story was due to its worldbuilding (heraldry descriptions, world history, and geographical tenets) & similarly with Codex Alera with its Romanic culture infused lands.
With This Kingdom Will Not Kill Me, I felt a similar deep immersion and while the world is a dark, medieval one. The authors have managed to brilliant thread the needle in making it realistic but not grimdark or unnecessary violent. I must also highlight Stephanie Stein’s crucial role in the expansion of the plot from a more intimate & less political story (as envisioned by the authors originally) into this genre-bending & fun story. I had read a small excerpt of the story a few years ago & this finished version is more complex, politically intriguing and something that I didn’t know I needed. So my eternal thanks to Stephanie for her editorial hand in elevating the story alongside the authors into its current amazing form.
“It would all end in blood and fire….who wanted nothing to do with the swamp that was the powerful underbelly of Kair Torren and the narrative had crushed her in the worst way possible…”The main plot of the story is about averting a political takeover which includes an event called “the night of thousand fires”, the event being as brutal and destructive as it sounds. The authors have shaped this story very much akin to a thriller, wherein the MC has certain knowledge of pre-ordained events and tries to carefully avert certain situations to change the eventual bloody outcome. This was fun to read as Maggie narrates what she knows and the readers get to know about it in real time as well. The joy is in finding out how she accomplishes with her cerebral Rellaspedia and what new consequences her actions unleash.
This story really flowed so smoothly because Maggie is very much a fan and so that resonated with me on such a deep level. Her love for the story and characters is something that all of us can keenly feel. Be it the six duchies or Westeros or Roshar or the Westlands or even post apocalyptic Atlanta, we the readers are transported in those worlds and care for it as deeply as our own. The world of Rellas is a brilliantly written one and as a reader, one can’t help but be drawn in via Maggie’s love and enthusiasm. The authors have meant this as a complement and given how re-readable their books are, I can only thank them for their venture into epic fantasy as I’ve been clamouring for them to do since the last decade.
Herein the book follows a semi-traditional epic fantasy plot structure but has enough twists within to differentiate it and make it fresh. I’m purposefully being vague because of spoilers but there’s a murder plot, a serial killer plot , soap-making as well as a missing person(s) mystery. Plus not to mention all the various story set-up for events that will happen in the sequels. All in all, there’s so much happening and none of it feels extraneous or excessive.
I would describe this as an epic fantasy with dark undertones as funnily the story within the Rise Of Kair Torren books is a gritty & grimdark one. But herein the authors smartly blunt those edges while still maintaining the dark feel. What I mean is that authors have provided a story that's about a dark world but the reading experience is a comfortable one. I also have to highlight that the authors are fans of David Gemmell’s heroic fantasy stories and there’s some wonderful character similarities to be found within. From the grizzled veteran to the mercenary family to the head of the assassin guild, these grey characters are so fascinatingly written that one can’t help but care for them and watch out for what they do next. There’s going to be a lot of fan favourite characters for every type of reader to root for. The action sequences are more of the personal kind except for the climax which is a mass affair. There’s no big battles as such but the climax will provide succor to the most ardent action fantasy fan.
The prose is very solid throughout and while nobody will be calling it purple. I found it to be solid and very geared to make the readers’ experience a fascinating one. The authors’ have a knack for writing comedy and there’s just the right amount interspersed within. Another thing I wish to highlight for IA fans who have read their various series is about the epic fantasy genre. While this book is very much paced properly, readers who are more accustomed to the urban fantasy genre will have to understand the more laid-back nature of epic fantasy and the worldbuilding involved. In most (if not all) epic fantasy books, the author must worldbuild alongside laying out the story and character arcs. This leads to a seemingly slower pace as compared to urban fantasy stories wherein the worldbuilding exercise is far less intensive as the world is usually our own.
Many readers might disregard this as a romantasy book and they would be very, very wrong. This book has a tendril of romance but it’s ensconced within the story in a neat fashion. For those readers who are wanting a spicy romantic read, they won’t find this book to be that either. The authors have tried really hard to make this story into its own thing and I applaud them for it.
(Stelka picture courtesy of the authors' website)One thing I must note is that this book & story is very, very cinematic. I could very easily visualize this as a TV series akin to Game Of Thrones with a Maggie voiceover ala Dexter. The same, charming narrative voice that Michael C. Hall so smoothly provided can be done herein. Albeit with an actor who can bring Maggie’s brilliance and spunk alive. I was thinking a young Willa Fitzgerald would have been terrific with this. I seriously hope that someone from Hollywood does consider this book series as it would make a for a thrilling, fun & addictive show.
CONCLUSION: Filled with mesmerizing characters, a medieval fantasy world that defies genre trappings and a hope-filled story that evokes joy. This Kingdom Will Not Kill Me is the exact type of exceptional fantasy that I’ve been dying to read. This Kingdom Will Not Kill Me is easily my top read of 2026 & it will be nigh impossible to top it IMHO. Get ready to meet Maggie The Undying as that’s a name you won’t be forgetting soon after March 31st 2026.
The Apple-Tree Throneby Premee MohamedMy neighbor across the street wants flowers blooming in her front yard from spring until the end of summer. To do so, she’s planted dozens of tulips, daffodil, California poppies, wildflowers, and other random bloomers.
Her yard is bright and colorful for months.
Autumn is creeping in, though—just the breath of it cooling the breeze and tempering the sunshiny days. Her flowers have done their job spectacularly, but now their colors have faded.
I love autumn, I do. But seeing her yard go fallow made me realize summer went by far too quickly. I stood at my gate wondering if I had enjoyed the sun enough. Had I drank lemonade, dipped my feet into lakes, rivers, oceans? Had I taken time to run through a sprinkler, sleep outside beneath a wide starry sky, told the people I love just how much I love them as we laughed and sang old songs?
Had I savored it enough, the sweet summer-ness of summer?
I’m happy to say YES! I did all those things! Summer was wonderful. I mean, Life has still been Life, with happy days and really sad days, hard things and joys. But time moves us all forward, and the seasons are turning once again.
I think this autumn I’ll take a hint from my neighbor. I have buckets of daffodil, iris, and tulip bulbs down in the shed. Maybe it’s time to plant them, a small hope—a promise—of more sweet summers to come.
Worldcon was a very fun experience for me this year! Here I am on day 1, waiting in the registration line. Even though I arrived just after noon on Wednesday, it took an hour for me to make it to the front of the line and there were even more people arriving behind me.
I headed straight to the dealers’ room, and was happily shopping all the tables (So Many books and authors present!) when I heard a familiar voice. Who should I see but…
the fabulous, amazing author (and terrific friend!) Nina Kiriki Hoffman!! We strolled more of the dealers room together and eventually went out for a bowl of chowder at Pike Place Chowder.
I’d just had a bowl of Mo’s Chowder a few days before, and sorry, Mo’s, Pike Place Chowder was the superior bowl.
I can’t quite remember the order of things but eventually Nina and I ended up going to Martha Wells Q&A session:
I thought it was a wonderful Q&A, and that Martha had thoughtful, interesting comments about her writing process, what she’s writing next, and even a bit of what she would take away from the Murderbot show and possibly use in her upcoming work (it’s the costuming, and how the people from Preservation leave obvious patches on their clothing to acknowledge both injuries and recovery.)
I finally caught up with my fabulous roommate (and writer friend) Diana Pharaoh Francis by the evening and if I remember right, we talked for hours and called it a day.
These were the signed books I gave away to folk on my Patreon last year:

We also have an active discord.
For higher tier Patrons I do consults and chapter critiques.
Also social media follows, early signed copies of upcoming books, and tuckerisation into new novels.
In addition, I have a collection of unpublished work including 7 books and numerous short stories that tier 3+ patrons can access.
So ... check it out!
Patreon is a great way to support authors and get involved in their work at a deeper level.
Back in late 2023 I started writing something, and in early 2024 that something was a complete book, called The Bookshop Book.
In this post in late 2024 I was offering folk on my Patreon access to it.
The book centres on a bookshop called ... Books.
The name is explained not as a lack of imagination on the owner's part but by the fact that the proprietor's surname is Books, and Books's Books felt rather too much for him.
All good so far.
Today a Facebook advert alerted me to a new TV series called Bookish about to drop 2 days from now. Here's a still from the trailer:

Eagle-eyed readers will notice that the bookshop (around which this series is set) is called Book's.
Moreover, it turns out that it bears this name because the proprietor (the star of the show) is a Mr Book...
So - I now expect that when The Bookshop Book hits the shelves in 2026, if Bookish turns out to be a popular show, I will be accused of copying from it.
And the point of this blogpost is simply to flag the coincidence at work here.
Ironically, The Bookshop Book is tangentially related to The Library Trilogy, and in both works I talk about how the Library uses the currents of coincidence to bring interested parties together and manipulate the world. Coincidence?
It’s been a minute since I’ve been here. I’ll be blogging more often to keep folks updated, so here we go!
First bit of news: HOUSE IMMORTAL (ebook) is now re-released with a new cover! Book two and three (INFINITY BELL and CRUCIBLE ZERO) also have new covers and are up for preorder!
Good news! I’m writing a new series set in the town of Ordinary, Oregon. It’s funny, cozy fantasy with a dash of mystery. It features new characters, and of course, many of the favorites from the Ordinary Magic series. If things go to plan, you’ll see the first three of those books out this year!
Am I knitting? Yes, of course! I made this cute little car hat for a kiddo who loves cars:
and I also tried my hand at crochet, and made the same kiddo a race track rug:
That’s it for now, friends. More new soon, so stay tuned, and happy reading!!
It’s here! It’s out! Wayward Devils, Book 4 in the Souls of the Road series is available in ebook and print!
Apple Kobo Amazon Barnes & NobleCursed to follow Route 66 for nearly a hundred years, Brogan and Lula Gauge have made a deal with Cupid to find the spellbook of the Gods—a book powerful enough to destroy the world.
But they aren’t the only ones looking for it.
The evil goddess, Atë, has already tried to kill them once to get the book, and now Brogan and Lula must race to find it before Atë finds them and finishes the job.
Luckily, a coven of honkey tonk witches in Shamrock, Texas claims to know where the book is hidden. But their information comes at a great price. Brogan and Lula must help the witches kill an ancient monster. To do so, they will have to form an alliance with an old enemy who wants the Gauges dead.
Brogan and Lula’s luck is turning, but whether it’s good or bad teeters on a knife’s edge: trust the devils they know, or go all in with the wayward devils they’ve just met.
This book was a lot of fun to write, especially when a few favorite characters from Ordinary, Oregon showed up, as did a certain Crossroads I rather like. I’m SO EXCITED to share it with you all!
Happy reading!!!
(more book and writing news soon…stay tuned!)
The fabulous people over at Graphic Audio have put Brute of All Evil on sale for 60% off. That means you can get this audio, fully performed like a radio play by multiple voice actors and special effects and all the other bells and whistles, for LESS THAN THE PAPERBACK PRICE.
That, my friends, is a terrific deal. Sale will end soon, so get your hands on it soon-ish!
HELL OF A WITCH
The hotly anticipated sequel to HELL FOR HIRE...

From the BLURB:
A BOY MEETS A GIRL. THE PAST MEETS THE FUTURE. A FINGER MEETS A TRIGGER. THE BEGINNING MEETS THE END. ENGLAND IS FOREVER. ENGLAND MUST FALL.
In the near future, a disaffected civil servant is offered a lucrative job in a mysterious new government ministry gathering 'expats' from across history to test the limits of time-travel.
Her role is to work as a 'bridge': living with, assisting and monitoring the expat known as '1847' - Commander Graham Gore. As far as history is concerned, Commander Gore died on Sir John Franklin's doomed expedition to the Arctic, so he's a little disoriented to find himself alive and surrounded by outlandish concepts such as 'washing machine', 'Spotify' and 'the collapse of the British Empire'. With an appetite for discovery and a seven-a-day cigarette habit, he soon adjusts; and during a long, sultry summer he and his bridge move from awkwardness to genuine friendship, to something more.
But as the true shape of the project that brought them together begins to emerge, Gore and the bridge are forced to confront their past choices and imagined futures. Can love triumph over the structures and histories that have shaped them? And how do you defy history when history is living in your house?
'The Ministry of Time' is the debut novel from British-Cambodian writer and editor based in London, Kaliane Bradley.
So, this may well be my favourite book of 2024. WOW-ee. What an enjoyable read, especially for a low-science fiction girly whose particular proclivity is time-travel tales (those are always my fave 'Doctor Who' episodes, the back-in-time ones). So, some random observations;
⦿ I am very fond of 2005 YA novel 'The White Darkness' by Geraldine McCaughrean, which is about a teenage girl who is genuinely in love with (the long-dead) Captain Lawrence 'Titus' Oates from the doomed Terra Nova Expedition. So when I read the blurb for 'The Ministry of Time' about Britain having harnessed time-travel and successfully bought six travellers from various eras to the modern-day, including Commander Graham Gore from the doomed Franklin expedition - I was all in. *Especially* when the blurb hinted that Gore's present-day "bridge" - the protagonist of the novel who is tasked with helping him acclimatise and who maybe starts to develop feelings - I was *ALL IN*.

⦿ Time-travel has always been my bag. Modern-day women falling for out-of-time men is my particular favourite sub-genre ... I know exactly when this started; 'Playing Beatie Bow' by Ruth Park, and the time-travelling Abigail falling for Judah in the 1800's. This was particularly cemented when I read 'Outlander' by Diana Gabaldon as an 18-year-old; WWII army-nurse Claire passing through the stones to Jamie Fraser in the 18th century. No doubt there's some Marty McFly 'Back to the Future' Michael J. Fox appreciation thrown in there too. But this sub-genre of sci-fi and time-travel is my jamboree. And 'The Ministry of Time' gave it to me in HEAPINGS of timey-wimey goodness. The romance is slow-burn but makes up for it because our protagonist (whose name we don't know, but we get an intimate first-person account from) crushes HARD on Gore and that amps up the burn. But I was also very sucked into the mechanics and politics of the time-travel itself, so it wasn't like I was ever cooling my heels and checking my watch for the low sci-fi to get good ... it was ALL good.
⦿ The politics of time-travel in this book reminded me of the Norwegian sci-fi series 'Beforeigners', about people from different time-periods suddenly randomly appearing in Oslo, becoming refugees of time that the Norwegian government has to deal with. It's also a little bit like the (brilliant) Aussie TV series 'Glitch' set in a small outback town where; 'Seven people from different time-periods return from the dead with no memory and attempt to unveil what brought them to the grave in the first place.' I like this connection in particular because there's a shady organisation linked to the raising of the dead, a big-pharma laboratory called "Noregard" (best in-universe name for a corporation, ever.) It's also a wee bit like the 2001 rom-com starring Hugh Jackman and Meg Ryan, 'Kate & Leopold' about an English Duke from 1876 falling for a modern-day New Yorker when he's unceremoniously dragged into the future. If any/all of those recs are your picnic; this book is for you.

⦿ He filled the room like a horizon ... the writing was sumptuous, and gorgeous at times. Sometimes Bradley had a turn-of-phrase of description that made me go "ohhhhh." When something changes you constitutionally, you say: ‘the earth moved,’ but the earth stays the same. It’s your relationship with the ground that shifts.
⦿ I actually first heard about this book, in a Guardian round-up of British debuts to look out for, and the description of Kaliane Bradley's idea made my spine sizzle and then I Googled her even more and found that she partly wrote the idea for 'The Ministry of Time' during Covid and lockdowns and because she kinda fell in love with the only photograph of Graham Gore. No, really. 'Kaliane Bradley Fell in Love With a Dead Man. The Result Is The Ministry of Time' ... if that's not an *amazing* sales-pitch I don't know what is.

⦿ I just loved this. It's extremely cinematic and I wouldn't be surprised to find it is being developed into a movie or limited-TV series. It both feels appropriately head-nodding to plenty of other fabulous low-sci-fi time-travel that will make aficionados happy, but also sparkly-unique enough to keep adding to the conversation about the space-time continuum. Even if I guessed the small twist that comes, I did so because I know this sub-genre so well and expected certain markers along the way and Bradley did not disappoint. I loved this so much, I was only one-chapter in when I knew it'd give me the best bookish hangover and be hard book to follow-up, probably throwing me into a reading-rut.
5/5
"Featuring a motley crew of loveable demons, a chaotic male forest witch with a sassy talking cat familiar, snarky sentient weapons, wicked warlocks, and plenty of magical mayhem, Hell for Hire is a bewitching and diabolically fun urban fantasy that is as thrilling as it is wholesome." - Before We Go Book Blog


From the BLURB:
Nova Weetman’s unforgettable memoir reflects on experiences of love and loss from throughout her life, including: losing her beloved partner, playwright Aidan Fennessy, during the 2020 Covid lockdown; the death of her mother ten years earlier; her daughter turning eighteen and finishing school; and her own physical ageing. Using these events as a lens, Nova considers how various kinds of losses – and the complicated love they represent – change us and can become the catalysts for letting go.
This is a moving, honest account of farewelling a partner of twenty-five years, parenting teenagers through grief, buying property for the first time at the age of fifty, watching Aidan live on through his plays, and learning to appreciate spending hours alone with only the household cat for company. Warm and wise – and often joyful – Love, Death & Other Scenes ultimately focuses on the living we do after losses and what we learn from them.
At one point while reading Nova Weetman's memoir, I said out loud to the empty room; "Geez, you're good Nova."
Such was the power and force of certain sentences, ideas, inflections and offerings throughout. "As writers, we are stealers of other peoples memories, bowerbirds of story," she writes at one point - and then puts that ability to collect on full display throughout as she recounts the life she built with her partner, playwright Aidan Fennessy, who battled and then died from prostate cancer in 2020 during Melbourne's numerous lockdowns and waves of Covid.
I know Nova as a colleague, a fellow middle-grade author and someone I greatly admire, and whose books I truly - hand on heart - believe helped me in tapping into my own voice for this age group. I think it's a little odd that I feel like I know-her, *know* her now after reading 'Love, Death & Other Scenes,' though. And especially because I have a tangential understanding of the loss she and her two children experienced in 2020. My uncle died after his third bout of cancer - having beat the other two, it was pancreatic in the end, third time unlucky - and unlike Nova's partner who had the option but didn't use it; my uncle chose Voluntary Assisted Dying and went out on his own terms, at home, December 2020. We were all there. I'm both surprised and not at all by how much reading Nova's perspective of a death like that during Covid - which I watched my aunt and cousin go through, one of the helpers minding children and looking for ways to ease their pain - I needed to reexamine and feel.
But I'm also surprised at how beautifully romantic this book was too, as Nova writes about how she and Aidan first met - how she fell first, and pursued ... how so much of their relationship felt like it needed balancing, especially in their creative exchange; ‘He introduced me to albums I’d never heard, to singers dead before my time, and the way that songs stain your memories giving them meaning they don’t have in silence.'
In this too, I feel weirdly intimate to the story because Nova writes about Aidan's final play he ever wrote - 'The Heartbreak Choir' - finally being staged, but only after his death. His final work he never got to see fully-realised. It's because I know Nova and am a fan of hers, that I was aware through social media what she was going through - and when tickets became available for 'The Heartbreak Choir' debut performance in Melbourne, I snapped them up for both myself, my mum, and my aunt - also knowing that she in particular may find some comfort in both the story, and its background. And she did - we all did. I saw 'The Heartbreak Choir' in May 2022 and loved it! A play my Aunt still talks about, has triggered her love of theatre to the point that she and my mum will now spontaneously ask me to check out what's on and what's coming up, book something for us all.
'Love, Death & Other Scenes' feels like another chapter to that play, in a way. How apt, that Nova muses towards the end of her memoir; ‘And it is in words that I can find him,' and it's in both her words and his that I feel something being unlocked, and another story I want to share with my family. That I want to press this book into their hands and say; 'It's us, a little bit.' We're not so alone, I think.
5/5
Introducing...HELL FOR HIRE coming out June 4!
The Crew
From the BLURB:
A seriously FUNNY, seriously CLEVER history of our early kings and queens by one of our favourite comedians and cultural commentators.
This will be the most refreshing, entertaining history of England you'll have ever read.
Certainly, the funniest.
Because David Mitchell will explain how it is not all names, dates or ungraspable historical headwinds, but instead show how it's really just a bunch of random stuff that happened with a few lucky bastards ending up on top. Some of these bastards were quite strange, but they were in charge, so we quite literally lived, and often still live, by their rules.
It's a great story. And it's our story. If you want to know who we are in modern Britain, you need to read this book.
♛ ♛ ♛
This just *delighted* me and had me running to find any other audiobooks of David Mitchell's on my Library's BorrowBox app (and yes, I am forever disappointed when somebody says "David Mitchell" and means the bloke who wrote Cloud Atlas. I want 'Peep Show' David Mitchell, 'Upstart Crow' David Mitchell - and this book proves why!)
I listened to this while I walked the dog, and I must have looked like a King George III-level maniac laughing and guffawing as I picked up his poo (with a bag) and walked blithely along, nodding and laugh/crying ... but it was truly just *that* good!
David Mitchell's injections and rants are next-level (at one point he manages to tie in the absurdity of awards for art; like the year that the theme song for 'Shaft' was up against 'The Age of Not Believing' from 'Bedknobs and Broomsticks' for best song at the Oscars, to which he says you may as well compare a fish-finger to a ladder for all the good it does to categorise and quantify two pieces of art like that ... and he's not wrong!)
Mitchell only takes the book up to King James-ish because he says that was the last time that monarchy had true, absolute power before Parliament, Prime Ministers, foreign Governments and such started interfering with what the royals had bamboozled England into thinking was "divine rule," ... I do hope he decides to write a second-book about the waning royals (is it too much to ask that he give a full-throated debate on why a Republic would be better? Throughout the listening of this I could feel his tension to rein in what could have been an 11-hour long rant on the subject!)
As such, this was perhaps the most enjoyable new read I've encountered this year so far. Amazing!
5/5

No Victor lasts forever.
Victor thought he won when he became the Hero. He thought he won when he took over the DFZ. He thought he’d made himself untouchable.
He’s wrong.
Lola isn’t the sad little monster she used to be. She has a plan, she has allies, she has more magic than she ever dreamed possible. Killing one blood mage should be easy with an entire fairy kingdom at her fingertips, but Victor didn't make himself a god by playing fair, and his bag of tricks is far from empty. Taking him down will require everything Lola and her friends can bring, but if there’s one thing Lola’s always been, it’s determined. No matter the cost, no matter what it takes, she will see this through.
To the bloody end.
Get your copy now in ebook, KU, print, or audio!This was an extremely satisfying book to write. I don't think I've ever enjoyed wrapping a series so much. It's epic, it's awesome, and I cannot wait for you to read it in ebook, print, or KU or listen on audio, cause they're all out today!

From the BLURB:
Legend goes that long ago a Flores woman offended the old gods, and their family was cursed as a result. Now, every woman born to the family has a touch of magic.
Sage Flores has been running from her family—and their “gifts”—ever since her younger sister Sky died. Eight years later, Sage reluctantly returns to her hometown. Like slipping into an old, comforting sweater, Sage takes back her job at Cranberry Rose Company and uses her ability to communicate with plants to discover unusual heritage specimens in the surrounding lands.
What should be a simple task is complicated by her partner in botany sleuthing: Tennessee Reyes. He broke her heart in high school, and she never fully recovered. Working together is reminding her of all their past tender, genuine moments—and new feelings for this mature sexy man are starting to take root in her heart.
With rare plants to find, a dead sister who keeps bringing her coffee, and another sister whose anger fills the sky with lightning, Sage doesn’t have time for romance. But being with Tenn is like standing in the middle of a field on the cusp of a summer thunderstorm—supercharged and inevitable.
I am a seasonal reader, and that’s a very hard thing to be in Melbourne at the moment where we’re swinging between heatwaves and downpours. So I find it interesting that in a bit of a reading slump, I randomly decided to reach for a witchy book that includes a character whose mood can change the weather …
This is my first read by Gilliland - and it’s her third book, but first adult romance. Her second YA book - ‘How Moon Fuentez Fell in Love with the Universe’ - won and was shortlisted for a slew of awards, and was already on my radar. But TikTok actually put me onto ‘Witch of Wild Things’ - about a Mexican woman who returns to her hometown where her dead sister haunts her, another curses her, and the boy who made her swoon over AOL until he broke her heart has grown into a hot man with forearm tattoos.
The fact that we come from dirt, and eventually turn to dirt, is spooky and incredible to think about it at the same time. My sister is dirt by now, surely. All of our ancestors are, too. This must make dirt holy, holy enough for the old gods to walk upon it from time to time. Holy enough that Nadia gives it a little cup of espresso to drink every single morning.I’m so glad I started with this book because it *hit the spot* - was lovely and spicy, but also made me weepy and tender-hearted. Our protagonist Sage has a particular story-arc about being the oldest sibling to her two sisters, and defaulting to a parental responsibility role that’s so rarely explored in fiction like this … imagine Luisa Madrigal’s ‘Surface Pressure’ song from ENCANTO, made into a novel.
It’s also very ‘Practical Magic’ by Alice Hoffman (BUT - it’s actually more of the 1998 Sandra Bullock/Nicole Kidman classic movie ‘Practical Magic,’ with its cottagecore-comfy and whimsy, whereas the book is … not? It’s darker. So if you prefer movie ‘Practical Magic’ then *this* is the book for you … not the actual Hoffman book, FYI and lol)
You can *kinda* tell that this book struggled to find a strong plot, however. And Gilliland hints at this in her acknowledgements, where she talks about a severe bout of writer's block from which this story was borne, from the scraps of an abandoned and unworkable idea. It does have a little bit of that feeling, like; she was immersed in this town and this family, the universe, and an actual strong through-line of story had to be somewhat shoehorned in.
So while I loved this - I maybe would have liked a few threads to be more deeply explored and wrapped up, and *maybe* it got slightly too easy by the end … but those are minor quibbles in an otherwise very sparkly and lovely book.
4/5
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