If you missed the first of my 2026 book recommendations events with the Ashland Public Library last night, you can catch the video on Youtube here. While last year’s program focused on both fantasy and science fiction, I’m primarily focusing on fantasy book recommendations this year. (But if you’re looking for more science fiction books this year, Elizabeth Bear has you covered!) For the first book recommendations event of the year, I recommended a couple of epic fantasy books, a […]
The post February 2026 Virtual Book Recommendations first appeared on Fantasy Cafe.It’s Giveaway Friday, squeee!
House Andrews have witnessed the Horde’s long-suffering battle with our most relentless adversaries, W*iting and P*tience.
To fortify morale, they are gifting This Kingdom Will Not Kill Me: 1 hardcover copy will go to a lucky US winner and 2 PDF ARCs to international winners.
To Enter:Comment below and let us know:
You can use your own name, make one up, or go full fantasy-protagonist and keysmash a lot of “y” and “z” into the usual unpronounceable creations. Have fun, Horde!
Giveaway AdminThis is a blog-only giveaway, only answers in blog comments count.
Winners will be chosen next Friday, February 27th 2026, with the aid of a random number generator.
The international winners will have to sign an NDA before receiving their PDF copies. This is not personal, but standard publishing practice to ensure the file will remain private with the winner. We appreciate your understanding.
For readers who are receiving this post in their newsletter email and don’t know how to get to the blog to make a valid entry comment, you can click here.
Comments are paginated, so the BDH chalance doesn’t break the blog (again lol). If you don’t see your entry, it means it’s on a previous page. Please do not resubmit, it is one entry per person.
Happy weekend and good luck!
Signed: Moderataria Rhae’zalyndrix, First of Her Name,
The Untouched by Sun, Lady of the Soggy Isles
The post This Kingdom Will Giveaway Us first appeared on ILONA ANDREWS.
The Entanglement of Rival Wizards (Magic and Romance #1)by Sara Raasch
Reading Level: Adult
Genre: Historical Fantasy/ Cozy Fantasy
Length: 464 pages
Publisher: Del Rey
Release Date: March 31, 2026
ASIN: B0F88WRKVG
Stand Alone or Series: Stand Alone
Source: eGalley from NetGalley
Rating: 4/5 stars
“Mary Anning wants to be a geomagician—a paleontologist who uses fossils to wield magic—but since the Geomagical Society of London refuses to admit women, she’s stuck selling her discoveries to tourists instead. Then an ancient egg hatches in her hands, revealing a lovable baby pterodactyl that Mary names Ajax, and she knows that this is a scientific find that could make her career—if she’s strategic.
But when Mary contacts the Society about her discovery, they demand to take possession of Ajax. Their emissary is none other than Henry Stanton, a distinguished (and infuriatingly handsome) scholar . . . and the man who once broke Mary’s heart. She knows she can’t trust her fellow scholars, who want to discredit her and claim Ajax for their own, but Henry insists he believes in the brilliant Mary and only wants to help her obtain the respect she deserves.
Now Mary has a new mystery to solve that’s buried deeper than any dinosaur skeleton: She must uncover the secrets behind the Society and the truth about Henry. As her conscience begins to chafe against her ambition, Mary must decide what lengths she’s willing to go to finally belong—and what her heart really wants.”
Series Info/Source: This is a stand alone book. I got this on ebook through NetGalley for review.
Thoughts: I really enjoyed this, it sounded like a story that I would really like, and it was. The story has Victorian London vibes to it but blends that in with an alternate history were witches are real and others can learn to be geomagicians and use magic for a cost.
This is about a fossil hunter, Mary, who really wants to become part of the geomagician society in London, only issue is they don’t allow women in the society. When she accidentally finds a real live pterodactyl, things start to change. Unfortunately, political unrest in London starts to unravel everything, making her personal ambitions pale in view of civil unrest over basic human rights.
I enjoyed all the discussion about fossils, and liked the world as well (it has subtle Victorian overtones). I didn’t realize how politically heavy this was going to be, and I am not big into politically heavy reads (especially with the world as it is at the moment). However, the political aspects are tightly tied into the rest of the story and were generally well done.
I enjoyed the idea of reliquaries that hold magic and people having the ability to sell their magic. This is the main back story behind the political unrest here; the poor in London end up having to sell their magic for a pittance, and the rich in London buy up the magic and use it for excess.
Some things that held me back from loving the story were that it just wasn’t as exciting as I hoped. I mean we are talking about living dinosaurs! I think the most dire thing that happens (dinosaur-wise) is that the pterodactyl nips at someone. The pace here is also fairly slow.
I also was a bit disappointed in how the characters were portrayed at times. Mary thinks she has friends, but they are constantly helping her only when it suits their ulterior motives. This leaves Mary thinking that everyone is only helping her for their own gain (which at times that is true). While I appreciated the character complexity, I got tired of the undertone that everyone was out to get everyone else.
I will definitely keep an eye out for future books by Mandula. This was an enjoyable read after having a slew of DNF reads.
My Summary (4/5): Overall I enjoyed this. I liked the Victorian setting with some alternate historical elements such as magic and witches. I enjoyed delving into the fossil science here as well. I generally liked the characters but wished that there wasn’t such an overtone of everyone being out for themselves. I do wish that the pace had been a bit faster and the story had been, well, just more interesting. However, this was a well done cozy fantasy read with complex politics and some intriguing magical aspects. There is a bit of romance in here as well but it very much not the main focus of the story. I would recommend to those looking for a magical, cozy, fantasy read; especially if you don’t mind some politics and science mixed in.
I received a review copy from the publisher. This does not affect the contents of my review and all opinions are my own.
Nightshade & Oak by Molly O’Neill
Mogsy’s Rating: 3 of 5 stars
Genre: Fantasy
Series: Stand Alone
Publisher: Orbit (February 3, 2026)
Length: 304 pages
Author Information: Website
Going into Nightshade & Oak, I was genuinely excited. I really enjoyed Greenteeth, and one of the things Molly O’Neill does so well is blend mythology and folklore into something that feels more personal and grounded instead of grand but distant. That said, it’s hard not to compare the books. This one had similar foundations when it comes to setting and themes, and on paper it should have worked just as well. In the end, though, I still liked it, just not nearly as much.
The story opens on a battlefield in ancient Britain, following a brutal clash between the Iceni tribe and the Roman army. Mallt Y Nos, goddess of death, walks calmly through the carnage as she has always done, guiding the souls of the fallen to the afterlife. As she stops to tend to the body of a woman, however, she senses something wrong. Unbeknownst to her, the woman’s sister had been nearby, attempting a desperate spell to save her gravely wounded sibling. Instead, the magic backfires, catching Mallt in its effects and turning her mortal. Furious at the loss of her divinity, Mallt now must contend with all the physical weaknesses of having a human body, leaving her no choice but to bargain with the woman responsible if she hopes to reclaim her powers.
That woman turns out to be Belis, the magically gifted warrior daughter of Queen Boudicca. In trying to help her sister Cati’s soul, which is lingering in an in-between state, Belis has unwittingly bound her fate to a goddess, albeit a now diminished one. Still, Belis knows Mallt holds the key to reaching Annwn, the Otherworld, and will need a guide to survive and navigate her new mortal reality. If they can endure each other long enough to reach the realm of the dead, Belis may yet have another chance to save Cati. Reluctantly, the two women form a tenuous alliance, their goals aligned for now. But as they journey across the war-torn landscape, their quest grows ever more complicated and dangerous, especially with Roman forces on their tail, determined to hunt down the last surviving daughter of Boudicca and crush the rebellion for good.
Like Greenteeth, this novel is heavily inspired by folklore but it also weaves in historical events and figures anchored in real history. The author’s affinity for the mythology behind Mallt Y Nos is obvious here, and I liked her take on goddess’s story. At the same time, I couldn’t help feeling that the historical framework boxed the story in a bit. In a way, Boudicca’s fate, and by extension her daughters’, is a weight that hangs over everything.
Tonally, Nightshade & Oak is also a lot darker. There is war and reminders of it everywhere, creating an undercurrent of inevitability running through the story. That itself is not a flaw, of course, but I did miss the slightly offbeat charm and warmth that made the plot and characters of Greenteeth so endearing. Sure, Mallt’s adjustment to mortality has its moments, especially in the beginning, but overall, she and Belis didn’t quite win me over the same way. Even as their relationship deepened into something more towards the end, there was still that disconnect, largely because I never felt fully invested in it to begin with.
To O’Neill’s credit though, the plot here is much more ambitious, not simply a “go here, fetch this/fix that, rinse and repeat as necessary, then go home” structure. The stakes begin remarkably high and they keep expanding as the story builds. While Mallt and Belis are indeed set on a quest, it’s one that grows ever more complex than it first appears. And I admired that. That said, parts of the middle dragged, and I found it more difficult to stay engaged during those sections. The added layers made it richer, but also occasionally slower and more uneven.
In the end, Nightshade & Oak is a solid read and there’s a lot to love here with its themes of myth and history, gods made human, and love shaped by war. And yet, I just couldn’t shake the feeling that something was missing, perhaps that extra spark or emotional pull to truly bring it to life. Even so, I’ll absolutely keep reading whatever Molly O’Neill writes next, the promise of creative ideas blending history and fantasy always drawing me back.
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Mod R has been painstakingly gathering your This Kingdom questions and here are some non-answers.
Will there be any art in the ebook?
The official hardcover and ebook from Tor will have a black and white map.
Is this art (Candice’s Landmarks and Leesha’s Sushi) in the hardcover?
No. We have the hardcover, so we can confirm that there is only the map. The art we’ve been posting has been commissioned by us for inclusion into marketing materials and bonus things.
We have not posted any art from special editions because we do not own it.
Is the picture of the Hireling Temple in Maggie 1 or 2?
Neither. It is referenced in both books, but we do not visit it except in bonus material.
When are the special editions going on sale?
Umm, we are not sure, and we are not sure we are allowed to say.
Is there bonus fiction material in the special editions?
There is a short story in one of the US bonus special editions that explains things. Those who don’t end up buying that special edition will learn the exact nature of that episode when Book 2 comes.
How long is the Book 2 right now?
123,121 words and it needs to be longer, so we are working on it very hard.
Does Book 2 have a title?
Yes.
Can we be told the title?
No.
When can we have a round-up of all the editions available everywhere before release in March?
When the collective publishers allow us to do that. Right now we are not allowed.
Why?
We are not sure. It must have something to do with the way those special editions are distributed. Some of them are subscription-model book clubs and they have secrecy.
Why can’t we get art and bonus stuff?
You can. Or you will be able to. More on that after the release. We have invested into art for this trilogy from multiple artists. We will need to get our investment back so we will be doing things with art and bonus fiction. We have deleted scenes and scenes from other characters. We are not ready to discuss anything until we have something concrete to show you.
But will we have pretty things and mugs and all the other stuff?
Yes.
Some authors are doing special boxes…
::putting hand over twitching eye:: Are they?
Hypothetically, we would be open to special boxes. There are enough interesting things in the book to put together a very fun Kair Toren experience box. There is tea, and coins, and stuff.
But that would be after the release. We would not want to compete with other special editions and boxes, so you would be able to buy something like that for rereads, later, to revisit the city with your favorite copy of This Kingdom, whether it is in hardcover or ebook or audio.
Right now we must concentrate on writing.
People often ask me which of our characters I resemble the most. I am Cookie from that bit where he is trading with the muckrats.
::raises her hands up in the air and makes big circles::
An enormous rock blocked out the sun and crashed to our left with a shocking thud, sending the bodies flying from the impact. I felt it through the horse. The damn boulder was the size of a house. Fifty feet closer, and all of us would be on the ground.
The white stallion went into full gallop. My terrified horse followed, running for her life. We were flying through the battle, right in the middle of the enemy advance.
This was suicide. We were all going to die.
See? This is where we left off today. Rocks fall. Everyone dies. Must deliver sensawunda. Chi? Chi.
Can we have the countdown clock on the front page for TK?
Ehhhh… yes. Let me get the banner fixed first and I will get it up there.
PS Mod R:
What we can definitely have is DEALS!
If you’re in the US and an Audible Premium Plus member, Audible are running an Epic Series Sale until February 22nd, including 11 titles from Ilona Andrews, in both the Innkeeper and Kate Daniels series.
If you’re in the UK, Waterstones have a preorder sale until the 20th of February with code FEB26, including the This Kingdom Will Not Kill Me hardback (not special edition).
Finally, the lovely people at Graphic Audio are running a sale for everyone – 55% off selected title until March, including the KD series, Innkeeper series and the Hidden Legacy titles.
The post Can We Go To The Hireling Temple? first appeared on ILONA ANDREWS.

Other LitStack Spots If you think you’ll like the title in this LitStack Spotlight, we’ve…
The post Spotlight on “Paradiso 17” by Hannah Lillith Assadi appeared first on LitStack.
Looks like this is a re-release (and probably partly rewritten to add romance) of a book published in 2024, but it sure sounds fun.


And that voice is Kristen Sieh.
Audiobooks are, by nature, transformative. It is very rare when the author and the audio performer’s vision perfectly aligns. When you listen to your own book on audio, there are always little things that jar you out of the experience. A line that is spoken with the wrong emphasis. A rhythm that is just slightly off from how it should sound in your head.
Kristen Sieh is spot on. She is utterly amazing. This book has a massive cast. So many people, and she embodies them all.
She was kind enough to record some previews for us, and I have links for you. You can view the video on your social networks or below.
Facebook / Instagram / TikTok / YouTube
You can grab your preorder of This Kingdom Will Not Kill Me audiobook at your favorite retailer. Some buy links are listed below.
Audible / Amazon / Apple Books / Libro
The post This Kingdom Has a Voice first appeared on ILONA ANDREWS.
Six Scorched Roses (Crowns of Nyaxia #1.5)by Carissa Broadbent)Reading Level: Young Adult
Genre: Historical Fantasy/ Paranormal/ Manga
Length: 186 pages
Publisher: Yen Press
Release Date: December 16, 2025
ASIN: B0FGX7L2JM
Stand Alone or Series: 34th volume in the Black Butler series
Source: Bought in Paperback
Rating: 4/5 stars
“Compared to the evils Finny and Snake were expecting in the wake of the Sphere Music Hall’s carnage, F.O.L. appears to be on the up-and-up. Here, the orphans receive a progressive, sophisticated education and the skills they’ll need to serve their new family after fledging. But a young girl’s abrupt departure piques the curiosity of Finny, Snake, and certain students. As they follow the clues, their instincts, and the most recently fledged child―what secrets might the grounds of this orphanage whisper in the dark of night…?”
Series Info/Source: This is the 34th volume in the Black Butler series. I bought this in paperback format.
Thoughts: It took me a bit to get back into this story (it would be nice if these had a quick synopsis up front). This book is more about the Aurora Society, which is a storyline that I have not been loving all that much. The illustration remains beautiful, and I did enjoy some of the new characters introduced.
I had forgotten that we were heading to the orphanage, F.O.L, to follow another part of the Aurora Society storyline. Finny and Snake head there posing as new staff, and at first, everything looks fine. Finny is surprised to see that his old friend from the circus, Doll, is there as well. However, things take a suspicious turn when one of the students has a Fledgling Day and mysteriously disappears. Finny and Snake end up joining forces with the other head students to solve the mystery of what happens to students after their Fledgling Day. They end up finding out that both F.O.L and Doll are not at all what they appear to be.
I continue to enjoy the illustration here, and it was fun to spend time with Finny and Snake. I didn’t love the story as much though. This Aurora Society storyline is getting old and felt boring to me last volume, and this volume wasn’t much better. However, once I remembered what was going on again I did get sucked into the mystery of solving what was happening at F.O.I. Some of the new characters introduced were fun as well (I really liked Theo).
I am kind of on the fence with this one. We have really strayed from some of the original storyline and seem to be stuck with this Aurora Society one, which I wish would wrap up soon. I have been missing Ciel and Sebastian, we don’t see them at all in this volume. I was wavering between 3 and 4 stars for this one because we just haven’t been making a lot of progress here. I went with 4 stars because I still enjoy the illustration, liked some of the new characters, and did end up getting sucked in to this mystery.
My Summary (4/5): Overall this is a decent addition to the Black Butler series but is still stuck in the Aurora Society storyline which is really starting to feel old to me. I miss some of my favorite characters (Ciel and Sebastian) which have been practically non-exisitant the last few volumes. I will continue reading this series because I feel like I’ve been reading it forever at this point, but the last few volumes have definitely been slower and less exciting than previous volumes.
The guy from Mars didn't know I was coming. "Hi?" he says, with an upward inflection that asks who I am, what I want, and why I'm standing here when he's already checked everybody off his list.(page 1, Red Star Rebels by Amy Kaufman)
I’m doing hard time here.
I’ll play you a lament if I can pick up the world’s smallest violin here.
I understood that reference!
Russian Judge (Red Guardian) gives your joke three of four paws down.
I’m in hell. I’m literally in hell.
Reading Level: Adult
Genre: Fantasy/LitRPG
Length: 16 hours and 57 minutes
Publisher: Soundbooth Theater
Release Date: August 16, 2023
ASIN: B0CDCM4F92
Stand Alone or Series: 1st book in the Mimic & Me series
Source: Audiobook from Audible
Rating: 3/5 stars
“Damon has become a monster…sort of.
Betrayed and left for dead by a group of slaving nobles, he thought there was nothing left but to bleed out as he counted the number of bricks on the ceiling. But fate had other plans.
Moments before Damon’s death, a gelatinous, gluttonous mimic reveals itself to him. Fearing a more gruesome and horrible death down the mimic’s gullet, Damon offers the food in his pack—sandwiches, cookies, and everything else! Encouraged by the (admittedly forced) generosity, the Mimic fuses with Damon, enhancing his body and transforming him into a half-man half-mimic monstrosity.
Once a poor, down-on-his-luck scout, Damon now has new capabilities far beyond anything anyone on Basania has seen before.
The only problem? His new bodymate’s insatiable hunger for cake…and human flesh.”
Series Info/Source: This is the first book in the Mimic & Me series. I got this on audiobook from Audible.com.
Thoughts: This was an okay LitRPG. I listened to this on audiobook and the audiobook quality was amazing. I wasn’t a huge fan of any of the characters here, but the premise is unique and fun. I never found myself really drawn into the story at all. The writing was only so-so and the dialogue felt awkward.
Damon is a Scout. Scouts are lower class adventurers in The System; they are taken advantage of by the nobles and never allowed to advance. All that changes for Damon when he offers a Mimic a sandwich, and the Mimic decides to merge with Damon. Now Damon is something very different, and he can gain powers, levels, and new skills by eating other adventurers. I mean it is a bit yucky but Damon is kind of here for it.
What did I like about this….Well, the audiobook quality was amazing, and the Mimic voices were especially well done. The premise is intriguing, and I thought watching Damon gain new and unique powers in odd ways was somewhat interesting.
What did I not like about this book? Well, all of the characters in here are kind of jerks and mostly out for themselves. I didn’t really enjoy any of them. Partly because of this, I never really found myself engaged in the story. The other reason it was hard to engage in the story is that this is basically a party-building book. Throughout the book, Damon encounters new people that end up joining him, hence forming an adventuring party by the end of the book. There isn’t a solid main storyline really.
I also struggled with the world here; it is controlled by The System which is never well explained. It is just accepted that all these characters live in this odd System run world. I am going to assume later books in the series get into that more, but I will never find out because I didn’t enjoy this enough to continue the series. The writing here is okay but not great, dialogue is awkward at times, and the pacing is only so-so.
My Summary (3/5): Overall this was an okay LitRPG with an intriguing premise that ended up not being all that engaging. I liked the premise and the audiobook quality. I didn’t enjoy the characters, the world, or the lack of an engaging story. I finished it but won’t be reading any other books in the series. If you enjoy classic dungeon delvers but with a twist and mean characters and lack of world-building don’t bother you, give this a try, I guess. It wasn’t awful, but it wasn’t that good either.
I received a review copy from the publisher. This does not affect the contents of my review and all opinions are my own.
A Box Full of Darkness by Simone St. James
Mogsy’s Rating (Overall): 4.5 of 5 stars
Genre: Mystery, Horror
Series: Stand Alone
Publisher: Penguin Audio (January 20, 2026)
Length: 10 hrs and 17 mins
Author Information: Website
Narrators: Anna Caputo, Saskia Maarleveld, Ari Fliakos
Simone St. James is one of those authors whose work I’ll happily read without needing to know much going in because I’m just so confident that she’ll deliver. Which is why I went into A Box Full of Darkness almost completely blind, preferring to be surprised. As such, it’s safe to say I had high expectations, but this book still managed to blow me away. From the start, the very moment I realized we would be heading back to Fell, New York, I just knew this was going to be something special.
If you’ve read the author’s The Sun Down Motel, the setting is going to feel familiar. While it’s not a perquisite, returning readers will catch the subtle references and understand the layers of uneasiness that seem to permeate the small town. A Box Full of Darkness is a new story, centering on Violet, Vail, and Dodie Esmie, three siblings who reunite at their childhood home in Fell after being summoned by what they believe is the specter of their younger brother Ben, who disappeared years ago when he was only six years old. “Come home,” was what the message had said. The siblings had never been able to deny their beloved Ben anything when he was still with them, and they can’t now either.
Violet, the oldest, has always seen ghosts, and she has no doubt in the significance of those two simple words. Vail, the middle child, has been making a living as a UFO investigator, drawn to the otherworldly and unexplained in order to fill the void left by Ben’s mysterious disappearance. And then there’s Dodie, a hand and hair model whose unresolved grief from losing her little brother has left her unable to form healthy emotional relationships. Of course, everything changes now that it appears Ben is back, even if it’s not in the way they’d hoped. But is the message really from him? Or might it be something far more sinister?
That hook alone is hard to resist, containing echoes of a haunted house story but also with strong emphasis on family relationships and shared trauma. Each sibling carries the loss of Ben differently, with the bulk of the first half delving into how the boy’s disappearance has defined their lives in separate ways. To be clear, if you’re looking for a horror novel that dives straight into the thrills and chills, this isn’t that kind of book. It’s slower, more deliberate, and very much character driven. That’s what ultimately gives this story its weight.
It’s also why the multiple perspectives work so well here. Alternating POVs between the siblings reinforces the tensions embedded in their shared history, and St. James gives each of them a distinct voice, their individual personalities coming through loud and clear in the audiobook. Dodie’s narration is flippant and performative, projecting a confidence that masks her fragility. Vail carries a heavy burden of guilt, convinced that if he had acted differently, the outcome might have changed. And then there’s Violet, whose ability to see ghosts has shaped her life in the most heartbreaking ways, forcing her to hide a part of herself, leading to a breakdown, a divorce, and a strained relationship with her daughter. At times, we experience the same memory or event in slightly different ways, depending on how it is remembered.
The horror itself is classic St. James. This is a paranormal story, but doesn’t play out like a conventional haunting, even if it does contain a few familiar elements. The mystery surrounding Ben unfolds in ways that feel unexpected, and I liked that it avoids the most predictable ideas. The style here is subtle, eerie, and atmosphere-heavy, perfect for creating a sense of dread by accumulation, where every odd sighting or fragment of local lore adds to the town’s mystique. Fell becomes much like Stephen King’s Derry or Hawkins in Stranger Things, a place that feels complicit in the horror.
In the end, A Box Full of Darkness is definitely one of Simone St. James’ stronger novels, and it made for an absolutely brilliant listen in audio format. It’s a paranormal horror that hits all the right notes, with family drama and a payoff that is absolutely worth it. If we get more books set in Fell, I’m all for it. Already looking forward to what she writes next.
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The Seventh Brideby T. Kingfisher
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