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The French Gift - Kirsty Manning

  5/5 ⭐ I am not the biggest fan of historical fiction, but there was something about this one that just captivated me into reading it all in one day. Maybe it was the fact that the present-day scenes were more frequent than the flashbacks to the past. Maybe it was the museum and artifact talk that made my little nerd heart happy. I really can't put my finger on what it was. But I was left at the end of this with the biggest satisfied grin on my face. It opens with the scene that changes the life of one of our main characters, Margot, on the night of a party that went horribly wrong. And the friendship that bloomed between her and Josephine, a resistance fighter, in a prison cell during World War II. Back in the present time, Evie is tasked with preparing Josephine's possessions for showcase in an exhibit to honor her life and work as a popular mystery author. Exploring her past raises more questions than answers as Evie, her son, Hugo, and the museum curator Clement search for...

Almond - Won-pyung Sohn

5/5 ⭐ It's hard to put into words what I was left feeling after finishing Almond. This was one that I had on my TBR list for a long time before I was given the chance to read it and once I started, I couldn't put it down. As a psychology student, I was vaguely familiar with the condition Yunjae had. It was something we had talked briefly about in my neuropsychology class when we were studying parts of the brain. But that was brief and only talked about it in a clinical sense. Reading Yunjae's thoughts and how he looked at things and how he 'felt' about things was fascinating. At times I laughed at his bluntness and how uninterested he seemed. Other times I cried for how sad he must have been without knowing how to feel. To grieve. I think it does raise the question is it ever a good thing to not feel emotions. To keep a clear head and not be reactive. And after reading this, I think the answer is no. To not feel is to not live. To not experience. And if anything Yun...

A Beeline to Murder - Meera Lester

4/5 ⭐ I was a little nervous when I started it that I wasn't going to like it because some of the dialogue is a bit much but I was pleasantly surprised! The setting was wonderfully designed and you felt like you were there in Las Flores, walking downtown and visiting the cute and quaint places Abby visits in her quest to solve the murder of French-Canadian pastry chef Jean-Louis Bonheur. She is aided by the victim's brother and her former colleagues in the police department to uncover the truth. And the victim's adorable and excitable dog, Sugar. I liked how the book was dotted with recipes for not only baked goodies but other things like doggie treats, chicken wraps and how to treat a bee sting. I wasn't the biggest fan of all the cheeky dialogue between Abby and her best friend Kat. Or when it was used elsewhere. There is an overabundance of nicknames used. It felt over the top and after a while it was annoying. But that was probably the only part I wasn't a fan o...

The Whispered Word - Ellery Adams

  4/5 ⭐ The second installment in the Secret, Book & Scone Society features more book quotes, more baked goodies, and more murder. I hadn't planned on picking up the second one so soon but when my hold came for it I jumped on and ended up reading it all in one day. I enjoyed that while this is still clearly a cozy mystery there is enough grit and non-coziness about it that makes it feel different than the rest. It is a good middle ground between a traditional cozy and traditional mystery in my opinion. Nora and her friends are having an uneventful night when a mysterious young woman shows up at the bookshop. Rail thin and quiet as a mouse, the newcomer is not talking about what secrets she holds. With her arrival, a new appraisal store opens offering residents a way to make some quick cash but the difference in the business partner's personalities gives Nora a reason to pause. And of course, we get some more romantic tension built up between Jed and Nora. They finally get t...

Payback's a Witch - Lana Harper

5/5 ⭐ Filled with a fantastical description, feisty characters, and a devious plan concocted by three spurned witches, this book is hard to put down. I am notorious for being picky when it comes to fantasy and romance stories, so finding one that was a combination of both that I loved was thrilling. Emmy Harlow has finally returned home in order to fulfill a centuries-long tradition in her family. I don't know if it was just me but I could feel the struggles Emmy was facing from page one. Harper managed to make her feel alive and genuine, which I am coming to find appeals to me when reading. Emmy fled her hometown nearly 10 years earlier and the wounds are still hurting. She's a little lost, a little pissed, and a little in love. Her homecoming is something she struggles with throughout most of the main story. The longing for a home but not knowing if it is the place she grew up in, the magical and wonderful Thistle Grove. Or if it is magicless, solitary Chicago to which she fl...

The Witches' Tree - M.C. Beaton

  3.5/5 ⭐ As a perpetual fan of an English detective, it was high time that I read an Agatha Raisin mystery. I had seen some of the tv series and I had really enjoyed them. This book, however, was a little painful for me. It started off okay. Maybe a little sudden when it got to the murder part but eh it's a murder mystery what do you expect? We're quickly introduced to the cast of characters in this book. One right after another. Repeated what felt like 100 times. There were so many characters, I kept forgetting who was who. Plus some we only say once or twice the entire book. Of which they ended up playing a major role in the story but we only saw them maybe three times. Obviously, there is no mistaking or forgetting Agatha Raisin. But this book left something to be desired in regards to her character. I wasn't looking for a goody two-shoes or anything like that. That's a different book. I can't say I was bored but I was over it after the fourth scene of her inter...

Under the Whispering Door - TJ Klune

5/5 ⭐ 💜   Possible Spoilers - Read with care Whatever I expected before picking this one up was thrown out the window and obliterated. I had known that TJ Klune was a popular and well-written author. I knew that this book was going to be good. I just didn't realize how good it would be. There is something reassuring about his writing that doesn't drag you down into it or anything like that. Rather it welcomes you in, offers you something comforting, and invites you to stay. And that is an invitation you can't turn down. Because you don't want to. You want to sit and stay and feel every emotion and feeling he writes, the happy and the sad. Because it feels genuine. This is a story that talks about death at length and at points in vivid detail. It walks you through the five stages of grief in such a way that you almost forget that it is essential to the story. Not that it becomes insignificant, rather it happens so fluidly and naturally. It's never choppy or overly i...