Saturday, 6 September 2025

August 2025 Reading Wrap Up


August wasn't amazing by any means, I still haven't fully kicked the slumpy feeling at all. Usually I can rely on my Kindle reads getting me through the month but I started two library borrows and just couldn't get in to either of them so I feel like I'm just not in the mood to read much sadly. I read 7 books in August so here's my thoughts on them. 

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Saturday, 16 August 2025

July Reading Wrap Up 2025


This is a super late wrap up but I just felt like writing a post cause I've been going through some of my old blog posts and I just find it interesting reading my thoughts on books I've read. While I'm writing this, it's been a super slumpy couple of months. June, July and August haven't been great for my reading and I'm struggling to get into anything at the moment so I just about managed 6 books last month. The plus side is that nothing I've been reading has been less then a 3 star so at least there's that.

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Saturday, 5 April 2025

March 2025 Reading Wrap Up

I didn't get round to posting a February wrap up but I'm happy to say I've had a fairly average reading year so far and am 11 books ahead of my reading goal. I enjoyed everything that I read this month with nothing getting lower than a 3.5. I finished a popular YA trilogy (minus the prequels), read a backlist book that I've had on my shelf for 10+ years and dived into a bunch of 2025 new releases. Here's my thoughts on everything...

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Monday, 3 February 2025

January 2025 Reading Wrap Up


January was a pretty successful month, all things considered. I had two weeks off work to get some reading done and I'm glad to say that I enjoyed pretty much everything I read this month! I also completed the January Pages challenge on Storygraph which means I read every day in January, hooray! Here's my thoughts on all 10 books I read.
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Saturday, 11 January 2025

December 2024 Reading Wrap Up


Haven't done a monthly wrap up in over 2 years but new year, new blogging motivation! After a really slumpy few months, December was a pleasant surprise and I managed to read 13 books, a mixture of novels and short stories.

Heads up, these reviews are going to be a bit all over the place cause I read most of them over a month ago and my memory is not the best when it comes to remembering plot details 😂. 

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Thursday, 8 September 2022

August 2022 Reading Wrap Up


I'm pleased to say that August was a much better month for me with 9 books read (plus a DNF), it helped that I had a week off and a bank holiday weekend too. I enjoyed pretty much all of what I read so a fairly successful month. 

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I liked this Japanese Cinderella inspired story about a young girl desperate to escape her cruel stepfamily and flee her town but finds herself befriending a dragon and a witch which sends her on a journey to save her land. It definitely felt magical and I enjoyed the characters and the fairytale feel of it but I felt that there should have been more focus on the dragons and less on the endless list of chores Alliana had to complete. You can read my full review here

Despite the mixed reviews, I enjoyed this contemporary novella about a young woman's spiral amidst her job of reviewing disturbing content for a social media platform. I was really captivated by the toxic workplace environment and the way that information spread across the internet can be so influential. I found the situation fascinating and disturbing in equal measure. I can understand why this wouldn't be everyone's cup of tea but I was gripped and read it one sitting. 

Whistle in the Dark by Emma Healey 

This was a much slower mystery then I was anticipating, revolving around a mother who's teenager goes missing on holiday but shows up after four days refusing to talk about what happened to her. I was expecting a dark mystery/thriller but this was a lot more literary, with a strong focus on the relationship between mother and daughter. I did find the characters extremely authentic in the way they spoke and acted and found the mystery of what happened to Lana intriguing. I think the beginning was really strong but parts of the middle tended to slow the pacing down. The strong writing helps to keep this from feeling dull and the ending left me surprised but satisfied.  


On Midnight Beach by Marie-Louise Fitzpatrick

One of my favourites of the month was this Irish YA set during the heatwave of 1976 and following a group of teenagers who discover a dolphin has taken up residence near their town's beach. I think it helped that I read this during a heatwave, I speeded through this book whilst sat outside in my garden baking under the sun! The writing is beautiful and vivid, it paints such a strong picture of life in 70's Ireland. I loved the direction the plot went in with the combination of the romance, the rivalry between two towns and the resulting tragedy. A really underrated gem of a book. 

The Unexpected Everything by Morgan Matson     

Morgan Matson remains my go to for YA contemporary books. This is my fifth book by Matson and whilst it's probably my least favourite, it was still really fun and enjoyable. Her books are perfect summer reads and this one about a disgraced politicians daughter finding herself walking dogs for a summer job and falling in love a long the way is extremely adorable. I loved Andie's friendship group a lot as well as her rebuilding her relationship with her dad. I didn't adore the romance in here (although it was pretty sweet at times) and I also felt it was just too long at over 500 pages with lots of unnecessary chapters.   


Who is Tom Ditto? by Danny Wallace

A random library borrow about a man who's girlfriend disappears and he discovers she had an extremely odd hobby of following strangers in order to inject more excitement and spontaneity into her life. Through a group of people who share this interest he finds himself with new friends and a new outlook on life. This was one of those fine reads. Interesting plot, some comedic lines and easy to get through. I liked what it said about taking control of your life and not just doing the same thing every day, that you need to actually live. It didn't leave much of a lasting impression though. 

The Ghost of Gosswater by Lucy Strange      

An historical mystery middle grade that hit that spooky spot. Set in the late 19th century, a young girl is ejected from her family home after the death of her father but discovers that she wasn't his daughter at all. Now sent to live with her real father, she encounters a ghostly presence which brings up questions about her true family and the secrets they were keeping. An atmospheric read with an intrepid main character in Aggie. So many elements that I loved particularly the gothic mansion and the cemetery situated on a misty island!  


Beguiled by Cyla Panin

I really wanted to enjoy this one more then I did because I can't resist a fairytale-esque story especially when it involves wishes gone terribly wrong. When Ella's loom breaks she makes a request to the Bean-Nighe by the river for help and at first it feels to good to be true. She's making beautiful fabric and has become involved with a handsome, mysterious man. But the more she weaves, the more she finds that she may have bargained away more then she initially thought. I really liked this premise and I thought Ella was a strong, independent character who grows so much throughout the book. I struggled with the execution though as it felt sluggish at times and the overall arc was too obvious. You can read my full review here

The Fellowship of the Ring by J.R.R. Tolkien    

It's annoying that I DNF'd the audiobook of this one in the end because I got almost 65% in but considering this is a 23 hour long audiobook, I still had a long way to go! Andy Serkis is an immensely talented narrator who really brought the story to life but it just wasn't holding my attention. It was just too long and there's way too many songs for my liking! This is a re-read so maybe I'll just stick to the physical books in future.    


Ravenfall by Kalyn Josephson 

I completely adored this paranormal/fantasy middle grade about a girl who can see death who teams up with a boy to discover who killed his parents and who is now hunting him down. This was wonderfully magical, I mean the setting is a sentient inn that delivers luggage and holds grudges! There's also a family with psychic abilities and a pet jabberwocky disguised as a cat! It was so much fun with an exciting plot and loveable characters. I cannot wait for the sequel! You can read my full review here.  

What did you read in August? Have you read any of these? Leave a comment below. Happy Reading!    

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Saturday, 6 August 2022

July 2022 Reading Wrap Up


I read 7 books in July AKA my average! Luckily, everything was a four star or above so quality wise it was a success. August will be my month though! I have a whole week off work coming up which means plenty of time for reading!

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Monday, 4 July 2022

June 2022 Reading Wrap Up


So June was not it! A lack of motivation and feeling generally slumpy meant I only just managed 6 books this month. There's nothing below a three star in here so it's not a total fail. Onwards and upwards!

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Thursday, 2 June 2022

May 2022 Reading Wrap Up


I'm extremely happy to say that I had a really successful reading month in May and read a total of 11 books. A lot of this is down to taking part in Becca and the Books 48-hour readathon where I read three books over a weekend and has given me a surge of reading energy since. I'd say quality wise it was pretty good too, no five stars but mostly 4-star ratings with a few 3 and then a sneaky 1 star as well. I'm hoping that June will be just as good with my participation in the Whatever-You-Want-A-Thon and Clear Ur Shit readathons happening month long.     

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Saturday, 7 May 2022

April 2022 Reading Wrap Up


Isn't it the most frustrating thing when you start off the month pretty well and are fairly consistent as the weeks go on and then the last week just completely throws you off and you get really slumpy. THE. WORST. Genuinely thought April was going to be a turning point but I think I'm just going to have to accept that my new monthly average is around 6 books now. Remember October 2020 when I read 15 books in a month? How I miss that 😩     

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Monday, 11 April 2022

March 2022 Reading Wrap Up


I slightly dipped in March, only reading 5 books but I'm blaming it on me feeling slightly slumpy towards the end of the month. I'm not gonna dwell on it, just gonna look ahead to April and all the books I'm excited to get to!   

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Tuesday, 8 March 2022

February 2022 Reading Wrap Up


Oh hi, looks like I'm back with a monthly wrap up after 4 months. Life is crazy and therefore I have next to no time to draft blog posts even though I am still reading. Blog posts may be sporadic but I'm excited to talk about all the books I read this month, all - of them. 

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Friday, 8 October 2021

September 2021 Reading Wrap Up


Ok, so the fixed TBR thing didn't work as I only read 6 books in September and none of them were physical books. Anyone else struggle with finding the time and motivation to pick up your current read, I just seem to gravitate towards other things at the minute. (But i'm still buying books 😬). I'm not even going to bother saying 'I hope next month is better cause we're a week in and I still haven't finished anything so let's just skip to the wrap up 😂.

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Locke & Key by Joe Hill & Gabriel Rodriguez

This was an incredibly entertaining audiobook (although extremely long, it took me almost a month to finish it) that had me gripped. The voice cast is incredible and the amount of work that went into the production is so evident, this was such an immersive, high quality listening experience. I have watched the first season of the Netflix show which is how I know about this series but I will say that I agree with some reviewers who felt that this probably works better as a companion to the physical graphic novels as sometimes I did feel a little out of the loop. 

This one was a random library borrow that caught my eye whilst browsing and I ended up enjoying it a fair bit. It follows a 17 year old girl in 60's Yorkshire and is essentially her coming of age story about figuring out her future and the people in her life. I liked the writing style, it was witty and it had a lot of heart. I did find it sometimes got a little melodramatic especially with the character of her dad's new fiancée which became tedious at times. It was fun though and I appreciated a YA novel with zero love interests in sight!

To Break a Covenant by Alison Ames   

I jumped at the chance to take part in the blog tour for this atmospheric, spooky YA novel about a small town haunted by a past mine accident and all the weird stuff that happens to anyone who ventures down there. Focusing on a group of teenage girls (loved the friendships in here!) and their experience with the strange phenomena, this was such a fun read that deserves so much more hype. I especially loved the interspersed transcripts of  dialogue of various ghost hunting shows that have visited the town in the past. It gave us a deeper insight into the community and the residents. You can read my full review (plus my inspired playlist) here.            


The Wolf's Curse by Jessica Vitalis

My second blog tour of the month was this fantasy middle grade about a 12 year old boy who is 'cursed' with the ability to see a wolf and cast out by his community as the wolf is seen as an omen of death. Accused of controlling the wolf and being behind the deaths in town, he goes on the run and must attempt to clear his name. This was a beautifully told story that handles death and grief incredibly well, it had me so emotional by the ending. The narrator took me a little while to get used to but it's such a clever choice by the author, the characters are precious and overall this is a story that will stick with me. You can read my full review here.  

Dust & Grim by Chuck Wendig  

My last blog tour of the month and another middle grade, this one's a horror/fantasy from bestselling author Chuck Wendig in his middle grade debut. Two rival siblings are thrown together when Molly comes looking for her inheritance and finds her brother running a monster mortuary on their family estate. In an attempt to get her money Molly unleashes a rogue creature into the cemetery and now the siblings must team up to prevent a disaster. Enjoyable and funny, it definitely had a lot going for it. I just wanted to learn more about the actual funeral business but the book seemed to steer away from that side of the plot. You can read my full review here.      


All Eyes on Us by Kit Frick

My last read of the month was a YA thriller, similar to Pretty Little Liars, that was available to read on Audible that I chose cause I'd been in a thriller mood. I've struggled with how to rate this, I keep going between a 2.5 and a 3 star rating as a lot of this book was fairly meh for me. I wasn't overly fussed about the characters or the plot really, the dual perspective is interesting but I just wasn't invested enough. The side plot of Rosalie hiding her sexuality due to her religion was possibly the most interesting part which shouldn't be the case in a thriller. Everything was just fine for me right down to the ending. I'd be up for giving Kit Frick's other books a shot though cause her writing style wasn't the problem. 

September was fine in terms of reading, I just hope this semi-slump doesn't continue for much longer! What did you read in September? Leave a comment below. Happy Reading!
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Friday, 3 September 2021

August 2021 Reading Wrap Up

 

August is over (!) and I'm apparently sticking with my average of 7 books a month. I think though, hopefully this won't jinx it, that my reading has picked back up again as I'm finally out of my weird not picking up a physical book for weeks thing that I had going on. I've decided to go back to a fixed TBR for this month too, mostly because I'm participating in a readathon and also because I'm hoping that having the books already planned out will help with my motivation for the month. 

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Silent Victims (Prime Suspect #3) by Lynda La Plante

I finished off my bind up of the three Prime Suspect cases, with this one possibly being my favourite? They all seemed to get around the same rating, fairly average due to the fact that they were entertaining at the time but not particularly rememberable. La Plante always writes really gritty, dark crime books that have all the grim realities of policing especially for women in the 90's. If that's your thing check these out but be aware they contain a fair amount of sexism, racism and homophobia. 


S.T.A.G.S by M.A. Bennett

This was my main audiobook for the month, I got it free on World Book Day and decided to give it a shot whilst I was in the mood for mysteries. I've heard a lot of mixed things about this book and unfortunately whilst I liked what the book was trying to do, a lot of the plot points and dialogue didn't really work for me. This book follows a northern working class girl beginning at a prestigious boarding school who's invited by an elite group of students to a country estate for the weekend. It tried to be this dark, tense thriller but I just didn't feel particularly threatened by any of the events mostly because I couldn't take the posh characters seriously. They were such stereotypes. Other things like the fact none of the students own phones because they prefer traditional values just weren't realistic either. It was entertaining for what it was but I don't know if I'm invested enough to continue the series. 

My Sister, the Serial Killer by Oyinkan Braithwaite  

A super short, fast-paced thriller that kept me captivated from start to finish. Oyinkan Braithwaite has such a readable writing style, with short chapters that are still satisfying. I really enjoyed this examination of sisterhood and murder, darkly funny and entertaining. This would be perfectly adapted as a mini-series, hopefully it's already been optioned cause I'd love to see these characters portrayed on screen. 

My lowest rated for the month was this YA mystery that revolved around a group of teens invited to a murder mystery dinner, each with their own secrets about an event that happened one year prior, and how the night turns into a mysterious persons revenge plan. It was all just a bit far fetched and ridiculous for me. The writing was kind of odd in places, the characters were completely forgettable and the ending was so stupid. The plot had so much potential but it failed in terms of execution. If you like the bizarreness of Riverdale and Pretty Little Liars then you might enjoy this but I wasn't a fan. 

The Psychology of Time Travel by Kate Mascarenhas

I'm officially a fan of time travel novels! This was so much fun and I loved the blend of sci-fi and mystery that this had going on. Set over three different time periods, we follow three women involved with the business of time travel as well as a murder that connects everyone together. This had such an original and interesting premise and it delivered on all fronts. I loved the writing, the plot, the characters. Sometimes the scientific stuff would go over my head a little and the timelines could get confusing but overall I had such a good time with this book and I'm excited to read more from Mascarenhas.  


Unspeakable Things by Jess Lourey

Another mystery/thriller, this one is set in 80's small town Minnesota and follows a pre-teen girl as she comes to terms with the secrets her parents keep from the rest of the town as well as the horrific incidents of boys being attacked in her community. Whilst this is pitched as a thriller and there is a mystery sub-plot, I'd say this story mainly focuses on Cassie and her family with the attacks happening in the background although Cassie does attempt to solve the crimes throughout. I really liked Cassie as a character and this book was definitely an interesting read especially with the author being inspired by a true story that happened in her hometown. Another reviewer described it as a small town domestic drama, more character driven then plot.    

Strange the Dreamer by Lainie Taylor 

I finally finished this book! After starting it in June and then not picking it up for over a month, I managed to smash out the last 250 pages in two days to get it done. I had such a major slump with this book but beside how long it took, this really was a wonderfully told story. Lainie Taylor's writing is stunning! There are some beautiful passages in here with gorgeously vivid descriptions. The plot is imaginative and intriguing and the characters of Lazlo and Sarai and their relationship is just heartbreaking perfection. The only reason I didn't give it five stars was because of how long it took me to finish it but other then that, I loved it completely. 

Lastly, we have only my second DNF of the year! I was actually on the blog tour for this one and was due to do a review but I just couldn't get any further then about 25% in so changed my post to a spotlight instead. This is a contemporary romance about a young woman who discovers her boyfriend is potentially cheating on her after she travels to meet up with him for her birthday and his phone has ended up in the possession of a lyft driver. This lyft driver then begins texting with her and she spends her birthday following his instructions for the perfect day. A year later she decided to track him down in order to finally meet him in person. I just couldn't get behind the set up of the plot, it just seemed really unbelievable to me and I didn't understand how she was falling in love with this guy she'd only texted for a couple of hours. In the end I didn't care enough to continue any further. 

That brings us up to speed on everything I read in August, I'm excited for September and all the books I plan on reading. You can check out my September TBR here! Happy Reading!
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