Blog


Welcome to the blog! Here you’ll find posts in categories including book reviews, screen bites (or micro film and TV reviews), and poetry.

  • The Last Vampire Review

    The Last Vampire Review

    An uneven YA mash-up of Pride and Prejudice and Twilight that is tonally between Netflix’s 2022 adaptation of Persuasion and the TV series Sleepy Hollow (2013-2017). A mostly light and entertaining read that doesn’t quite know what it wants to be or how to handle its own lore.  

  • Nightshade Review

    Nightshade Review

    A soapy and angst-filled new adult offering that blends romance, off-kilter humor, suspense, and dark academia. Nightshade is a surprisingly entertaining first installment in a new two-book series that may appeal to readers aged 18+ interested in a medium-spice, minimal-gore, dark romance. Readers should take note of the author’s content warnings.

  • Society of Lies Review

    Excellently wielding a dual POV, multiple-timeline structure, Brown’s Society of Lies delivers a riveting and suspenseful tale that probes into power, privilege, identity, and the frightening costs of belonging.

  • Love and Other Paradoxes Review

    Love and Other Paradoxes is a short, smile-inducing reverie that fuses humor, time travel, and romance. It pairs well with the romantic comedy About Time and Kaliane Bradley’s genre-blending The Ministry of Time.

  • Aisha Screen Bite

    Aisha Screen Bite

    Aisha Osagie, a young Nigerian woman caught in a years-long struggle to gain asylum in Ireland, navigates bureaucratic hurdles and social isolation while cautiously opening herself up to a friendship with Conor Healy, a young Irish man who works at her accommodation center.

  • In Want of a Suspect Review

    A delightful and cozy genre mash-up that reimagines Elizabeth Bennet and Mr. Darcy as young lawyers with sparkling chemistry on a quest to solve an incendiary murder case.

  • The Queen’s Spade Review

    A thought-provoking, fast-paced battle of wills set in the midst of the Victorian royal court that features a wry, fearsomely determined protagonist on a dangerous mission to claim vengeance and her autonomy.

  • The Book of M Review

    The Book of M Review

    A backlist title from 2018 that presents a winding and suspenseful journey through a dystopian world that feels similar to Ling Ma’s Severance and the films It Comes at Night and 28 Days Later…[it] leads readers through a near-constant state of upheaval that ultimately lands in an affecting and hopeful place.

  • On the Cusp of a New Year

    On the Cusp of a New Year

    …between an unknowable future and a lugubrious past.

  • The Courting of Bristol Keats Review

    An engrossing, well-paced first book in a new adult fantasy series by an author known for her YA fiction. With a style that mixes fantasy, romance, and literary elements, The Courting of Bristol Keats gives readers an intricate, otherworldly story of slow burn romance, betrayal, generational secrets, and self-discovery.