Grade A #BookReview: In the Devil’s Nebula by Anna Hackett + #Giveaway

Grade A #BookReview: In the Devil’s Nebula by Anna Hackett + #GiveawayIn the Devil's Nebula (Phoenix Adventures #2) by Anna Hackett
Format: eARC
Source: author
Formats available: paperback, ebook
Genres: science fiction romance
Series: Phoenix Adventures #2
Pages: 276
Published by Anna Hackett on March 18, 2026
Purchasing Info: Author's WebsiteAmazonKobo
Goodreads

She wants her freedom, and only one daring starship pilot can help her get it.

Previously published - has been lightly edited.

On a deadly mission to the lawless Devil's Nebula, Commander Zayn Phoenix lost it all: his career, his friend, his sanity. Now the former Strike Wing pilot fills his days with dangerous adventures with his treasure hunter brothers. But his nights are haunted by the friend he lost.

Then a beautiful assassin lures him into a hunt. An assassin with the face of a dead woman.

Ria Dante wants to escape the Assassin’s Guild, and she needs the help of the man she’s been dreaming about for months. What she doesn’t need is the distraction of Zayn’s muscled body and charming grin. And she definitely doesn’t need him thinking she’s his dead friend.

Zayn and Ria embark on a perilous adventure for an ancient artifact used in the infamous assassination of old Earth president, Abraham Lincoln. As the undeniable heat between them intensifies, they head straight into the heart of the Devil's Nebula, and collide with the ghosts of their pasts.

My Review:

This is the second book in Anna Hackett’s re-release of her Phoenix Adventures series, and I was reminded yet again of how much I loved this series back when it came out ten or so years ago. I’m also pleased beyond imagining that the stories – at least so far and we’ll certainly see – are still just as good a decade later.

In other words, no suck fairy has invaded while I wasn’t looking and I’m SO HAPPY about that.

Instead, the re-releases remind me both of my original love for the series AND for the genre called SFR or ‘Science Fiction Romance’. It’s every bit as good – if not a bit better IMHO – as ‘romantasy’. It just needs a catchy new genre name to be every bit as popular. Some marketing genius needs to get started on that RIGHT AWAY!

OK, I’ll get down off my soap box and back to the book. At least, I’ll TRY.

When I read this back then, in the still early days of Reading Reality (which is what makes this book SO APPROPRIATE for this year’s Blogo-Birthday Celebration) I loved this series AND I loved this second book in the series even more than I did the first book, At Star’s End.

Which I honestly forgot about over the intervening years. But it’s still true. I did enjoy this one just a touch better – and I think that boils down to Zayn and Ria. (Not that Dathan and Eos weren’t fun.) It feels like Zayn and Ria are more equal. Both that they are more equally badass AND that they are more equally fucked up emotionally.

They are both missing pieces – and even some of the same pieces. Both have had their dreams stolen – and by the same people. Both need to fight to get those dreams back – and not take their losses out on each other OR shutting down, which they are both prone to do.

Original cover for In the Devil’s Nebula

Part of what I loved about Devil’s Nebula back in the day, and the series as a whole, is the way that it manages to extrapolate out into a far future where Earth is mostly gone and yet still hearken back to the history that we’re familiar with.

In At Star’s End, they were chasing a fragment of the Mona Lisa. In the Devil’s Nebula, they’re after the gun that John Wilkes Booth used to assassinate Abraham Lincoln. The ‘Lincoln Derringer’ really does exist, and it really does have the storied history that is ascribed to it in THIS story.

Like my recent re-read of At Star’s End, I remembered the original story of In the Devil’s Nebula in general but not in specific. Specifically not the humongous secret that teases at the reader – and the characters – for much of the story and is revealed as a big twist of an emotional scene. Looking back at my earlier review, (HERE) I did figure out the secret then and did this time as well, but from entirely different starting points.

Last time around, it was due to a book I’d recently finished at the time. This time around, I had a guess but wasn’t sure whether the situation was more akin to The Ghost Brigades in John Scalzi’s Old Man’s War series or Captain Marvel’s origin story in the Marvel Cinematic Universe. I’ll leave you to figure it out for yourself because In the Devil’s Nebula is well worth a read or re-read.

Escape Rating A: I did like this just a bit more than At Star’s End both times around. So this is still a Grade A read to beat that first book’s A-. Part of that is the characters and part is that this second book already has some scaffolding for its universe to build onto. I’ll let you be the judge of that – which I sincerely hope you will.

Science Fiction Romance is still very much my jam, and I’m so happy to have a classic in the genre back and available again. I’m looking forward – VERY MUCH – to the re-release of the rest of the At Star’s End series and hopefully more in this universe.

And in the meantime, I recently finished Marc, the latest book in the author’s CURRENT science fiction adventure and romance series, Hunter Squad, and now I’m looking forward to the re-release of the third book in the Phoenix Adventures series, On a Rogue Planet, orbiting this way in April.

 

There’s a giveaway every day in this Blogo-Birthday Celebration. Today’s giveaway is the winner’s choice of any one of Anna Hackett’s terrific romances (up to $20 US), whether your jam is SFR, action adventure, romantic suspense or contemporary. She has something for every romance reader and they are all FANTASTIC!

Fifteenth Annual Blogo-Birthday Celebration Week and GIVEAWAY!

Today marks the start of Reading Reality’s FIFTEENTH Blogo-Birthday Celebration Week. When I looked ahead this time last year, I realized that this year’s celebration would be weird as both Reading Reality’s official blogoversary, April 4, and my own birthday, April 5, both fell on a weekend. This time last year, I thought I’d be conducting the Celebration Week BEFORE the official dates. I changed my mind. I’m starting today. Because why not celebrate early?

As is always true for my Blogo-Birthday Celebration, this is a Hobbit Birthday. Like Bilbo’s “eleventy-first” (111th) birthday in The Fellowship of the Ring, I’m giving presents away every day this week, starting with today and finishing up on my actual birthday on Sunday – which also happens to be Easter Sunday this year.

Reading Reality began on April 4, 2011, under the name “Escape Reality, Read Fiction”, which is also the reason the ratings are “Escape Ratings” and “Reality Ratings”. This blog, and all of the other reading/writing/reviewing activities that have grown up around it over the past FIFTEEN years have turned into both my longest and my absolute favorite job. At least in part because I created it out of things that I wanted to do, and can do the work at whatever time feels right to me.

As this is Reading Reality’s 15th blogoversary, I’ve been thinking a lot in recent weeks about how it all came about, and more importantly how it works, how I work, how it works for me, and how important it’s been to my continued health and well-being. Because giving up the structure of a ‘regular job’ is hard, no matter how or why one does it or how much one looks forward to not having to deal with the parts of it that are, let’s say, less than stellar.

Which leads to this essay, titled “Purpose, Structure, Control” because those are my three keys to living without the structure, and the ballast, of a regular day job. As I say in the essay, technically, I’m retired. But the reality is that I work every day and I’m happy to do so because I’ve come up with a PURPOSE I find stimulating and fulfilling, a STRUCTURE that makes it possible and keeps me focused, and that I have enough CONTROL of my circumstances that I can make those things work for me most of the time.

And if those are things that you’re thinking about – or even in the middle of – or if you’re just wondering what “the rest of the story” is and why I’m writing this here and now, read on.

Purpose, Structure and Control

My very first post on Reading Reality, then called “Escape Reality, Read Fiction”, occurred on April 4, 2011. Fifteen whole years ago this Saturday. How time flies when you’re having fun – and I am.

I was then, too, but I was also on the horns of a huge dilemma. It was the middle of the ‘Great Recession’, we were in the process of moving to Atlanta for Galen’s job, all while I was in the midst of my own job search. I didn’t think it would too terribly long, as there are oodles of libraries in the Atlanta metro area. But during the recession, all the public library systems in the area were operating under hiring freezes. There were no jobs to be had – at least not in the immediate term.

Which left me with a big problem. I had to do something with myself. Something productive. Something that kept me in touch with my profession. Something that gave me a reason to get up in the morning and would keep me busy and mentally occupied for as long as it took to get another job.

In other words, I needed a purpose. And playing video games all day was just not going to cut it – as tempting as that prospect might have been.

I did get another library job. It took 18 months and a move to Seattle. It also wasn’t a terrific choice, but it was what was available. After two years I realized that it wasn’t working for me, that working for myself on Reading Reality was more interesting, more fulfilling and yes, more purposeful, and I was fortunate enough to be able to retire early.

I never stopped working on/at Reading Reality while we were in Seattle, and since we moved back to the ATL it’s been my primary occupation. Technically, I’m retired. But in reality, I work every day and plan on continuing to do so indefinitely.

At least in part because I learned a lesson from my parents. My dad retired at 63 and died six months later because he just didn’t know what to do with himself without the purpose, the identity, and in his case the sheer adrenaline of solving crises and having a job. My mom worked very part time and mostly for favors rather than cash until her final illness at the age of 89. My mom was already ‘retired’ when my dad retired, but they did not have the same ideas for retirement – at all. My mom was very much a homebody and my dad wanted to learn to fly. (I mean that literally. He was taking flying lessons AGAIN when he died and hadn’t even told my mom he was doing so.) As much as I am like my dad in a whole lot of ways, this is definitely a case where I’m much better off being like my mom.

However, the thing about planning for retirement is that there is LOTS of focus on the financial aspects. Which is, of course, uber important. If one can’t afford to retire, what one is going to do when one retires matters a whole lot less. At least, not until you end up like my dad, retired and completely at loose ends.

Because a job, any job, even a job that you utterly hate, does a whole lot more than just provide a paycheck. It becomes the structure of your entire life. Not that there aren’t plenty of other things in that life, but everything has to get scheduled around work hours and work locations and whether or not you’re on call for work, who you interact with every day at work, and a whole lot of your identity gets tied to what you do and where you do it.

When you retire, ALL of that goes away, not just the paycheck. While the job may be terrific, terrible or something in between, we humans need all the rest of that stuff. We need a reason to get up in the morning. We need a purpose. We need something to structure our days around or nothing ever gets done.

And in order for that reason and structure to work, we need some control over what goes into both of those things.

Or, at least, this human does. Based on conversations with a lot of other humans who have gotten outside of the forced structure of a day job – including starting a business of one’s own or the day job of being a stay at home parent – the issue applies to more than just retirement.

That’s where Reading Reality came in for me, as well as the life-structure that makes it possible.

I needed a thing to do every day. That’s the way I’m wired. I’m better off with lots of short goals rather than one big one. Which is why I latched onto writing book reviews instead of taking a stab at writing the Great American Fantasy Novel. (Yes, I thought about it. I still occasionally think about it.)

My purpose is to share what I read with whoever is interested in reading my reviews. Not just at Reading Reality, but also at Library Journal – and anyplace else that will have me. So every single day, there’s a book to read and a review to write or an event to post about. I can work ahead, and I do when I’m on vacation, but there’s always a thing that needs to be done.

Yes, I could skip a day. There’s no one making me do any of this. But I feel better if I have a thing every day. Which is also part of the point of all of this. There were all sorts of things I could have chosen to do. People often speak of all the things they ‘could’ do in retirement. The trick, for me, lay in finding something that I WOULD do.

I could join a club. I could volunteer somewhere. But I’m not, as my mother said of herself, a joiner. I’m an introvert and at this point in my life I recognize that and work with it instead of against it. Reading – and writing – aren’t just things I could do, but they are things I recognized that I WOULD do. In fact, the writing makes the reading more interesting and enjoyable because I’m sharing it.

The same thing applies with other aspects of my working retirement. Regular exercise is important. So is interacting with people besides my husband. There are lots of ways that I could accomplish both of those things but I needed a method that I would enjoy and therefore sustain. So I go out every day for either Pilates or strength and cardio training, and structure my day around that session. I do individual sessions because I know that I won’t ‘flake’ on a one-on-one session the way I might for a class.

The idea is to work WITH my natural tendencies and not pretend that I’m going to magically change who I am because I don’t have a regular job to work around anymore.

Which leads to the last part of my three steps to a busy retirement, and that’s control. The reality is that Galen and I were never going to retire at the same time. A lot of people who write into advice columns do so because the retirement they’ve planned on involves the active participation of other people in SPECIFIC ways that don’t pan out. In order for this to be the thing that sustains me, I have to have a big portion of agency in it. That agency part is true for everyone, whatever their individual circumstances. If you’re planning something that is intended to sustain YOU but you aren’t the primary driver of it, you’re in for endless frustration and dissatisfaction.

If you’ve stuck with me this far, you might be wondering what any of the above has to do with Reading Reality and its 15th Blogoversary. For me, they go hand in hand. I started Reading Reality to keep myself busy and mentally occupied, and it has sustained me and my mental and physical health for 15 years, and I have no intention of stopping. Not any of it.

But all of this feeds back into what I said earlier. There is plenty of advice available when it comes to the financial aspects of retirement. My dad was an accountant, he knew all the numbers about whether his retirement was financially viable for them. But there’s not nearly as much information available when it comes to what a person needs to do with themselves once they’ve retired. What parts of their working life structure they should think about replicating or replacing, what they can do – and more importantly what they will realistically do – to stay mentally and physically active.

And that’s where all of this comes in. I review books in the hopes that I can reach readers looking for something good to read. I wrote this, in part to get my thoughts in order but mostly in the hopes of reaching people thinking about what they’ll do when they start thinking about a new structure to sustain them after their day job is done. Whether my dad would have listened to something like this then, or even now if he were still around, if this helps one person then the writing of it was worthwhile.

As worthwhile as Reading Reality itself has been for me these past 15 years. To infinity and BEYOND!

So, to make a long story short – or not as the case might be – that’s how and why I’m still here, 15 years later, at Reading Reality. It’s been my longest “job” and also the most fulfilling and rewarding one that I’ve ever had. And I’m thrilled to share book reviews and bookish news and especially cat pictures with each and every one of you who has followed me on this journey.

Which leads right to the part that you’ve all been waiting for! Today’s giveaway. On this first day of Reading Reality’s Fifteenth Blogo-Birthday Celebration Week, I’m giving away (1) $25 Amazon Gift Card and (1) $25 Barnes & Noble Gift Card. The Amazon Gift Card is an electronic gift card, and it will be emailed to the lucky winner. If said winner is outside the US but in the vicinity of a local Amazon in their own currency, it can be the equivalent of $25 (US) from their Amazon in their local currency. If you have a local bookstore in your area (US or otherwise) that sells gift cards over the interwebs, I am happy to make that arrangement instead.

The Barnes & Noble Gift Card is a physical card that’s been sitting unexpired and unused in my desk drawer. It will need to be snail-mailed to the winner. So that winner will need to be in the US somewhere. (Note that the giveaways are separate. The first is for the Amazon GC and the second for the B&N GC. If you qualify for both, you absolutely CAN enter both!)

As always and forever, from the bottom of my bookish and cat-loving heart, my heartfelt thanks to each and every one of you who has been a part of this adventure. There’s more to come!

The Sunday Post AKA What’s on my (Mostly Virtual) Nightstand 3-29-26

This is the first “normal” weekend we’ve had in a while. The floors are finished, the handymen have come and gone after fixing several years of minor stuff that accumulated into a fairly big list, and the cats are finally settling down into some slightly different behavior patterns. (The night that the cats decided to test the new acoustics AT 2AM will live in infamy). Today’s cat picture is of Hecate, cuddled up to Galen, proclaiming that he belongs entirely to her with every single glare.

But the change in feline dynamics means that Luna is cuddled up on Galen’s other side – closer than Hecate has ever let her without hissing if not a bit of ‘pawsticuffs’. Galen has become the feline version of the Berlin Wall, and he’s not unhappy about it at all!

This coming week is going to be different from the usual, but this time in an excellent way. Tomorrow marks the beginning of Reading Reality’s 15th Blogo-Birthday Celebration Week. For those who are new to the celebration, it’s a “blogo-birthday” because Reading Reality’s blogoversary is April 4, and my own birthday is April 5.

As always, it’s a ‘Hobbit Birthday’ meaning that I’ll be giving presents all week as part of the celebration. Mostly books, because of course, books. I’ve chosen three books to review and giveaway this year, an old favorite re-released and newly re-available in Anna Hackett’s In the Devil’s Nebula, a new favorite series by a long-time favorite author in Charles Todd’s Legacy of the Dead, and a new favorite series newly available in the U.S. after a best-selling run in the U.K.: Tim Sullivan’s The Politician.

Come one, come all and join in ALL the fun!

Current Giveaways:

$10 Gift Card or $10 Book in the Chasing Rainbows Giveaway Hop (ENDS TUESDAY!!!)
$10 Gift Card or $10 Book PLUS EVENT-WIDE AMAZON/PAYPAL PRIZE in The Spring Giveaway Event!
$10 Gift Card or $10 Book in the Spring 2026 Seasons of Books Giveaway Hop

Blog Recap:

A- #BookReview: The Legend of the Nine-Tailed Fox by Katrina Kwan
A- #AudioBookReview: Tiny House, Big Love by Olivia Dade
B #BookReview: Trace Elements by Jo Walton and Ada Palmer
A- #BookReview: Hunter Squad: Marc by Anna Hackett
B- #BookReview: Magic and Mischief at the Wayside Hotel by Elizabeth Everett
Stacking the Shelves (698)

Coming This Week:

Blogo-Birthday Celebration Week (#Feature, #Essay, #GIVEAWAY)
In the Devil’s Nebula by Anna Hackett (#BookReview, #Giveaway)
Honey Bunny Giveaway Hop (#BlogHop, #Giveaway)
Legacy of the Dead by Charles Todd (#BookReview, #Giveaway)
The Politician by Tim Sullivan (#BookReview, #Giveaway)
Stacking the Shelves BLOGOVERSARY EDITION (#Giveaway)
Sunday Post / Virtual Nightstand  BIRTHDAY EDITION (#Giveaway)

Stacking the Shelves (698)

If pretty is as pretty does, most of these covers don’t. There’s not a lot of pretty here, but I think that’s a sign that there’s a lot of mystery/suspense in this stack. Although Wisdom Corner looks like the exception to that rule, as it is an adrenaline-fueled story and it does have a beautiful cover. At least as long as the drippy bits are paint and not blood. Summerland Cove, The Unicorn Hunters, and Writers of the Future Volume 42, however, are pretty, and both Most Ardently Yours and Vera Stein Is Fine are pretty cute. Vera Stein reminds me of those 1950s pinup calendars, and I think that’s going to play into the story – which is also one of the books I’m really curious about, along with (again) Wisdom Corner and The Unicorn Hunters.

The book I’m most looking forward to honestly surprises me. It’s Writers of the Future Volume 42. I’m not that fond of short story collections, because I like to sink my teeth into a story and stay sunk, but I reviewed one of these a couple/three years ago for Library Journal and really enjoyed the new stories. So I get the collection every year for review and have generally had as good a reading time as I did the first time. I’m not expecting this latest one to be an exception, but we’ll certainly see in the weeks ahead.

But in the meantime, I’m very much looking forward to Reading Reality’s 15th Blogo-Birthday Celebration starting on MONDAY. What’s the highlight on YOUR calendar – or in your stack – for your coming week?

For Review:
American Han by Lisa Lee
Based on a True Story by Sarah Vaughan
Big & Lily by Lisa Roe
The Faithful Dark (Brilliant Soul Duology #1) by Cate Baumer
Hooked by Asako Yuzuki, translated by Polly Barton
The House of Now and Then by Edward Underhill
It Looks Like You in the Dark by Mathilda Zeller
L. Ron Hubbard Presents Writers of the Future Volume 42 edited by Jody Lynn Nye
Most Ardently Yours by Freya Sampson
The Mysterious Affair of Judith Potts (Marlow Murder Club #5) by Robert Thorogood
Son of Nobody by Yann Martel
Summerland Cove by Ellen Baker
The Talking Bone by Rene Denfeld
A Thousand Little Goodbyes by Lucy Gilmore
The Unicorn Hunters by Katherine Arden
Vera Stein Is Fine by Julie Murphy
Wisdom Corner by David Heska Wanbli Weiden
Without a Clue by Melissa Ferguson
You Did Nothing Wrong by CG Drews

Purchased from Amazon/Audible/Etc.:
The Evil Men Do (P.T. Marsh #2) by John McMahon
The Good Detective (P.T. Marsh #1) by John McMahon
A Good Kill (P.T. Marsh #3) by John McMahon


If you want to find out more about Stacking The Shelves, please visit the official launch page

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#BookReview: Magic and Mischief at the Wayside Hotel by Elizabeth Everett

#BookReview: Magic and Mischief at the Wayside Hotel by Elizabeth EverettMagic and Mischief at the Wayside Hotel by Elizabeth Everett
Format: eARC
Source: supplied by publisher via Edelweiss
Formats available: paperback, ebook, audiobook
Genres: cozy fantasy, romantasy
Pages: 352
Published by Ace on March 10, 2026
Purchasing Info: Author's WebsitePublisher's WebsiteAmazonBarnes & NobleKoboBookshop.orgBetter World Books
Goodreads

When a magical hotel appears smack-dab in the middle of the most unmagical of worlds, the last thing the residents expect is to fall in love.

Manager of the Number Five Wayside Inn and World Travel Hub, Pax Nomen has one of the easiest jobs in all the known universes, unless you count the occasional plumbing disaster. When Number Five Wayside gets stranded on a non-magical world, even Pax's trusty Wayside Handbook can’t help him. How is he going to “reboot” the hotel and keep it on its magical journey?

Josie LaChusia is a single mom experiencing debt, having parenting doubts, and tipping dangerously toward depression when an ad pops up on her phone that an apartment is available in a building she’s never seen before.

Pax needs a new guest to restart his hotel, and Josie needs a nudge to restart her life. In a building occupied by faeries, gargoyles, and a gnome with a bad attitude, two souls from very different places come together to create a home like no other.

My Review:

The premise of this was just a teensy bit familiar, which is what made me pick it up. If you’ve read Ilona Andrews’ Innkeeper Chronicles, well, let’s just say that the Wayside Hotel and Gertrude Hunt, Innkeeper Dina DeMille’s Texas B&B, have more than a bit in common.

The Wayside Hotel finds itself very much by the wayside as this story opens. The quantumly entangled, multiverse-traveling, magically voyaging hotel comes to a stop on Earth because it’s run out of gas. Or whatever resource fills its tank. It’s literally dropped itself by the side of the intergalactic road because its ‘get up and go got up and went’.

The hotel’s manager, a retired paladin calling himself Pax Nomen, which more or less translates to “the name is peace”, doesn’t actually know what powers the Waysides, of which his is Number 5. What he knows is that magic is dying, that there used to be six Waysides but one is gone and that Number 5 has been on the blink for a while.

Earth has no magic, so if it’s magic that Number 5 needs, then there’s no help or hope in sight. But Pax just can’t let it go. And he can’t let the Wayside’s current crop of intergalactic travelers loose on magicless Earth. There must be something he can do.

The vampire lord Raphe, just one of the not-exactly-human travelers, is late for his own coronation and dead certain (all puns intended) that a blood sacrifice will top the Wayside’s tanks back up. But Pax has retired from the business of killing and wants to try something considerably less violent.

Which is where widowed single mother Josie LaChusia and her little boy Amos come in. Literally, through the front door with more than a bit of wish fulfillment – hers, Pax’s AND the Wayside’s. Josie and her boy need a safe place they can afford so that she can keep a roof over their heads, keep her underpaid job at the local college AND keep her grasping mother-in-law at bay regarding Amos’s custody.

Josie is sure that it’s all a bit too good to be true. The Wayside Hotel has transformed itself into an apartment building, so close to her job that she won’t need a car. The apartment is built out of her dreams for herself and Amos, and the rent is less than the last dump they lived in.

There has to be a catch – and there is. Very few of the Wayside’s residents can pass for human; all of them have magic and some of them still think it would be quicker and easier to just sacrifice the humans and be on their way.

But the Wayside makes it very clear that it wants Josie and Amos to stay. They might be just what is needed to get the tank topped up – not by dying – but by living and turning the place they live in into a community – with at least one happy ever after shining sunshine through all the windows.

Escape Rating B-: I have very mixed feelings about this book. At first, it was just delightful and charming and sweet. It’s very cozy and I felt cozy within it. But it just wasn’t grabbing me. I mean, I enjoyed it as it was reading it but it seemed like not much was happening. When I put it down I didn’t feel compelled to pick it back up – not even to see how the romance was going to work itself out. But when I did pick it up, it was like being wrapped in a cozy blanket.

Part of that is probably down to the concept being very familiar. The Wayside Hotel will remind readers a LOT of the Gertrude Hunt in Ilona Andrews’ Innkeeper Chronicles. But the Innkeeper Chronicles, which are also set in a magically powered inn with non-human travelers, AND also includes a romance between the innkeeper and a local resident, always seems considerably more compelling.

There’s stuff happening at Gertrude Hunt, there’s usually a crisis or three, the guests nearly break out into outright warfare on a regular basis, and the local police can’t keep their noses out of the outlandish or outright otherworldly things that happen in the inn’s proximity. Wayside Number 5 needed more of that spark.

The events at the Wayside Inn move slowly, almost as if the Wayside itself was being as careful as Pax is in his courtship of Josie – because the Wayside is courting Josie and Amos every bit as much in its own hospitable way. The big tensions get underplayed or carpet-swept; Pax’s powerful but distrusting and micromanaging assistant, Josie’s insecure and micromanaging boss, and especially Josie’s negging, grasping, overbearing and overreaching mother-in-law.

Someone needed to blow up somewhere about something, but instead all the issues fizzled out – even though Fairy Princess Naliti unintentionally blew up the planetarium.

This was a really terrific premise and I had high hopes for it. It sounded like what you’d get if the Innkeeper Chronicles, If Wishes Were Retail, and Hotel Transylvania had a book baby. There was a LOT of potential between the various not-quite-human species and stereotypes – I adored the cheerleading squad of fairies and the gargoyles dressed as sporting mascots – but not even that accidental explosion gave the story as much of a life as it needed.

This story had a lot of potential, but the sizzle turned out to be more like a fizzle. Color me disappointed, even though the fairy cheer uniforms were in some truly eye-popping color combinations. Your reading mileage may vary.

A- #BookReview: Hunter Squad: Marc by Anna Hackett

A- #BookReview: Hunter Squad: Marc by Anna HackettMarc (Hunter Squad) by Anna Hackett
Format: eARC
Source: author
Formats available: paperback, ebook
Genres: action adventure romance, science fiction, science fiction romance
Series: Hunter Squad #3
Pages: 191
Published by Anna Hackett on March 24, 2026
Purchasing Info: Author's WebsiteAmazon
Goodreads

We survived the invasion and beat the aliens. But they left something behind…
Killing monsters is what I do. Like my father before me, I fight side by side with my twin brother and my squad to protect our people.
Since the invasion, life is dangerous. I know how short it can be, so I live it to the fullest. I work hard on Hunter Squad, I party harder, I love a joke and a good time, and I never get tangled up in relationships. I watched my father’s grief at losing his brother. I almost lost my own twin. I’ll never let myself get in too deep.
Then our squad’s pilot crashes alone in monster-infested mountains.
Tiny, opinionated Colbie who’s the best pilot I know. A fierce redhead who never hesitates to stand up to me.
Everything changes. Every protective instinct I have is in overdrive. I have to find her and bring her home.
I’ll risk it all—monsters, raging rivers, dangerous terrain—but when the two of us are alone and fighting for survival, I realize that what’s most at risk is the one thing I’ve always guarded—my heart.

My Review:

This third book in the Hunter Squad series, after Jameson and North, takes a classic case of jeopardy and mixes it with an equally classic romance trope. Then it stirs the pot – and plot – by adding what appears to be the full reveal of the series’ overall big bad to create a pulse-pounding sci-fi adventure romance with a whole lot of heart at its, well, heart.

Colbie Erickson, the daughter of Hell Squad Hawk pilot Finn Erickson and Hell Squad drone pilot Lia Murphy, has followed in her dad’s footsteps – or perhaps that’s wings – to become the go-to pilot for Hell Squad’s successors, Hunter Squad. So when her quadcopter goes down in dangerous territory during a medical supplies run, Hunter Squad immediately deploys to find her.

Not that the whole squad doesn’t both respect AND care for her, but there’s something about Colbie that’s special to one Hunter Squad member in particular, Marc Jackson. Marc has never been able to stop thinking about Colbie, but he’s also never been able to stop thinking about the grief that his dad, Gabe Jackson, has lived with since the loss of his twin brother during the original Gizzida invasion. Marc keeps all his relationships one-night only and no strings attached because he’s afraid to get close to anyone.

He knows that Colbie deserves better than that. More importantly, so does Colbie.

But when Hunter Squad’s rescue of Colbie results in the discovery of a new Gizzida-Terran hybrid experimental base in the ruins of Hell Squad’s old Blue Mountain Base, the bond they have spent years trying to suppress flares to life. Because now, Colbie’s not just a squadmate he needles and teases and walks away from (to party with someone else), now she’s someone who has saved his life AND had his back in more than one firefight.

His head believes that he can’t risk the loss if something happens to her, but his heart has already taken that ride and isn’t coming back. The only question is whether he can get his head out of his angst enough to tell her how he feels before she walks away.

Or before the next time the monsters come out to play with them all. For keeps.

Escape Rating A-: So, I’m still not all that fond of the covers for this series. However, this third entry really hit a sweet spot for me and I’m very glad of it. I think that now that the ‘big bad’ has reared his ugly head (literally) in this follow up to the author’s Hell Squad series, the whole thing just reached back and grabbed that same set of vibes by the tail – and then set them on fire.

(Yes, I know I mixed my metaphors something fierce, but it worked for me. Just go with it.)

There are three elements that made this one work for me where the last one didn’t quite.

First is that the relationship between Colbie and Marc isn’t instalove or instalust. They’ve known each other forever, they’ve always been friends or at least friendly and have always gotten along. They tease each other, but it’s never mean-spirited and always done in friendship even if that friendship is also designed – by Marc – to keep Colbie at arm’s length.

Colbie may want more, but she wants more in a way that Marc obviously doesn’t. And she’s smart enough to know that and keep her heart safe as long as they maintain that slight distance.

The reasons they have kept to friendship feel real and organic to the story and their characters. The message she got from her parents’ relationship is just how terrific and supportive a forever love can be. The message Marc got from his dad is that grief never ends. Not that Gabe Jackson doesn’t love his wife and his family, but he’s never gotten over the loss of his twin and never will. Which doesn’t mean that he hasn’t had a fulfilling life, but that Marc has taken the wrong lesson from what he’s observed.

The relationship that develops between Colbie and Marc is a relationship of equals. The squad comes to get her, but she and Marc rescue each other. They’re not holding each other back AND they’re not pushing each other into places they don’t want to be.

And very much on my third hand, or claw, or whatever the Gizzida-Terran hybrids have, the new front in the old war heats up in this story in a fantastic way. In the first two books in this series, the fight was a bit, well, amorphous. It needed to happen, it was clearly happening, but to make it into a good story it needed a focus – and now it has one.

The potential is that it’s going to be even bloodier and more interesting this time around because the nature of the enemy has changed. The original Gizzida invaders could be kicked off Earth because they weren’t part of it. This new threat takes the worst of the old threat and makes it home grown in a way that’s going to make this fight harder and uglier and even more righteous when Hunter Squad wins.

Sooner or later. Probably later. Because there are just oodles of great story-telling possibilities, along with so many chances for steamy romance, just waiting to be told. In the end, it took TWENTY books for Hell Squad to get their job done. I wouldn’t be mad – at all – if Hunter Squad needs every bit as many.

#BookReview: Trace Elements by Jo Walton and Ada Palmer

#BookReview: Trace Elements by Jo Walton and Ada PalmerTrace Elements: Conversations on the Project of Science Fiction and Fantasy by Jo Walton, Ada Palmer
Format: eARC
Source: supplied by publisher via Edelweiss
Formats available: hardcover, ebook
Genres: books about books, books and reading, fantasy, literary criticism, science fiction
Pages: 368
Published by Tor Books on March 24, 2026
Purchasing Info: Author's WebsitePublisher's WebsiteAmazonBarnes & NobleKoboBetter World Books
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From two of the most acclaimed writers in the field today, a groundbreaking look at how SF and fantasy writing—and reading!
Jo Walton and Ada Palmer are two of the most innovative and insightful writers to emerge in the SF and fantasy genres in this century. As writers of fiction they’ve each won multiple awards. As commenters on SF and fantasy in print and in visual media, they’ve both sparked new conversations that expanded our imaginations and understanding of how SF and fantasy work, and what more it could be doing.
Now, in Trace Elements, Walton and Palmer have come together to write a book-length and supremely entertaining look at modern science fiction and fantasy, at how our genre is written and how it is read, that will join nonfiction works like Ursula K. Le Guin’s The Language of the Night, Samuel R. Delany’s The Jewel-Hinged Jaw, and Understanding Comics by Scott McCloud on the short shelf of titles essential to all readers of our genre.
Subjects covered include the nature of genre itself, the history of SF publishing, the implicit contract between author and reader, the ways SF and fantasy disguise themselves as one another, what SF&F can learn from outside influences ranging from Shakespeare to Diderot to anime, the role of complicity in reading, the need to expand our “sphere of empathy”, and finally the need for optimism, the importance of rejecting “purity” culture, and the fact that the human story for centuries to come will be composed of hard work.

My Review:

I picked this up because I loved two of Jo Walton’s previous books that looked into both the business of and the writing of science fiction and fantasy, What Makes This Book So Great and An Informal History of the Hugos, and was hoping for more of the same – except with different books.

What I got wasn’t like either of those first two, but it IS in dialogue with both of them, as well as the business of writing genre fiction in general AND an actual dialog between Walton and her co-author Ada Palmer.

I read it for two reasons, the first being a Library Journal assignment that I pretty much begged for. I mean that I seriously wanted to read this. I just didn’t expect it to lend itself to the kinds of in-depth reviews I usually write.

But I can’t stop thinking about it, and what it has to say about not just Fantasy and Science Fiction, but about genre fiction for adults in general. I’ve discovered it to be, not so much “What Makes This Book Great” because Walton has already written that book and it was awesome. Instead, I found this to be “What Makes This Book Great FOR YOU”, or NOT.

Not by talking about specific books – although yes, sometimes they do – but by addressing the blenderizing of genre – which is something I run into – and get run over by – a lot in the reading and reviewing that I do.

The part of Trace Elements that is sticking in my head are the discussions about genres that are settings vs. genres that are formulas vs. genres that are emotion driven. Which is all a ball of thoughts that I’ve been working through on my own.

What does that mean? What does it relate to specifically?

It gets into books like last year’s Orbital and The Ministry of Time, which were hugely popular with general readers but didn’t resonate nearly as much with SF readers even though EVERY single review labelled them as SF. Basically, it turned into a discussion of why “literary sf” doesn’t hit the right beats when it’s marketed to actual SF readers. Because it uses the furniture of SF but doesn’t follow the actual conventions of the literature itself. It’s not in conversation with what came before in SF because it’s not intended to be.

As more and more genres mix and mingle – those issues are becoming increasingly prevalent. It’s the issue that’s at the heart of any and all discussions of ‘romantasy’, but also the increasing amount of both science fiction and fantasy mysteries, about what tropes near-future and dystopian fiction are intended to follow, and about what audiences those books that ride a dividing line between two or more genres are intended to appeal to.

The above is not the only “trace element” of the discussion that’s still swirling around in my head, but it is the part that’s swirling the hardest.

Reality Rating B: This wasn’t a book to be read for pleasure, at least not exactly. I certainly did enjoy parts of it, and Walton in particular is someone I always enjoy listening to in person at Worldcon. She calls it like she sees it, or like she saw it when it happened, and it’s a perspective that works for me.

I haven’t read much of her co-author’s work, although it’s been recommended and I have quite a bit. I can see it wiggling up the virtually towering TBR pile out of the corner of my eye but it hasn’t made its way to the top yet. I’m particularly interested in her Inventing the Renaissance nonfiction book, which I bought and is also worming its way up that TBR pile as it’s likely to be on this year’s Hugo ballot in the “Best Related Work” category.

Like any collection of anything, not everything will work for every reader. I found the discussions on the business of genre, its history and the reasons for its appeal to be the most interesting from a personal perspective. And I always love good writing about how the sausage gets made – especially when it’s sausage that I enjoy.

But as a whole work, it didn’t draw me in and keep me glued to the page the way that Walton’s solo works on the genre did. This one just doesn’t gel into a whole the way that both What Makes This Book So Great and An Informal History of the Hugos managed to do. OTOH, parts of this one really made me think, even though others didn’t quite grab me. Your reading mileage will probably vary on which are which.

Anyone who reads genre broadly and is interested in what makes it work and not work and for whom and why will find the discussion fascinating. Many readers will be particularly taken with Walton’s comments about the author’s (unwritten) contract with the reader and how that works from each side.

Trace Elements is a difficult book to encapsulate, and I recognize that I’m struggling with that a bit here. However, I’m still thinking about a lot of what I read in this book, and will continue to do so. If you enjoy discussions about literature even half as much as you do reading the literature itself, Trace Elements is definitely worth a bit of your reading time.

It certainly informed my read of Walton’s forthcoming book, Everybody’s Perfect and made the experience that much richer. I kept looking for where she kept that contract between the author and the reader, and where she subverted the expectations and kept it anyway, and was just delighted all the way around.

A- #AudioBookReview: Tiny House, Big Love by Olivia Dade

A- #AudioBookReview: Tiny House, Big Love by Olivia DadeTiny House, Big Love (Love Unscripted, #2) by Olivia Dade
Narrator: Joy Nash
Format: audiobook
Source: purchased from Amazon, supplied by publisher via Libro.fm
Formats available: paperback, ebook, audiobook
Genres: contemporary romance, romantic comedy
Series: Love Unscripted #2
Pages: 158
Length: 4 hours and 8 minutes
Published by Dreamscape Media, Hussies & Harpies Press on August 29, 2019
Purchasing Info: Author's WebsitePublisher's WebsiteAmazonBarnes & NobleKoboBookshop.orgBetter World Books
Goodreads


On camera. Up close. In denial--but not for much longer...

After a relationship gone bad, Lucy Finch is leaving everything behind. Her old home, her old job, her old insecurities. Even Sebastián Castillo, her protective but intensely private friend of almost twenty years. Before she moves halfway across the country, though, she has one last request for Seb: She wants him to help her choose a tiny house on cable television. And maybe during the filming process, she can discover once and for all whether his feelings for her are more than platonic...
Sebastián would rather do anything than appear on HATV. But Lucy needs him, and he can't say no. Not when she's about to leave, taking his heart with her. Hiding how he feels with a television crew watching their every move will prove difficult, though--especially when that crew is doing their sneaky best to transform two longtime friends into a couple.
Tiny spaces. Hidden emotions. The heat generated by decades of desire and denial. A week spent on camera might just turn Lucy and Seb's relationship from family-friendly to viewer discretion advised...

My Review:

This is the follow-up to last week’s Desire and the Deep Blue Sea. I’ll admit that that first book didn’t work all that well for me, so I was hesitant about this second one. OTOH, I generally like this author’s work so I set aside my misgivings and dove right in.

While both stories are set in stories wrapped around a fledgling cable TV network and their stable of reality shows – hence that Love Unscripted series title – this second story worked a whole lot better for this reader than the first one did.

And that’s all down to the romantic trope that powers this story. The previous story was an enemies-to-lovers story that just didn’t deal with the way that only one of the enemies even recognized that they were enemies. He was just that clueless.

This time around we have a friends-to-lovers story that begins exactly where it should, with the ride or die nearly two decades-long friendship between Lucy Finch and Sebastián Castillo. They were both outcasts in high school, and they bonded together over being on the outside together. It’s a bond that hasn’t wavered in nearly 20 years, not even when they both temporarily left Marysburg for their respective colleges.

Now, Lucy is about to leave Marysburg again – and this time it’s likely for good. Her last relationship didn’t just  end, it ended after her ex pretty much cratered her confidence for nearly a decade. She’s WAY better off without him, but she’s having a hard time dealing with the memories AND the negging voice in her head that’s definitely his.

But she can’t leave without making one last try at getting the infamously taciturn Sebastián to open up about his feelings. Specifically, his feelings for her. If friendship is all he has to give, then that’s all she’ll ever ask for. But she has to KNOW before she leaves.

She also needs a home that she can carry away with her on her new job as a traveling representative for Massage Mania. She’s looking for a tiny house she can move with her as she travels. The cable TV network that sponsored Callie’s Caribbean vacation ALSO has a who about tiny house shopping. Lucy’s friend Allie is a real-estate agent looking for a leg up in a cutthroat real estate market. Lucy herself is hoping for one more chance to discover what Sebastian really feels, and sees her unscripted tiny house hunt to spend some quality time with her bestie AND get a clue about her next move – or theirs.

Either it’s the opportunity of a lifetime – or it’s a chance to burn the bridge on the most important, supportive AND frustrating relationship in her entire life. But one way or another, when the show is over, she’ll know whether her relationship with Sebastián is forever – or for never.

Escape Rating A-: This worked for me. I went into this one hopeful, and this time, that hope was fulfilled. It was also terrific in audio, and the narrator Joy Nash did a great job with all the voices.  As she did in that first book but I was just too bummed about the story to give her the shoutout she deserved. So this one goes double.

(The book is available now. The audio will be released on April 7 so if you want the audio you’ll need a bit of patience. But if this is what you’re in the mood for – and I was – it’s worth the wait.)

As I said before – and I’ll say again later this week in another review – friends-to-lovers is one of my favorite romance tropes because the tension is real and relatable. Lifelong friendships are precious whether they have the possibility of turning romantic or not. There’s nothing in this world as supportive and sustaining as having someone in your corner who knows you from the inside out and loves you anyway – even when you drive each other crazy.

But the tension in turning a friendship into romance is real and the stakes are always high. Because if it doesn’t work you’ve lost something equally precious that you know you’ll never get back. So it’s easy to feel for Lucy edging up to taking the risk of telling Sebastián how she really feels.

At the same time, it’s just as easy to understand Sebastián’s unwillingness to take that risk. He has family who do love him and vice versa, but Lucy is the only person he’s let into his core. She’s literally the sunshine in his life and he’s afraid to even take a chance on losing it. The only way he’d EVER risk himself that way is that the risk of losing her because he’s told her how he really feels is now equal to the risk that he’ll lose her because she’s leaving and not coming back.

His only way to win is to leap and hope that the net of Lucy’s love will appear. But he’s spent so much time pretending not to feel much of anything at all that he’s frozen in place until not just the bitter end but a little bit past it.

That Sebastián’s frozen emotional landscape is the result of being the recipient of some epic high school bullying is just another facet of tragedy in this story. Bullying inflicts terrible trauma on the recipients. It leaves lifelong scars and it does not make the sufferers stronger – it makes them brittle. (This is a huge soapbox for me and I felt for Sebastián a lot because of it. I sincerely hope your mileage varies on this part.)

As heavy as some of Sebastián’s inner thoughts and feelings are, the wild array of tiny houses that Lucy is shown and her laughably honest rejections of them add a delightful bit of lightness to a story that does need a bit more sunshine. (The school bus converted to a tiny house decorated in used chewing gum and magic marker dick drawings was a masterpiece of snicker-worthy giggles. Because REALLY…)

In the end – and honestly through all of the terrible tiny house showings – this romance was a lot of fun, did a great job getting Lucy and Sebastián from friends to lovers and wrapped up their story in a big, beautiful, happy ever after glow that felt delightfully earned.

And it left me hoping that we’ll get to see more of HATV and its hardworking interns Cowan and Irene, in Cover Me, a new book tantalizingly teased after the end of this one. But whichever of the author’s ongoing series Cover Me turns out to be a part of, I can’t wait to read it!

A- #BookReview: The Legend of the Nine-Tailed Fox by Katrina Kwan

A- #BookReview: The Legend of the Nine-Tailed Fox by Katrina KwanThe Legend of the Nine-Tailed Fox by Katrina Kwan
Format: eARC
Source: supplied by publisher via Edelweiss
Formats available: paperback, ebook, audiobook
Genres: Asian inspired fantasy, epic fantasy, fantasy, romantasy
Pages: 320
Published by S&S/Saga Press on February 24, 2026
Purchasing Info: Author's WebsitePublisher's WebsiteAmazonBarnes & NobleKoboBookshop.orgBetter World Books
Goodreads

From the author of The Last Dragon of the East comes a sweeping fantasy adventure with a dash of romance between a nine-tailed fox and the demon-hunter who captures her, banished to the underworld together and forced to form a reluctant alliance in order to escape the circles of Hell.

Yue may be the last of her kind. At night, she stalks the streets of the capital city of Longhao, luring in unsuspecting victims with the mask of a beautiful woman, then consuming them in her true form of the nine-tailed fox.

When she is captured by a powerful demon hunter named Sonam and banished to Hell, she manages one final act of dragging him—and two of his subordinates—down with her.

Now trapped in an abyss with unimaginable terrors, they’ll need each other’s help to navigate Hell and bypass the gods who preside over each circle, each of whom presents the group with a unique and deadly challenge. Forced to depend on one another as they claw their way out of the underworld, both demon and demon hunter discover that there might be more to the other than meets the eye.

My Review:

Yue is a demon. Not the horned and cloven-hoofed demon of Western mythology, but rather the nine-tailed fox of Asian legend, known as a kitsune in Japan, a kumiho (or gumiho) in Korea and, in this particular story, the Chinese húli jīng. Perhaps mixed with just a bit of the kumiho – or at least their signature nine tails.

She may be a demon, she may look like a monster – at least without her magical mask – but she’s not actually evil. She’s all alone after the deaths of her sisters, and she’s just trying to survive the best she can. She’s also an apex predator – at least in her demon form – whose primary diet is, well, us.

She’s alone and she doesn’t want to draw attention to herself so she only takes what she needs to live. And she only takes monsters in human form, the kind of people the world would be better off without. She doesn’t even play with her food – which honestly puts her a bit above her prey who can’t resist toying with their victims before moving in for the kill.

But there is a plague of demons killing and eating their mostly innocent victims all over the city of Longhao. Sonam, the princely ‘Demon-Hunter of Jian’ has promised his royal father that he will kill all the demons in the realm. Sonam hopes that his success will earn him the place at his father’s side that his mother’s lowly birth has kept out of his reach his entire life.

Sonam has never questioned what he’s been taught about demons and their rapacious monstrosity. Not until he meets Yue, both in her guise as a beautiful woman and in her true form as a burn-scarred, nine-tailed, fox. Because she’s not the monster he was taught she would be.

When he brings her before his father, magically caged and seemingly utterly trapped, it’s his brothers who act like monsters, while Yue waits for her opportunity to escape. Instead, his father’s mages open what they believe is a one-way portal to hell. But Yue is nothing if not resourceful. If she’s going to hell, she’s taking the man who captured her along for the ride.

The ride of a lifetime for them both. Because if they want to escape the trap they are now both in, they’ll have to do it together.

Escape Rating A-: It’s interesting how much better the books get when I’m in a better place to read them. Which may be another way of saying that Dorothy was right and “There’s no place like home.” Because I’ve finished three books since we got home and they were all better than most of last week. There’s a lesson there somewhere, but first, there’s a terrific, and terrifically surprising, book to start the week with.

In this Chinese myth-inspired fantasy, Hell doesn’t have a mere seven circles as it does in Dante’s Inferno. That would be too easy. Instead, it has TEN jade palaces, each presided over by its very own demon. A fallen god who represents one of the myriad ways that humans – and gods – can fall from the path of enlightenment. The kind of enlightenment that leads to a decent life in THIS life and a better position on the cycle of rebirth in their next.

So this Hell doesn’t have seven circles, it has 10 demon gods, mixed with a bit of The Fox Wife and wrapped – all nine tails – around horromantasy. Not so much because Yue is a monster, but because Sonam represents the monster in all of us. So, the story in The Legend of the Nine-Tailed Fox sits squarely at the crossroads between mythic retelling, epic fantasy, romantasy and horromantasy – with a touch of enemies to lovers for added depth and tragic potential.

There are so many ways to look at this story, and all of them just make it that much more fascinating. The hell that Yue and Sonam fall into does resemble Dante’s Inferno, but that’s because that’s my go-to-frame of reference. However, it’s really a mythic reinterpretation of Chinese legends of the “Ten Courts of Hell”, each of which is ruled by a judge, who are also based on figures out of legend.

At the same time, the story reads a bit like plenty of epic fantasy stories about battles between good and evil, because one of the judges in those Courts of Hell really is unquestionably evil and has perverted his duty as a judge into a test for recruitment to establish his evil empire – ON THE SURFACE.

But the story is also about the walk through dark places, the journey to get out of the underworld that recalls Orpheus and Eurydice and a whole bunch of other myths and fantasy stories – and tells a cracking adventure tale into the compelling bargain. And that’s the point where the story kicked into high gear and got this reader firmly in its grip.

What tripped this story from fantasy to romantasy, however, is the growing relationship between Yue and Sonam and the way it works out. It should have been tragic, a man falling in love with a monster he’s vowed to kill. But Yue only ‘looks’ like a monster. She isn’t actually monstrous. Instead, she’s rather like many vampires in paranormal romance, in that she doesn’t have to kill to feed AND when she does kill only kills those who deserve it. That Sonam recognizes the truth of her lack of monstrousness as well as the monster that lives within all humans, including himself, takes the romance out of horromance. It’s not like the romance in But Not Too Bold where both the reader and the protagonist know that someday the monster she loves will kill her, but instead turns it into a relationship of equals that neither of them expected at the start.

The Legend of the Nine-Tailed Fox ended up being both more and better than I expected. So much so, in fact, that I’ll probably pick up the author’s first fantasy, The Last Dragon of the East, the next time I’m looking for this combination of myth, adventure and romance.

The Sunday Post AKA What’s on my (Mostly Virtual) Nightstand 3-22-26

No one at Chez Reading Reality had the best week this week, and the reviews definitely reflect that. I only had ONE book work for me, and there was even more flailing and bailing than seems evident from here. We were finally able to sleep in our own bed again Thursday night – and things are slowly getting back to normal although there’s a lot of clean up to do AND a whole lot of area rugs to decide on. But with the cats, hardwood is definitely a better option than carpet.

The humans were definitely NOT the only people in the house who were not best pleased with the work being done. The cats stayed in the basement while we decamped to a hotel. It took several hours on Thursday evening for most of them to emerge from what had clearly become their new ‘safe place’.

But if a picture is worth a thousand words, Tuna is just saying ‘DADDY I’M SCARED!’ over and over again. Even between the knees of a ‘security human’, Tuna was obviously petrified of all the changes. This was taken Friday morning just below the top of the stairs because he was just not coming up. He did finally join the rest of the fam late Friday evening. Everyone seems to be okay now, even Tuna, but they’re all still a bit clingy. And so are their humans!

Current Giveaways:

$10 Gift Card or $10 Book in the Chasing Rainbows Giveaway Hop
$10 Gift Card or $10 Book PLUS EVENT-WIDE AMAZON/PAYPAL PRIZE in The Spring Giveaway Event!
$10 Gift Card or $10 Book in the Spring 2026 Seasons of Books Giveaway Hop

Winner Announcements:

The winner of the Winter 2025-2026 Seasons of Books Giveaway Hop is Sherry

Blog Recap:

Chasing Rainbows Giveaway Hop
B- #AudioBookReview: Desire and the Deep Blue Sea by Olivia Dade
Grade A #BookReview: A Pretender’s Murder by Christopher Huang
C+ #AudioBookReview: And Now Back to You by B.K. Borison
Spring 2026 Seasons of Books Giveaway Hop
Stacking the Shelves (697)

Coming This Week:

The Legend of the Nine-Tailed Fox by Katrina Kwan (#BookReview)
Tiny House, Big Love by Olivia Dade (#AudioBookReview)
Trace Elements by Jo Walton and Ada Palmer (#BookReview)
Magic and Mischief at the Wayside Hotel by Elizabeth Everett (#BookReview)
Hunter Squad: Marc by Anna Hackett (#BookReview)