Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated
4.25
I love stories about the importance of stories.
'Young Hag' is Isabel Greenberg's spin on the tales of King Arthur, focusing on Morgan Le Fey and the return of magic to the human land. Isabel's storytelling is warm and witty and a winning combination with her whimsical illustration style.
'Do you believe in ghosts?' I said. 'Yes,' she said. 'Me, too, I think,' I said. 'I think-' she said, then stopped. 'What?' 'There are lots of universes. There are all the universes, with all the possibilities in them. And humans can imagine all of those universes.' 'Yeah,' I said. 'That's what I think ghosts are,' she said.
I was so excited for this book. The concept was incredible and I felt like I was hooked from page one but the longer it went on the more repetitive certain parts became. While the format was interesting and I became invested in wanting to find out what was happening to Gabriel I found the inserts of scripts and the ex's short stories a little jarring.
Some sentences were gut punching and beautiful -"The stain of something that was briefly perfect."- while some parts seemed childish in nature (which I'm not 100% sure if they were intentional or not with the narrator returning to live in his childhood home) but contrasted with dark and after crude notions.
I will say the things I liked - concept, idea and tone/vibes - will make be pick up anything Gabriel produces in the future.
Night's Edge: I'm a wholly original queer vampire story that will hurt your heart. First Light: Ha, Hold my beer.
This was phenomenal. A non-stop, horror filled revenge thrill ride. This story picks up straight after the ending of 'Night's Edge' and you are thrown right back into the story. New characters and Old are mixed together really well. The twists and revelations in this book had me wanting to hurl the book across the room (in a loving way of course).
That epilogue destroyed me I'm not going to lie. Who do I bill for therapy?
Liz Kerin has done it again. Mia is one of my favourite POV characters. Liz is now firmly an auto-buy author for me!
Lost in the Garden is a surreal gem of a book. A folkhorror that quickly worms its way under your skin and unsettles you. It will keep you guessing and hooked as you follow three girls on a journey into a village they've been told since childhood not to go to. Dead Ink Books NEVER MISSES!!!!! Perfect for fans of films like the Wicker Man and Midsommar.
"I've told you before, nobody ever leaves this house. We're trapped here, us and the shadows. That's what my mother used to tell me. We're trapped here till they come and take us, she'd say. Until who comes and takes us? Whoever might come knocking at the door and frighten the dead so hard they go off with the saints."
Oh man this was incredible.
Woodworm follows a Grandmother & Granddaughter who live in a cursed house. They live on the outskirts of their village and keep to themselves until a young boy goes missing.
Layla's writing is so poetic, yet blunt and scathingly beautiful. I'm obsessed with the format of this book, with each woman taking turns taking turns telling their stories. I read this in one sitting because I couldn't stop, I couldn't pull myself away. A cursed house, a cursed family? Yes please. Dealing with issues of race, sexism in such a interesting & visceral way.