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readingwitherin's reviews
434 reviews

Love in Winter Wonderland by Abiola Bello

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4.5

My rating: 4.5 stars

I absolutely loved this book! It is such a sweet and heartfelt read that will make you smile. Trey and Ariel are two characters that are just wanting what’s best for their families, while also trying to figure out life. With Trey you have his family owning a black owned book shop and them potentially having to close due to financial issues. Then with Ariel her dad died a year ago and her family has been struggling since then, she is an artist like he was and wants to go to university for it, but isn’t sure how she is going to be able to do that. Ariel ends up getting a job at Trey’s family bookstore and together these two come up with ideas to help raise money for the store to be able to stay open and to have more customers. This book is filled with so many ups and downs as they go through life and have school, dreams, and friend and family drama. It’s a lot but is told so well.



Overall I highly recommend this book if you want a nice Christmas read that has community building, family bonding, figuring out who you are, friendships, and advocating for yourself, friends, and community.



The audio narrator did a fairly good job, with all the different characters and having slightly different voices for them. There were only a few that I struggled with at first, but by the end of the book I knew which character was talking all the time.


Christmas in Peachtree Bluff by Kristy Woodson Harvey

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fast-paced

5.0

This was the first book I have ever read for the Peachtree bluff series and I loved it. This family is truly one of a kind and I loved how supportive but real they were with each other. Felt like a real family for a change, and not something that was just having drama to have drama, but instead had real problems and mishaps that they were addressing and dealing with together. 

Christmas in Peachtree Bluff follows the Murphy family as they get ready for Christmas, and while they all have big plans, those plans end up changing quickly due to a hurricane of the century happening. 

Overall I loved this book. I loved seeing all the different pov's from all the different Murphy women and the lives they had created. For the first time ever I didn't have a favorite, and I loved all of them equally and enjoyed seeing what would happen in their lives next as they all lived such different lives. The fact that this was set around Christmas made the book even better, as we saw the entire family come together to rebuild and spend time with one another. 

While this is the third or fourth book in the series I didn't feel like I was missing anything with having not read the first books in the series. I was able to jump right in and just read what the family was doing now and enjoy it. Having said that though I do think I will be going back and starting the series from the beginning because of how much I enjoyed reading about them. 
Dracula by Bram Stoker

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2.0

 
I’ve gone back and forth on if I should even write a review for this one, and I’ve decided to go ahead and write one just so I have my thoughts down somewhere. I did not enjoy this book. 

First this book is very long, and at times just way too drawn out for my liking because I felt like certain things could have been handled a lot easie and it was overly detailed at times. Second thing is that while I did learn some things about Dracula like how he is apparently related to Attila the Hun in a round about way which was interesting as I hadn’t read that anywhere else until now. Third I was expecting this book to be far scarier than it was. Now maybe it was at the time it was written, but overall I just found this book to be rather boring and none of what happened in it scary or even all that entertaining. Fourth so much of this book is just Jonathan and Dracula going back and forth about things,and then rushing here and their to try and fix them, when Dracula already knew what was happening, but no one was following his rules and then wondered why the bad things kept happening. Like really people come on. 

Overall this book was not for me, and I don’t know if I will be reading anything else by Stoker in the future. 

 
The White Feather Murders by Rachel McMillan

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medium-paced

4.5

This is the final full book in this trilogy and I am so sad to see it end. This one was bitter sweet for me in the fact that it is the end and that throughout most of the book one of the characters had a problem with another character making it hard to like both of the characters. As for the mystery part I could not figure it out and I was shocked by who the person was, I never would have suspected them. I'm still shocked by it.
A Lesson in Love and Murder by Rachel McMillan

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fast-paced

5.0

 "Sometimes in the city, you can find what the solitude of the wilderness can never give you a sense of constant companionship. You're connected to everyone around you and you're never really lonely."

In the first book Bachelor Girl's Guide to Murder we see Merinda and Jem start up their detective business and start to make names for themselves with the police and the rest of the City as well.

This one starts a few weeks after the last one ended with Jem and Ray married and have started a life together. Recently they've had some financial struggles, plus Ray is worried about his sister and nephew, and finally a surprise that has both of them slightly on edge and unsure what to do next.

"We have something better. Fairy tales just end. The excitement of turning a page and not knowing what happens? That ends. You never get to see the ever-after. Don't you see, that's what we're in right now! The after. It's a beginning and constant adventure."

Jem and Merinda are still solving crimes, but no big cases have come up for them that is until a Mountie shows up needing help finding a family member who may be the cause of some recent explosions that have been happening. Not only does this involve them into some dangerous situations we also have Jasper and Ray who are trying to keep them safe and away from what is happening, all while also helping them solve the mystery (this sounds impossible, but it works somehow).
We also have a new character Benny who is the Mountie that needs their help, but he also just might make someone show a little bit of human emotion for a change. (Oh Merinda who well you had us all fooled, turns out you might not be as much like Sherlock as you originally thought. )

"What bothers me most is that you won't tell me about it. That you won't say it out loud. Just tell me. Let's stay up half the night giggling over his smile or his broad shoulders. Or are you too logical for romance? For love? You think there's some sort of virtue in keeping a brick wall around your softer emotions. Well, you have them! Even as we keep playing detective and tripping into solutions, you have the same capacity to love and have your heart broken as any other woman. Why can't you just let yourself grab at some happiness?"

Not only does this one take place in Canada we also get to see Chicago in the earlier 1900s and what was happening in both countries wasn't that different for the most part when it came to how immigrants and women were treated.

Overall I really loved this second book in this trilogy and I can't wait to read the final one even if it does make me sad to know that there won't be more (besides the novels which I know I'm just going to end up buying).


Side note I really like how each chapter starts out with some about being a detective or a proper lady. 
A Singular and Whimsical Problem by Rachel McMillan

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fast-paced

5.0

Oh how I've missed all these characters and the things they get into. So much was packed into this one little book and I was so sad when it was over.
Thankfully I have two more to read today and I can't wait to see what they get up to next!
The Bachelor Girl's Guide to Murder by Rachel McMillan

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fast-paced

5.0

 I originally got this as an e-arc from netgalley and the publisher. I ended up reading a finished copy from the library.

"She no longer cared about propriety. She no longer cared to be one of those girls who married at a proper age, who had their lives figured out, who wouldn't be caught dead in trousers."

Merinda Herringford and Jem Watts balance each other out pretty well, and I can see the resemblance between Sherlock and Watson with them. But that doesn't take anything away from the story. In fact, besides Merinda being reckless most of the time when it comes to social things and dragging Jem along for the ride at the beginning, they completely stand on their own. At times I did notice myself Imagining this happening the Murdoch Mysteries world but I think that has more to do with it being in Canada and me not really knowing much about it, especially in the early 1900's.

"Since she wasn't going to be one of those girls, she could do exactly what she wanted. She could love whomever she wanted-- even if he refused to love her in return! As for her parents expectations and every young lady's etiquette guide, why expectations be hanged."

Jem having been disowned by her parents for not having settled down with a respectable young man is now working a job while following Merinda around trying to solve mysteries. Merinda is the instigator for most things at first it appears, and while she does seem to be the mastermind, she is also the one that has the funding for them to be able to live in such a nice place.

Then we also have the two men characters who encourage Jem and Merinda in their crime-solving. First, we have Jasper a detective in the police force that helps them get access to certain things (plus he has a crush on Merinda that is almost painful to imagine after a while).
Then we have Ray DeLuca a report for a small newspaper who encourages the crime-solving due and even ends up helping them out along the way. Plus the advice he gives Jem when she is dating someone who is not good for her at all was perfect. I mean can we please have more men like these two in books? Kind, respectful of the ladies' wishes, and encouraging or discouraging when it was needed.

"I don't care if you send him chocolates laced with arsnic, so long as you keep him out of his office long enough for me to get what I need."

Let's get back to Jem and Merinda now. Jem being the more sensible one and also the one that was trained growing up to deal with social situations is also the one that has to go out and find out information and then report back to Merinda. While Merinda is at home trying to piece together all of the information that Jem finds along with what she assumes is happening. I also just want to give it up for Merinda convincing Jem to break the Morality Laws as much as possible, because while dangerous, really needed to happen! Plus women in pants, solving crimes in the 1900's is really something I want to read more of!! Or just women solving crimes in historical fiction in general and actually being successful in it.


"I don't belong with anyone, do I? A girl in trousers who follows Merinda Herringford around the city. But I need to be in your life.. I know that you'll need to chase your stories. That you don't want to be cooped up. Maybe I won't ever be the first thing in your life, but..."

P.S. Why can't romance be like this in every book? It happened naturally and never became the main focus of the book. Plus the characters stuck to who they originally were instead of changing suddenly which I've noticed happens quite a bit in Christian fiction. 
No Saints in Kansas by Amy Brashear

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3.5

 "People always think highly of the dead when they're dead. It's definitely not how they thought of them when they were alive."

No Saints in Kansas starts off the morning the bodies of the Clutter family are discovered and we get to see memories that Carly has of the family slowly throughout the book.

Carly from the wrong Manhatten Fleming is still 'new' in town when Nancy and her family are brutally murdered. While Carly and Nancy weren't really close, she was starting to get to know her and is deeply upset by these murders. The one person who was really connected to the Clutter family is Asher, Carly's young brother who was friends with Kenyon. While Carly is upset by the murders, Asher is devasted and it affects everything in his life.

"The funny thing is, I agree with her. I don't understand why Dorothy was so keen on getting back to Kansas. Dorothy might think there's no place like home, but to me, Kanas is lies, all lies."
The whole town becomes obsessed with it, and with the sudden media attention, Truman Capote coming to town and the KBI (Kansas Bureau of Investigation) being involved everyone has an opinion on what happened and who did it.
But no one becomes as obsessed with it as Carly and she ends up involving her friends Mary and Seth in order to help solve the murders and clear an innocent young man that everyone thinks did it.

"It turns out my brother was one of the last in town to talk to him. Not that I'm surprised. He was one of the first to talk to the police for the same reason: he always wants to do what's right, and talking to Mr. Capote didn't fit the bill. But in the end, I think he felt pressured to, mainly by himself."

Overall I did enjoy this book, it was a fast read and made me laugh several times. But I also found myself getting annoyed with Carly a lot especially when she goes on and on with how she and Nancy could have been such good friends.
No Saints In Kansas does have some funny moments with Carly adjusting to small town life after the big city. Which also means Carly is constantly getting into trouble and being told she shouldn't be somewhere that has to do with the investigation of the murders. I think this does show small town life fairly well and how people treat outsiders.
Personally, I would have found this story more enjoyable if more had been focused on the preparing of the trial and the actual trial part, and not so much about how Carly was obsessed with the murders and constantly getting into trouble.

The things I didn't like:
I did find it hard to believe that Truman Capote would be able to get so much information from the KBI as he wasn't too highly thought of for the most part in small towns. I also found it hard to believe certain things would be left unattended so much in such a high profile case at this one was.
Another thing why was it needed to add in the Kennedy storyline? It literally had nothing to do with Carly or the Clutter case.

Thank you to Soho Teen for sending me a Physical ARC of this book in exchange for my honest review. 
Glory in Their Spirit: How Four Black Women Took on the Army During World War II by Sandra M. Bolzenius

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5.0

 

Glory in Their Spirit by Sandra M. Bolzenius
I know very little about the women who served during World War II and this year I am working on changing that. 
This book is a real eye-opener to the inequality and how unprepared the army was for women and especially women of color. 6,500 black women enlisted in the Women’s Army Corps (WAC) and served during the war, yet the army seemed to have no real idea how to best utilize them. This is why four women stood up for themselves and asked to be treated fairly and to be given the proper training they were told they would receive to provide medical care to injured soldiers. Instead, they had to fight for every little thing and were ignored until they started to rebel. 
Overall I enjoyed learning from this nonfiction book. It is a great overview of the entire trials, and what led up to them, and the aftermath of them. The women were able to change little things within the army, but outside the army they got people to pay attention to the unfair treatment that they were receiving. 
I think this was a good place to start for learning about women in the army and I’m going to try and find several of the books mentioned in the back to learn more.

 
Counting on a Cowboy by Sara Richardson

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fast-paced

3.75

Thank you to Netgalley and the publisher for an e-arc.

Counting on a Cowboy follows Thatch and Lyric we get to see the story unfold from both of their pov's. 
Thatch needs Lyrics help to get into shape for bronc riding, and even with their past of hurt feelings due to one-sided feelings, he takes the chance and asks her for help. 
Lyric is unsure if she should help him or not, and ultimately she does because she thinks it will help her get closer to someone else. 
Overall I did really enjoy this story. It was fun, quick, and I loved how Thatch let everything go at Lyrics' pace when it came to their friendship. While this is the third book in a companion series I was able to get caught up with everything that had happened in the previous books quickly and didn't feel like anything was left out or that I was missing anything. We see our two main characters' relationship unfold while also knowing why they are a little cautious about moving forward with things based on their pasts. This story did such a good job of bringing things to a close, while also showing that the future can be bright if it's with the right person. 


This book is perfect for those who love some angst, fake dating, and a side of spicy.