Top Ten Tuesday was created by The Broke and the Bookish in June of 2010 and was moved to That Artsy Reader Girl in January of 2018. It was born of a love of lists, a love of books, and a desire to bring bookish friends together.
April is mid autumn in Australia, but the weather is not dissimilar to that of early Spring as it shakes off Winter’s grip. Cool days and late showers encourages cozy reads while curled up on the couch, wearing bed socks and sipping a warm drink. Cozy fantasy, combining humour, adventure, and romance, in an imagined world, suits the season for me. The low stakes nature of the genre is also a welcome diversion from the chaos the world is in right now.
So, for my top ten this week I’m highlighting five cozy fantasy books I’ve read (linked to my reviews) , and five on my TBR (linked to Goodreads).
PS: In Australia we spell cozy with an ‘s’ but I’ve gone with the American ‘z’ because the latter is more common in the book world than the former.
Legends and Lattes by Travis Baldree is arguably responsible for making the cozy fantasy genre mainstream. I was one of the first to read it when the author self published it, after I responded to his request for reviews on Twitter on a whim.
The Spellshop by Sarah Beth Durst is a simple but satisfyingly sweet, low stakes story with a sprinkle of drama, a dollop of romance, and a feast of magic.
Some of the humour will perhaps be judged as inappropriate, but overall I was amused by the irreverent wit and banter. For me, Til Death Do Us Bard by Rose Black was an entertaining and engaging read.
Tusk Love by Thea Guanzon started life as a joke during campaign two aka The Mighty Nein, of Critical Role, a popular Dungeons and Dragons group who live stream their weekly games. With its charming characters, spicy romance, and low stakes adventure I found Tusk Love to be an enchanting and fun read.
A cursed princess must discover what her heart truly longs for in Stay for a Spell by Amy Coombe, a charmingly cozy romantic fantasy for everyone who’s ever lost – or found – themselves in a bookshop.
Howl’s Moving Castle meets Little Thieves in A Curious Kind of Magic by Mara Rutherford, a cozy fantasy about the teenage owner of a (mostly fake) magical curiosity shop and a girl cursed to turn everything she touches into magic.
A maker of magical jewelry finds her life turned upside down when she ends up on the run with a half-giant in A Tale of Mirth and Magic by Kirsten Vale, a spicy and cozy fantasy romance
Have a terrific Tuesday!
Today is Top Ten Tuesday #TTT hosted by @artsyreadergirl #books #bookblogger This week I’m sharing cozy fantasy titles! Learn more at Book’d Out
Thank you for all your good wishes last week. I had a lovely birthday. I got a book (Direbound by Sable Sorenson), some clothes, a stick vacuum cleaner, and a delicious meal.
The best gift however was my eldest daughter announcing her engagement to her partner of three years. He proposed on the Sunday but they waited til the family was together for my birthday dinner to share the good news. We are delighted!
I’m attending an author talk one town over this week. I’ve read a lot of Fleur McDonald’s 20+ something novels, and this is the first time she’s been anywhere near my area, so I am looking forward to it.
I am in the midst of a review writing slump though. I am 9 reviews behind, though 3 are sort of half written. It’s very frustrating.
Redemption is a dish best served warm . . . Retired Michelin-star chef Griff Barlow has lost his appetite. He’s done with grief, guilt and the beige slop they dare call food at Sunny Glen Aged Care Facility, where he now resides. Life’s given him all the lemons he can handle – so he breaks into the nursing home kitchen to bake himself one last tart. It’s supposed to be his final meal but the act of cooking stirs a dormant joy. Soon, he’s regularly sneaking in after dark, serving up flavour and comfort to fellow residents. Yet behind the apron is a lie so big it could destroy the one thing he has left to protect … Meanwhile, Griff’s younger sister Lisa is navigating a new ADHD diagnosis and the spark of an unexpected romance. Despite their fractured sibling relationship, she dutifully visits Griff, though she knows hope of a reconciliation is gone, buried in the silence between them. But the truth has a way of boiling over – and when secrets, soufflés, and second chances collide, they may discover a recipe for forgiveness.
Night shift. Just keep them all alive until the morning they said. No higher brain function required they said. They were wrong. For Amy, being a doctor was supposed to mean winning at life. Helping people. Saving lives. Having a secure job. Earning good money. Tick, tick, tick, tick. But now, in her second year in a city hospital the reality is a world away from Amy’s med school dreams. She is finding out that people don’t always want to be ‘helped’, the pay barely covers rent, her hours are ridiculous, her favourite patients are getting sicker, and her surgical trainee boyfriend has recently gone shy on proposing. What Amy does have are the friendships forged by dealing with recalcitrant patients, endless nightshifts, and crying in the emergency department bathrooms. And a belief that maybe, underneath it all, it’s a job that’s still worth doing. And when things begin to go wrong – horribly wrong – they’re all that Amy has. Will it be enough?
Husbands Don and Rodney have lived a good long life. Together they’ve experienced the highest highs of love and family, and lows so low that they felt like the end of the world. Now, the world is ending for real. A wandering blackhole is coming for Earth and in a month everything and everyone they’ve ever known will be gone. Suddenly, after 40 years together, Don and Rodney are out of time. They’re in a race against the clock to make it from Maine to Washington State to take care of some unfinished business before it’s all over. On the road they meet those who refuse to believe death is coming and those who rush to meet it. But there are also people living their final days as best they know how–impromptu weddings, bright burning bonfires, shared meals, new friends. And as the blackhole draws near, among ball lightning and under a cracked moon in a kaleidoscope sky, Don and Rodney will look back on their lives and ask if their best was good enough. Is it enough to burn bright if nothing comes from the ashes?
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It’s Monday! What Are You Reading? #IMWAYR @bookdatereads #SundayPost @caffienatedreviewer #SundaySalon @debnance I’m #reading #WhenLemonsGiveYouLife #ALittleUnwell #WeBurnedSoBright Learn more at Book’d Out
The Paradise Heights Miniature Railway Bust-Up is the second cozy mystery novel from Kate Solly to feature mother, crafter, and amateur sleuth Felicity (Fleck) Parker, though it can be read as a stand alone.
Having identified the person responsible for a spate of vandalism affecting her favourite coffee shop, Fleck is looking for a new puzzle to solve when her husband mentions supplies and equipment are disappearing from the community Miniature Railway Park where he volunteers.
Solly has created a well plotted mystery with several red herrings, and I enjoyed Fleck’s endeavours to identify the thief. While juggling the school run, potty training, and her craft projects, Fleck pokes around the Park, developing a list of suspects that includes a publicity-hungry mayoral candidate, a financially struggling university student, a secretive artist-in-residence, and a long-standing, pompous, member of the railway group. As Fleck narrows down her list of suspects the stakes rise, leading to a rather dramatic confrontation.
Meanwhile Fleck’s best friend, Trixie, working towards revitalising the craft shop which helps support the Many Hands Society for women in need, is flustered by the evangelical behaviour of a volunteer who is neck deep in a MLM scheme and alienating others, and needs her help.
With its strong sense of community, combined with humour and just the right amount of tension, The Paradise Heights Miniature Railway Bust-Up is an entertaining read however, Solly also weaves in more serious themes, including PTSD, domestic violence, and fraud. Her approach to these issues is thoughtful adding emotional depth while preserving the cozy tone.
Offering an appealing cast of characters and engaging, well-paced mystery, The Paradise Heights Miniature Railway Bust-Up is an easy and entertaining read.
#bookreview The Paradise Heights Miniature Railway Bust-Up by Kate Solly @affirmpress @SimonSchusterAu #read #book #review #fiction #mystery #cozymystery #cloakdaggerchal #2026NewReleaseChallenge #AussieAuthor #TheParadiseHeightsMinatureRailwayBustUp Learn more at Book’d Out
Top Ten Tuesday was created by The Broke and the Bookish in June of 2010 and was moved to That Artsy Reader Girl in January of 2018. It was born of a love of lists, a love of books, and a desire to bring bookish friends together.
This week’s theme is ‘Books That Describe Me’. I’ve gone for a pretty literal interpretation and I mostly searched Goodreads for book titles I thought would work.
As it happens, today is my birthday, making me the birthday girl!
I’ve been a happy wife for a little over 30 years, and I have four wonderful children who are now all adults of whom I am very proud, so I must have been a good enough mother.
My mum’s name is Cherry so I am Cherry’s baby 🙂 I my be turning 50 something today but most of the time I still feel like I’m twenty something hence so old, so young.
There are books everywhere in my house, on shelves, in piles, in boxes! My husband has been known to complain we are buried in books Unfortunately it’s not only books I have trouble letting go of, I’m a little bit of a hoarder too
I have a chronic health condition which means I’m always a little unwell.And thanks in part to menopause I feel like a hot mess a lot of the time.
Despite everything, I’m grateful for my great big beautiful life
Have a terrific Tuesday!
Today is Top Ten Tuesday #TTT hosted by @artsyreadergirl #books #bookblogger This week I’m sharing book titles that describe me! Learn more at Book’d Out
Romance readers! You’ve had chemistry with STEMinist romance, you’ve raced through sports romance. Now get ready for the ultimate crossover… Biochemistry major Keely has the next five years of her life down to a science. But when her grad school loan application is inexplicably rejected, her carefully calculated future spontaneously combusts. Her college’s Pursue Your Passions scholarship could be the answer. The problem? There’s one place left, and she’s not the only student in the running. Enter Max: a state champion sprinter who sets hearts racing on and off the track – and the one thing standing between Keely and her dreams. Keely knows the key to winning is keeping her head in the game. But when your opponent is Lycra-clad and… rippling?! Well, it’s hard to keep the chemistry to the lab. Experimenting with her heart could cost Keely everything she’s worked for. But staying away from Max might be a race she’s destined to lose…The Love Hypothesis meets Heated Rivalry in this spicy, dual-POV, academic rivals rom com – as nerdy as it is sure to raise your pulse.
A mother’s worst fear, a killer on the loose, a darkness visible… A gripping page-turner for readers of Candice Fox and Karen Slaughter from an award-winning author. Sergeant ‘Hex’ Rexford is the detective who caught the infamous serial killer Dr. Witcherton. Now, with a series of gruesome murders unfolding inside Coast Sanctuary – a hospital for the criminally insane – Witcherton claims to know who’s behind them. Hex takes the case, determined to uncover the truth, even as his own body is failing him. Beth Thompson is desperate to keep her children safe. Her violent ex is stalking her, her son’s behaviour is growing strange, and his beloved teddy bear, Theo, might be more than just a toy. When an elderly woman offers Beth a remote cottage, it feels like a chance to breathe – but safety is an illusion. Meanwhile, true crime podcasters Eve and Zane are chasing the story of the murders. But as Eve edges closer to the truth, the danger closes in. As past and present collide, and the body count rises, the threads connecting them all begin to tighten – and something terrifying is watching from the dark.
From the bestselling author of The Radio Hour comes this charming but pointed look at the tumultuous extraordinary decade of the 1960s, and the effects of the pill, rebellion and new ideas on ordinary Australian women as alongside shorter skirts and the Beatles, they embrace freedom… 1960s The Langley family – Olive, Len and their two daughters, twenty-year-old Cathy and ten-year-old Evelyn – live a peaceful suburban life, although Grandma Langley turns up each Sunday lunch like a bad fairy to castigate them for their dubious morals. Cathy, training to be a teacher, thinks women have it tough. No sex until marriage, then no work, child after child and the sacrifice of their desires to church, husband and family. Cathy is determined not to marry right away. Once married, it’s all over. A life no longer her own. Young Evelyn wants to be a fairy princess … until she sees for herself the price women pay for such dreams. When the new contraceptive pill arrives women can suddenly sense freedom. But powerful forces are aligned against women’s reproductive choice and a fight begins. A fight that takes on their own doctors, the might of the Catholic church, and the outdated morality of previous generations.
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It’s Monday! What Are You Reading? #IMWAYR @bookdatereads #SundayPost @caffienatedreviewer #SundaySalon @debnance I’m #reading #HeartRacer #DarkSanctuary #TheMarriageTrap
It is a sad truth that I have a finite lifespan (and budget) yet a desire to read all the books. The books on my Reading Schedule (click the link to view) largely represent those I’ve been privileged to select from offerings by a range of generous publishers, and therefore are my priority, but they don’t embody my every bookish desire or interest.
I’ve noticed a trend for limiting to-be-read (TBR) and/or want-to-read (WTR) lists (the distinction for me being those already on my physical or digital shelves vs those that aren’t), but I’ve never felt the need to temper my book lust. If I see a book that interests me, I add it to my WTR without a skerrick of guilt, at the moment my WTR shelf at Goodreads has over four thousand books on it.
As I currently feature my TBR in my monthly Bookshelf Bounty post, Book Lust will be a monthly post featuring a handful of already published books I’ve recently added to my WTR.
What books are you lusting after? Do you have any of these on your TBR/WTR list? And please feel free to share your links in the comments if you have reviewed them.
(Covers are linked to Goodreads)
WHY?: The title caught my attention
‘For so long we’d been on the same path together. But somehow, along the way, I turned around and Genevieve kept going.’ Charlie, a prime-time radio producer in her early thirties, has always had a big group of friends – until she left her husband, and they all sided with him. Now she finds herself floundering in a sea of awkward run-ins and silent group chats. When her best friend Genevieve starts moving on with her life, too, Charlie realises how few significant people she has around her, and what a lonely place that can be. Dreading the prospect of returning to her childhood home for the anniversary of her father’s death, she busies herself by seeking new friendships – book clubs, pub crawls, team sports, the works. But Charlie’s determination to surround herself with unfamiliar people forces her to confront her insecurities. What kind of life does she want? And who does she really want to spend it with?
WHY?: The central characters are the children of Jane Austen’s famous couples, a fresh twist on the plethora of retellings and variations.
A summer house party turns into a whodunit when Mr. Wickham, one of literature’s most notorious villains, meets a sudden and suspicious end in this mystery featuring Jane Austen’s leading literary characters. The happily married Mr. Knightley and Emma are throwing a house party, bringing together distant relatives and new acquaintances—characters beloved by Jane Austen fans. Definitely not invited is Mr. Wickham, whose latest financial scheme has netted him an even broader array of enemies. As tempers flare and secrets are revealed, it’s clear that everyone would be happier if Mr. Wickham got his comeuppance. Yet they’re all shocked when Wickham turns up murdered—except, of course, for the killer hidden in their midst. Nearly everyone at the house party is a suspect, so it falls to the party’s two youngest guests to solve the mystery: Juliet Tilney, the smart and resourceful daughter of Catherine and Henry, eager for adventure beyond Northanger Abbey; and Jonathan Darcy, the Darcys’ eldest son, whose adherence to propriety makes his father seem almost relaxed. The unlikely pair must put aside their own poor first impressions and uncover the guilty party—before an innocent person is sentenced to hang.
WHY?: The premise is intriguing
The average restless American will move 11.7 times in a lifetime. For Melody Warnick, it was move #6, from Austin, Texas, to Blacksburg, Virginia, that threatened to unhinge her. In the lonely aftermath of unpacking, she began to wonder. Aren’t we supposed to put down roots at some point? How does the place we live become the place we want to stay? This time, she had an epiphany. Rather than hold her breath and hope this new town would be her family’s perfect fit, she would figure out how to fall in love with it—no matter what. How we come to feel at home in our towns and cities is what Warnick sets out to discover in This Is Where You Belong. She dives into the body of research around place attachment—the deep sense of connection that binds some of us to our cities and increases our physical and emotional well-being—then travels to towns across America to see it in action. Inspired by a growing movement of placemaking, she examines what its practitioners are doing to create likeable locales. She also speaks with frequent movers and loyal stayers around the country to learn what draws highly mobile Americans to a new city, and what makes us stay. The best ideas she imports to her adopted hometown of Blacksburg for a series of Love Where You Live experiments designed to make her feel more locally connected. Dining with her neighbors. Shopping Small Business Saturday. Marching in the town Christmas parade. Can these efforts make a halfhearted resident happier? Will Blacksburg be the place she finally stays? What Warnick learns will inspire you to embrace your own community—and perhaps discover that the place where you live right now . . . is home.
WHY?:Who can resist a sentient Roomba?
In a near future, where even the smallest of appliances are sentient, a young Roomba vacuum sets out to save the humans of her house from a rising technological power in this compelling, original novel. In a self-running, smart house, a young and sentient Roomba listens as her owner, Harold, reads aloud to his dying wife, Edie. Mesmerized by To Kill a Mockingbird and craving the human connection she witnesses in Harold’s stories, the little vacuum renames herself Scout and embarks on a journey of self-discovery. But when Edie passes away, Scout and her fellow sentient appliances discover that there are sinister forces in their midst. The omnipresent Grid, which monitors every household in the City, seeks to remove Harold from his home, a place he’s lived in for fifty years. With the help of Adrian, a neighborhood boy who grows close to Scout and Harold, as well as Kate, Harold and Edie’s formerly estranged daughter, the humans and the appliances must come together to outwit the all-controlling Grid lest they risk losing everything they hold dear.
WHY?: This is the first in a fun sounding series which features a bookstore owner who hunts various cryptids
A Wisconsin bookstore owner and cryptozoologist is asked to investigate a series of deaths that just might be proof of a fabled lake monster in this first installment of a new mystery series by USA Today bestselling author Annelise Ryan. Morgan Carter, owner of the Odds and Ends bookstore in Door County, Wisconsin, has a hobby. When she’s not tending the store, she’s hunting cryptids—creatures whose existence is rumored, but never proven to be real. It’s a hobby that cost her parents their lives, but one she’ll never give up on. So when a number of bodies turn up on the shores of Lake Michigan with injuries that look like bites from a giant unknown animal, police chief Jon Flanders turns to Morgan for help. A skeptic at heart, Morgan can’t turn down the opportunity to find proof of an entity whose existence she can’t definitively rule out. She and her beloved rescue dog, Newt, journey to the Death’s Door strait to hunt for a homicidal monster in the lake—but if they’re not careful, they just might be its next victims.
WHY?: I’m interested inthe insight into an unfamiliar culture
In 2023, I Deliver Parcels in Beijing became the literary sensation of the year in China. Hu Anyan’s story, about short-term jobs in various anonymous megacities, hit a nerve with a generation of young people who feel at odds with an ever-growing pressure to perform and succeed. Hu started posting essays about his experiences online during COVID lockdowns. His recollection of night shifts in a huge logistics center in the south of China went his nights were so hot that he could drink three liters of water without taking a toilet break; his days were spent searching for affordable rooms with proper air-conditioning; and his few moments of leisure were consumed by calculations of the amount of alcohol needed to sleep but not feel drowsy a few hours later. Hu Anyan tells us about brutal work, where there is no real future in sight. But Hu is armed with deadpan humor and a strong idea of self. He moves on when he feels stuck—from logistics in the south, to parcel delivery in Beijing, to other impossible jobs. Along the way, he turns to reading and writing for strength and companionship. I Deliver Parcels in Beijing is an honest and startling first-person portrait of Hu Anyan’s struggle against the dehumanizing nature of our contemporary global work system—and his discovery of the power of sharing a story.
Book Lust is a monthly post featuring a handful of published books I’ve recently added to my WTR #read #books #BookLust #TBR #WTR #lovereading #bibliophile #fiction #Nonfiction
Don’t Fall In Love with Me is another heartfelt romance from bestselling author Paige Toon.
When the boy-next-door Gracie has loved since she was fifteen marries someone else, she can’t bring herself to return to the place where she spent every summer of her childhood. But when Jackson calls, newly single and offering her dream job, Gracie finds herself drawn back to Ardèche, hoping that this time, he might finally choose her.
Don’t Fall in Love with Me is first and foremost a romance. As Gracie holds onto the possibility of a future with Jackson, she reconnects with Étienne Fournier, whom she met one summer when she was seventeen. What begins as a plan to spark Jackson’s jealousy soon evolves into something far more complicated, forming a compelling love triangle.
Through flashbacks, we gain insight into Gracie’s long history with Jackson, the wealthy heir to a spring water company. While he can be shallow and a little spoiled, he is also capable of generosity and emotional openness.
In contrast, Étienne is enigmatic and guarded. The son of a single mother who passed away from ALS, he works as a mechanic and car restorer.
The chemistry between Gracie and Étienne is undeniable, and as their connection deepens, Gracie finds herself genuinely torn between the two men—forced to confront what she truly wants for her future.
There is a thread of drama beyond the central romance, involving a family secret that disrupts everything. While it’s not an entirely unexpected twist, it is well handled and I liked how it was resolved.
The epilogue to the story is a particular highlight, delivering the kind of heartfelt, happily-ever-after ending that romance readers will find deeply satisfying.
I think francophiles will especially appreciate the setting, a charming semi-rural spa town inspired by Vals-les-Bains in southeastern France, which adds warmth and atmosphere to the story.
Though it lacked the emotional resonance I’ve found with several of Paige Toon’s earlier books, I did enjoy Don’t Fall in Love with Me. It’s a lovely contemporary second chance romance.
#bookreview Don’t Fall In Love with Me by Paige Toon @PenguinUKBooks #read #book #review #fiction #romance #AussieAuthor #2026NewReleaseChallenge #DontFallinLoveWithMe Learn more at Book’d Out
Though I prefer to avoid the horror genre I was willing to take a risk with Femme Feral, in part because of my empathy for anyone suffering perimenopause, but also to take a step out of my comfort zone in honour of the Speccy Fiction Challenge.
To be honest I’m not exactly sure how I feel about it. The social commentary is on point, not only as Ellie struggles to balance the demands of work and family while overlooking her own needs; but with regards to the medical misogyny, attitudes to ageing, and the entitlement of so many of the men in the story. The none too subtle analogy between the symptoms of perimenopause and ‘the beast’ is in some ways all too relatable (The insomnia! The brain fog! The hair!); and there’s some satisfaction in Ellie’s revenge.
At times Femme Feral made me snigger, but it’s also not unexpectedly, very dark. Quite apart from multiple gruesomely described pet and people deaths, Beckbessinger explores serious topics including eating disorders, domestic violence, stalking, and suicidal ideation.
While the horror elements didn’t bother me and I appreciated Femme Feral’s sharp commentary and fearless exploration of feminine rage, I’m left feeling rather ambivalent about the story as a whole. Ultimately Femme Feral is a book I admired rather than enjoyed.
#bookreview Femme Feral by Sam Beckbessinger @Bloomsburypublishing #read #book #review #fiction #horror #SpeccyFicChal #2026NewReleaseChallenge #FemmeFeral Learn more at Book’d Out
Mystery, magic, romance, The Alchemary, a captivating new fantasy series by Rachel Vincent, has it all.
When Amber Fallbrook, a star student on the cusp of graduation from The Alchemary, wakes to realise she has no memory of the past three years she is bewildered and anxious. With the deadly Mastery Trials that will determine her future just weeks away, if Amber can’t reverse the amnesia she has only two choices; to drop out and forfeit her dreams; or relearn everything she has forgotten, and risk catastrophic failure.
The looming deadline of the Trials lends a strong sense of urgency as Amber endeavours to understand what has happened to her. I was invested in her mission to uncover the cause of her amnesia and unravel the meaning of the hidden symbols scattered across campus, though I do feel the former deserved slightly more narrative focus than the latter.
Vincent establishes the world of the Alchemary with satisfying detail, weaving in elements of its history, politics, and people. The setting of the University evokes something like Oxford, prestigious and majestic. The magic system, rooted in alchemy and the crafting of potions, is particularly interesting. At its heart lies the ultimate ambition of any alchemist – the creation of the legendary Philosopher’s Stone, capable of transforming metal into gold, curing illness, and extending life.
Amber is surprised when she learns that she has spent her time at university ruthlessly focused on creating the mythical Stone. With no recollection of making that choice, or of who she became because of it, Amber is forced to confront a version of herself that feels like a stranger. Post-amnesia Amber is far more likeable, and internal conflict adds to the appeal of her character.
While there are hints of a love triangle, the dynamic between Amber and brothers Desmond and Wilder is more nuanced than expected. Both characters are distinct and compelling in their own ways, and I appreciated how the romantic thread developed without overshadowing the central mystery.
Offering plenty of tension, intriguing mysteries, and a richly imagined magical world, The Alchemary is a strong start to the Alchemy Trials series and I’m looking forward to reading more.
#bookreview The Alchemary by Rachel Vincent @DisneyBooks #read #book #review #fiction #fantasy #readingchallenge #SpeccyFicChal #2026NewReleaseChallenge #TheAlchemary Learn more at Book’d Out