I usually do individual reviews, but since I haven’t posted in a while, here’s what I’ve read in the past three months.

The Christmas Murder Game by Alexandra Benedict
Read by Ana Clements
I wanted a cozy mystery set around the holidays, and Hoopla recommended this surprisingly when I finished a book. So, I read it on a whim. It was fun! I don’t know if it really fits the “cozy mystery” genre since, as far as I know, violence doesn’t happen on the page for cozy mysteries. And in this book, violence does happen… multiple times. Bloody. But for some reason, it still felt cozy. I don’t know how the author managed it.
The game of this book is a little complicated, but essentially the protagonist has to go to her family’s grand estate for an annual game she hasn’t attended in years. The winner of the game gets to own the estate. Mayhem ensues.
Additionally, I was surprised to fine queer representation done well and in a positive light. 4 stars.
Aesthetica by Allie Rowbottom
Read by Chelsea Stephens
I can’t tell you how much I loved this book. I read it completely randomly, letting Storygraph recommend it. I think it’s incredibly well done, emotional, eye-opening, relatable, chilling… I want to read anything Rowbottom writes.
So what’s it about? This book is mainly told in flashbacks by a 35-year-old former social media influencer. At 19, she left home to follow that dream. It details the horrors she went through to become an it girl, a star, or just someone. As she aged, into her early twenties, her mother (who she does more-or-less have a relationship with) becomes ill, so the novel also explores the mother-daughter dynamic.
In the framing of the story, it opens with the former influencer preparing for a surgery that promises to reverse all of the plastic surgery she’s had on her face. This will make her look like herself as though she has naturally aged. The book moves back and forth between the young influencer’s life and her older self on the night before the surgery.
There is also so much more here. How we view ourselves, what we want to be, and how we want others to view us. How far will we go to be who we think we want to be? Do we make the wrong decisions knowing they’re the wrong decisions? 5 stars.


The House of Rust by Khadija Abdalla Bajaber
Read by Waceke Wambaa
This is a fantastical, emotional book, and while it’s an adult novel, it reminds me of a good child’s movie from the 90s. One of those stories that gets into your bones and stays there because the child is so pure and determined. We’ve all felt like that child, someone with a mission, demanding to do what’s right. Aisha believes her father is lost at sea, and she sneaks away (with some help) to find him. She discovers terrifying sea monsters, magical boats, talking animals, and more.
It’s very imaginative, taking the story in places I wouldn’t expect. As the blurb says, The House of Rust is a coming-of-age story told through the lens of the Swahili and diasphoric Hadrami culture in Mombasa, Kenya. I’m not familiar with this culture, so even though that might explain why some of the story felt so new to me, I still loved Bajaber’s writing and storytelling. I even set a Google alert on her because she hasn’t published anything, or really been anywhere publicly I could see, since this book. I can’t wait for more. 4 stars.
The Secret History by Donna Tartt
Read by Donna Tartt
This is the first time I’ve read The Secret History, and I knew little about it besides, “dark academia.” I read If We Were Villains a few months ago, and now the two of them are kind of mashed in my head. I’m trying to pry them apart. I can see how Rio’s book is pretty much a direct successor of Tartt’s. While both are long and meandering, I found The Secret History heavier throughout the book. What I mean is, I don’t know if I enjoyed it as much. It was of course good, and I’m not strictly comparing it to If We Were Villains, but I really felt like I had to push through. I used the word “meandering” before, and that’s exactly the first word I would use to describe The Secret History. Things happen, but slowly, and in a way that life actually happens. Not by plot points.
This books seems to be ultra-famous at this point, but if you don’t know (as I didn’t), it follows a group of friends at an elite college. They study Greek, and they are the only students there who study Greek. This sets them apart and they become very tight-knit, to a fault. The book follows them as they decide what is really wrong and what is really right.
This is something that needs to be read over again, I think. Probably a few times. 4 stars.


Catherine House by Elisabeth Thomas
Read by Inés del Castillo
I’ve been wanting to read this book for a bit, and I like gothic-boarding-school settings, and it fulfilled a Storygraph challenge. These were all great reasons for me to read the book. However, I’m not sure how much I can recommend it. I gave it a high rating because I liked the feeling I got. Inez is a great protagonist, and from her perspective, she’s connecting with friends, dealing with past trauma, and trying to become a good student. The feeling you have during college to prepare for your future and the closeness you have with friends around you are very powerful.
Mixed in with that is this sci-fi element of “plasm” and experiments being done on students. For me, it seemed Thomas was trying to write across multiple genres, or even to subvert genres, but instead the book just didn’t know what it wanted to be. Does Inez want to solve the mystery or run away from it? Does she care or not about her friends and what may be happening to them? Do they care about her? I actually have so many more questions I can’t share because they’d lean more into spoilers. At the time, I rated this 4 stars, but now it feels like 3.
Coming Home by Brittney Griner and Michelle Burford
Read by Andia Winslow and Brittney Griner
I don’t read many memoirs, and I picked this one for another reading challenge. I love watching WNBA games, so I’m familiar with Griner and what happened. I did not know the details, though, and they are horrifying. This memoir details Griner’s arrest and imprisonment in Russia in 2022.
Griner and Burford are very good at sharing the facts, how Griner experienced and/or thought things when she experienced/thought them in that moment. The book doesn’t jump around like it’s telling the story from the future in a “looking back on” kind of way. Instead, it makes you feel like you’re there, living through this, with Griner.
This makes the story riveting and page-turning. But once it’s done, it’s done. This is not a memoir I need to re-read for any thoughtful perceptions, lessons, etc. I guess what I’m saying is it’s not poetic. And that’s fine. I don’t think that’s Griner’s way, but that’s the reason this is only 4 stars for me.


The Keeper of Magical Things by Julie Leong
Read by Natalie Naudus
I’ve been hyped for this book for over a year. When I first read Leong’s The Teller of Small Fortunes, I was head-over-heels. And that book introduced me to cozy fantasy. I still love that book. So obviously, my expectations were high for this one. I can’t say I was disappointed because I really enjoyed the book, but it wasn’t the same experience for me.
This book is a cozy fantasy that follows two mages (well, a mage and a mage-in-training) to do a menial task in a small village. Adventure, chaos, magic, and love ensue. I enjoyed the experience of this book. To me, it was a romp. However, it also felt predictable in a lot of ways. Some things surprised me, and I loved the characters and the world. I would read more books set in this world.
I don’t know if this is something I would re-read, but I might, who knows? Depending on my mood. And I do want to buy a physical copy of it. So maybe that says something. 4 stars.
I hope you enjoyed this wrap up! I enjoyed doing it. Hopefully, I’ll start doing longer reviews again. Find me on Storygraph if you’re there.












