Another Yes for Yarros

Another Yes for Yarros

Don’t you love a little alliteration? It’s my favorite. I read Great and Precious Things by speed writing romance icon, Rebecca Yarros. This woman has such an extensive backlist that I can’t even begin to dream of what her process might be. She mentioned in an interview earlier this year that we won’t even be seeing the fourth book in the Empyrean series next year because Onyx Storm “nearly killed her”.

Creative work can be intense and grueling. It can amount to hours spent at a desk with an aching back and a marathon going on inside of your brain. I’ve been working on my book of short stories that I hope to put out in the next 3 months or so, and have been bartering with the Gods of money in the hopes that they will help me win ANY of the writing contests that I’m entering.

Anyways, back to the book.

What It’s About

Ex-marine Camden Daniels returns to his small, stifling hometown in Colorado. He’s essentially the village leper, not only because of the havoc he used to wreak in his turbulent childhood, but because he committed the ultimate sin: He didn’t bring the Golden Son (his brother, Sullivan or Sully) back from overseas.

His little brother followed him into the service and returned home in a wooden box.

Camden’s neighbors and even his own father hold him responsible for Sullivan’s death.

Everyone except Willow Bradley: Sullivan’s ex-girlfriend and Camden’s lifelong love. While Camden would do anything to not have to deal with the unmasked hatred of the folks of Alba, Colorado, he’s been summoned home by an urgent phone call from his father. His father has early onset Alzheimer’s, and he begs Camden to return after years of silence so that his son can help him secure a DNR.

Camden’s mission is met with pushback from his older brother, Xander (who also happens to be the mayor). The two brothers prepare to battle it out in court, and the only person who’s willing to help Camden is Willow.

Willow has certain feelings for Camden that tangle with her grief over her first love. That doesn’t last long, however, as the two bend a knee to the bond that has held the two of them together since they were kids. Confusion, heat, and a bold love story ensue.

Dope Shit About This Book

So, here’s what I personally liked about this book, and what kept me coming back. Me staying dedicated to one book for days at a time is a big deal because I tend to read about 8 books at once, and I have an absurd number of books checked out from my library.

  • A female protagonist who is not afraid to want boldly. Willow doesn’t heed the hatred that palpates Camden’s presence in Alba. She is not afraid to let him know that Sully wasn’t the only man that she’s ever loved, and she takes step after faithful step back into Cam’s life, hoping that he’ll want her back.
  • An emphasis on the relationships between our parents and their expectations for us. Great and Precious Things is a cute love story for sure, complete with teasing nicknames similar to Xaden and Violet in Yarros’ Fourth Wing series. Both Willow and Camden have to untangle themselves from their parents’ perceptions of them. Camden wants his father to really see him and not his youngest son’s wild killer. Willow needs to stand in her truth in front of her judge father (he’s a judge in this town) and proclaim that she will not isolate Cam, that she will not don the mourning veil in Sullivan’s honor for the rest of her life.
  • Melty, melt, melt, romance. Camden is an undeniably likeable and well-rounded male lead. He is sensitive, protective, and a total hero. He is a tortured hero in a sense because he will never give himself credit for the good things that he has done.

Now, Go Get It

You know what I say- I always end these things telling folks to go to their local libraries. You can do that, or you can read it on Kindle Unlimited with a subscription. But I will say libraries are under attack in the US, and there’s no way of telling where things will end up in the next few years. Go to your library, get a card, and make your friends and family members get cards. Libraries need your support now more than ever.

What’s Next?

Let me know if I can take the book bullet for you and read a book you’re unsure about before you do. If the book is bad, I will have suffered so that you don’t. If the book is great, you’ll see it on this blog!

Also, comment and tell me what you guys are reading! Have you already read Great and Precious Things? Did you like it?

I’ll be posting again soon, probably about a romantasy I’m reading right now. In the meantime, stay weird and happy reading.

Alicia

How to Write When You Have Seasonal Depression

How to Write When You Have Seasonal Depression

Hello, readers! I come to you with a humble blog post about writing when you feel like you can’t go on. I have written professionally for years, and every year, I’m faced with what Adam Gnade has coined the Big Sad.

It’s the same every year. I lose motivation to do fuck all but eat, drink coffee, and eat again. I’m snappier and I’m harder to love, but I can tell you that I can avoid being either of those things when I’m writing. I’m not myself when I’m not writing. I put on my people suit and go to work, and pretend to be the kind of person that would be happy working for someone else for the rest of my life.

But there’s no fooling myself. Or my loved ones.

If you are a writer, to survive the winters, you must write.

Easier said than done, especially when you’re constantly beating yourself up over all the writing you haven’t done. So, here is my advice to you, things that I have learned the hard way when it comes to the beautiful art of writing. (I don’t know why more people don’t call writing an art, but instead a craft)

Take Advantage of Your Upswings

Most folks with seasonal depression tend to have very good days and very bad, rotten days. When you find yourself graced with a good day, go to your writing desk. Or couch. Or closet (more on a good writing space later).

The feeling of having written will carry you through on the bad days like a lifeline. Writing will ultimately give you purpose. And you don’t have to write for a super long time, either!

On my worst days, I can only manage a 5 minute writing prompt or brain dump. But I at least give myself my best chance, and I sit down at my desk. It is not easy, and it takes a lot of buildup. Some days coffee is the only thing that brings me there.

Sensory Goodness

I’m neurodivergent in a lot of ways. I won’t get into it here, but essentially, my senses are more easily agitated than neurotypical people. I can’t stand the sound of the kid running upstairs when it is comparatively a low mumble to my husband, who’s neurospicyness allows him to ignore it with the help of a pair of noise cancelling headphones. Strong smells inspire anger, and being too hot or too cold drives me nuts.

Invest in the things that make it easier to be at your desk. Create a soft environment with just a little clutter. Light a candle (or two), and throw on some earbuds. As I write this, I’m listening to lofi hip hop beats through my over ear headphones. I’m wearing a comfortable pair of sweats, and a fluffy jacket and my hair is in plaits. I look like a complete ragamuffin. But that’s what I need to work.

Start Meditating

I recently started meditating again and it has been life changing. My low mood has improved and I look at things with more optimism. I only mediate in 3 minute spurts using an app, and it works wonders for me. I also practice rectangle breathing (breathe in the nose for 4 seconds, hold for 2, then out for 6).

Meditation has cleared my mind enough to be clear about my goals and what I hope to accomplish with my writing. It’s also been a way for me to take it easy when it feels like I should be writing.

Become a Student in Your Craft

I know I said writing should be called an art earlier, but you get the idea. I love nothing more as a form of productive procrastination than acting as a student. I read books on writing, do writing exercises, and read magazines to see what other writers have accomplished. A particularly good book about writing instruction is Natalie Goldberg’s Writing Down the Bones. She takes a Zen approach, and it’s a great, easily digestible read with some lessons on writing.

Writing courses are expensive, so if you want to be a writer, learn all that you can from books.

No News Unless It’s Book News

Oof. Easier said than done. I try to limit my news viewing, especially post-election. I let myself read as much book news about publishing, and all the new stuff coming out by reading about it on sites like Book Riot. I like to wrap myself in a cocoon where books are my only reality.

Read, Read, Read

If you can’t manage to make it to your desk, or sofa, or coffee table to write, then read a book. And read lots of them. When you’re reading a book, you’re still learning how to be a writer but without the excruciating feeling of trying to get blood out of a rock when you sit down to write and it just isn’t happening that day.

Read widely. Go to bookstores and libraries, get an e-reader, or listen to audiobooks. One of my defense mechanisms against the Big Sad is that when I get up in the morning before the intrusive thoughts start to settle in, I put on my over-ear headphones and listen to an audiobook or a podcast about writing.

Now, Go and Write!

After reading this post, I hope you feel more confident about your writing practice. If you don’t, I’m sorry. Just know I am here with you and you are not the only one struggling to get things done. Feel free to leave a comment on how you manage your writing practice throughout the winter months.

Till next time!

Alicia

Sager Slam Dunk

Sager Slam Dunk

Hello, readers! I just missed being able to post this one on Halloween, but such is the way when you have seasonaI depression.

If there’s one thing you’ve gleaned about me from this blog, it’s that I am a Sager fangirl. I’m willing to give just about any of his books a try. This book doesn’t dither or dally, and it jumps straight into the action.

I listened to this one and read a physical copy and I was glued to the edge of my seat. There were times when I was just sitting there listening to the story while not doing anything else to keep my hands busy.

This is another Sager book that begs the question, “Is it a ghost story or a thriller?” And honestly? I’ll let you figure that out. Sager has done the ‘haunted house’ trope before and in this one he took another shot at it and it was a slam dunk.

The book is a solid 4/5. First of all, it’s about Ethan, a 40 year old man who has recently moved back home, where a tragedy occurred 30 years ago.

When Ethan was 10 years old, he and his friend Billy camped out in his backyard. When Ethan woke up the next morning, Billy was gone. Ethan’s parents and the entire neighborhood searched for him, but their efforts were in vain.

Billy was never recovered.

Survivor’s guilt and anxiety have plagued Ethan for years. When he moves back into his childhood home after his parents have decided to move to Florida, he’s reminded of that one summer night on a near-constant basis.

Old friends reconnect with him as the secrets of his old culdesac reveal themselves. In true Sager fashion, you won’t see (or at least I hope you won’t see) the twist(s) coming.

You can snag this one on Amazon here. Or, if you feel that Amazon has enough money (they do), then you can visit your local library, chat with a librarian, and borrow a copy of Sager’s latest.

I look forward to checking in after my next read, and if there’s something you think I should review, either comment or email me at alicia@ajcreads.com.

Also!

If you have recently published a cool book on Kindle Unlimited, I’d love to read it! And I also might review it! So, hit me up, fellow indie writers.

Till next time.

Alicia

Rip My Heart Out, Why Don’t You

Rip My Heart Out, Why Don’t You

Hello, and welcome back to ajcreads! I’m back a week after my last post (it’s my intention to post more) and I’ve been busy devouring Say I’m The One by Siobhan Davis. I hadn’t heard of Davis before this week, but when I was prowling Audible for a good listen, I found this in my feed.

I listened to this book and read it on Kindle Unlimited, and I was hooked. Not a single shower was taken without this book playing on top of the toilet.

I’ll get right into it.

Say I’m The One is a searing hot romance with an unexpected twist. It is not for the faint of heart, and it’s not an ooey gooey read, although I do like my ooey gooey romances. Davis does a spectacular job of dropping you right into the mind and body of Vivien Mills, the daughter of two Hollywood actors. Vivien prefers to stay out of the spotlight, but when her childhood best friend turned boyfriend, Reeve Lancaster, breaks out onto the scene as a fresh face in Hollywood, she is thrust onto the world’s stage as Reeve’s clingy highschool girlfriend that won’t let him go and be great without her.

It makes matters worse that Reeve seems to be changing. He’s not the same sweet boy that Vivien has come to worship. He’s angry and defensive and nothing like himself as Hollywood sinks its claws further into him.

Their love is tested when Reeve snags the starring role in the Rydeville Elite series, where he we’ll be working up close and personal with Saffron Roberts (a literal psychopath) who is hell-bent on claiming Reeve for herself and breaking up his relationship with Vivien.

This book will give you a whirlwind of emotions that you leave you cheering for, and screaming at Viv as she navigates the new obstacles in her relationship. Davis does an incredible job of always launching straight into the action, giving us the good stuff right away.

The second half of the book left me feeling like I was reading a telenovela instead of a romance novel. The next part of the story is when we are introduced to Vivien’s new, and dangerous love interest.

Irish singer Dillon O’ Donoguhue is nothing like the soft-hearted man she’s used to. Dillon is fiery, his love is passionate and hot. Vivien experiences a wholly different kind of love with him, and the question she’s left asking is: Is Dillon’s love enough to finally give up on Reeve?

There is an incredible twist at the end of the book, so hold on tightly because I in no way saw it coming. This searing hot novel is the first in a duet. I’m going to start reading the second book as soon as I finish typing this.

What can I say other than: (squeal) Read the book!!

You can read it for free on Kindle Unlimited if you have a subscription. When I snagged the audiobook, I got it from Audible for about $7.

Let me know if you read this book or have read it before in the comments. Love triangles bring me back to my high school years when the pressing question was Team Edward or Team Jacob? (I’ll never tell.) With Team Reeve or Team Dillon at the forefront of your mind while reading this, you will be hooked down to the very last word.

Keep it weird until next time~

I Don’t Know, a Ghost Maybe?

I Don’t Know, a Ghost Maybe?

Hello! Welcome back to ajcreads. I’m back after a month or so, and going forward, I want to try and at least post biweekly for you guys. I’ve been busy writing my YA fantasy novel (more on that in a few weeks), and reading, and working my daytime job. Anywho, I can’t wait to tell you about Home Before Dark by Riley Sager.

If you read one of my previous posts, Creepy, Creaky Houses, you would know that I am a Sager Fangirl. Sager doesn’t miss, struggle, or falter. Home Before Dark is another slam dunk in Sager’s catalog. Did you know that Riley Sager is actually a pseudonym ? Well, now you do.

So, let’s get into it. Home Before Dark, is a heart pounding thriller that may or may not be a ghost story. I had plenty of fun guessing in between feeling my spine tingle from all of the spooky scary stuff going on in the book.

The story centers around Maggie Holt. She is the only daughter of infamous writer Ewan Holt, and Ewan has recently died due to an illness. Upon his deathbed, Ewan asks Maggie to never return to the subject of the book that made him so famous: Baneberry Hall. Maggie and her family fled Baneberry Hall, a massive estate, when she was five. Ewan wrote about the estate in his wildly successful book, House of Horrors.

The legacy of the book and the controversy surrounding the infamous house where several random and grisly deaths have occurred has followed Maggie her entire life. So much so that she can hardly get away from questions from a nosy receptionist at the lawyer’s office that tells her what Ewan left her in his will.

Ewan has left not only a sizeable amount of money for Maggie, but to her absolute shock, he’s left her Baneberry Hall. Maggie had assumed that her father sold it, but he’d kept it all these years. She ultimately goes back on her promise to not go back to Baneberry Hall due to a burning curiosity to visit the place that her parents fled from when she was so young, but to also fix it up and sell for a profit since she’s a designer.

When Maggie returns to Baneberry Hall, things are instantly sketchy. I mean, some of the stuff happening is an instant hell no for me (for real, like pack it up, turn around, no amount of money is worth this, send me my check) Ghostlike activity keeps happening in the house, people may or may not be breaking into the house to say they did for bragging rights, and Maggie is never too sure who she can trust while she investigates the past and tries to learn the true story of what happened 25 years ago at Baneberry Hall.

This novel was absolutely addictive. I listened to it on Audible and I read the physical book from my library (ahem, go to the library, go right now). This story is a spine chilling mystery that constantly begs the question, are ghosts real? Sager almost instantly drops you into Maggie’s body, and every emotion is so visceral and just fucking scary. So creepy, so good, so compulsively readable.

I would advise you to find out by picking up a copy of the book here or you can find a library in your city and borrow it from there. Beware, it might be difficult to get your hands on a copy of this title.

Have you read this one? Let me know in the comments! Are there any other books that you guys want me to read so that I can do the hard work of finding out if it’s good or not? If it is good, it will appear on the blog. I make a point to keep this a book recommendation blog and I only post about what I liked.

Keep it weird until next time (I know I will)

Keep Reading!

Keep Reading!

Welcome back to ajcreads! I’ve been gone for a while because I can’t seem to finish any book that I start.

However, I recently finished Austin Kleon’s Keep Going and I have good things to say. I’ve been a fan of Austin Kleon since when I read his first book, Steal Like an Artist, shortly after I graduated high school in 2013. I remember being enthralled by his message that we have to stay creative even when we’re feeling uninspired and like nothing we make is original. (Side note: there’s no such thing as an original work these days. Every thing has been done, just do your best version of it!)

Keep Going did not disappoint. While so many terrible things are happening in the world right now, it’s crazy important for us to keep going as creatives. I know a lot of you might be doing Camp NanoWriMo next month, and maybe you should give this a read before you set off on your next challenge.

It’s a brief read, and there are illustrations throughout the book. Winter is a challenging time for me, so I needed the pick me up of something inspiring. Kleon touches on how we can stay creative by doing things like staying off of social media and maybe turning your phone on airplane mode, developing and maintaining a practice practice of your craft, and even having a special spot to do what you do.

This is a great read for creatives that are crawling out of the Winter Sad and need a pick me up to start doing what we as artists need to do most: make things.

You can buy Keep Going here. Or, you can use this unseasonably warm weather (72 degrees in Februrary here in Kansas) as an opportunity to go to the library and pick up a copy.

I want to hear your thoughts on how you stay inspired and motivated to keep going in those down periods. Like, comment, subscribe, and let’s start a conversation!

Till next time!

Alicia

Creepy, Creaky Houses

Creepy, Creaky Houses

Hello and welcome back to ajcreads! I’ve been gone for a while, right? I was waiting to finish a book that truly energized me. I read all the time, but finishing books is not my strong suit during a certain time of year.

Anyways, let’s get to today’s book recommendation: Riley Sager’s The Only One Left.

Horror and thriller lovers will lose themselves in this eerie tale that reads like a ghost story, but really takes place in a topsy turvy 1980s setting that will leave you white knuckling the edge of your seat.

You will immediately fall for Kit, a caregiver accused of murdering her last patient and as a result she’s been ostracized by everyone in her oceanside town in Maine. Kit finds a potential kindred spirit in Lenora Hope, the septuagenarian she has been assigned to care for who has been accused of a triple homicide at her massive estate, Hope’s End, in 1929.

The question hanging over the book is: Did Lenora really kill her parents and sister? Will Kit untie the knots that make up this mystery and possibly see Lenora (now a disabled, paralyzed and mute stroke victim) brought to justice? With a cast of characters surrounding Lenora and Kit, all playing their own part in the mystery of that night when most of the Hope family was slain, it’s almost impossible to tell who’s really telling the truth. That is, until what is a satisfying and heart pounding end is delivered to the reader.

Riley Sager has no business writing something this good because now she has an obsessed Forever fan. You can expect to see her on this blog a few more times once I start reading her other novels.

It is skill like hers that as a fellow writer, I feel that I am way out of my league writing any kind of novel. Sager’s mind churns in a way that I can only dream of, and I hope to catch up someday.

You can read The Only One Left via Kindle or you can visit that beautiful brick (or cement) building we need to protect–the library. You can buy it here.

Merry Christmas to every single one of my readers. Be sure to leave a comment and like this post. And please be so kind as to subscribe for more book recommendations where I fangirl for about 500 words and fall into the depths of a book hangover. Sigh. I do this for you.

See you soon!

Red Hot: How to Get a Life 101

Red Hot: How to Get a Life 101

Hello, hello! I have so many great books to tell you about, and today’s book is Get a Life, Chloe Brown by Talia Hibbert.

Let me start by saying that this book has made me a forever fangirl of Hibbert’s. It’s sweet and sexy and it kept me busy for about three days. I can’t think of a better way to procrastinate writing my own romance book, frankly.

So, let’s get into it.

Serious and ultimately misunderstood, Chloe Brown doesn’t have a life. Or, at least, she doesn’t have the life she wants. She usually prefers to stay in her apartment due to the chronic pain she experiences from living with fibromyalgia. Chloe supports herself by being a freelance web designer and she also has the safety net of her well-off family if shit really hits the fan.

Chloe is a creature of habit. When she deviates from her daily routine by attempting to rescue a cat that she thinks is stuck in a tree, she’s ultimately saved by her building super, Red. Her super cute, paints with his shirt off and window open at night building super.

Chloe and Red’s relationship is already tinged with tension because of Chloe’s wealth and general standoffish personality. However, despite his best efforts, Red is drawn to who Chloe might be under her prickly exterior, and so he allows Chloe to employ him in her plan to complete her list of ‘get a life’ activities. In exchange, she promises him a website that he can display his art on.

The push and pull between them as they accidentally deviate from their plans and end up toying with the possibility of forever will leave you squirming in your seat. Hibbert does a fantastic job of building up tortuous sexual tension.

It’s hot, cute, and I was sad to see it go when I finished the book. Oh, and one last thing!

Red is such a believable, irresistible, and fresh character. Hibbert pushes against society’s expectations of men as it relates to trauma and obliterates the macho man narrative.

This is the first in the Brown Sisters series, and I will be reading and reviewing the other two books soon.

You can get a copy of Get a Life, Chloe Brown here or you can visit your local library, an institution we must protect until the end of time.

Thanks for reading, until next time!

Wild Bitches in Suburbia

Wild Bitches in Suburbia

Hello, readers! I’m going to be posting a lot of reviews about some indie reads I found, but first I have to tell you about Nightbitch, the novel that’s kept me company over the last few days.

First of all, I have to give you a massive trigger warning due to a couple of violent scenes in the book, but don’t worry, that can sometimes be the best part.

Put simply, Nightbitch is the story of an unnamed narrator that the reader only knows as Nightbitch.

Nightbitch is a new mother that’s lost herself to suburbia, toddler reading times, and the inward battle she faces from dealing with the selective incompetence of her husband. Once an artist, she struggles to connect with her creative spirit again.

With the help of the revelation that Nightbitch very well could be a dog walking around in human skin, Yoder carves an insane story out of the silent fury of housewives around the world.

However, Nightbitch’s journey into rediscovering her creative spark turns into an infuriating look into motherhood that you can’t pull your eyes away from.

All at once, you’ll notice:

  • You’re scared for Nightbitch
  • You’re rooting for Nightbitch

And lastly, some of you are Nightbitch.

You can pick up a digital copy of Nightbitch here.

First Up!

First Up!

Thanks for coming to my blog! ajcreads is a book review blog and author page for me, ajc! I’ve read so many books so far this year, but I want to get my recommendations out into the world as soon as possible. Let’s dive into my first must read- Siri, who am I?

This one kept me busy for about two days. First of all, Tschida does a great job of including the stereotypical millennial short attention span into the pacing of the novel. This novel doesn’t have any dead points, its very fast paced which complements the chaotic plot.

Without spoiling too much, the main character, Mia, wakes up in the hospital with severe amnesia and she has no clue who she is. The only path to recovering her life is in the contacts in her phone. Mia puts the story of what she thinks is an ideal life together and goes on several adventures to make sense of how she ended up in the hospital.

This book is hilarious in a way, and a quick and laid back read. You can find it here.