Month: September 2022
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Book Review: All The Light We Cannot See by Anthony Doerr
At this point in my reading life, I’m no longer shocked when I don’t fall head over heels in love with a book that the majority raves about. While I did enjoy All the Light We Cannot See, that enjoyment only came well into the second half of the book…
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Book Review: Condolence Casseroles by J. Lee Mitchell
I started this installment immediately following the previous book. I just had to know what was going on with Alain!…
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Book Review: Moonshine and Malice by J. Lee Mitchell
It’s not often I enjoy a sequel more than the first book, but such was the case with Moonshine and Malice!…
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Book Review: I Saw The Devil’s Face by Teresa Giglio
I don’t think I’ve ever read a more personal account of trauma before, at least not this on this level. Teresa Giglio’s writing style is personal, making it feel like a rapport between author and reader has already been established…
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Book Review: The Orphan’s Letters by Glynis Peters
Picking up after the events of ‘The Red Cross Orphans’, ‘The Orphan’s Letters’ follows Kitty Pattison and her work with the Red Cross during World War II once again…
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Book Review: Next of Kin by Kia Abdullah
A dark and twisty thriller centered around family drama? I’m in…
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Book Review: Wrong Place, Right Time by E.B. Roshan
This was something a bit new to me. I’ve read romance books and I’ve read dystopian books, but never the mix. What a treat to discover!…
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Book Review: Sinister Cinnamon Buns by J. Lee Mitchell
Food and cozy mysteries go so well together. As soon as I saw this series, I knew I needed to give it a go…
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Book Review: The Inheritance Games by Jennifer Lynn Barnes
Five teens and a multimillion-dollar inheritance… what could possibly go wrong?…
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Book Review: The Hills Be Shaken by Michael Stewart
Mose is an engineer recruited by the FBI after the collapse of a dam that killed thousands. Was it a natural disaster? Or was it an attack?…