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2025-07-30 09:44 pm

Book Review: Ancestors by Alice Roberts

Cover of the book Ancestors by Alice Roberts Title: Ancestors
Author: Alice Roberts
Dates read: 20/05/25 - 28/07/25
Rating ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ (5 stars)

Publisher: Simon & Schuster UK
Number of pages: 446
Fiction or non-fiction: non-fiction
Subject or genre: history, science

Book blurb:

An extraordinary exploration of the ancestry of Britain through seven burial sites. By using new advances in genetics and taking us through important archaeological discoveries, Professor Alice Roberts helps us better understand life today.

We often think of Britain springing from nowhere with the arrival of the Romans. But in Ancestors, pre-eminent archaeologist, broadcaster and academic Professor Alice Roberts explores what we can learn about the very earliest Britons, from burial sites and by using new technology to analyse ancient DNA.

Told through seven fascinating burial sites, this groundbreaking prehistory of Britain teaches us more about ourselves and our history: how people came and went and how we came to be on this island. It explores forgotten journeys and memories of migrations long ago, written into genes and preserved in the ground for thousands of years.

This is a book about belonging: about walking in ancient places, in the footsteps of the ancestors. It explores our interconnected global ancestry, and the human experience that binds us all together. It’s about reaching back in time, to find ourselves, and our place in the world.



How I discovered or acquired this book: I absolutely adore Alice Roberts - we've watched a bunch of her tv shows and this one's been on my TBR for a while. I've read another one of her books and definitely want to read more

As an aside - have I mentioned my crush on the woman?

My thoughts:This book made me feel like I was sitting cross-legged in the back of a Time Team tent, mug of tea in hand, listening to Alice Roberts gently and excitedly talk about bones for hours. And honestly? That’s my happy place.

Ancestors is everything I hoped it would be: a thoughtful, deeply humane wander through Britain’s ancient burials that’s part scientific detective story, part love letter to the messy, unknowable people of the past. It doesn’t try to tie things up too neatly. Instead, it invites you to linger in uncertainty — to wonder, to imagine, to care. And it does it with the kind of calm, bone-deep (sorry) enthusiasm that makes me feel like I’m safe in nerdy hands.

Each chapter starts with a body — sometimes buried with ceremony, sometimes in ways that make you wince — and builds outwards: what do we know about them? What don’t we know? What can isotope analysis tell us about where they grew up? What stories have we told about these graves in the past, and which ones hold up? There’s no rush to the finish line; Roberts is more interested in inviting you to notice the details, to ask better questions, to feel the weight of time in your chest.

I kept pausing to look things up — other burial sites, photos of grave goods, radiocarbon quirks — but not because the book lacked anything. It just made me want more, in that specific rabbit-hole way that feels like being in love with a subject.

Also: if you’ve ever felt frustrated by the way some archaeologists talk about early human remains like they’re just data points, you’ll love the quiet, persistent way Roberts pushes back against that. She reminds us again and again: these were people. They laughed, mourned, built weird things, buried their dead with care. They were not just prehistory’s NPCs.

Ancestors made me want to cry and then go dig a hole. In a good way.
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2025-07-28 11:00 pm

Book review: Windswept by Annie Worsley

Cover of the book Windswept by Annie Worsley Title: Windswept
Author: Annie Worsley
Dates read: 26/06/25 - 28/07/25
Rating ⭐️⭐️3/4 (2.75 stars)

Publisher: William Collins<
Number of pages: 305
Fiction or non-fiction: non-fiction
Subject or genre: memoir, nature

Book blurb:
A few years ago, Annie Worsley traded a busy life in academia to take on a small-holding or croft on the west coast of Scotland. It is a land ruled by great elemental forces – light, wind and water – that hold sway over how land forms, where the sea sits and what grows. Windswept explores what it means to live in this rugged, awe-inspiring place of unquenchable spirit and wild weather.

Walk with Annie as she lays quartz stones in the river to reflect the moonlight and attract salmon, as she watches otters play tag across the beach, as she is awoken by the feral bellowing of stags. Travel back in time to the epic story of how Scotland’s valleys were carved by glaciers, rivers scythed paths through mountains, how the earliest people found a way of life in the Highlands – and how she then found a home there millennia later.

With stunning imagery and lyrical prose, Windswept evokes a place where nature reigns supreme and humans must learn to adapt. It is her paean to a beloved place, one richer with colour, sound and life than perhaps anywhere else in the UK


How I discovered or acquired this book: It was a Borrowbox loan but I don't remember how/why I picked it up - it might just have been that it caught my eye

My thoughts:Annie Worsley’s writing is undeniably beautiful — she captures the raw wildness of the land and sea with a painter’s precision and a poet’s heart. Reading Windswept often felt like standing beside her in a gale, soaking up the salt air.

But as much as I loved the imagery, I found myself waiting for something to happen — some deeper thread or narrative tension to carry me through. It’s more a patchwork of impressions than a story, which may suit some readers better than others.

A lovely mood piece, but left me a bit… windswept, and waiting
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2025-07-15 07:34 pm

Books with Honorifics in the Title

Top Ten Tuesday was created by The Broke and the Bookish and is now hosted by That Artsy Reader Girl. It was born of a love of lists, a love of books, and a desire to bring bookish friends together. Each week a new theme is suggested for bloggers to participate in. Create your own Top Ten list that fits that topic – putting your unique spin on it if you want. Everyone is welcome to join but please link back to The Artsy Reader Girl in your own Top Ten Tuesday post.

This week's topic is Books with Honorifics in the Title

Sir David Attenborough - Adventures of a Young Naturalist: Sir David Attenborough's Zoo Quest Expeditions
Michelle Magorian - Goodnight Mr Tom
Matthew Baylis - Man Belong Mrs Queen
Dr Amanda Brown - The Prison Doctor
Alison Weir - Richard III and The Princes in the Tower


Susanna Clarke - Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell
Allan Ahlberg - Please Mrs Butler
Robert Louis Stevenson - The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde and Other Tales of Terror
Ransom Riggs - Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children
Shelley Adina - Lady of Devices
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2025-07-11 07:40 pm

Book Blogger Hop: How many weekly bookish posts do you put on your blog and/or social media?

The Book Blogger Hop was originally created by Jennifer from Crazy-For-Books in March 2010 and ended on December 31, 2012. With Jennifer's permission, Ramblings of a Coffee Addicted Writer relaunched the meme on February 15, 2013. Check out the hop here!

Each week the hop will start on a Friday and end on Thursday. There will be a weekly prompt featuring a book related question. The hop's purpose is to give bloggers a chance to follow other blogs, learn about new books, befriend other bloggers, and receive new followers to your own blog.

The Question of the week is: How many weekly bookish posts do you put on your blog and/or social media?

It varies, honestly - and I’m okay with that.

Sometimes I’m in a groove, with a full blog schedule and plenty of bookish Instagram content ready to go. Other weeks, I might only manage a Top Ten Tuesday or a single review. It all depends on how life’s going, what I’m reading, and whether I feel like sharing.

On the Blog:
I try to post 2–3 times a week when I can. My regulars include:
blog linkup posts (like this one!)
Reviews or reading wrap-ups
Monthly TBRs or themed round-ups
...and the occasional blog tag or reflective post when inspiration strikes.

On Instagram:
I post less frequently there, but I love using it for:
Book stack or flatlay photos
Book Reviews
Quotes or graphics to match blog posts
The odd chaotic book haul or shelf update (with plushie cameos, obviously)

The Real Answer?
I don’t really have a hard rule or set quota - and I like it that way. I want my bookish space to feel joyful and sustainable, not like a second job. Some weeks are busy. Some weeks are quiet. The books are always there.

💬 What about you?
Do you have a regular posting schedule — or do you just go with the flow?
bibliollama: (Book Love)
2025-07-09 07:13 pm

🗺️ Weekly Wednesday: Fictional Worlds I’d Like to Visit

This week’s Weekly Wednesday Blogging Challenge question is A sport I want to try

One of the best parts of reading is the quiet ache you get when you finish a book and think: I don’t want to leave this place.

Some fictional worlds are chaotic and dangerous (looking at you, Westeros), but others feel like places I could happily live forever.

Here are five I’d step into in a heartbeat:

🦁 Narnia in the Golden Age
Not the Narnia of White Witches and winter — but after. When Peter, Susan, Edmund and Lucy are ruling as Kings and Queens, Cair Paravel glitters at the edge of the sea, and talking animals roam freely. I want the peace, the feasting, the old magic still echoing through the forests. Let me ride a talking horse and sit down to tea with a faun, please and thank you.

🌿 The Shire
All I want is a quiet garden, a well-stocked pantry, and a stack of books by the fire. The Shire’s slower pace, long walks, and second breakfasts sound like a dream — no world-ending quests, just a good pipeweed-scented breeze and the occasional party tree lighting.

☕ Viv’s Coffee Shop from Legends & Lattes
A cosy coffee shop run by a retired orc adventurer? Count me in. I’d spend my days tucked into a booth with a cinnamon roll the size of my head and a book I can’t put down. It's a world where kindness, community, and coffee matter — and I love that.

📚 Fern’s Bookshop from Bookshops & Bonedust
Tucked away in a sleepy town, Fern’s shop is full of dusty volumes, comfortable silences, and the kind of magic that lingers in the air even after you leave. It feels like a soft space — a sanctuary. I’d be a regular, no question.

🌌 The Federation Future from Star Trek: The Next Generation
Not a bookish world, but one that’s always stayed with me. A future without poverty or war, where exploration and understanding are the priorities? Sign me up. I’d love to live in a world built on curiosity, compassion, and connection — plus, holodecks and replicators sound incredible.

Some fictional worlds are filled with peril and plot twists — but these? These are the ones I’d live in. The ones with coffee, community, quiet magic, and hope.

What about you?
Which fictional place would you visit — or stay forever, if they'd let you?
bibliollama: (Book Kitten)
2025-07-08 07:21 pm

Top Ten Tuesday: Books I love to re-read

Top Ten Tuesday was created by The Broke and the Bookish and is now hosted by That Artsy Reader Girl. It was born of a love of lists, a love of books, and a desire to bring bookish friends together. Each week a new theme is suggested for bloggers to participate in. Create your own Top Ten list that fits that topic – putting your unique spin on it if you want. Everyone is welcome to join but please link back to The Artsy Reader Girl in your own Top Ten Tuesday post.

This week's topic is Books I’d Like to Re-read

Anne Rice - Interview with the Vampire Gothic, brooding, and emotionally messy — and somehow more intense every time. The ultimate comfort reread if you're me.
CS Lewis - The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe Snowy woods, epic battles, and the thrill of discovering another world behind a wardrobe. Pure childhood wonder.
J.R.R. Tolkien - The Hobbit A quiet journey that somehow always feels huge. There and back again... and again, and again.
Dan Brown - Angels & Demons Conspiracy, chaos, and the kind of fast-paced drama that makes it perfect for rereading when your brain wants popcorn.
Matthew Reilly - Temple Utterly bananas in the best way. Ancient codes, nonstop action, and just enough heart to make me keep coming back.


Andy Weir - The Martian Smart, sweary, and surprisingly soothing. The kind of book that makes surviving Mars feel like a cozy weekend project.
Dan Jones - The Hollow Crown Epic royal drama, backstabbing nobles, and actual history written like a thriller. It’s like prestige TV in book form.
Stephen King - Firestarter One of my King favourites — full of fire (literally), father-daughter love, and government paranoia. Always hits the spot.
Poppy Z Brite - Lost Souls Queer vampires, Southern Gothic mood, and enough angst to drown in. I read it at just the right time and always return to it.
Clement C Moore - The Night Before Christmas A tradition: I reread it every Christmas Eve. It’s short, sweet, and carries a lifetime of memories in its verses.

Whether it’s queerness and chaos, ancient puzzles and explosions, or a quiet moment of snowy nostalgia, these are the books I come back to when I need comfort, distraction, or a reminder of why I love reading. Some have lived on my shelves for decades; others have earned their place with just one reread.

What about you? Are you a re-reader, or a one-and-done kind of reader? And if you are a fellow re-reader — what book do you always come back to?
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2025-07-07 11:31 pm

📚 Books I Borrowed from the Library This Month 📚

 aka: I definitely don’t have a problem, I just love options

There’s nothing quite like walking into the library and emerging with a stack of books that whisper hope and potential — and maybe a touch of delusion about how much free time I actually have. But listen, it’s not a problem unless they fall on me.

This month’s pile is full of feelings, ghosts (literal and emotional), chaos, murder investigations, romantic tension, and at least one classic cowboy. It’s the reading equivalent of a tapas bar — something for every mood.

✔️ Just finished:

A House with Good Bones – T. Kingfisher
Creepy and clever with that perfect mix of Southern gothic and weird humour. Loved it enough that I now side-eye every rose bush I pass.

📖 Currently Reading:

Weyward – Emilia Hart
Three generations of women, witchy power, and gorgeous writing? Yes please. I’ve only just started but already feel like it’s going to leave an imprint.

📚 The Tower of Possibility:

  • Sherlock Holmes and the Shadwell Shadows – because Victorian detectives + Lovecraftian horror is a combination I didn't know I needed.
  • Eleanor Oliphant Is Completely Fine – finally reading this one! I’m emotionally bracing myself.
  • Really Good, Actually – I’ve been meaning to read this since forever, and now it's staring at me from the pile like now is the time.
  • The Paradise Problem – for a hit of fake dating and romantic chaos.
  • A Good Girl's Guide to Murder – because sometimes you just want to unravel a mystery with a very determined teenage girl.
  • East of Croydon – travel memoir energy. Possibly one to read with a cup of tea and a bit of wanderlust.
  • Say You’ll Remember Me – Abby Jimenez’s latest: a gorgeous, heartfelt romance featuring a hot veterinarian with Greek god vibes, a tiny kitten, and one unforgettable night that refuses to stay in the past. I’m fully prepared to cry.
  • Done and Dusted – I hear this is cowboy romance fun. I'm prepared to yee and/or haw.
  • All The Pretty Horses – the Cormac McCarthy I keep meaning to read. Might need a mood for it, but I will get there.
  • The Graham Effect – because sometimes I want soft sports romance with bonus character growth.

The current situation:

  • The pile is teetering. Literally.
  • I’ve made peace with the fact that I won’t finish all of them before they’re due.
  • I have renewed at least two already. We don’t need to talk about which ones.

All in all, it’s a beautiful stack of maybe-reads and well-intentioned ambition. Some will be devoured in a day, others will quietly return unread but admired. Either way, the library is magic and I will absolutely do this again next month.

What’s in your library pile lately? Any I must bump up the stack?

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2025-07-05 09:46 pm

📚 Weekend Reads Check-In 📚

It’s a slightly chaotic reading weekend over here — which feels very on-brand. I just finished Mythos by Stephen Fry and really enjoyed it: clever, funny, and packed with mythological gems. Fry brings warmth and wit to even the most violent of gods.

Here’s what’s in the current rotation:

📖 A House With Good Bones by T. Kingfisher (47%) – creeping unease, southern gothic touches, and unexpected humour. I love the tension building in this one.

🐺 Bitten by Kelley Armstrong (69%) – a re-read and still one of my comfort books. I have so much love for Elena, Clay, Jeremy, and the messy, protective pack dynamic. Werewolf drama perfection.

🍃 Windswept by Annie Worsley (30%) – gentle, slow, reflective nature writing. I keep dipping in and out between heavier reads.

🧬 Ancestors by Alice Roberts (74%) – loving this one. It’s thoughtful and packed with fascinating detail, but also weirdly tender in the way it treats its ancient subjects.

💋 The Kiss Curse by Erin Sterling – haven’t started it yet, but very much in the mood for something witchy and playful. I was pleasantly surprised by The Ex Hex and hoping this one brings the same cozy magic.

🧟‍♂️ Frankenstein by Mary Shelley – this one’s hovering in the background. I’ve been craving something darker and more emotionally intense, and I’m pretty sure Shelley’s masterpiece is just the thing.

Anyone else balancing five books and still flirting with starting something new? Or is that just me?
bibliollama: (Book Love)
2025-07-04 08:30 pm

Book Blogger Hop: Has Your Perspective on Reading Changed As You’ve Grown Older?

The Book Blogger Hop was originally created by Jennifer from Crazy-For-Books in March 2010 and ended on December 31, 2012. With Jennifer's permission, Ramblings of a Coffee Addicted Writer relaunched the meme on February 15, 2013. Check out the hop here!

Each week the hop will start on a Friday and end on Thursday. There will be a weekly prompt featuring a book related question. The hop's purpose is to give bloggers a chance to follow other blogs, learn about new books, befriend other bloggers, and receive new followers to your own blog.

The Question of the week is: Has your perspective on reading changed as you've grown older? If so, has it affected how you write your reviews?

📖 Then vs. Now
When I was younger, I had a very specific reading niche: horror. And not just any horror - mostly Stephen King and Anne Rice on repeat. I loved the atmosphere, the tension, the sprawling narratives and the characters who teetered right on the edge of something monstrous or magical.

These days? I still love those authors - they’re part of my reading DNA — but I’ve definitely broadened my horizons. Now I read almost everything: romance, sci-fi, fantasy, memoirs, historical fiction, history and science non-fiction, contemporary, weird little books that don’t fit neatly anywhere. Reading widely has become part of the joy.

I also read multiple books at once now, something I never used to do. It keeps things interesting, and lets me match my reading to my mood - even if the total number of books I finish hasn’t really changed.

✍️ What About Reviewing?
I’m still figuring out what kind of reviewer I am. I know I don’t want to just summarise or rate - I want to connect with a book and then try to explain why it did (or didn’t) work for me. I’m learning what questions to ask, how to talk about tone and pacing and voice, and when to let my emotional reaction speak for itself.

So yes - my perspective has changed. I read more broadly. I read with more intention. And I’m learning how to write about that process in a way that’s meaningful to me.

But the one thing that hasn’t changed - and I hope it never does - is that I still absolutely, wholeheartedly love books and reading. Possibly more than ever.

💬 What about you?
Has your relationship with reading evolved over time — and how has that shaped your reviews?
bibliollama: (Book Kitten)
2025-06-30 09:10 pm

June Reading Wrap-up

 Or: How Many Books Did I Start But Not Finish Because of Tennis?

June wasn’t the strongest reading month I’ve ever had, and that’s okay. I only finished four books — which isn’t nothing, but when you’ve got twelve others in progress and a TBR that’s practically teetering… yeah, it felt a little slow.

In my defence, Roland Garros happened. And it was wild. I spent a frankly ridiculous number of hours yelling at my screen, emotionally invested in five-set dramas and rain delays. It was brilliant. It was distracting. It was totally worth it.

Here’s what I did manage to finish in between matches:

✅ Books I Finished:

Dirty Laundry by Richard Pink & Roxanne Emery – ★★★★★
A standout this month. Sharp, validating, and deeply relatable.

The Fiancé Dilemma by Elena Armas – ★★★★☆
Light, fun, and exactly what I needed for a few evenings of escapism.

Down Under by Bill Bryson – ★★★★☆
Bryson doing what Bryson does best — equal parts dry wit and chaos.

Everything I Wish I’d Known About Stress by Jayne Hardy – ★★☆☆☆
Unfortunately, this one didn’t quite hit the mark for me. A little too surface-level and generic.

I also read a lot without finishing much — I’ve got twelve books currently in progress (yes, twelve 😳), including library books that are rapidly running out of renewals and a handful of paperbacks that have been lounging on my bedside table for weeks.


🎾 Life + Reading:

Reading time was snatched in odd, quiet moments this month. A few chapters in the mornings, some Kindle time in the evenings, and the occasional sneaky page or two during lunch breaks. Not ideal, but it worked — mostly.

Wimbledon has now started, so I’m not holding my breath for a major July reading spike... but we’ll see! Stranger things have happened.


📅 July Goals:

  • Finish at least 6 books (starting with the ones I’ve already begun)
  • Tackle my library loans before they boomerang back
  • Actually post some reviews on Instagram — even the short ones
  • Prioritise joy reads over pressure
  • Continue the "read for 20 mins a day" mindset — no guilt, just stories

So, not the most prolific reading month. But honestly? Still a good one. Books were there when I needed them — even if I didn’t always make it to the end.

Tell me: how was your June reading? Are you watching Wimbledon too? And what’s the book you keep meaning to finish?

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2025-06-21 06:01 pm

My Summer 2025 TBR

Top Ten Tuesday was created by The Broke and the Bookish and is now hosted by That Artsy Reader Girl. It was born of a love of lists, a love of books, and a desire to bring bookish friends together. Each week a new theme is suggested for bloggers to participate in. Create your own Top Ten list that fits that topic – putting your unique spin on it if you want. Everyone is welcome to join but please link back to The Artsy Reader Girl in your own Top Ten Tuesday post.

I'm picking up last week's topic: Books on My Summer 2025 to-Read List

Elena Armas - The Spanish Love Deception
Sophie Austin - The Lamplighter's Bookshop
Mira Grant - Deadline
Mira Grant - Into the Drowning Deep
Natalie Haynes - Divine Might


Ali Hazelwood - Love on the Brain
Emily Henry - Beach Read
Talia Hibbert - Highly Suspicious and Unfairly Cute
John McEnroe - Serious
Erin Sterling - The Kiss Curse

So there you have it — my summer 2025 TBR in all its chaotic, romantic, occasionally monstrous glory. From sea creatures to STEM crushes, fake fiancés to furious goddesses, I’m clearly aiming for emotional whiplash (and loving every second of it).

Will I read them all? Honestly, who knows.
Will I swap half the list for something shiny I found in a charity shop? Almost definitely.

But for now, I’m embracing the energy: flirty, feral, and just a little unhinged.

Let me know — what’s on your summer TBR? Anything here you’ve read (or want to buddy read)?
Drop your must-reads, your wildcards, or your softest comfort books in the comments 💬👇
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2025-06-16 08:13 pm

🐺 From Fake Fiancés to Feral Instincts: Last Week’s Reads & What’s Next

 Last week didn’t go the way I planned — and honestly? That might’ve been for the best.

Instead of getting lost in mythology (Mythos by Stephen Fry) and cozy magic (Mosaics & Magic by Nancy Warren) like I intended, I fell headfirst into a small-town fake engagement (The Fiancé Dilemma by Elena Armas) and then promptly wandered off into the wilds of Australia with Bill Bryson (Down Under). It was romantic chaos meets curious factoids - and exactly the kind of accidental reading week that reminds me why I love letting my TBR derail itself.

But now, it’s a new week - and a new, slightly more feral direction.

📚 What I’m Reading This Week
🐺 Bitten by Kelley Armstrong
Werewolves, secret societies, bite marks, identity crises… and one very reluctant heroine.
Bitten is the first in Kelley Armstrong’s Women of the Otherworld series, and it doesn’t hold back: Elena’s trying to build a normal life when her old alpha calls her home. Cue moral dilemmas, tangled loyalties, and a lot of clawed tension.

It’s paranormal romance with teeth - messy, muscular, and surprisingly thoughtful. And yes, I’m already yelling at the characters.

🧬 Ancestors by Alice Roberts
A complete pivot in genre but not in theme - this one’s all about where we come from and how our earliest ancestors shaped the bones we carry now. Alice Roberts blends archaeology and anthropology with personal reflection, crafting a fascinating, deeply human account of what makes us… us.

I love how grounded this is, even when it veers into ancient burial rites and stone tools. It pairs oddly well with Bitten, actually - both books are about instinct, identity, and what it means to belong.

🧵 Two Sides of the Same Story?
You know those weeks where you’re craving both escapism and connection? That’s what this reading pair feels like.

  • Bitten is raw, emotional, supernatural.
  • Ancestors is academic, reflective, grounded.

And yet, both are circling the same questions:
🧬 Who are we, really?
🐺 What parts of us are instinct… and what parts are legacy?

Up Next
Will I stick to my reading plan this week? It’s honestly anyone’s guess.
But I’m leaning in to the chaos - and the transformation.

What’s on your reading pile right now? Something wild? Something wise?

bibliollama: (Book Kitten)
2025-06-14 03:54 pm

April-May Reviews Round-up

I've finished reading quite a lot of books lately and written the reviews for them but haven't quite found my schedule with posting them. I've got reviews going back to books I finished in April that aren't posted yet. So I figured I'd do some drive-by mini reviews just to catch myself up and then see if I can figure out more of a schedule going forwards.

Mira Grant - Feed (Newsflesh #1)
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️, dystopian, horror, science fiction, zombies
Zombies, politics, blogging, and a slowly unfolding conspiracy - Feed is one of those books I’d heard about for ages, and I’m so glad I finally picked it up. Yes, it’s a bit slow in places, and at times the political detail lost me a little — but wow, the rest of it more than made up for it.

The world building is sharp and believable, with a post-zombie-apocalypse society shaped by fear, media, and control. Add in a deep-dive conspiracy, tense horror moments, and characters that feel fully lived-in, and you’ve got a chillingly smart take on the zombie genre.

It's clever, creepy, and so compelling when it hits its stride. If you like your horror with a side of social commentary and smart journalism, this one’s for you.

Joanne Fluke - Peach Cobbler Murder (Hannah Swensen #7)
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️, cozy mystery
There’s just something irresistibly comforting about diving back into Lake Eden with Hannah Swensen. Peach Cobbler Murder delivers all the cozy hallmarks I’ve come to expect from this series: small-town gossip, delicious-sounding desserts, and a heroine who can’t help but find herself at the center of another murder mystery.

This installment sees a rival bakery open up shop, tensions rising, and, of course, a suspicious death. While the mystery itself isn’t the most tightly plotted of the series, it’s still engaging enough to keep the pages turning. I’ll admit the real draw here is less the murder and more the comforting rhythm of Hannah’s world: baking, sleuthing, and navigating her (increasingly chaotic) love life.

As always, the recipes included sound mouthwatering (I may or may not have bookmarked the actual peach cobbler one), and there’s something deeply nostalgic in the tone and structure of these books. They’re not high-octane thrillers, and they don’t pretend to be—they’re cozy, warm, and a little bit bonkers in the best way.

This one didn’t reach the heights of my favourite installments, but it still hit the spot. 4 stars, a hot drink, and maybe a baked good or two recommended for reading.

Travis Baldree - Bookshops & Bonedust (Legends & Lattes #0)
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️, cozy fantasy, queer
If Legends & Lattes was a warm hug in book form, then Bookshops & Bonedust is the slightly dustier but equally heartfelt origin story that makes you fall in love with Viv all over again.

This cozy prequel delivers everything I hoped for - a quieter kind of fantasy, low-stakes but rich with character. Watching a younger Viv begrudgingly rest up in a sleepy seaside town was a joy, especially as she slowly warms to the quirky bookshop owner, a scatterbrained gnome, and the town's soft-hearted baker. The writing is funny, gentle, and full of affection for found families, good food, and the small comforts that matter most.

What truly made it a 5-star read for me was how much heart Baldree pours into these characters - there's a tenderness here, even amid pirates, skeletons, and secrets. It’s a story about healing, connection, and learning to slow down. Perfect for fans of cozy fantasy, cinnamon rolls (both literal and metaphorical), and books about books.

A love letter to small bookshops, unlikely friendships, and the magic of taking a breath before the real adventure begins.

Bonnie Garmus - Lessons in Chemistry
⭐️⭐️⭐️, historical fiction, literary
I went into Lessons in Chemistry expecting something sharp, funny, and empowering - and while it does have those elements, it didn’t quite come together for me as a whole.

Elizabeth Zott is a fascinating character, and the book’s premise — a brilliant woman navigating 1960s sexism with stubborn resolve — is compelling. But the tone is unexpectedly flat at times; the matter-of-fact narrative voice suits Elizabeth’s character but left the emotional beats feeling a bit distant for me. It’s not that I didn’t care, but rather that I often felt I was being told, not shown.

That said, there’s a lot here to appreciate: from commentary on misogyny and science to a charming dog and found family moments. I just don’t think it was quite the book it set itself up to be. Still enjoyable, but I didn’t love it the way I hoped to.

Mira Grant - Rolling in the Deep (Rolling in the Deep 0.5)
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️, horror, novella, science fiction
A perfect mix of horror, sci-fi, and deep-sea dread, Rolling in the Deep is the kind of novella that grips you by the throat and drags you down... fast. Mira Grant takes the familiar premise of a documentary voyage gone wrong and spins it into something chilling, clever, and deeply unsettling.

The faux-scientific structure, the layered tension, the way the dread builds—it's everything I want in a horror novella. You know where it’s going, but that doesn’t stop the descent from being absolutely riveting. And the mermaids? Not the whimsical kind. These creatures are sharp, brutal, and terrifying in the best way.

Short, sharp, and brilliantly executed, this is oceanic horror done right. I couldn’t put it down - and then I didn’t want to sleep.

Natalie Haynes - Pandora's Jar: Women in the Greek Myths
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️, non-fiction, feminism, greek mythology, history
This is exactly the kind of feminist myth retelling I’m here for — sharp, witty, and unflinchingly clever. Pandora’s Jar digs deep into the stories of the women in Greek mythology who are so often sidelined, misrepresented, or outright vilified, and Natalie Haynes doesn’t just reclaim their voices — she rewrites the whole conversation.

The tone is conversational and accessible, sometimes almost stand-up in its delivery, which works brilliantly... most of the time. There were moments where the humour slightly undercut the emotional weight of what was being discussed, but overall, it made what could’ve been a dense read feel breezy and inviting.

Each chapter focuses on a different figure — from Pandora to Medea to Clytemnestra — and Haynes draws connections across ancient texts, pop culture, and modern feminism without ever sounding preachy. It’s a powerful reminder that the way stories are told matters just as much as the stories themselves.

Jeremy Clarkson - Driven to Distraction
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️, non-fiction, economics, education, memoir, sports
Look, I couldn't tell you the difference between a V8 and a vacuum cleaner — and honestly? I don't care. But that’s the magic of Clarkson: even when he’s ranting about obscure car models or driving on winding country roads, I’m still completely entertained.

This collection is sharp, ridiculous, and occasionally delightfully petty. You’re not here for the car reviews (well, I’m not) — you’re here for the grumpy wit, the vivid metaphors, and the sense that you're listening to your most opinionated uncle let loose over dinner.

A fun, fast read that made me laugh out loud more than once — even when I had absolutely no idea what he was on about.

C.S. Lewis - The Voyage of the Dawntreader (The Chronicles of Narnia #5)
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️, childrens, classics, fantasy
Revisiting childhood favourites is always a gamble — sometimes the magic doesn’t hold up, or the things you loved as a kid don’t quite land the same way. But I’m glad I took the chance on The Voyage of the Dawn Treader.

There’s still so much wonder in this seafaring quest: dragons, islands, curses, and that sense of wide-open adventure that made Narnia so captivating the first time around. Some parts felt slower than I remembered, and some of the narrative voice feels dated now, but there’s no denying the charm.

What surprised me most were the parts I remembered vividly — Reepicheep, the dragon, the dufflepuds — versus the bits I’d forgotten entirely. It felt like reading something familiar and unfamiliar at the same time, and that was half the joy.

And it still has one of the best opening lines ever: There was a boy called Eustace Clarence Scrubb, and he almost deserved it.
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2025-06-11 10:50 am

Favourite things to do in the summer

I’m very much a solar-powered llama, a “give me sunshine and snacks” kind of summer person — not the hiking-in-the-heat type, but the “let’s make a day of doing very little in a pretty place” kind. Summer, for me, is all about slowing down and savouring the little things. Here are some of my favourite ways to spend it:

📚 Reading outdoors
Whether it’s a park bench, a café courtyard, or just the back step with a cup of iced tea, books hit different in fresh air. Bonus points if there’s a breeze and nowhere I have to be.

🍓 Farmers’ markets & fresh berries
Saturday morning wanderings with stalls full of handmade things, locally baked bread, and punnet after punnet of sun-warmed strawberries? Bliss.

🌅 Evenings that stretch on forever
There’s something magical about golden-hour walks when the air’s finally cooled, and everything’s tinged with that soft orange light. Add a playlist and I’m all set.

🍦 Ice cream for absolutely no reason
Summer rules: if you want an ice cream, you get an ice cream. No guilt, no occasion, just pick your flavour and go.

🌊 Escaping to the coast… carefully
Living in a touristy area means the beaches can get packed — but I have my little hidden corners. There’s nothing like the smell of salt air and the sound of waves without the crowds. It’s a kind of peace I wait all year for.

🏰 Visiting castles and historic sites
Give me crumbling stone walls, overgrown gardens, and a bit of local lore — I’ll happily wander through a castle ruin or old abbey for hours. It feels like stepping sideways in time (and yes, I always imagine the story that might go with the setting).

📖 Rereading old favourites
Summer is prime reread season. I don’t know why, but it’s when I reach for comfort reads — the ones that feel like coming home. The nostalgia just fits with long days and slow evenings.

What are your favourite things to do in the summer? Are you a beach person? A garden lounger? A history nerd like me?
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2025-06-10 10:15 am

Books with 'Summer' in the Title

Top Ten Tuesday was created by The Broke and the Bookish and is now hosted by That Artsy Reader Girl. It was born of a love of lists, a love of books, and a desire to bring bookish friends together. Each week a new theme is suggested for bloggers to participate in. Create your own Top Ten list that fits that topic – putting your unique spin on it if you want. Everyone is welcome to join but please link back to The Artsy Reader Girl in your own Top Ten Tuesday post.

I'm picking up a topic from a few weeks ago: Summer Freebie (Pick any topic you can think of that fits into the category of “summer”. and I'm being super original and going for books with 'summer' in the title

Ali McNamara - Summer of Serendipity
Jenny Kane - Midsummer Dreams at Mill Grange
Heidi Swain - Summer at Skylark Farm
Mandy Baggot - Those Summer Nights
Rebecca Raisin - Summer at the Santorini Bookshop


Debbie Johnson - Summer at the Comfort Food Café
Ben Aaronovitch - Foxglove Summer
Rick Riordan - The Sword of Summer
Francisco X. Stork - The Last Summer of the Death Warriors
Dan Jones - Summer of Blood: The Peasants' Revolt of 1381

I'm not going to lie - I'm very amused at the progression of this one... like it's all contemporary romance and you think that's where the post is going and then there's Rivers of London, Magnus Chase and some British history *grins*

Got a fave “summer” book I missed? Tell me! Bonus points for anything niche, tear-jerking, or accidentally profound.
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2025-06-09 08:36 pm

📚 Reading This Week: Divine Chaos & Witchy Whodunnits

This week’s reads are spinning tales both ancient and arcane — and I’m happily caught in the middle.

⚡ Mythos by Stephen Fry
Greek mythology has never felt so charming. Stephen Fry retells the familiar myths of the Greek gods, goddesses, and glorious disasters with trademark wit and warmth. It’s like listening to your favourite eccentric uncle recount tales of the gods’ wild parties, petty revenge schemes, and endless transformations — only that uncle also happens to be a national treasure.

Fry strikes that rare balance between reverent and ridiculous: the myths are respected but not put on pedestals. And honestly? Zeus needs a firm talking-to.

I'm reading this one slowly, letting each myth settle before moving on — there's something almost ritualistic about it, in the best way.

🧵 Mosaics & Magic by Nancy Warren
From divine drama to small-town spells — Mosaics & Magic is another delicious entry in the Vampire Knitting Club series. (Yes, there's knitting. Yes, there are vampires. No, I wasn’t expecting it to work this well either.)

It’s cozy mystery meets magical realism, with a side of British wit and suspicious locals. Lucy’s sleuthing is gentle and witchy, the murder is more curiosity than horror, and the supernatural elements are woven in like a good charm — never too heavy, always intriguing. Add in mosaic art and you’ve got a mystery that’s as textured as it is twisty.

✨ Unexpected Companions
What ties them together? Storytelling.

Both books celebrate the power of narrative — Mythos through the myths that shaped ancient culture, and Mosaics & Magic through the small stories of secrets, community, and hidden truths. They’re also both, in their own way, about identity: who we are, where we come from, and the tales we use to make sense of the chaos around us.

Also: everyone’s hiding something. Whether it’s a spell, a secret affair, or the fact that you accidentally birthed Athena from your skull.

What’s on your reading stack this week?
Are you in the mood for gods, spells, or something in between?
bibliollama: (Rainbow Bookcase)
2025-06-07 07:39 pm

Book review: The Mini ADHD Coach by Alice Gendron

Cover of the book Murder at Kings Crossing by Andrea Penrose Title: The Mini ADHD Coach
Author: The Mini ADHD Coach
Dates read: 29/04/25 - 01/05/25

Rating ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

Publisher: Vermillion
Number of pages: 204

Fiction or non-fiction: non-fiction
Subject or genre: adhd, psychology, self-help

Book blurb:

When Alice Gendron was diagnosed with ADHD aged 29, she knew she didn't fit the usual ADHD stereotypes. And she knew she wasn't alone. With 10 percent of the population worldwide living with ADHD, it's still highly misunderstood.

Can you have ADHD and still be able to focus? Do you have to be hyperactive to get a diagnosis?

The Mini ADHD Coach will set the record straight. Through Alice's much-loved illustrations, you'll learn:

- How ADHD can impact your daily life, from getting dressed and commuting to dating and making dinner
- How to deal with strong emotions after your ADHD diagnosis
- What ADHD expressions, such as analysis paralysis, hyperfocus and time blindness, really mean
- And how to finally understand yourself

Full of insider tips, daily hacks and an important glossary of ADHD language, this book will show you that you are not alone and that by with working with your brain, not against it, it is possible to thrive with ADHD.

How I discovered or acquired this book: It jumped off the library shelf, waving emphatically at me!

My thoughts: Reading The Mini ADHD Coach felt like a deep exhale — like someone had finally cracked open my brain and gently said, “Hey, that’s valid.” Alice Gendron has written an incredibly kind, affirming, and practical guide to understanding ADHD, especially as it presents in adults who might have gone undiagnosed or misdiagnosed for years.

What makes this book stand out is its friendly tone, the adorable and spot-on illustrations, and the way it captures both the frustrations and the magic of an ADHD brain without judgement. It doesn’t talk down to the reader. Instead, it holds your hand through everything from executive dysfunction to rejection sensitivity to the joy of hyperfocus.

For me, the real beauty of this book lies in how seen and understood I felt while reading. It wasn’t just educational — it was emotional. Every page was like a hug that said, “You're not lazy, broken, or weird — you're wired differently, and that’s okay.”

This is an ideal read for anyone newly diagnosed, self-diagnosing, or simply wanting to understand themselves or someone they love. It's also a gentle, approachable resource for those who might be overwhelmed by more clinical texts.

bibliollama: (Book Love)
2025-05-26 10:21 am

📚 Reading This Week: Love, Loss & the Layers Beneath

This week’s reads are taking me from heartache to hard ground, in the best possible way.

💞 Say You'll Remember Me by Abby Jimenez
Abby Jimenez always knows how to hit me right in the feelings, and this book is no exception. It’s tender, romantic, and bittersweet — about love, second chances, and what it means to be remembered for who you really are. The characters are beautifully flawed and earnest, and I already feel like they’ve moved in and taken up space in my head.

There’s something so comforting about sinking into a romance that’s just as much about emotional growth as it is about the happily ever after.

🪨 Ancestors: The Prehistory of Britain in Seven Burials by Alice Roberts
Switching gears (in the biggest way possible), I’m also making my way through Ancestors by Alice Roberts — and I am loving it. It’s a fascinating deep-dive into British prehistory, told through the stories of burials and what they reveal about the people who lived, loved, and died thousands of years ago.

This is the kind of book that reminds you how connected we are — across time, space, and story. It’s part archaeology, part anthropology, and part quiet reflection on what it means to be human.

✨ A Surprising Pair
What ties these two together? Honestly — more than I expected.

Both books are, in their own ways, about what we leave behind. Whether it’s memories, love, grief, or literal bones in the ground, they ask the same core question: How will we be remembered?

One makes my heart ache. The other makes my mind wander. And together, they’re the perfect pair for a week of thoughtful, emotional reading.

What are you reading this week? Do your books ever unexpectedly connect like this?
bibliollama: (Book Love)
2025-05-14 08:45 pm

Books I Love That Became Films or TV Shows

One of my favourite things (and also one of the most nerve-wracking) is when a book I love gets adapted for the screen. Sometimes it’s magic. Sometimes it’s heartbreak. And sometimes it’s so bad it sends you right back to the book just to wash it out of your brain. So for this week's Weekly Wednesday Blogging Challenge here’s a look at the adaptations I’ll defend forever, the ones I’m hopeful about, and the disasters I wish never happened.

Got It Right
Jurassic Park by Michael Crichton
An iconic film and one of the rare cases where the adaptation might even outshine the book. Crichton’s story is sharp and science-heavy, but Spielberg's movie brought the dinosaurs — and the danger — to life in a way that’s still thrilling today

The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe by C.S. Lewis
I grew up completely enchanted by Narnia thanks to the books and the 90s BBC shows, and the early 2000s film adaptations (especially The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe) did a beautiful job bringing that world to life. Were they perfect? No. But they absolutely captured the magic.

The Shawshank Redemption by Stephen King (from Different Seasons)
One of the best book-to-film adaptations of all time. Moving, powerful, and perfectly acted — it brings out the emotional depth of the original novella Rita Hayworth and the Shawshank Redemption.

Bad Adaptations That Let the Book Down
Percy Jackson & the Olympians by Rick Riordan
The books are a joy — fun, heartfelt, and myth-packed. The movie? Let’s just say they missed the mark entirely. Thankfully, the new Disney+ series seems to be a much better fit. Fingers crossed it continues to do Percy justice!

The Vampire Chronicles by Anne Rice
Anne Rice’s gothic vampire saga deserves an adaptation that truly understands its lush, philosophical, queer core. Unfortunately, we haven’t gotten that yet. The Interview film was watchable but missed key emotional beats. Queen of the Damned was a chaotic mess. And as for the new AMC series — I haven’t watched it, because the casting choices just don’t work for me.

Bitten by Kelley Armstrong
I love Elena. I love Clay. I love the entire Women of the Otherworld world. Which is why I hated the TV adaptation — it felt cheap, overly sexualised, and lost all the emotional nuance that made the books so compelling

Adaptations I’m Hopeful About
The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo by Taylor Jenkins Reid
This has all the ingredients for a sensational adaptation — old Hollywood glamour, scandal, queerness, and heartbreak. I just hope they really get Evelyn right: fierce, complicated, and unforgettable.

You and Me on Vacation by Emily Henry
I love a friends-to-lovers story with tension and heart, and this one’s made for screen — if they keep the wit sharp and the pacing tight, it could be the next great rom-com adaptation.

Daisy Jones & the Six by Taylor Jenkins Reid
This was one of my favourite books (and I just got a signed copy) — the music, the relationships, the behind-the-scenes chaos — and I’ve been holding off watching the series because I want to savour it. I’m hopeful it captures the heart of the book and brings Daisy to life just the way I imagined.

Other Adaptation Stories
Bridgerton by Julia Quinn
I came to this story backwards — I loved the show and now want to dive into the books and see what the original series feels like in comparison.

World War Z by Max Brooks
Controversial take: I didn’t really enjoy the book, but the movie really worked for me! Not a faithful adaptation, but a solid film on its own.

The Body / Stand by Me by Stephen King
This coming-of-age story was quietly beautiful on the page — and the movie captured the same melancholy and depth, maybe even better than the book. Sometimes, the screen brings something extra.

What book adaptation do you think nailed it (or totally missed the mark)?
bibliollama: (Default)
2025-05-13 07:19 pm

Books With 'Star' in the Title

Top Ten Tuesday was created by The Broke and the Bookish and is now hosted by That Artsy Reader Girl. It was born of a love of lists, a love of books, and a desire to bring bookish friends together. Each week a new theme is suggested for bloggers to participate in. Create your own Top Ten list that fits that topic – putting your unique spin on it if you want. Everyone is welcome to join but please link back to The Artsy Reader Girl in your own Top Ten Tuesday post.

I'm picking up a topic from a few weeks ago: Books with the Word “[Insert Word Here]” in the Title and my word is 'star'

Kevin J Anderson - Star Wars: Tales of the Bounty Hunters
Isaac Asimov - The Stars, Like Dust
Alexandria Bellefleur - Written In the Stars
Peter David - Star Trek: The Next Generation: Imzadi
Kerry O Ferris - Stargazing


John Green - The Fault in our Stars
Marian Keyes - The Brightest Star in the Sky
Sarah J Maas - A Court of Frost and Starlight
Clive Prince - The Stargate Conspiracy
Suzanne Wood - Stargate SG:1 #11 The Barque of Heaven

Was it wildly tempting to just list ten Stargate, Star Trek, or Star Wars books and call it a day? Of course it was. 😂

But instead, you’re getting a lovingly chaotic mix of “star” titles — nostalgic, weird, sparkly, and maybe a little unhinged. Just how we like it.

⭐ Got a fave “star” book I missed? Tell me! Bonus points for anything niche, tear-jerking, or accidentally profound.