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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?
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 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 Love)
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)?
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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 a Debut Novels I Enjoyed

Kelley Armstrong - Bitten
Alexandria Bellefleur - Written In The Stars
Poppy Z Brite - Lost Souls
Belinda Jones - Divas Las Vegas
Stephen King - Carrie


Stel Pavlou - Decipher
Sarah Penner - The Lost Apothecary
Anne Rice - Interview With The Vampire
Rick Riordan - The Lightning Thief
Alison Weir - Innocent Traitor

This was harder than I thought it would be - I thought of 3 straight off (Brite, King & Rice) but then it got a little trickier! It turns out a lot of the authors I love, I haven't read their early work. There's a couple who started self-publishing and those first books are ok, but it's only their traditionally published later works I absolutely love. There are also a couple where I couldn't figure out what was actually their first book.

I read much more non-fiction than fiction, so I'm tempted to save that as an idea and do 10 debut non-fiction books I enjoyed as well. Of course, knowing my luck, I won't have read those authors early books either LOL

What debut novels have you enjoyed?

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Cassie

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