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First Monday

Janet in January

January 1, 2024

The following post includes affiliate links. More details here.  As you’re doing your Amazon shopping, we’d be ever so grateful if you’d use our affiliate link to do so as it helps pay the bills around here!

Darling readers, come close because we have a tale to tell today!  We did a thing… an ambitious, ridiculous thing, and we are not sorry.  We decided in the spring that we were going to reread the entire Maas-iverse before the newest title comes out on January 30.  We had a plan, and it was amazing, and then we got Kindle Unlimited, a couple of times… and so, our plan went up in flames (no thanks Aelin).  

As a result, for 2024, we’ll be celebrating Janet in January in honor of Sarah Janet Maas.  Yes, Ashley did copious amounts of research to confirm that is accurate and we’re calling it close enough to Jane (and also being a bit self-serving, and no, we’re not one bit sorry).  That does mean we’ll be discussing both the completed (or is it?) Throne of Glass series and the still in progress A Court of Thorns and Roses series this month, since we’ve not discussed either on the blog, and only ACOTAR in Virtual Book Club (although we did discuss CC#1/HOEAB in this post)!  We’ll also be discussing our favorite titles of 2023 too, so you’ll get WAY more books than usual, not less!  In keeping with our usual format, for this unusual development, this month we’ll be discussing:

Our 2023 Favorites (as we did for 2019, 2020, and 2021)

Throne of Glass Series

A Court of Thorns and Roses Series

Don’t forget to PRE-ORDER the newest edition to the Maas-iverse, House of Flame and Shadow, scheduled to release on January 30th! (There might be an opportunity to join us for a rekindled Virtual Book Club discussion, so stay tuned or comment below if you’re interested!)

Which post are you most looking forward to reading, and then sliding into our DMs to discuss?  Yes darlings, we do want just that!

~Ashley and Nikki 

P.S. There may be spoilers, as the newest book in either series is nearly three years old!  We’ll give warnings and such, so it’ll be your choice! 

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Reading Life Review

Reading Life Review: December 2023

December 28, 2023

The following post includes affiliate links. More details here.  As you’re doing your Amazon shopping, we’d be ever so grateful if you’d use our affiliate link to do so as it helps pay the bills around here!

Ashley IN MEDIAS RES

  • Pillars of Wealth: How to Make, Save, and Invest Your Money to Achieve Financial Freedom by David Greene
  • The Body Keeps the Score by Bessel van der Kolk*
  • Think and Grow Rich for Women: Using Your Power to Create Success and Significance by Sharon L. Lechter * 

*Ashley’s still waiting for these two titles to come back off hold at the library…struggle bus.

Nikki IN MEDIAS RES

  • Empire of Storms (Throne of Glass #5) by Sarah J. Maas
  • Life Lessons from Psalms by Max Lucado

Ashley FIN

  • The Naughty List by Jade West
  • Queen of Shadows (Throne of Glass #4) by Sarah J. Maas
  • A Court of Sugar and Spice (Wicked Darlings #1) by Rebecca F. Kenney 
  • How the Grump Saved Christmas by Claire Kingsley
  • The Ocean at the End of the Lane by Neil Gaiman
  • Ethan: A Billionaire’s Game Novel (Billionaire’s Game #3) by Samantha Whiskey
  • A Dangerous Collaboration (Veronica Speedwell #4) by Deanna Raybourn
  • The Wedding Date by Jasmine Guillory
  • Pucking Ever After: Volume 1 by Emily Rath
  • Pucking Ever After: Volume 2 by Emily Rath
  • Pucking Wild (Jacksonville Rays #2) by Emily Rath

Nikki FIN

  • Lady Brazen (Notorious Ladies of London #6) by Scarlett Scott
  • The Lives We Actually Have: 100 Blessings for Ordinary Days by Kate Bowler
  • Queen of Shadows (Throne of Glass #4) by Sarah J. Maas
  • Reading While Black: African American Biblical Interpretation as an Exercise in Hope by Esau McCaulley
  • The Silent Struggle: Taking Charge of ADHD in Adults by L. William Ross-Child M.L.C.
  • How the Grump Saved Christmas by Claire Kingsley
  • Lady Lawless (Notorious Ladies of London #5) by Scarlett Scott
  • The Ocean at the End of the Lane by Neil Gaiman
  • Lady Wicked (Notorious Ladies of London #4) by Scarlett Scott
  • A Dangerous Collaboration (Veronica Speedwell #4) by Deanna Raybourn
  • Runaway Love (Cherry Tree Harbor #1) by Melanie Harlow
  • The Wisteria Society of Lady Scoundrels (Dangerous Damsels #1) by India Holton

Technically we’ve waited for December’s Reading Life Review to occur when January 2024 is officially started and we here at Heart.Wants.Books. know exactly what our reading life looked like for the entire year. I’m over here taking 3 titles I started months ago and rolling them over on the In Medias Res section of my life because I’m struggling to get some of them off hold at the library, and another that I pre-order purchased is a collection of lessons that I have read multiple times from different authors repeated in another book. Sometimes reading the same thing in a new way is really helpful, but this time it’s just kinda boring. I’m hoping for a little more pizazz when I finally get to another section of the book.

During the holiday break I leaned-in to the Kindle Unlimited subscription that we signed up for during Black Friday deals week. I read some absolutely amazing and filthy smut and some pretty filthy smut. And some comfortable romance reads that some people would consider filthy smut. I wish I could have leaned-in to the holiday romance a little more as Nikki and I have done in years past, but, alas, it was not to be as we have the continuation of Maas-Distraction happening this season. I’m tickled pink that we were able to buddy read Claire Kingsley’s How the Grump Saved Christmas. It’s set in Tilikum, the same town as her Bailey Brothers series and upcoming Haven Brothers series and can be read either before or after book six in the Bailey series, Rewriting the Stars, just note that there are a few concurrent plot points. They’re romance novels, folks, we know how the books are going to end!

December was the third month in 2023 that I did not finish reading a nonfiction book. I’d like to state that I am constantly going between fiction and nonfiction but that sometimes it takes me a little longer to read the nonfiction because, and I can not state this enough, fiction is my stress release from the real world.

How are you going to focus on reading for pleasure in 2024?

~Ashley

Generally, I don’t mind rolling books from one month to another, but I 100% wrapped up three books on purpose the last week of December because I wanted them to be finished and to start the new year with a bit of a more concise in progress list.  I wasn’t letting them hang out for any particular reason other than fiction is just more comfortable than nonfiction, generally, which also helps Ashley and I distract / support each other’s coping mechanisms.  

I don’t have anything earth shattering to say about my titles this month, and that’s just fine.  They were all comfortable and that was my goal, so I ACHIEVED MY GOAL, GO ME!  Please darling readers, do not underestimate the value of a good enough, comfortable-to-you read during a stressful season or a season of refilling your cup (like the week between Christmas and New Year’s hopefully was for you).  There was a lot of that on my list this month, and likely will be again in January.  For anyone wondering, the Throne of Glass series (or anything by Sarah J. Maas) is likely not a comfort read the first time through, but 100% can be as a reread, and I forgot how fun the story in Queen of Shadows is and appreciate the reminder!  

I don’t want to sign off without mentioning The Lives We Actually Have.  I was heavily influenced to purchase this title and got a great deal on kindle, and I regret nothing.  This is literally a book of blessings for ordinary days, hard days, seasons of grief, and so much more.  I loved the weekly Advent blessings and definitely was looking at the table of content almost daily to see which blessing felt the most right for me to read over myself that day.  It’s almost up there with Matt Haig’s The Comfort Book, although I do appreciate the secular nature of that title more for some, and I might one day need dead tree copies of both!

What did you read and adore during this season of comfort reads?

~Nikki 

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Book Review

The Ocean at the End of the Lane by Neil Gaiman

December 21, 2023

The following post includes affiliate links. More details here.  As you’re doing your Amazon shopping, we’d be ever so grateful if you’d use our affiliate link to do so as it helps pay the bills around here!

Darling readers, I’m delighted to share today’s book with you, and even more delighted to have some inklings as to why my beloved Kendra Adachi adores Neil Gaiman so ding dang much.  The Ocean at the End of the Lane by Neil Gaiman is such a fun read, and so well executed!  I feel like the both / and of it all is hard to do, and congratulations to us at Heart.Wants.Books I think we’ve hit the jackpot of comfort reads this month!

The Ocean at the End of the Lane is the story of a man returning to his past, on the occasion of a funeral.  As a result of this return, he finds himself remembering way back when he was a child, a series of tragic things that occurred (some of which are in the marketing copy).  When all hope feels lost, our protagonist meets Lettie, who lives in a farmhouse at the end of the lane.  Lettie lives with her mother and grandmother, and takes our protagonist under her wing, and then the real drama starts!  The short (marketing copy) story is that darkness in the form of magical realism is unleashed and Lettie protects our protagonist.  The experiences in that drama shape the protagonist, both during and after, and both with and through Lettie, he has some pretty fantastic epiphanies.  

On a related note, themes of The Ocean at the End of the Lane include the power of books and reading, and how child-like adults really are, or could be if they only admitted to it.  I found it both refreshing and uplifting.  My favorite quotes include:

“Adult stories never made sense, and they were so slow to start. They made me feel like there were secrets, Masonic, mythic secrets, to adulthood. Why didn’t adults want to read about Narnia, about secret islands and smugglers and dangerous fairies?”

  • Narnia and stories about secret islands, smugglers, and dangerous faeries are some of my favorites, even as an adult.

“Growing up, I took so many cues from books. They taught me most of what I knew about what people did, about how to behave.”

  • Cosigned, no notes

“I’m going to tell you something important. Grown-ups don’t look like grown-ups on the inside either. Outside, they’re big and thoughtless and they always know what they’re doing. Inside, they look just like they always have. Like they did when they were your age. The truth is, there aren’t any grown-ups. Not one, in the whole wide world.”

  • FACTS – although I do wish I had more wonder like I did way back when.  Perhaps that’s a muscle that needs some exercising.

I’m giving The Ocean at the End of the Lane four solid stars.  While I’m not likely to reread it, it has stayed with me, and definitely helped Gaiman’s catalog rise on my TBR list.  Overall, it is a hopeful, magical book that includes vibrant dialogue and lush descriptions.  What more could a person want in a novel?  

What’s a recent read that left you feeling hopeful?

~Nikki 

Neil Gaiman from Variety.com

Neil Gaiman is a bestselling and award winning author who was born in Hampshire, United Kingdom, and currently lives outside Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA. Here at Heart.Wants.Books. Nikki and I have read and discussed with you, darling readers, American Gods during a Virtual Book Club Session. Plus, during our pre-blog buddy read years, we read Good Omens by Terry Pratchett and Neil Gaiman before we watched the Amazon TV series of the same name. (FYI, highly recommend reading the book before watching the series, of which I have only consumed season 1 – season 2 released in 2023.) Gaiman began his writing career as a journalist after a childhood being left, feral, at libraries where he was introduced to the inter-library loan. Love a good ILL story, friends. An author with a cult following is always an interesting creature, and most of that cult following comes not from his prolific collection of novels, but from the comic books he’s authored specifically Sandman. There’s not one Gaiman title that I would say no to reading, even or especially his titles for young readers!

Like most Gaiman novels, I didn’t quite know what to expect as the beginning exposition of the story doesn’t match the marketing copy. Gaiman usually takes quite a little while for the plot to pick up and The Ocean at the End of the Lane is no exception. We, as readers, always love when the protagonist is a reader, and when I read about how Gaiman was a young boy who was also a reader it feels a little autobiographical at the beginning and how many readers become writers. I also loved how our protagonist had a kitten that he loved then lost and was reminded that like all living things they are “kittens one day, old cats the next. And then just memories. And the memories fade and blend and smudge together…” It is our memories as humans that make us who we are and Gaiman tells us at the very beginning of the book that “Childhood memories are sometimes covered and obscured beneath the things that come later, like childhood toys forgotten at the bottom of a crammed adult closet, but they are never lost for good.” We can always find our way back to ourselves, our true self as long as we can access our memories.

I’m giving The Ocean at the End of the Lane four stars for such excellent writing, a hidden theme, and a protagonist that loves reading like I love reading. What book have you read that’s given you some big feels when you finally figure out the theme that’s hidden in a plot like childhood toys at the bottom of a closet?

~Ashley

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Book Review

A Dangerous Collaboration by Deanna Raybourn

December 14, 2023

The following post includes affiliate links. More details here.  As you’re doing your Amazon shopping, we’d be ever so grateful if you’d use our affiliate link to do so as it helps pay the bills around here!

Darling readers, there is something very comforting about visiting an old friend, and at this point after meeting them in 2020, Veronica and Stoker feel like old friends. There’s something also really fun about going with old friends to an island with a castle that has stood the test of time and has all the fun passageways and gardens to prove it. That is where A Dangerous Collaboration leads us and I’m only mad about the slow burn.   

In this iteration of Veronica and Stoker solve a mystery, otherwise known as A Dangerous Collaboration (Veronica Speedwell #4) by Deanna Raybourn, they travel to Cornwall, then to an island, where a friend of Stoker’s brother is the Lord.  (Yes, this had me picturing all the landscape of Poldark, and it was just creepy enough for me to have a vision of Aunt Agatha too!). Turns out, a party has been assembled rather dramatically to help solve the mystery of why the Lord’s bride disappeared three years ago on their wedding day.  

If you love a good madcap, this might be for you!  Veronica is rather ahead of her (Victorian) times, Stoker has such a great balance of feminism and chivalry, and neither have any cares to give, they’re just here for the science of it all.  A Dangerous Collaboration is another step towards what I hope will be their fantastic romance, and another really fun hang of a book.  I’m not generally a connoisseur of mysteries, but something about this series feels like just the right balance of cozy and creepy that have me hooked. And you know the “will they or won’t they” doesn’t hurt either.  

If you need something fun to read this holiday season, or this winter, as you escape the cold and rest up, I’m giving A Dangerous Collaboration four solid stars.  I’m not still thinking about the mystery, but I am wondering what comes next for our daring pair of leads and am grumpy that our Maas adventure is going to interfere with me finding out, for now.  Please start with A Curious Beginning if you’re just meeting Veronica and Stoker.  They do require proper introductions!

What’s a fun series that you love to come back to?

~ Nikki 

Deanna Raybourn from DeannaRaybourn.com

Deanna Raybourn is a sixth-generation native Texan who graduated with a double major in English and history from the University of Texas San Antonio. She’s the author of the Lady Julia Grey mystery series, the Veronica Speedwell mystery series, a collection of 1920’s themed novels, other stories, and the 2022 bestselling thriller Killers of a Certain Age. Her novels have been nominated for Edgar, Macavity, and Agatha awards, and Killers of a Certain Age won the Barry Award for best thriller. She lives in Virginia with her college sweetheart of a husband and one child.

We have never reviewed a Veronica Speedwell mystery novel before because we have only ever read them for Virtual Book Club titles. It goes a long way to say that the fact we have chosen the fourth in the series of nine books (currently, there is not a set number of titles anticipated yet) for our Comfort Read themed month means we love this series and these characters. Veronica is a butterfly hunter who can no longer bear to kill the lovely insects for her collection and is creating a vivarium of live specimens to be included in the museum of natural history that she and Revelstoke Templeton-Vane are creating for Lord Rosemorran. Tiberius, Lord Templeton-Vane, Stoker’s elder brother receives a request to journey to his friend’s family island and tempts Veronica with the promise of glasswing butterflies for her vivarium that are only found on this very island. The relationship between Veronica, Stoker, and Tiberius is awkwardly delightful and full of weirdness and emotional understanding. 

I am also giving A Dangerous Collaboration four stars for its exceeds expectations writing and plot. I, too, prefer to not have a slow burn relationship and this is the fourth book with all the sexual tension of one romance novel. It doesn’t mean that I am going to slow down in wanting to read the rest of Veronica and Stoker’s story and about all the adventures they go on separately and together. Especially together for at least five more books! The comfort level of this series is like a mug of hot cocoa enjoyed next to a fire. I highly recommend reading them while enjoying just those things.

~Ashley

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@nikkiringenberg got herself out of a #RegencyRom @nikkiringenberg  got herself out of a #RegencyRomance ‘slump’ this month and read non-romance books that were also not for the blog. @ashleysellsmiddletn finally surpassed her sister, @mrs.lindseyandry  in the total books read this year category! 17 to @ashleysellsmiddletn and the race is on to hit 100 for the year - she’s behind… and other interesting topics abound in the #March2024 #ReadingLifeReview #WomensHistoryMonth #WeKnowItsAprilNow

Check out the blog post at the #LinkInBio or directly at www.heartwantsbooks.com

#Bookstagram #BookBlogger #LetsRead #MoreBooksLessAlgorithm
Another #AdvancedReviewCopy from another #SeasonPa Another #AdvancedReviewCopy from another #SeasonPassAuthor and another #DoubleFiveStarReview title from @chanelcleeton 📚 #TheHouseOnBiscayneBay, which releases Tuesday 2 April 2024, is a gothic novel taking place over two timelines with separate yet connected mysteries that our heroines must unravel while also braving all the dangers that #Florida can bring. As Anna says in the first line: “I cannot for the life of me imagine why anyone would want to live in Florida.” Read along with our final title of #WomensHistoryMonth #March2024 to find out why. #ThisIsNotAnAprilFoolsPost - Special thanks to #BerkleyPublishingGroup, #NetGalley, and the #BlogBlitzAlert for the pre-release copies!

Check out the blog post at the #LinkInBio or directly at www.heartwantsbooks.com

#Bookstagram #BookBlogger #LetsRead #MoreBooksLessAlgorithm
It’s a Bird! No, It’s a Plane! Specifically, a It’s a Bird! No, It’s a Plane! Specifically, a  #PanAm jet traveling the world with the most glamorous women as your personal concierge to the skies!  Check out #HeartWantsBooks #Double4StarReview of #ComeFlyTheWorld by #JuliaCooke and learn about a few of the real life women who were the face of America’s most well known international-only airline …  plus some of the less glamorous activities of the jet-set we didn’t learn about in history class. #WomensHistoryMonth #March2024

Check out the blog post at the #LinkInBio or directly at www.heartwantsbooks.com

#Bookstagram #BookBlogger #LetsRead #MoreBooksLessAlgorithm #DontForgetAbout #VirtualBookClub #HWBVBC
#HeartWantsBooks is thrilled and delighted to brin #HeartWantsBooks is thrilled and delighted to bring you the #ThirdInstallment of the #DefyingTheCrownTrilogy by @kerrywrites  this #WomensHistoryMonth  #DaughterOfSnowAndSecrets finds our heroine saving her Huguenot people from religious persecution by the Sun King. Will Isabelle and her family return unscathed from Versailles and return to the peace of Geneva? You’ll have to pick up this #DoubleFourStarReview title to find out! Don’t forget to start with #DaughterOfTheKing and #DaughterOfShadows which, along with Daughter of Snow and Secrets we received an #AdvanceReviewCopy from @blackrosewriting , but all opinions are our own. #WomensHistoryMonth2024 #March2024

Check out the blog post at the #LinkInBio or directly at www.heartwantsbooks.com

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It’s #March2024 and we’re focusing on the madn It’s #March2024 and we’re focusing on the madness that can be a woman’s life this #WomensHistoryMonth - traversing centuries, countries, and cultures, and genres in three different titles. Two of which are #AdvancedReviewCopies 📚 We’re finishing up a trilogy with one and reading a title from a #SeasonPassAuthor with another. The third book…a #NonFictionTitle #gasp

For the list check out the blog post at the #LinkInBio or directly at www.heartwantsbooks.com

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#February2024 and our #BlackHistoryMonth #ReadingL #February2024 and our #BlackHistoryMonth #ReadingLifeReview is filled with much of the usual, excepting that @nikkiringenberg is on track to meet her reading goal and @ashleysellsmiddletn is not. We’re taking this moment to remind you to not ‘should’ on your reading life and to enjoy your hobbies at the pace in which they happen. #HobbiesAreForJoy #TheReadingLifeIsNotACompetition 

Check out the blog post at the #LinkInBio or directly at www.heartwantsbooks.com

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February is #BlackHistoryMonth and #HeartWantsBook February is #BlackHistoryMonth and #HeartWantsBooks is committed to reading and celebrating #BlackAuthors 📚#February2024 has a mixture of #Fiction and #Nonfiction and every week has a title that can be found on #KindleUnlimited so we hope you choose to #ReadAlongWithUs the blog post has the list!

Check out the blog post at the #LinkInBio or directly at www.heartwantsbooks.com

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