Review – My Heart in Braille

Posted May 16, 2026 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Review – My Heart in Braille

My Heart in Braille

by Joris Chamblain, Pascal Ruter, Anne-Lise Nalin

Genres: Graphic Novels, Young Adult
Pages: 74
Rating: one-star
Synopsis:

Victor loves vintage cars and belting out songs in his garage band, but school is harder for him and he seems to always say the wrong thing. When he meets the cello-playing, straight-A student Marie-Jo, the two strike up an unlikely friendship, and before long both his grades and his attitude improve. But when Marie-Jo confesses a terrible secret to him, Victor will have to return the favor and do a little rescuing of his own.

There’s some pretty art in Joris Chamberlain’s My Heart in Braille, but I didn’t really think much of the story. I gather it’s actually based on a novel, which might make more sense of it; it didn’t really feel like it’d been written/structured to be a graphic novel to begin with.

Overall, it feels like there’s some lacking context for the characters and like certain aspects of the story just get totally dropped, or elided. There isn’t strong character development or relationship development, and Victor’s personal development (and coping with his ?ADHD) is essentially ditched in favour of Marie’s feel-good story about getting to go to music school.

Overall, not strong at all.

Rating: 1/5 (“didn’t like it”)

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Stacking the Shelves & The Sunday Post

Posted May 16, 2026 by Nicky in General / 3 Comments

Happy weekend! And happy reading time? Well, for some of us at least.

Books acquired this week

I had no intention of getting anything this week, except maybe some more poetry from the library, but then I realised that volume three of the Omniscient Reader’s Viewpoint novel was out… and volume ten of the manhwa. How is a person of flesh and blood supposed to resist?

Cover of Omniscient Reader's Viewpoint vol 10 by Umi, SleepyC and singNsong Cover of Omniscient Reader's Viewpoint vol 3 by singNSong

I did also get some more poetry from the library, since I’m trying to use some short books to fill gaps in my day, so there they are:

Cover of If All the World and Love Were Young by Stephen Sexton Cover of The Weather Wheel by Mimi Khalvati Cover of Obit by Victoria Chang

I’ve already dug into two of those, so I’m sure I’ll have more loans soon. Hurrah for libraries!

Posts from this week

First the review posts, as per usual:

As ever, these aren’t necessarily recent reads, since I store up reviews to spread out the genres I’m posting about as much as possible. See below for the books I’ve been reading this week!

And of course there have been some other posts:

What I’m reading

Things are still a bit quiet on the reading front, and let’s admit it, it’s at least partly due to my newfound special interest in hidden object games. Oh well: I don’t read as part of a curriculum or obligation or whatever, but for my own enjoyment… and these things come and go. And I did do quite a bit of reading this week all the same — here are the books I finished!

Cover of Brigands and Breadknives by Travis Baldree Cover of Ambush at Still Lake by Caroline Bird Cover of A Palace Near the Wind by Ai Jiang

Cover of If All the World and Love Were Young by Stephen Sexton Cover of Omniscient Reader's Viewpoint vol 9 by Umi, SleepyC and singNsong Cover of Obit by Victoria Chang

This weekend I’m planning to finish up An Ancient Witch’s Guide to Modern Dating and A History of the World in 50 Pieces, for the latter of which I might switch to audiobook, especially if the audiobook has any snippets of the actual pieces. I’m being somewhat hindered in following the text by not knowing all the music, and there doesn’t seem to be a handy playlist or anything.

Other than that, I do also want to dig into volume ten of the Omniscient Reader’s Viewpoint manhwa, and probably read another couple of shortish reads: a manga or comic, probably, and another poetry collection (the Mimi Khalvati collection is rather calling to me).

That said, I might be slowed up this weekend by the arrival of yarn for a new crochet project. It’s been a while, but I ended up sorely tempted by this beautiful pattern, and I didn’t see any reason not to give it a shot. Listening to the audiobook of A History of the World in 50 Pieces might be a good accompaniment to that, once I’ve got started and sorted out my initial stitch count. The whole width is worked for each row, so I’ll want to concentrate to make sure I get that right.

And of course, I’m sure I’ll be playing plenty of hidden object and puzzle games, too!

Linking up with Reading Reality’s Stacking the Shelves, Caffeinated Reviewer’s The Sunday Post, the Sunday Salon over at Readerbuzz, and It’s Monday! What Are You Reading? at The Book Date.

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Review – Somewhere There Is A Sky For Us

Posted May 15, 2026 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Review – Somewhere There Is A Sky For Us

Somewhere There Is A Sky For Us

by Joelle Taylor (editor)

Genres: Poetry
Pages: 170
Rating: two-stars
Synopsis:

This anthology gathers the many voices and textures of Language is a Queer Thing, a 3-year long poetic dialogue between queer voices from India and the UK, unfolding over three years of exchange, residencies and performance.

These poems are prayers, protests, lullabies, warnings, duets, sonatas and satires.

Somewhere There Is A Sky For Us is the product of a three-year project involving queer poets from India and the UK sharing their work, doing residencies and exchanges, etc. It’s an interesting spread of poems, and often plays with form (sometimes a bit difficult to read in print form, since they’ve turned it sideways on the page so you have to turn the book). It’s mostly in English, but other languages are mixed in here and there.

Overall it wasn’t quite my thing — I think I’m more of a traditionalist about poetry at times, and don’t love ones that play with shapes on the page or go very abstract. There’s a few prose-poems, which I can enjoy, but didn’t really stand out to me.

As ever, there are a few images and lines that stand out, and I’m glad I gave it a shot! Just not my personal cup of tea. Which is perhaps an unfair figure of speech, as I’ve never met a cup of tea I liked; rest assured that I didn’t read this expecting not to like it, as it’s a pretty cool sounding project.

Rating: 2/5 (“it was okay”)

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Review – Craftland

Posted May 14, 2026 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Review – Craftland

Craftland: A Journey Through Britain's Lost Arts & Vanishing Trades

by James Fox

Genres: History, Non-fiction
Pages: 360
Rating: four-stars
Synopsis:

Britain has always been a craft land. For generations what we made with our hands defined our identities, built our communities and shaped our regions. Craftland chronicles the vanishing skills and traditions that once governed every aspect of life on these shores.

Travelling the length of Britain, from the Scilly Isles to the Scottish Highlands, James Fox seeks out the country’s last remaining master craftspeople. Stepping inside the workshops of blacksmiths and wheelwrights, cutlers and coopers, bell-founders and watchmakers, we glimpse not only our past but another way of life — one that is not yet lost and whose wisdom could shape our future.

For as long as there are humans, there will be craft. It is all around us, hiding in plain sight, enriching even the most modest things. And in this increasingly digital age, it is perhaps more valuable than ever. Craftland is a celebration of that deeply necessary connection between our creative instincts and the material world we inhabit, revealing a richer and more connected way of living.

James Fox’s Craftland is a celebration of the “crafts” we’re losing in Britain — wheelwrighting, stone wall laying, watchmaking, etc. He speaks elegaically, referring to people as craftsmen even when they dislike that term for themselves (which he notes almost in the same paragraph as referring to it as a craft). I think in some cases he’s creating a virtue out of something that people just feel should be kept alive for their own reasons, and that they may not all be comfortable with how they’re portrayed here, based on his own words about them.

That said, it’s still interesting, especially when he goes into the details of how things are done, and how the traditional methods might help reduce the use of plastic and move toward more sustainable systems, e.g. in fishing. That sort of thing could well be important in returning to something like a sustainable fishing industry.

I wasn’t quite sure about some of his claims, though, e.g. re: watchmaking and saying the man he talked to was one of the last two watchmakers in Britain. I read Rebecca Struthers’ The Hands of Time not that long ago (and it’s an excellent and not obscure book), and she and her partner are both watchmakers (though often working on repairing watches). Maybe he meant that they came out of nowhere and magically taught themselves — I don’t remember the details well enough to be sure they didn’t just appear from nowhere after the point where he says the master and apprentice he writes about were the only two watchmakers in the British Isles. Still, it doesn’t quite suit his narrative of experts literally dying as he lines up interviews with them, and leaves me with some questions.

As far as his sources go, a lot of it is “because I went and saw it myself, so there’s no source but my say-so”, but there are numbered footnotes, sparser in some chapters than others.

A decent celebration of the historically necessary and vital work people have done, haunted by a few questions for me, overall.

Rating: 4/5 (“really liked it”)

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Review – The Meteorite Hunters

Posted May 13, 2026 by Nicky in Reviews / 2 Comments

Review – The Meteorite Hunters

The Meteorite Hunters

by Joshua Howgego

Genres: Non-fiction, Science
Pages: 272
Rating: four-stars
Synopsis:

Want to join the ultimate cosmic treasure hunt?

Meteors, with their ethereal, glowing trails slashing through the atmosphere, have entranced us for centuries. But these extraterrestrial visitors are also inestimably valuable. Not just for collectors, who can make their fortunes tracking them down, but for scientists too. Meteorites are the most ancient objects we know, unblemished time capsules from the birth of the solar system.

Following in the footsteps of passionate hobbyists, ground-breaking scientists and intrepid adventurers, Joshua Howgego takes a rollicking ride through the world of meteorite hunting. Join the seasoned practitioners braving the elements as they scour the Sahara and ice sheets of Antarctica. Discover how, closer to home, one unlikely hero – a self-taught jazz guitarist – is uncovering the countless micrometeorites scattered across the rooftops of our cities. And meet the professor searching for the rarest of the rare: fossil meteorites, entombed in rock since the days of the dinosaurs.

Finding these stones from space is just the beginning. As scientists tease out their secrets, they piece together an unexpected new history of the solar system, with implications that extend to one of the most fundamental questions we can ask: how did life on earth begin?

I liked Joseph Howgego’s The Meteorite Hunters a lot more than I liked the other book I read about meteorites recently (Helen Gordon’s The Meteorites), and I think it’s largely because it stayed more focused on the popular science side of things: the chemical composition of meteorites, and what that can tell us about our own origins, the formation of the universe, etc.

Howgego’s pretty good at explaining things — I will never properly retain the differences between types of meteorites from one book to another, it’s just not something I’ve ever needed to properly log in my brain, but Howgego made it clear enough without repeating himself too much. He does lean a little sometimes on telling us about people he’s going to speak to (I do not need so much detail about someone’s band), which sometimes caused it to drag for me at times, because I’m not that interested in The Big Personalities (TM) Of Meteorite Hunting.

I think he also does a good job at indicating what’s contested, what’s speculative, where we’re going next in studying meteorites, and what certain discoveries might mean. The sources for each chapter are discussed in a “notes from sources” chapter which isn’t numbered, but does make it clear where each bit of info comes from.

Overall, I quite enjoyed it!

Rating: 4/5 (“really liked it”)

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WWW Wednesday

Posted May 13, 2026 by Nicky in General / 4 Comments

Cover of Omniscient Reader's Viewpoint vol 9 by Umi, SleepyC and singNsongWhat have you recently finished reading?

Last night I polished off volume nine of the Omniscient Reader’s Viewpoint manhwa in one fell swoop, which is fun. I found the whole thing with the Catastrophe of Questions so frustrating (stop! answering! his questions! how many times do you have to be told!) but I am veeeery intrigued by the ways Junghyeok is surprising Dokja.

Cover of The Other World's Books Depend on the Bean Counter (light novel) vol 1, by Yatsuki WakutsuWhat are you currently reading?

I’ve got back to my reread of the light novel version of The Other World’s Books Depend on the Bean Counter, hoping to finish volume one today. Boooy, it’s so awkward at first, but I do love Aresh’s obviously growing crush.

Other than that, I actually finished the books I had most “on deck” at the moment, but I still have loads of books I’ve technically started, so I’ll get back to those next. I got the latest British Library Crime Classic this week (Carter Dickson’s The Unicorn Murders), but only read a chapter, so probably I’ll focus on that next. I also got an early copy of Ann Leckie’s Radiant Star, and definitely want to spend more time with that!

What will you be reading next?

I think it’d normally be quite sufficient to focus on the books I’ve already started, but I did just get volume three of the Omniscient Reader’s Viewpoint light novel, and volume ten of the manhwa… so you know, probably those.

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Review – The Murder at World’s End

Posted May 12, 2026 by Nicky in Reviews / 5 Comments

Review – The Murder at World’s End

The Murder at World's End

by Ross Montgomery

Genres: Crime, Historical Fiction, Mystery
Pages: 368
Series: A Stockingham & Pike Mystery #1
Rating: three-stars
Synopsis:

Secrets, murder and mayhem collide as this unlikely sleuthing duo - an under-butler and a foul-mouthed octogerian - hunt a killer in a manor sealed against the end of the world.

Cornwall, 1910. On a remote tidal island, the Viscount of Tithe Hall is absorbed in feverish preparations for the apocalypse that he believes will accompany the passing of Halley's Comet. The Hall must be sealed from top to bottom - every window, chimney and keyhole closed off before night falls. But what the pompous, dishonest Viscount has failed to take into account is the danger that lies within... By morning, he will be dead in his sealed study, murdered by his own ancestral crossbow.

All eyes turn to Steven Pike, Tithe Hall's newest under-butler. Fresh out of Borstal for a crime he didn't commit, he is the wrong man in the wrong place at the wrong time. His unlikely ally? Miss Decima Stockingham, the foul-mouthed, sharp as a tack, 80-year-old family matriarch. Fearless and unconventional, she relishes chaos and puzzles alike, and a murder is just the thrill she's been waiting for.

Together, this mismatched duo must navigate secret passages, buried grudges and rising terror to unmask the killer before it's too late...

I’m fairly picky about my mysteries, often preferring to stick to stuff like the British Library Crime Classics series, and shying away from a lot of the attempts to set stories in the same eras: they just don’t end up with the right feel. Nor does The Murder at World’s End, to be fair: I was very aware of reading a modern novel with modern sensibilities, and was weirdly most reminded of Robert Jackson Bennett’s Ana and Din (though Miss Decima is far more dismissive of Stephen than Ana is of Din).

Still, it did capture a certain amount of the fun of classic mystery types, with both a locked room and a closed circle element. I thought part of the solution was obvious very early on, and the problem was just figuring out the details — and I missed a big part of the final solution, actually.

I thought the bumbling detective was a bit overdone, though I was amused to read in the acknowledgements that many of the things he said were actually quotations from an actual policeman writing at the turn of the century, Hargrave L. Adam. Sometimes real people are goofier than fiction, I swear: it felt overdone and silly, in the context of the story. At times, it felt like the whole thing was going to devolve into slapstick.

That said, it maintained just enough tension, mystery and atmosphere to hold me, and I sped through it. I’d probably read another book in the series, though I’d like to see Miss Decima show a bit more respect to those around her, especially Stephen. She’s a fun character, a quick-minded older woman who relishes a mystery and to cause a bit of mayhem, but does have a softer side as well, regretting some of her past actions and acknowledging her faults. There’s some good room for growth there. Stephen was less of a stand-out, since he’s kind of hapless, though there’s plenty of room for him to grow as well.

Overall, I had a good time!

Rating: 3/5 (“liked it”)

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Top Ten Tuesday: May Flowers

Posted May 12, 2026 by Nicky in General / 32 Comments

Today’s Top Ten Tuesday theme celebrates flowers, which is another opportunity for me to look at book covers a bit more closely! I’m not a very visual person and often don’t notice/remember covers, so I’ve been enjoying this kind of topic lately. Let’s see what I can do!

Cover of Thistlemarsh by Moorea Corrigan Cover of The Killing of a Chestnut Tree by Oliver K. Langmead Cover of How Flowers Made Our World by David George Haskell Cover of Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation manhua vol 12 Cover of The Keeper of Magical Things by Julie Leong

Cover of A Magical Girl Retires by Park Seolyeon Cover of The Bookshop Below by Georgia Summers Cover of The Beauty's Blade by Feng Ren Zuo Shi Cover of Princeweaver by Elian J Morgan Cover of Hemlock & Silver by T. Kingfisher

Flowers are such a common element of cover design that I had trouble picking favourites — especially when it came to danmei and baihe, where cherry blossoms abound!

I haven’t read all of these books yet (Thistlemarsh is still on my TBR, and I only just started Princeweaver), and some of the books I didn’t love… but the cover designs stood out for one reason or another for all of them. I was surprised by the relatively dark theme in the second row until I added in The Beauty’s Blade there to break it up a bit: you don’t always associate flowers with that kind of dark cover, but here we are.

Curious to see what others have picked today!

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Review – Solo Leveling (light novel), vol 4

Posted May 11, 2026 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Review – Solo Leveling (light novel), vol 4

Solo Leveling

by Chugong

Genres: Fantasy, Light Novels
Pages: 300
Series: Solo Leveling (light novel) #4
Rating: four-stars
Synopsis:

"IT'S SHOWTIME."

The news has made headlines—"Korea and Japan join hands to exterminate the terrifying magic beasts on Jeju Island once and for all!" It's a monumental moment for the people of the country…and it has absolutely nothing to do with Jinwoo. Instead, the newest S-rank hunter's number one priority is bringing his recently recovered mother back home where she belongs at last. When the situation on Jeju Island takes a devastating turn for the worse, though, will the country's top hunters be strong enough to save the day without him?

Volume four of Chugong’s Solo Leveling covers the Jeju Island arc, and it’s a lot of fun — the other S rank hunters are so outclassed, even Ryuji Goto, and then Jinwoo swoops in… It’s wish fulfilment, there’s never any real chance that Jinwoo’s going to lose (or allow all Korean hunters to die), and it’s so satisfying to see that come to fruition.

I know others find that without any tension (because we know Jinwoo won’t lose) — or at least minimal tension, because some does come through from Haein Cha etc — the series isn’t so fun, but that’s a feature not a bug to me.

Speaking of bugs, hurrah, Beru! He’s super cute in the manhwa, a weird thing to be saying about a scary insect shadow soldier, so I’m curious about how he is in the source material too.

Plus, with the next volume (and a return to Cartenon Temple), we’re getting close to getting some explanations of what’s going on, so I’m very much looking forward to that.

Rating: 4/5 (“really liked it”)

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Fantasy with Friends: Early Memories

Posted May 11, 2026 by Nicky in General / 10 Comments

Fantasy With Friends: A Disccusion Meme hosted by Pages Unbound

Time for another Fantasy with Friends discussion post! As ever, the prompts are hosted at Pages Unbound, and this week’s is about what got you interested in the genre:

Is there a particular fantasy that got you interested in the genre? Do you remember any of the earliest fantasy books you read?

Given that my mother’s a fantasy reader as well, I think fantasy stories were just stories to me, rather than thinking in terms of genre. Lots of the books I had as a kid were fantastical in some way, some more so than others; I read a lot of Enid Blyton’s work, for instance, where the Famous Five books are not fantasy, but she also wrote The Magic Faraway Tree. I know I had a box set of the Narnia books, too, with cover art that I personally prefer to all the others I’ve seen, but which hasn’t been reused (alas).

That said, I know that after I read The Hobbit, I pestered Mum for more like it, by which I think I meant fantasy (and she certainly took it to be so). She didn’t let me read The Lord of the Rings until I was a bit older, to make sure I would understand and properly appreciate it, but I have vivid memories of many of the fantasy books she lent me from her shelves. Raymond E. Feist’s Magician was definitely a major early player, along with David Eddings’ work. There’s a lot of nostalgia there, though I doubt I’d revisit David Eddings’ work now, being aware of his extensive child abuse directed at his adopted children. I can’t remember quite when I got A Wizard of Earthsea for Christmas, but probably somewhere around 10-11 years old.

I can’t quite picture where I started seeking out and choosing fantasy books of my own, either — probably in a small way I was doing that all along, but often following Mum’s suggestions and recommendations to help me choose. I know that by the time I was in my mid-teens, Mum and I were both reading Robin Hobb’s Farseer books, and visiting the Waterstones in town for their SF/F section (and to attend a reading and Q&A session by Robin Hobb). At the same time I was reading Neil Gaiman for myself for sure (sadly he’s also tainted his own legacy), Tad Williams, Sarah Zettel…

I can definitely remember when it started becoming more the other way round, too, which was probably most marked from when I was 18 or so: I’d discover the authors and get Mum interested, in my turn. I borrowed Scott Lynch’s The Lies of Locke Lamora from the library when I was at university, and persuaded her to read it. (No, I still haven’t read Republic of Thieves, though. Someday. If people don’t nag me.)

Overall, definitely heavily influenced by Mum’s taste in books, especially until I went off to university and spent more time browsing in bookshops on my own, exploring via library books and second-hand sales, etc.

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