Top Ten Tuesday: May Flowers

Posted May 12, 2026 by Nicky in General / 5 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 / 1 Comment

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 / 7 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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Review – The Grendel Affair

Posted May 10, 2026 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Review – The Grendel Affair

The Grendel Affair

by Lisa Shearin

Genres: Fantasy, Mystery
Pages: 292
Series: SPI Files #1
Rating: two-stars
Synopsis:

We're Supernatural Protection & Investigations, known as SPI. Things that go bump in the night, the monsters you thought didn't exist? We battle them and keep you safe. But some supernatural baddies are just too big to contain, even for us...

When I moved to New York to become a world famous journalist, I never imagined that snagging a job at a seedy tabloid would change my career path from trashy reporter to undercover agent. I'm Makenna Fraser, a Seer for SPI. I can see through any disguise, shield, or spell that a paranormal pest can come up with. I track down creatures and my partner, Ian Byrne, takes them out.

Our cases are generally pretty routine, but a sickle-wielding serial killer has been prowling the city's subway tunnels. And the murderer's not human. The fiend in question, a descendant of Grendel--yes, that Grendel--shares his ancestor's hatred of parties, revelry, and drunkards. And with New Year's Eve in Times Square only two days away, we need to bag him quickly. Because if we don't find him--and the organization behind him--by midnight, our secret's out and everyone's time is up.

Lisa Shearin’s The Grendel Affair is a relatively typical urban fantasy sort of set-up, with much of the world unaware of magic and monsters, and others secretly working to keep that the case. The main character is a seer, working for a group run by a dragon and centered in New York, and the coolest thing about the book… is unfortunately spoilered by the title.

I’ve seen some reviews complaining about how useless Mac is, and I don’t think that’s entirely fair. She’s new to the job and not trained as a front-line agent, and though she’s definitely overconfident in the opening, she’s eager to learn and to listen to what those who are actually experts in the action say. She’s not the most useful combatant, but she does what she can, and she doesn’t shirk the danger when she is the right person for the job.

That said, I didn’t love her as a character either, mostly because I found her just kinda meh, a bit of a cipher. The same goes for pretty much all the characters, to be fair; Ian’s mostly just a cop stereotype who lost his partner etc etc. That’s partly because it’s the first book of a series and it needs time to grow, but it didn’t grab me.

Overall, it was fine, just not super exciting. I probably won’t read more.

Rating: 2/5 (“it was okay”)

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Review – Home Sick Pilots, vol 3

Posted May 9, 2026 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Review – Home Sick Pilots, vol 3

Home Sick Pilots: Three Chords and the End of the World

by Dan Watters, Caspar Wijngaard, Aditya Bidikar, Tom Muller

Genres: Graphic Novels, Horror
Pages: 144
Series: Home Sick Pilots #3
Rating: four-stars
Synopsis:

At long last, it’s the Home Sick Pilots—in a walking haunted house—versus the Nuclear Bastards—in a mech fueled by the sins of the nation. A battle of the bands to end all battles…and probably the world as we know it.

DAN WATTERS (Arkham City: The Order of the World, COFFIN BOUND) and CASPAR WIJNGAARD (Star Wars, Peter Cannon: Thunderbolt) return for the thrilling final volume of bloody action, busted guitar pedals, and ghosts.

Collects HOME SICK PILOTS #11-15

The third volume of Dan Watters’ Home Sick Pilots goes into action quickly, and the concept is pretty neat: a walking haunted house vs a mech powered by the tortured regrets of America. Ami pilots the house, desperately trying to hold out while Buzz and Rip try to find the final ghost that belongs to the house and bring it back to help give her enough power.

It works its way to an explosive finale, which isn’t everything it seems because it leaves Ami, Buzz, Rip and Meg still trapped in the house, sealed tight against any way out. But they have a plan…

The ending kinda surprised me — I guess I’d expected things to turn out a bit better, or maybe I’d just been hoping for that — but it seemed fitting in the end.

I continue to love Caspar Wijngaard’s work on the art and designs, and appreciated the bit included at the end showing some of the design process.

Rating: 4/5 (“really liked it”)

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Stacking the Shelves & The Sunday Post

Posted May 9, 2026 by Nicky in General / 22 Comments

Oof, another long week, but here we are on the other side!

Books acquired this week

This week I’ve been blessed with a couple of review copies from Hachette/Orbit, one of them being extremely exciting to me: the new Ann Leckie!

Cover of The Last Contract of Isako by Fonda Lee Cover of Radiant Star by Ann Leckie

I’m hoping to dig into both pretty soon; I’ve been meaning to read more of Fonda Lee’s work as well, though I think Radiant Star is likely to jump the queue straight onto my currently-reading pile, ahaha.

I also “had to” grab a book to fill out an order for express delivery (oh no), so I picked up a highly anticipated non-fiction:

Cover of The Lost Voices of Pompeii by Jess Venner

I’m excited to dig into this as well: I’ve always been fascinated with Pompeii, and (to the complaints of my traveling companion) thoroughly explored every area tourists had access to when I visited.

Finally, I’ve been trying to keep up my explorations of poetry, despite the sad news about Carol Rumens (editor of the Guardian‘s poetry column, which I’d been using to give me ideas). So here’s a couple of books I borrowed from the National Poetry Library:

Cover of A Hundred Doors by Michael Longley Cover of First Rain in Paradise by Gwyneth Lewis

Posts from this week:

I’ve kept up with posts pretty well, so there’s plenty to highlight. Starting with the reviews:

As ever, these aren’t a reflection of my reading week — often the reviews I post are of books I finished a couple of months ago, depending on the genre. See below for this week’s reads!

First, though, there have been some non-review posts, though Let’s Talk Bookish is currently on hiatus. Here’s the roundup:

What I’m reading:

I’m still not up to my normal reading speed, but I added a little daily habit for this month that I’m hoping will at least keep things moving: every day, I read at least 15 minutes of whichever book I’m closest to finishing. That has been pretty effective so far, whittling down my currently-reading pile from 30 to 26 since the start of the month. That said, I think I’m going to undo all that work this weekend by starting new books, ahaha.

In any case, here are the books I’ve finished this week!

Cover of Winter Hours by Mary Oliver Cover of A Long & Short Love Story by Kei Ichikawa Cover of First Rain in Paradise by Gwyneth Lewis

Cover of We Burned So Bright by TJ Klune Cover of Strange Animals by Jarod K. Anderson Cover of The Murder at World's End by Ross Montgomery

It’s been a pretty good week for reading! I’m not sure what I’ll focus on this weekend, honestly. I think the book I’m next-closest to finishing is Ai Jiang’s A Palace Near the Wind, so probably I’ll spend some time with that, and I probably want to start Radiant Star and The Lost Voices of Pompeii.

I’ve had a busy and weird couple weeks, though, so I’ll probably mostly follow whatever urge hits me: I’m keen to read more of Kate Strasdin’s Dressing the Queen, for instance.

Hope everyone’s been having a good week, and I wish you all a nice weekend!

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 – How Flowers Made Our World

Posted May 8, 2026 by Nicky in Reviews / 2 Comments

Review – How Flowers Made Our World

How Flowers Made Our World

by David George Haskell

Genres: Non-fiction, Science
Pages: 352
Rating: three-stars
Synopsis:

An exquisite exploration of the power of flowers, placing them at the center of the story of how evolution created the world we know today.

We live on a floral planet, yet flowers don’t get the credit they deserve. We admire them for their aesthetics, not their power. In this exquisite exploration of the role flowers played in creating the world we know today, David George Haskell observes, smells, and studies flowers such as magnolias, orchids, and roses, as well as fascinating but less celebrated flowers such as seagrasses and tea to show us what we’ve been missing.

Flowers are beautiful revolutionaries. When they evolved, they remade the natural world: Gorgeous petals and alluring aromas transformed former enemies into cooperative partners. Flowers reinvented plant sexuality and motherhood, bringing male and female together in the same flower and amply provisioning seeds and fruits, innovations that also feed legions of animals, ourselves included. Through radical genetic flexibility, flowers turned past environmental upheavals into opportunities for renewal. This inventiveness allowed them to build and sustain rainforests, savannahs, prairies, and even ocean shores.

Without flowers, human beings would not exist. We are a floral species. Flowers catalyzed our evolution, and we now depend on them for food and a healthy planet. When we perfume ourselves, give a loved one a bouquet, or use blooms in gardens and religious ceremonies, we honor the special bond between people and flowers. The study of flowers also shaped modern science and horticulture in ways both marvelous and, sometimes, unjust.

Looking to the future, flowers offer us lessons on resilience and creativity in the face of rapid environmental change. We need floral creativity, beauty, and joy more than ever. How Flowers Made Our World combines lyrical writing, sensual exploration, and the latest in scientific research to explore some of the most consequential life forms ever to have evolved, showing how our planet came to be and how it thrives today.

My main comment on David George Haskell’s How Flowers Made Our World is a plea for even pop-science writers (and, perhaps more to the point, publishers) to use numbered endnotes to give sources. Without knowing the specific source of a particular claim (“X plant does X% of carbon sequestration”), it’s impossible to evaluate the truth of the claim.

I can say that where I do know my stuff, Haskell’s not wrong or exaggerating — I’m not by any measure a botanist, but my first science degree was in natural sciences (emphasis biology), so I do have some grounding in stuff like plant respiration, plant growth, etc. But it’s impossible to call him on the details without reading literally everything that he read.

I did find the close study of various plants and species interesting, all the same; many of his descriptions are based on things you can observe yourself if you like (assuming you’re in the right location for the plant, of course), and it’s always fascinating to read someone enthusing about a pet subject. I suspect it’s largely preaching to the choir about the importance and beautiful diversity of plant life, and the need to protect it, but it’s still an important message.

I think at times it got a bit too wordy or too focused on reporting details of the author’s conversations (e.g. with his sister about an expedition to find seagrasses), but it was fairly readable and the author’s enthusiasm does a lot to hold interest.

Rating: 3/5 (“liked it”)

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Review – Felicity

Posted May 7, 2026 by Nicky in Uncategorized / 2 Comments

Review – Felicity

Felicity

by Mary Oliver

Genres: Poetry
Pages: 96
Rating: five-stars
Synopsis:

Mary Oliver, winner of the Pulitzer Prize, celebrates love in her new collection of poems.

If I have any secret stash of poems, anywhere, it might be about love, not anger, Mary Oliver once said in an interview. Finally, in her stunning new collection, Felicity, we can immerse ourselves in Oliver's love poems. Here, great happiness abounds. Our most delicate chronicler of physical landscape, Oliver has described her work as loving the world. With Felicity she examines what it means to love another person. She opens our eyes again to the territory within our own hearts; to the wild and to the quiet. In these poems, she describes--with joy--the strangeness and wonder of human connection. As in Blue Horses, Dog Songs, and A Thousand Mornings, with Felicity Oliver honors love, life, and beauty.

Mary Oliver’s poetry is gorgeous. This was the first of her collections I’d read, though I’d undoubtedly come across her poems before, and I loved how readable and accessible it feels — she isn’t trying to mystify, and her poems share her joy in the world, sometimes even in moments that someone else could make into a tragedy.

It’s actually hard to pick favourites, but here’s one in its entirety that I loved, ‘Everything That Was Broken’:

Everything that was broken has
forgotten it’s brokenness. I live
now in a sky-house, through every
window the sun. Also your presence.
Our touching, our stories. Earthy
and holy both. How can this be, but
it is. Every day has something in
it whose name is Forever.

Definitely a poet I want to read more of.

Rating: 5/5 (“loved it”)

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WWW Wednesday

Posted May 6, 2026 by Nicky in General / 2 Comments

Cover of We Burned So Bright by TJ KluneWhat have you recently finished reading?

Just earlier I finished TJ Klune’s We Burned So Bright, which… I don’t think it was a good moment for me to read it in general, given the themes, but also I didn’t think it was that well done. A bit info-dumpy in structure, and the black hole swallowing the world did not feel “real”.

Cover of Strange Animals by Jarod K. AndersonWhat are you currently reading?

You know the drill by now: a lot of things at once. But most actively, Jarod K. Anderson’s Strange Animals, which I wasn’t sure if I would like, but I’m pretty hooked on it — from the point with the rag moth, which I found a fascinating scene. I’m very curious where the whole thing is going.

Other than that, I’m still reading Kate Strasdin’s Dressing the Queen, which I paused last week to try to finish some other reading. I’m not so interested in the royalty part, just the artisans and craftspeople working on the clothes, and it’s giving me that in spades.

Also on pause awaiting a free evening to just mainline it is Ross Montgomery’s The Murder at World’s End, which definitely has classic mystery vibes. Aunt Decima and the protagonist are kinda reminding me of the dynamic between Ana and Din in Robert Jackson Bennett’s series.

Cover of A Trade of Blood by Robert Jackson BennettWhat will you be reading next?

Speaking of Ana and Din… possibly my eARC of the new one! However, I also know there are two physical review copies wending their way to me courtesy of Hachette, one of them being Leckie’s Radiant Star, so — maybe that?!

But as ever, really it’ll be down to my whim.

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Review – Ramesses the Great

Posted May 5, 2026 by Nicky in Reviews / 2 Comments

Review – Ramesses the Great

Ramesses the Great: Egypt's King of Kings

by Toby Wilkinson

Genres: History, Non-fiction
Pages: 240
Rating: five-stars
Synopsis:

The life, dramatic reign, and enduring legacy of the pharaoh Ramesses the Great, with lessons for the present, from internationally acclaimed Egyptologist Toby Wilkinson

Ramesses II ruled the Nile Valley and the wider Egyptian empire from 1279 to 1213 B.C., one of the longest reigns in pharaonic history. He was a cultural innovator, a relentless self-promoter, and an astute diplomat—the peace treaty signed after the Battle of Kadesh was the first in recorded history. He outbuilt every other Egyptian pharaoh, leaving behind the temples of Abu Simbel; the great hypostyle hall of Karnak; the tomb for his wife Nefertari; and his own memorial, the Ramesseum.

His reputation eclipsed that of all other pharaohs as well: he was decried in the Bible as a despot, famed in literature as Ozymandias, and lauded by early antiquarians as the Younger Memnon. His rule coincided with the peak of ancient Egypt’s power and prosperity, the New Kingdom (1539–1069 B.C.).

In this authoritative biography, Toby Wilkinson considers Ramesses’ preoccupations and preferences, uncovering the methods and motivations of a megalomaniac ruler, with lessons for our own time.

I really enjoyed Toby Wilkinson’s Ramesses the Great: I remember reading one of Wilkinson’s books before and finding that it dragged, but this really didn’t. It helps that Ramesses the Great is a larger-than-life figure, and can be made incredibly vivid through an account of his reign.

Despite reading a fair number of general histories of Egypt, I’ve never read a lot about his dynasty before, so there was a fair bit here that was actually new to me. Ramesses the Great looms large in the landscape of Egypt, both literally and figuratively thanks to his massive building works and the way he’s echoed in the stories told about Egypt and the stories Egypt has told about itself, and Wilkinson’s book makes it really clear why that is.

Ramesses II is compelling: he turned what was at best a stalemate into a stunning victory by simply selling the narrative confidently enough, made peace with the Hittites, had a truly astonishing number of children, built/restored/took credit for a ridiculous number of building projects/statues/temples, and reigned for 66 years. I loved reading about the stories he told about himself, his choices to change the art style of Egypt, the choices made about his tomb… and Wilkinson did a great job of explaining the evidence and putting together a readable narrative here as well, while making it clear what we can and can’t know. You get a sense of Ramesses II’s personality, even as Wilkinson reminds us we can’t judge that so easily based on a king’s public proclamations.

One detail I loved: the part about Khaemweset, one of Ramesses’ sons, who was essentially an Egyptologist, going round restoring monuments from older dynasties to the glory of his father (and sometimes himself).

So yeah, overall, really liked this one!

Rating: 5/5 (“loved it”)

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