Review – Solo Leveling (light novel), vol 2

Posted April 24, 2026 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Review – Solo Leveling (light novel), vol 2

Solo Leveling

by Chugong

Genres: Fantasy, Light Novels
Pages: 327
Series: Solo Leveling (light novel) #2
Rating: four-stars
Synopsis:

ARISE! Once dubbed the Weakest Hunter of All Mankind, Jinwoo is now
well, something else entirely. Armed with his mysterious system, he’s currently powerful enough to single-handedly clear dungeons that once would have proven life-threatening. He just has to ready himself to take on the Demon’s Castle-and what better way to do so than finishing a quest? Exclusive new weapons and skills from an assassin-class job may be just what Jinwoo needs
 but the system seems to have other plans for him!

As with volume one, volume two of Chugong’s Solo Leveling novel has been adapted pretty closely by the manhwa I’ve already read. There are a few details that I don’t remember popping up, and maybe a bit more detail for side characters’ and their thoughts — I don’t remember Park Heejin having quite so much detail in the manhwa, for example — but mostly the adaptation was very faithful.

Despite the story being so familiar, it’s fun to get more of Jinwoo’s point of view, especially as he starts to really get to grips with being a Player, and figure out things like his job change quest. It’s still such fun to read about him subverting the system a little bit (e.g. by going to the penalty zone for four hours to extend his timer, albeit that’s a bit accidental on his part) — and of course to watch his journey toward being so absolutely OP he could probably rip down a bit of sky and beat someone with it. He’s not there yet here, but he’s gonna get there.

The scene between him and Jinho when Jinho says Jinwoo’s like a big brother and Jinwoo says he’ll consider Jinho a brother then is so cute, too.

As with the first book (and indeed the manhwa), it’s fun light reading.

Rating: 4/5 (“really liked it”)

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Let’s Talk Bookish: Climate Fiction

Posted April 24, 2026 by Nicky in General / 2 Comments

Graphic for Let's Talk Bookish, created by Rukky @ Eternity Books, Hosted by Aria @ Book Nook Bits and Dini @ Dinipandareads

Let’s Talk Bookish is a weekly bookish meme created by Rukky @ Eternity Books and co-hosted by Aria @ Book Nook Bits and Dini @ Dinipandareads! Every Friday they have a different topic for participants to write about and discuss, e.g. like this post.

This week’s prompt is as follows:

Climate fiction is an increasingly popular genre, and has grown from being seen as a sci-fi subgenre to a broader category of its own — its own literary prize even being established in 2025. Have you read climate fiction (‘cli-fi’) or books centred around environmental issues? Do stories about the climate or the environment make you feel hopeful, anxious, or something else? Do you think cli-fi can influence how people think about the environment?

I haven’t really thought of it as a genre on its own, since most of my experience of climate fiction has been in science fiction (where it’s long been a concern, either covered in the main plot or just part of the worldbuilding). I’m not sure how much recent cli-fi that’s written solely as such I’ve actually read, but I’m thinking about stuff like N.K. Jemisin’s The Fifth Season (which is stunning though also horrifying) and A Psalm for the Wild-Built (which is really post-climate disaster and more soothing/hopeful). It haunts other stories, like Malka Older’s The Mimicking of Known Successes… this assumption that we ruined Earth, and had to leave.

(Even when this is for reasons other than climate change, I think it’s reflecting on the same anxiety about the outside impact humans can have on the planet, and it’s coming from the same place, linked with an anxiety about war and destructive weaponry.)

I think whether cli-fi makes me hopeful, anxious or angry is very much down to the book in question, but I think I’m a little bit inured to it because it’s been haunting the fiction I’ve read for so long. There’s a fair bit of science fiction which assumes we’re going to wreck the planet as part of the setup for why we’re out in space or on another planet, and I think that’s generally left a pessimistic mark on me when it comes to fiction.

Out in reality, I do what I can, so I don’t think that stops me — though it might have added to my cynicism about it, given many of the drivers of climate change are completely out of individuals’ control and in the hands of corporations. My small impact by using a renewable energy supplier, cycling and walking when I can, paying for carbon capture, investing in solar and wind farms, using sustainable products… it’s all tiny compared to the damage many corporations are doing.

I don’t really know whether I think cli-fi can make a difference. Given that scientists’ warnings don’t, I’m sort of pessimistic on that too — but then, fiction moves different levers sometimes. So, maybe? I’d be curious if anyone feels like it has for them!

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Review – Home Sick Pilots, vol 2

Posted April 23, 2026 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Review – Home Sick Pilots, vol 2

Home Sick Pilots: I Wanna Be A Walking Weapon

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

Genres: Graphic Novels, Horror
Pages: 120
Series: Home Sick Pilots #2
Rating: three-stars
Synopsis:

There is a haunted house that has learned to walk. As it chases them across the country, Ami, lead singer of the Home Sick Pilots, regrets teaching it how. But when the military attempt to develop their own ghost-powered weapon, the Old James House might be the only defense the world has from what they unleash.

The second volume of Dan Watters’ Home Sick Pilots feels a bit middle-bookish, it must be said: it all feels like setup for the grand finale, without much of a satisfying arc of its own — a couple of things come together at the end of the volume, and there’s a bit of character development for the main three and Meg, but it’s all about getting the pieces in place for the end.

With a bit along the way about Nazis infiltrating punk, which is in one sense welcome in these times, but also felt a bit preachy and shoe-horned in.

I still love the art and character designs, though. Meg’s transformation is a hell of a thing.

Rating: 3/5 (“liked it”)

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Review – The Library of Ancient Wisdom

Posted April 22, 2026 by Nicky in Reviews / 6 Comments

Review – The Library of Ancient Wisdom

The Library of Ancient Wisdom

by Selena Wisnom

Genres: History, Non-fiction
Pages: 448
Rating: five-stars
Synopsis:

More than half of human history is written in cuneiform, but only a few hundred people on earth can read it. In this captivating new book, Assyriologist Selena Wisnom takes us on an immersive tour of this extraordinary library, bringing ancient Mesopotamia and its people to life. Through it, we encounter a world of astonishing richness, complexity and sophistication. Mesopotamia, she shows, was home to advanced mathematics, astronomy and banking, law and literature. This was a culture absorbed and developed by the ancient Greeks, and whose myths were precursors to Bible stories - in short, a culture without which our lives today would be unrecognizable.

When a team of Victorian archaeologists dug into a grassy hill in Iraq, they chanced upon one of the oldest and greatest stores of knowledge ever seen: the library of the Assyrian emperor Ashurbanipal, seventh century BCE ruler of a huge swathe of the ancient Middle East known as Mesopotamia. After his death, vengeful rivals burned Ashurbanipal's library to the ground - yet the texts, carved on clay tablets, were baked and preserved by the heat. Buried for millennia, the tablets were written in cuneiform: the first written language in the world.

The Library of Ancient Wisdom unearths a civilization at once strange and strangely familiar: a land of capricious gods, exorcisms and professional lamenters, whose citizens wrote of jealous rivalries, profound friendships and petty grievances. Through these pages we come face to face with humanity's first civilization: their startling achievements, their daily life, and their struggle to understand our place in the universe.

Selena Wisnom’s The Library of Ancient Wisdom examines the world of ancient Mesopotamia by using the famed library of Ashurbanipal as a jumping-off point. This isn’t as futile as you might think: the ancient baked clay tablets have survived beautifully, with even shattered tablets being pieced back together, so we actually have quite a wide spread of literature available to us. The British Library wouldn’t survive nearly as well in the same circumstances: paper might be more versatile, but baked clay has serious staying power.

There’s a range of texts in what we have from that ancient library, in any case: medical texts, religious texts, literature, letters both domestic and foreign. It’s necessarily a somewhat limited picture, all the same, focusing primarily on the king and his family, so it’s important to remember that the extraordinary level of preservation still doesn’t tell us anything about the world further afield.

I liked that Wisnom reminds the reader several times that the Mesopotamian world wasn’t primitive; though they had beliefs that seem to us wild superstition, they didn’t believe them in spite of the world they could readily observe around them. Their gods were capricious and imperfect, and could make mistakes and change their minds — and thus the omens and portents they saw around them were warning and possibilities, not set in stone. Lamentations, prayers and sacrifices could avert evil. And in fields like astronomy and maths, they knew things which took “Western civilisation” millennia to recover.

Given my interests, I was especially interested to note their views on hygiene, including carefully washing your hands. They didn’t attribute it to microbes, of course, but to curses which could be transferred between people — but that’s a pretty good understanding for practical purposes! Contrast with the modern Western world, where Ignaz Semmelweiss was literally treated as insane for suggesting an evidence-based approach to pueperal fever. No, I’m not kidding: he proposed that doctors should wash their hands with disinfectant between performing autopsies on rotting bodies and delivering babies, and he literally died in an insane asylum (of septic shock; you can’t make it up, can you?).

My only caveats here would be that obviously it’s a deeply biased way to see Mesopotamian society since you only really see what concerns the king (even if that does give you glimpses of his family and advisors, they’re all high ranking too), and that it can be difficult to keep track of the geopolitics sometimes if you don’t have a good head for it — keeping a map handy and writing notes might have helped me a bit there!

Rating: 5/5 (“loved it”)

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WWW Wednesday

Posted April 22, 2026 by Nicky in General / 6 Comments

Cover of Yankee and Carameliser by Chiuko UmeshibuWhat have you recently finished reading?

The last thing I finished was, on a total whim based on seeing it in the offering in my library’s Comics Plus subscription, Chiuko Umeshibu’s Yankee & Carameliser. It turned out pretty cute, with a “bad boy” protagonist who loves to bake and a supportive classmate who encourages him, and (of course) ends up falling in love with him. There’s some pretty sad/homophobic backstory for Maki which doesn’t entirely get addressed, keeping the tone mostly light.

Cover of An Ancient Witch's Guide to Modern Dating by Cecelia EdwardWhat are you currently reading?

A lot of books at once, more than usual still, but I can’t say I’m actually focusing on all of them. I most recently started Cecilia Edward’s An Ancient Witch’s Guide to Modern Dating, which so far feels a bit too rom-com for my tastes… but I’m giving it a chance, especially as I remember seeing some positive reviews of it which led me to add it to my TBR in the first place.

I also recently started Alexa Hagerty’s Still Life with Bones, on a much more serious note: it’s a bit like Sue Black’s books about her work as a forensic anthropologist, but focuses on work in Latin America pursuing the truth about state terror and genocide. I’m not very far into it yet.

Cover of Queen James by Gareth RussellWhat will you be reading next?

I’m trying not to start any new reads, and instead focus on some of the ones I’ve got started but haven’t got far with. That means I need to get back to Gareth Russell’s Queen James, for a start, since that’s the BookSpin choice for me for April’s challenge on Litsy — though I also need to start S.L. Huang’s The Water Outlaws.

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Review – Blue Horses

Posted April 22, 2026 by Nicky in Reviews / 2 Comments

Review – Blue Horses

Blue Horses

by Mary Oliver

Genres: Poetry
Pages: 83
Rating: five-stars
Synopsis:

Maybe our world will grow kinder eventually. Maybe the desire to make something beautiful is the piece of God that is inside each of us. In this stunning collection, Mary Oliver returns to the imagery that has defined her life's work. Herons, sparrows, owls and kingfishers flit across the page in meditations on love, artistry and impermanence. Whether considering a bird's nest, the seeming patience of oak trees or the paintings of Franz Marc, Mary Oliver reminds us of the transformative power of attention and how much can be contained within the smallest moments. Blue Horses asks what it truly means to belong to this world and to live in it attuned to all its changes. 'To be human,' she shows us, 'is to sing your own song'.

Mary Oliver’s work is definitely a proof that poetry doesn’t have to be impenetrable — there’s something very open and airy about her work, something that invites you in, and she seemed to take such joy in the world and to have had a curiosity about everything.

Here’s the end of one poem that stuck with me:

I’ll just leave you with this.
I don’t care how many angels can
dance on the head of a pin. It’s
enough to know that for some people
they exist, and that they dance.

Definitely going to read more of her collections; kind of wish I’d picked up one or two more at the same time during my trip to Gay’s the Word!

Rating: 5/5 (“loved it”)

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Top Ten Tuesday: April Showers

Posted April 21, 2026 by Nicky in General / 26 Comments

This week’s Top Ten Tuesday theme is “april showers”, with a generous range of how to interpret that: “Interpret this however you’d like: rainy day reads, books that make you cry, books that give you happy tears, books to wash away a bad reading experience, books set in rainy places, books with rain/raindrops/umbrellas on the cover, blue book covers, etc.”

I did start by looking for books with rain and umbrellas on the cover, but I ran out a bit too quickly… so let’s chat about the books I’ve been saving for a rainy day!

Cover of After Hours at Dooryard Books by Cat Sebastian Cover of Death in Daylesford by Kerry Greenwood Cover of Mistakenly Saving the Villain vol 1 by Feng Yu Nie Cover of At The Feet of the Sun by Victoria Goddard Cover of The Green Man's Heir by Juliet E. McKenna

  1. After Hours at Dooryard Books, by Cat Sebastian.
    Technically I’ve started this, but I haven’t really properly got into it yet. Sebastian’s books have been such a treat lately that part of me keeps leaving it for when I need a good distraction — though goodness knows with how fidgety I’ve been about my reading, maybe that’s now!
  2. Death in Daylesford, by Kerry Greenwood.
    Partly it’s the fact that I want to reread the other books first, but also… there’s a limited amount of new-to-me Phryne Fisher in the world, and I’m saving it for a bit longer.
  3. Mistakenly Saving the Villain, vol 1, by Feng Yu Nie.
    I really wanted this one, but now that I have it, I’ve hesitated to start! I’ve heard fun things about it and the amount of yearning it contains…
  4. At the Feet of the Sun, by Victoria Goddard.
    I think I saved this one long enough that I’d have to reread The Hands of the Emperor first. Oh nooo, etc. I loved Cliopher and his growing friendship with his emperor.
  5. The Green Man’s Heir, by Juliet McKenna.
    I hear such good things about this series, but somehow I never get round to it — imagining some future time where I’ll be able to mainline the whole series or something.
  6. Ian Fleming’s Commandos, by Nicholas Rankin.
    This is a book my grandad bought me — I can’t remember why we were in WHSmiths in Caerphilly, but it was sometime in the last year before he died (so around 2011-2012), and when I showed interest in this and a book about trains, he got them for me. Since he loved James Bond and worked on the railway, it seems an appropriate pick… though I’m not sure I’d actually considered that in the moment, it was just one of those cases of my random interest landing on something. He’d probably have bought me anything I wanted; he doted on me and loved that I was going to university in Wales. He spent my first year scouring the land for book sales, and was actually a major instigator of me ending up with a backlog… which has spiralled out of control ever since. Anyway, this book’s waited on my TBR ever since, but someday I trust it’ll be the right day.
  7. Sweet Poison, by Mary Fitt.
    Or basically any other book by Mary Fitt I haven’t read yet; there’s quite a few. I really enjoyed The Banquet Ceases and (in a different way) Clues to Christabel, they’re really solid classic mysteries, and I look forward to settling in. For this one specifically, I’m also intrigued by the archaeology thread…
  8. Draakenwood, by Jordan L. Hawk.
    Hawk’s books are generally a lot of fun and quick reads, so I’d been saving this one for a time when I needed that. I’ve probably saved it so long I need to reread the other Widdershins books again. Once more I say unto you: oh noooo, how awful. 😉
  9. The Rise and Fall of Ancient Egypt, by Toby Wilkinson.
    One day I’ll need a chunky non-fiction book on one of my pet topics, and this one will still be waiting for me on that day.
  10. The Boy in the Red Dress, by Kristin Lambert.
    This one looks like a lot of fun, and every time I notice it on the shelves I think about adding it to the month’s TBR… but something tells me ‘not yet’.

Cover of Ian Fleming's Commandos by Nicholas Rankin Cover of Sweet Poison by Mary Fitt Cover of Draakenwood by Jordan L. Hawk Cover of The Rise and Fall of Ancient Egypt by Toby Wilkinson Cover of The Boy in the Red Dress by Kristin Lambert

Looking forward to seeing other people’s takes on this theme! Everyone’s always more inventive than me, it feels like, ahaha.

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Review – Jack on the Gallows Tree

Posted April 21, 2026 by Nicky in Reviews / 2 Comments

Review – Jack on the Gallows Tree

Jack on the Gallows Tree

by Leo Bruce

Genres: Crime, Mystery
Pages: 204
Series: British Library Crime Classics
Rating: four-stars
Synopsis:

“If Carolus Deene catches so much as a whiff of murder he will be on the scent with all the persistence and gusto of a dachshund in search of truffles.”

While Senior History Master of Queen’s School, Newminster, Carolus Deene has a troubling hobby as a criminologist and sometime sleuth. Even more troublingly, he has jaundice. But with the papers shouting of the crimewave sweeping the seaside resorts of England, sending him to the coast to recover is too risky for the Headmaster – he will be much further from trouble in the inland spa resort of Buddington.

But before long Buddington is rocked by a twisted double-murder – two elderly women found dead on the same night at the same time, each with a white lily by their side. Perhaps things are looking up for the curious Deene?

First published in 1960, Leo Bruce’s classic mystery hums with his trademark wit and comedic flair, centred around an intelligent puzzle and a memorable cast of Buddington’s best.

I wasn’t sure if I’d like Jack on the Gallows Tree, as Leo Bruce is also the author of the Sergeant Beef stories, which I’ve never enjoyed much when I came across them in British Library Crime Classics collections. Fortunately this one is based around his other series detective, Carolus Deene, who I find more enjoyable as a character, with his sense of civic duty and the sense that he genuinely suffers strain during a case, and genuinely feels conflicted about pointing to a murderer.

In many ways it’s a pretty typical classic crime story, and I quickly figured out the motive in the same way as the character does — that part wasn’t exactly a mystery, though I think there’s a biiit of a dearth of clues pointing you to the right character (since three have motives which fit the bill). Possibly I missed something, but it felt to me like we didn’t have all the evidence until the circle of suspects was convened in classic mystery style, and then it was starting to feel a bit ponderous.

Still, I enjoyed it overall: Deene works quite well as a detective, some of the character observations are funny, along with the rather metafictional bit where Priggley tells Deene the circle-of-suspects thing is why he’s not one of Julian Symons’ top detectives. I’d definitely read more Carolus Deene books, though I still hope I won’t have to subject myself to a whole novel of Sergeant Beef.

Rating: 4/5 (“really liked it”)

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Fantasy with Friends: Favourite Subgenres

Posted April 20, 2026 by Nicky in General / 2 Comments

Fantasy With Friends: A Disccusion Meme hosted by Pages Unbound

Happy Monday! Which means it’s time for the Fantasy With Friends discussion post for this week (prompts hosted at Pages Unbound). This week the prompt’s about favourite genres:

Do you have any favorite subgenres of fantasy such as urban fantasy, historical fantasy, etc.?

Sort of! There are subgenres/combinations of genres that will always draw my attention, but I don’t have exclusive favourites, and it’d probably take some working out from the books on my shelves, because I like to try a bit of everything. I think there are some people who find a subgenre they love and just revel in it for months/years/forever, reading little else, and that’s not me — I’m too restless for that and too prone to trying anything and everything I can.

(Which, to be clear, is not intended as a diss for folks who find a genre or a corner of a genre and get themselves entrenched! It’s just not for me.)

As for what draws my attention, I had to actually have a think about it, because it’s definitely been evolving. I think these are the top ones though:

  • Fantasy mysteries: I do get a little picky about this genre, because a fantasy mystery has to be careful if it wants to be a fair-play mystery (one where the reader has all the clues). People need to get enough background to the story to be able to theorise for themselves. Even when it’s not intended as a fair-play mystery, the reader shouldn’t be totally blindsided by stuff like special murder magic or something at the end of the story. Still, there are some very fun fantasy mysteries out there: Robert Jackson Bennett’s The Tainted Cup and A Drop of Corruption manage to give you enough detail to the world and magic that you can theorise for yourself, though they aren’t 100% fair-play. Katherine Addison’s The Witness for the Dead is pretty good at that as well. I recently snagged Oliver K. Langmead’s upcoming The Killing of a Chestnut Tree as an ARC exactly because it’s a pastiche of Sherlock Holmes in a fantasy world (and indeed loved it!).
  • Cosy fantasy: If anything, I’m even pickier here because sometimes “cosy fantasy” ends up all vibes and no substance, and even interpersonal interactions can get flattened down to keep things low conflict to the point that characters and relationships can end feeling cardboard. Sometimes the happy endings feel too easy to be real, as well. There are cosy/lower-stakes fantasy I’ve loved, though — Legends & Lattes, for example, and The Teller of Small Fortunes.
  • Retellings/reinterpretations: There are some ridiculously clever ones that are completely transformative, like T. Kingfisher’s Hemlock & Silver, which is very much a Snow White retelling, but is also full of inventiveness. The mirror monsters are an astounding idea. Shout out too to Jacqueline Carey’s spin on The Lord of the Rings, Banewreaker and Godslayer; it’s been so long since I read those I don’t think I have reviews to link, but which I loved — you wouldn’t think anyone could make Sauron the good guy, and that’s not exactly what Carey does, but you can see the influence. There’s also Jo Walton’s The King’s Peace and sequel, and The Prize in the Game… I’ve been meaning to reread these for quite a while, because they are reflections on Arthurian legends (and The Tain) while being wholly their own thing too. It’s really exciting when people do retellings of less-known stories, too: I’m currently reading Finn Longman’s The Wolf and His King, which retells Marie de France’s ‘Bisclavret’, and I love that.
  • Political fantasy: I read Kushiel’s Dart at an impressionable age, and I’ve often looked for similarly rich political intrigue ever since. The Goblin Emperor and The Hands of the Emperor are recent books that scratched the same itch, and I’ve just remembered E.J. Beaton’s The Councillor as well (and sadly learned that the sequel may never be published). In a slightly different way, The Traitor Baru Cormorant digs into this too, though I didn’t get into the follow-up books.
  • Historical fantasy: Books like Guy Gavriel Kay’s A Song for Arbonne and Sailing to Sarantium really left their fingerprints on me (and arguably Kushiel’s Dart falls under this heading as well, while many of Kay’s books have political scheming too, like Tigana). I do think this genre can tend to be a bit bland and conjure up a very single-note “history” (i.e. medieval European), so it’s also especially nice when someone goes beyond that (I’d gladly take recommendations on this front!).
  • Xianxia and wuxia. I’m combining these because it’s a fairly recent interest of mine (though I’ve read a couple of wuxia-inspired novels here and there before), and mostly in the context of danmei and baihe (which I didn’t want to call a subgenre of fantasy because they don’t have to be fantasy). I have fallen totally in love with stories like The Scum Villain’s Self-Saving System, The Disabled Tyrant’s Beloved Pet Fish (though this isn’t quite xianxia, it’s adjacent) and The Beauty’s Blade, and I’m looking forward to reading more wuxia- and xianxia-inspired novels (like S.L. Huang’s The Water Outlaws).

Okay, I’m going to stop there, but it was fun to think about what exactly draws me in!

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Review – Snake-eater

Posted April 19, 2026 by Nicky in Reviews / 6 Comments

Review – Snake-eater

Snake-eater

by T. Kingfisher

Genres: Fantasy, Horror
Pages: 352
Rating: four-stars
Synopsis:

In an isolated desert town, a young woman seeking a fresh start is confronted by ancient gods, malevolent supernatural forces, and eccentric neighbours. A witty horror-tinged fantasy, perfect for fans of Silvia Moreno-Garcia, Chuck Tingle, and Rachel Harrison.

When Selena travels to the remote desert town of Quartz Creek in search of her estranged Aunt Amelia, she is desperate and short of options. Fleeing an unhappy marriage, she has exactly twenty-seven dollars to her name, and her only friend in the world is her dog, Copper.

On arrival, Selena learns Amelia is dead. But the inhabitants of Quartz Creek are only too happy to have a new resident. Out of money and ideas, Selena sees no harm staying in her aunt’s lovely house for a few weeks, tending to her garden and enjoying the strange, desolate beauty of the desert. The people are odd, but friendly, and eager to help Selena settle into her new home.

But Quartz Creek’s inhabitants share their town with others, old gods and spirits whose claim to the land long predates their human neighbours. Selena finds herself pursued by disturbing apparitions, visitations that come in the night and seem to want something from her.

Aunt Amelia owed a debt. Now her god has come to collect.

I saw someone describing T. Kingfisher’s Snake-eater as “cosy horror”, and that does make sense to me, weird as it sounds. There’s something very tempting in the life that Selena manages to find for herself, the friends she makes, and the sense of being home that Kingfisher somehow manages to communicate with every word of description (making her acknowledgements section note about returning to high desert areas pretty unsurprising, though I hadn’t known that she was returning to somewhat familiar ground when she moved).

I love the community described as well — Grandma Billy especially, and Father Aguirre, but really all of them. They’re so kind and welcoming, usually without forcing Selena into anything (even if Grandma Billy’s a bit of a forceful personality, she still gives Selena her space).

One thing that might give people pause in reading this is that Selena’s recovering from an abusive relationship, in which her partner (Walter) tried to control her, often doing so by telling her she’s terrible with people, can’t tell when people are uncomfortable or dislike her, etc, or by acting like she’s mentally ill for having emotions and breaking down under the strain of him treating her that way. A couple of reviewers said that she’s “obviously” suffering from autistic burnout, which I can’t speak to; mostly it looked like someone coming out of a terrible relationship that made them doubt themselves, to me.

And then, of course, there’s Snake-eater. That’s a lot cleaner peril than Walter, really: Selena’s aunt was in a relationship with a roadrunner god, who drained her energy and killed her. Now he wants Selena, and when she declines, he’s furious.

I worried that the two relationships would get knitted together the whole way, with some kind of confrontation with both Snake-eater and Walter, or Snake-eater using Walter — or even vice versa. It felt like that would have over-simplified things, and thankfully that’s not how it played out. I liked that the situation with Walter is ultimately resolved in a single chapter, using everything that Selena has learned about her community and her own ability to take care of herself.

I think there are some slight pacing issues with this one, in that it feels like a very slow build and then all of a sudden everything’s come to a head and it’s over… and I hadn’t quite got enough of a sense of building menace from the slow build (if anything, Selena’s growing comfort kind of gives us the opposite, even if she angers Snake-eater and has to deal with that situation). So that’s worth knowing — but even so it’s a book I flew through.

Rating: 4/5 (“really liked it”)

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