Review – Seasons of Glass and Iron

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

Review – Seasons of Glass and Iron

Seasons of Glass & Iron

by Amal El-Mohtar

Genres: Fantasy, Short Stories
Pages: 196
Rating: four-stars
Synopsis:

With confidence and style, El-Mohtar guides us through exquisitely told and sharply observed tales about life as it is, was, and could be. Like miscellany from other worlds, these stories are told in letters, diary entries, reference materials, folktales, and lyrical prose.

Full of Nebula, Locus, World Fantasy, and Hugo Award-winning and nominated stories, Seasons of Glass and Iron: Stories includes "Seasons of Glass and Iron," "The Green Book," "Madeleine," "The Lonely Sea in the Sky," "And Their Lips Rang with the Sun," "The Truth About Owls," "A Hollow Play," "Anabasis," "To Follow the Waves," "John Hollowback and the Witch," "Florilegia, or, Some Lies About Flowers," "Pockets," and more.

Seasons of Glass & Iron is a collection from various different times in Amal El-Mohtar’s writing career, and it’s surprising that they all fit pretty well together in light of that. Of course you don’t expect short stories to all be about the same thing, anyway, so that helps — but sometimes in collections like this that come from different times/were written for different purposes, you can really feel the disjointedness. That isn’t the case here.

I do enjoy El-Mohtar’s writing style, which helps, and knew I wanted to read this from a preview in the advance copy of The River Has Roots; it was nice to settle in and read the full collection, and there were several stories I really liked; ‘John Hollowback and the Witch’ is a fun one, and ‘Their Lips Rang With The Sun’. I was also interested in the story based on the Welsh story of Blodeuwedd, and would’ve loved some commentary on that and what provoked it, why Blodeuwedd felt like the right mythical source to use, etc.

I admit some of the other stories interested me less (like the one about pockets, since it didn’t quite feel like it really went anywhere?) and I wasn’t thaaat interested in the poems (at least in this context; it feels weird swapping between forms like that, for me!) — but overall, a good collection and one I enjoyed.

Rating: 4/5 (“really liked it”)

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Review – Dinosaur Sanctuary, vol 4

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

Review – Dinosaur Sanctuary, vol 4

Dinosaur Sanctuary

by Itaru Kinoshita

Genres: Manga, Science Fiction
Pages: 202
Series: Dinosaur Sanctuary #4
Rating: four-stars
Synopsis:

DINO ON THE LOOSE!

Suma Suzume is getting ready for her first winter as a dinokeeper at the struggling Enoshima Dinoland, but she’s got more to deal with than just keeping dinosaurs warm and cozy. When a report comes in that a Velociraptor is roaming the streets of Japan, Suzume and her coworker Kaido are sent to help! Can they bring the raptor back unharmed?

Aaahh, I loved some of the chapter opening images in vol 4 of Itaru Kinoshita’s Dinosaur Sanctuary — the Sherlock Holmes-esque one really made me laugh. We get a bit of variation here in that Suma ends up away from the dino-park, trying to track down a velocipraptor who escaped from smugglers. I love that the plots and how they work out are carefully based on trying to extrapolate how dinosaurs lived, and how they could live now.

The rest of the book gets back to the problem of the park’s social media somewhat, and pairs Suma up to work with yet another guy who is sceptical of her ability and seriousness about the job. I kinda hope that she doesn’t easily win him over within the next volume… though I get that her arc (inasfar as character development is happening) is all about proving herself. That doesn’t have to mean everyone likes her!

Still really fun, mostly-low-stakes, and full of dino-facts.

Rating: 4/5 (“really liked it”)

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WWW Wednesday

Posted June 10, 2026 by Nicky in General / 8 Comments

Here we are again! As usual lately, trying linking up with Taking on a World of Words.

Cover of How to Lay An Egg with a Horse Inside: An Alternative Guide to Writing and Enjoying Poetry, by Brian BilstonWhat have you recently finished reading?

I haven’t finished anything in a few days; I’m trying not to stress about that and just let my brain do a bit of a reset, because I have been reading… just not necessarily focusing on finishing books. Looks like the last thing I finished was How to Lay an Egg with a Horse Inside, by Brian Bilston: it’s ostensibly a guide to writing and enjoying poetry, but it largely felt like a platform for Brian Bilston to show off his poetry and humour. That might work better for others, but I didn’t enjoy it a lot.

Cover of Egypt's Golden Couple: When Akhenaten and Nefertiti were Gods on Earth by John Darnell and Colleen DarnellWhat are you currently reading?

A bunch of books at once, as ever, but with a decent amount of enthusiasm now, which is a relief. I most recently started John Darnell and Colleen Darnell’s Egypt’s Golden Couple; so far I’m raising an eyebrow slightly at their stated decision to take “the small liberty of providing the royal couple with personal quirks”. I’m giving it some time, especially as the bibliographical essays in the back do show sources, but I do hope the speculative/invented stuff is clearly flagged up.

I’ve also got started on volume two of Feng Yu Nie’s Mistakenly Saving the Villain, and I’m eager to see how the relationship develops now that some time has passed and Yue Wuhuan has gained more power and confidence.

I diiiid also start on Moorea Corrigan’s Thistlemarsh, but haven’t got far with that, and am knee-deep in Hal Rubenstein’s 100 Unforgettable Dresses, too many of which I find kinda forgettable. Mostly I think it’s not as focused on fashion history and what fashion tells us as I’m interested in, and more on “dresses make women beautiful”, with a dip in the last few entries I read into beliefs that all women want to look beautiful (implied: in a dress), so, yeah, not entirely my thing.

Cover of Puzzles of the Parish ed. Martin EdwardsWhat will you read next?

I just got this month’s British Library Crime Classic via my subscription, and this month’s is a short story collection: Puzzles of the Parish, focusing on stories around churches and clergy (I expect at least one appearance of Father Brown). I often end up gobbling up the short story collections, and they’re a nice range of different authors/periods/styles, so I might well pick this up next.

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Review – The Stranger in the Hoarding House

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

Review – The Stranger in the Hoarding House

The Stranger in the Hoarding House

by Joe Aruku

Genres: Manga, Romance
Pages: 182
Rating: two-stars
Synopsis:

After a traumatic incident at work, Kamakura locked himself away and let the trash pile up around him, resigned to his fate as a hikikomori... That is, until the day Katsuyoshi climbed in through his balcony.

At their landlord's behest, Katsuyoshi offers to help Kamakura clean his apartment, insisting that Kamakura stay with him in the meantime. Kamakura reluctantly agrees, wondering why Katsuyoshi would offer to help out a complete stranger. Turns out, Katsuyoshi has his own reasons— and his own trauma— to work through.

As they tidy together, the pair open up to each other and slowly begin to heal in this sweet slice-of-life romance about moving forward, one trash bag at a time...

Joe Aruku’s The Stranger in the Hoarding House is pretty short and sweet; the characters are thrown together when Katsuyoshi climbs into Kamakura’s apartment after someone throws a ball to break the windows, and finds him there locked in with a load of trash. Things went badly for Kamakura and he just stopped caring, but Katsuyoshi tasks himself to get him back on his feet — not just out of the kindness of his heart, but partly in redemption for being unkind to someone close to him who was in a similar situation.

The whole thing resolves pretty quickly, particularly the hoarding problem, and there’s not an enormous amount of build-up to the relationship before it launches sideways into a weird sexual encounter, but the relationship between the two of them turns sweet and supportive, helping both of them make good changes to their lives.

It’s not amazingly detailed or fleshed out, but it was cute, all the same.

Rating: 2/5 (“it was okay”)

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Top Ten Tuesday: Handwriting on Covers

Posted June 9, 2026 by Nicky in General / 18 Comments

This week’s prompt from Top Ten Tuesday is another cover-based one, about covers featuring handwriting/fonts that look like handwriting. I don’t actually know what I’ll find, but let’s see!

Aaand the end results are a bit of a mix: mostly I kept finding the same sort of “handwriting-ish” fonts being used, the “I’m based ultimately on handwriting/calligraphy, but everyone’s used to this as a font” ones. But here are some that caught my eye, narrowed down from about twenty…

Cover of A Long & Short Love Story by Kei Ichikawa Cover of A Long and Speaking Silence by Nghi Vo Cover of Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation manhua vol 12 Cover of Heaven Official's Blessing manhua vol 1 by STARember Cover of The Book Eaters by Sunyi Dean

 Cover of Glass Town by Isabel Greenberg Cover of The Murder of Roger Ackroyd by Agatha Christie Cover of Nick & Charlie by Alice Oseman Cover of A Nobleman's Guide to Seducing a Scoundrel by KJ Charles   Cover of The Annual Migration of Clouds by Premee Mohamed

I didn’t love all these books (and I haven’t finished The Book Eaters yet), but I confess that handwriting fonts do seem to grab my attention, and I definitely like them a lot when I’m making graphics (on the rare occasions that I do). Amsterdam Three, how I love thee.

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Review – A Dress of Locusts

Posted June 8, 2026 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Review – A Dress of Locusts

A Dress of Locusts

by Safa Khatib

Genres: Poetry
Pages: 64
Rating: one-star
Synopsis:

Woven from threads of Aramaic, Spanish, Ancient Greek, Sumerian and Arabic, A Dress of Locusts is an unforgettable song cycle in which the living and dead sing back and forth to one another. Here, Safa Khatib journeys across the possibilities of language and self, asking us to dwell in the thresholds between the 'old' and the 'new'.

There are some very striking images and strongly expressed scenes in Safa Khatib’s A Dress of Locusts (including the image that gives the title!), and I’m kind of sad I don’t like it more. The poems are very readable and easy to follow (except for one or two where I found the layout slightly annoying), but I didn’t really find my way in.

A large part of that is the sexual content of the poems. I wouldn’t generally consider myself prudish at all, and of course sex has a place in poetry, but the way sex is treated in these poems — I don’t know. Each time it stuck out and felt like a surprise, an inclusion designed to shock and disrupt, and it didn’t work well for me.

Maybe reading it unprepared as a random choice from the National Poetry Library was part of it; sometimes I think poetry can benefit from a little context. That said, I don’t think it would ever have quite worked for me, though as ever I’m really glad to be able to explore poets I’ve never read before and broaden my frame of reference. I don’t regret reading it, even if I didn’t enjoy it.

Rating: 1/5 (“didn’t like it”)

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Fantasy with Friends: Series or Standalones

Posted June 8, 2026 by Nicky in General / 2 Comments

Fantasy With Friends: A Disccusion Meme hosted by Pages Unbound

Happy Monday!

It’s time for more Fantasy with Friends: as always, the prompts are hosted at Pages Unbound, if you’d like to join in. This week’s prompt is about fantasy series:

Do you currently prefer standalone fantasies or series? Is there a certain number of books that seems like “too much,” whether that means the series feels intimidating to start or just that the author might need to move on to something else? Is there a point at which you worry that a series is just a “cash grab?”

At the moment, I definitely lean toward standalones, or loosely-connected series which don’t require that you grab the next book right away in order to find out how the story ends. There’s something very satisfying about knowing the story has reached a happy-ever-after (or miserable-ever-after, though I’m not so keen on that) or at least a happy/miserable-for-now. And you don’t have to worry whether the remainder of the series will ever come out at all, or that the series will get cancelled before it all comes out.

That said, there are some amazing series out there, and authors I absolutely trust with that — I’ve probably mentioned Marie Brennan’s Lady Isabella Trent books a few times so far, but she’s definitely one example where I was thrilled to hang on and wait for the next instalment, eagerly reading each as it came out, and I’d trust her for the same now. I had a similar feeling about Heather Fawcett’s Emily Wilde books, too. I think it comes down to a certain amount of trust that the story’s going somewhere and that there’s a plan to get there.

There are some series where I find myself having my doubts and finding the sheer number of volumes daunting, though I don’t want to go as far as calling anything a “cash grab”. Seanan McGuire’s books seem to spawn apparently-infinite series, for example. I’m aware that she has a game plan for Toby Daye, for instance, but… I don’t know. It is definitely getting to daunting lengths, and the degree to which hardcore fans breathlessly greet each new story does make me a little worried it’s become too big for McGuire to wrap up.

As far as “cash grabs” go… well, authors need to make money, they have bills to pay, etc, and ongoing series with enthusiastic followings are a good way of guaranteeing a certain amount coming in, the induction of new fans, and the sales of backlist books. Authors have to be businesspeople because we don’t have worldwide universal basic incomes. If an author is looking at a series thinking “the books have to keep coming”, no shade for that except inasfar I think it’s possible for the world/story to end up suffering for it, and that would be a shame… and, well, my ability and desire to follow a series like that at the moment are somewhat limited, so I’m not the ideal audience.

There have been times in the past where I was absolutely into epic series, so it might happen again in time. At the moment I’m even reading Omniscient Reader’s Viewpoint, which is coming out in translation a volume at a time. What helps there is that I know the story is finished, and it’s just waiting on translation… so it’s already finite. Same goes for a lot of the danmei I’ve picked up lately (though also they’re often just four volumes or so, so not too intimidating).

So in conclusion: mostly standalones or at least short/loosely connected series for me at the moment, but I can’t say I won’t get into an epic sometime in the future.

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Review – Japanese Dress in Detail

Posted June 7, 2026 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Review – Japanese Dress in Detail

Japanese Dress in Detail

by Josephine Rout

Genres: Fashion, History, Non-fiction
Pages: 208
Series: Fashion in Detail
Rating: four-stars
Synopsis:

A unique insight into the history and key themes of Japanese dress from the eighteenth century to the present, Japanese Dress in Detail reveals the elaborate embroidery, precise folds, and sophisticated dyes that form some of the most beautiful garments in the Victoria and Albert Museum's unparalleled Japanese dress collection. This book provides readers with the rare opportunity to examine historical clothing, from breathtaking Edo-period kimono, court robes, and No-- theatre costumes to indigo-dyed utilitarian garments and exciting contemporary designs.

Featuring both garments and accessories, this book is an extraordinary exploration of the beauty and complexity of Japanese fashion. Specially commissioned close-up photography and authoritative texts accompany each garment, and front-and-back line drawings make this publication an invaluable resource for students, collectors, designers, fashion lovers, and Japanophiles.

As usual for the books in this collection from the V&A, Japanese Dress in Detail is rich with photographs and illustrations to help understand and explain the details of garments. I must admit that it helped that I’d also seen some of them in person now at the V&A itself; though the fashion gallery is currently closed, several of the items are to be found in the Japanese gallery. It was extra-neat to read about the items I’d actually seen and got to examine in a few more dimensions (even if through glass).

I found it interesting how the clothes were mostly from 1850 or so onward, 1750 at oldest (if I remember the dates rightly) — the history of contact with Japan also making an imprint here, compared to the much older clothes from Britain and the US (and, if I remember rightly, China as well).

One of my favourite garments of the book was utilitarian, though: a fireman’s outfit which was heavily padded both to provide protection from falling objects and so it could be soaked to help with protection from flames.

Overalll, as ever, a lovely and fascinating volume.

Rating: 4/5 (“really liked it”)

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Stacking the Shelves & The Sunday Post

Posted June 6, 2026 by Nicky in General / 20 Comments

Happy weekend! I’ve had a fairly quiet week without feeling in the mood for much, but I got out of the house yesterday for a little adventure (viewing the UK AIDs Memorial Quilt, which is on display this weekend not too far away) and feel a bit perkier today, so let’s hope for some good weekend reading.

Books acquired this week

Nothing new in the mail for me, but I did pick up some library books! These were more or less random choices just based on whatever I spotted in a very quick trawl through while waiting…

Cover of Laughter in Ancient Rome by Mary Beard Cover of English Food: A People's History by Diane Purkiss Cover of A Short History of the World in 50 Lies by Natashia Tidd

Cover of Off the Shelf: A Celebration of Bookshops in Verse, ed. Carol Ann Duffy Cover of How to Lay An Egg with a Horse Inside: An Alternative Guide to Writing and Enjoying Poetry, by Brian Bilston

And a hold came in from the National Poetry Library:

Cover of A Man, A Woman and a Hippopotamus by Selima Hill

It’s possible I put it on hold just for the hippos on the cover!

Posts from this week

Starting with the reviews:

As usual, most of them aren’t books I’ve finished super recently, since I hold back reviews to keep a mix of genres going. The books I’ve read this week are in the next section though!

Other posts:

What I’m reading

It was a bit of a slow week as far as reading goes, though I did some organising of my currently-reading pile and got realistic, so the terrifying stack is a bit better managed now, and I kinda hope that will perk me up. I did finish a few books, and they weren’t short ones either, so it wasn’t a bad week, all the same!

Cover of The Unicorn Murders by John Dickson Carr Cover of Dressing the Queen: Two Hundred Years of Makers and Monarchy by Kate Strasdin Cover of The Dead Beat: Lost Souls, Lucky Stiffs and the Perverse Pleasures of Obituaries, by Marilyn Johnson Cover of How to Lay An Egg with a Horse Inside: An Alternative Guide to Writing and Enjoying Poetry, by Brian Bilston

This weekend I’m hoping to return to Sunyi Dean’s The Book Eaters, which I’ve been neglecting, and maybe start on volume two of Feng Yu Nie’s Mistakenly Saving the Villain… but I’m not super set on anything, and mostly planning to follow my whim. Not doing that is what gets me feeling overwhelmed and unhappy with my reading, after all.

I haven’t made much progress on my crochet since last week, but I’m hoping to get some work in on that, too.

Happy reading, folks!

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 – The Unicorn Murders

Posted June 5, 2026 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Review – The Unicorn Murders

The Unicorn Murders

by Carter Dickson, John Dickson Carr

Genres: Crime, Mystery
Pages: 270
Series: British Library Crime Classics
Rating: three-stars
Synopsis:

The diplomat Sir George Ramsden is returning to Britain from France with the mysterious “unicorn” in tow. The legendary thief Flamande has declared that he will be on the same flight as Ramsden, in disguise, and that the unicorn will be his. His arch-rival and head of the Sûreté Nationale, Gasquet, has assured the public that he too will be on the plane to thwart his nemesis. Meanwhile, holidaying in Paris, the ex-spy Kenwood Blake runs into Evelyn Cheyne and is swept into a perilous chase ending at the Chateau de l’Ile on a stormy night. Here, Ramsden’s plane has made an emergency landing, and Henry Merrivale has joined the party. When the castle is cut off by the flooding river, the stage is set for a battle of wits between two masters of disguise in Flamande and Gasquet, as a bizarre and seemingly impossible murder among the party casts suspicion in every direction – and the mystery of the unicorn is revealed. Carter Dickson’s brilliantly intricate mystery was first published in Britain in 1936; it remains a testament to his unique talent for wrangling audacious levels of devilishness into a masterpiece.

I’ve had a bit of a rocky time with John Dickson Carr/Carter Dickson’s work — at some point things clicked and I started to enjoy it a bit more, but The Unicorn Hunters definitely encapsulates some of the things I really dislike about it. At times it doesn’t even seem to know what genre it wants to play in: spy thriller? spot of romance? murder mystery? gothic novel?

That is part of the fun if you can get on board, of course: it’s a bit overengineered, and it takes some work to keep up and follow Merrivale’s guesses (especially since you’re stuck in Kenneth Blake’s point of view), but it does feel like Carr was having fun referencing all these genres and setting up his twisty plots, and that helped to keep me in the game.

The romance part is mostly an aside, but there are a few moments where the story focuses on that… though, since Kenneth refers to the capable government agent Evelyn as “wench” and acts like she’s an irrational creature who will do anything for her man, that’s not always a good thing. (She seems fairly competent, actually.)

And I haven’t even mentioned the battle of wits between the brilliant detective (Gasquet) and the arch-criminal (Flamande)…

Once I got past the start, where I was annoyed by Kenneth lying in order to hang out with Evelyn, which was obviously going to lead to trouble, I managed to have fun — but I can’t say it’s a favourite, and this is on the lowish end of three stars.

Rating: 3/5 (“liked it”)

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