Let’s Talk Bookish: Discussion Posts

Posted July 10, 2026 by Nicky in General / 0 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 monthly bookish discussion meme created by Rukky @ Eternity Books and co-hosted by Aria @ Book Nook Bits and Dini @ Dinipandareads! It’s recently moved to a lower-frequency posting schedule which you can check out here.

July’s prompts are all about this kind of discussion post:

How do you prepare your posts when you’re writing a discussion post—do you have an outline or do you usually start writing in advance and work on it slowly over time? Do you prefer to have many prompts (like LTB), or do you prefer one question that you can take in whichever direction you prefer (like Fantasy with Friends by Unbound Pages)? Do you think weekly discussions are better, or quarterly discussions (like Literary Inbox by 24yabookblog)?

I don’t really have a system for working on these posts: I read the prompt and see what pops into my head to answer the question. I usually write it in one sitting, though lately I keep finding myself sneaking back to add in just a little detail or an extra thought, haha. Sometimes I write the post in advance, and sometimes it’s more last-minute — it really depends on how busy I’ve been.

I don’t have strong feelings about the number of questions, to be honest; sometimes having a lot helps prompt me to think through a topic thoroughly, while other times it’s hard to answer any of them at length and the resulting post feels a bit choppy and unfocused. It’s mostly down to the type of questions asked, I suppose, and how many thoughts they prompt in me!

As for frequency, I like the predictability of having a weekly schedule, since I plan my posts mostly on that kind of time frame, trying to avoid having more than two posts (one discussion, one review) on any given day in order to avoid spamming up people’s inboxes and give them a chance to reply to me. Having a weekly schedule means I can plan ahead and do the same pattern of posts every week. That said, having some longer-term stuff that can pop in more “at random” (as monthly/quarterly prompts tend to feel to me) isn’t bad, I’m just more likely to forget to join in.

I’m not sure this answer is very interesting, unfortunately, but I guess it’s of use for people who plan discussion posts or might want to in future!

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Review – Game Changer

Posted July 9, 2026 by Nicky in Reviews / 5 Comments

Review – Game Changer

Game Changer

by Rachel Reid

Genres: Romance
Pages: 366
Series: Game Changers #1
Rating: three-stars
Synopsis:

New York Admirals captain Scott Hunter takes his pregame rituals very seriously. When a particular smoothie precedes Scott's breaking his on-ice slump, he’s desperate to recreate the magic
 and to get to know the sexy, funny guy behind the counter.

Kip Grady knew there was more to Scott’s frequent visits than blended fruit, but he never let himself imagine being invited back to Scott’s penthouse. Or kissed with reckless abandon—and more. What goes on between them is hot, incredible and frequent
 but also only on Scott’s terms and always behind his closed apartment doors.

Scott needs Kip in his life, but with playoff season approaching, the spotlight on him is suddenly brighter than ever. He can’t afford to do anything that might derail his career or the public’s image of what a hockey captain should be. Kip is ready to go all in with Scott—but how much longer will he have to remain a secret?

I’d been meaning to try Rachel Reid’s Game Changer for a while, given people’s excitement about the Heated Rivalry series, and it was definitely fun. I’d say it was pretty predictable, and quite a lot of it focused on sex scenes to a point where it didn’t feel like they were advancing the connection between the characters or the characterisation of either of them… but it was fun, all the same.

It helps that Kip and Scott are both characters that make sense, and their connection (and the ways they didn’t always work perfectly together) proceeded from that pretty well. Scott’s a very successful but deeply closeted athlete; Kip’s a poor queer arts graduate working shit jobs who’s happy to go to gay bars and pick up men who seem handsome and fun. It makes sense that there’s a lot about Kip that attracts Scott, at the same time as it makes sense that they’ll struggle to find a balance in terms of money and in terms of how public they want to be.

I did enjoy their friendships outside of the relationship, too, particularly Kip’s with Elena, but also Scott’s with his team. Kip’s dad is pretty cool as well…

So it all added up to something that wasn’t groundbreaking or full of surprising turns — and seeing the third act breakup coming from a mile away did have me wincing in anticipation, which I always hate — but which managed to be pretty cute and entertaining for what it is.

Rating: 3/5 (“liked it”)

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Review – We Burned So Bright

Posted July 9, 2026 by Nicky in Reviews / 3 Comments

Review – We Burned So Bright

We Burned So Bright

by TJ Klune

Genres: Science Fiction
Pages: 169
Rating: two-stars
Synopsis:

Husbands Don and Rodney have lived a good long life. Together they’ve experienced the highest highs of love and family, and lows so low that they felt like the end of the world.

Now, the world is ending for real. A wandering blackhole is coming for Earth and in a month everything and everyone they’ve ever known will be gone.

Suddenly, after 40 years together, Don and Rodney are out of time. They’re in a race against the clock to make it from Maine to Washington State to take care of some unfinished business before it’s all over.

On the road they meet those who refuse to believe death is coming and those who rush to meet it. But there are also people living their final days as best they know how–impromptu weddings, bright burning bonfires, shared meals, new friends.

And as the blackhole draws near, among ball lightning and under a cracked moon in a kaleidoscope sky, Don and Rodney will look back on their lives and ask if their best was good enough.

Is it enough to burn bright if nothing comes from the ashes?

I received a copy of this book for free in exchange for an honest review. This does not affect my opinion of the book or the content of my review.

I didn’t really read much about this novella before requesting it on Netgalley, because I’ve enjoyed TJ Klune’s books in the past. The concept is basically that two elderly gay men are travelling on a road trip during the end of the world to do something they feel they have to do, which isn’t completely revealed at first.

Sadly, I felt that it wasn’t very well written, overall. There were infodumps, the various different encounters and epiphanies they had were fairly predictable, and so was the object of their journey. I had only one doubt about exactly what it would be (which I won’t say in case I spoil it for someone else!) but that didn’t really feel like much to hold on for.

More than anything, the concept felt a little goofy. A black hole is going to eat the Earth, really? It doesn’t feel at all realistic, and I get that it’s not meant to actually convince me that it’s going to happen or is likely, but it felt like even Klune wasn’t totally committing to it, to me. He tried to figure out how people would act, and that part isn’t bad, but I think he’d have been more confident and avoided that goofy feel by picking something less… uncertain in details. A meteor would’ve worked better in most ways, apart from the mystical stuff that snuck in toward the end.

Overall, pretty weak tea, to my mind. Klune usually writes sentimentality quite well, but it didn’t come off here, maybe because the details were so weak.

Rating: 2/5 (“it was okay”)

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WWW Wednesday

Posted July 8, 2026 by Nicky in General / 6 Comments

Cover of Lost Voices of the Nile by Charlotte BoothWhat have you recently finished reading?

I’ve finally been getting through some books that’d been sort of paused for a while, so I finished up Charlotte Booth’s Lost Voices of the Nile and Stephanie Burgis’ Wooing the Witch Queen at last. That’s… a pretty weird mix, I’ll admit; Lost Voices of the Nile is a bit dry, but really interesting (to me, anyway; I never grew out of the obligatory childhood Egypt phase). Wooing the Witch Queen was pretty fun, too: I was pretty worried about the identity reveal part and whether it’d be a totally stupid third act breakup, but honestly, that wasn’t bad.

I also finished volume three of Mistakenly Saving the Villain, and I really wish it was October already so I could have the next/last book. It is unclear to me how everything’s going to work out, but wow. Things sure are messed up!

Cover of The Stones of Britain: A History of Britain through its Geology, by Jon CannonWhat are you currently reading?

I’m focusing on three books at the moment: one is Jon Cannon’s The Stones of Britain, which is soothing because I have no actual interest in geology or psychogeography, but Cannon is fascinated by stones and place and how the combination of the two have worked out, and someone else’s enthusiasm is (usually) very enjoyable to me.

I’ve also got back to Helen Pilcher’s Life Changing: How Humans are Altering Life on Earth, almost none of which is coming as a surprise to me (nor would’ve when it was new), but is sort of soothing because of it.

And finally, I’ve got back to Carwyn Graves’ Welsh Food Stories, which is interesting enough so far; the importance of bread and cheese didn’t come as a surprise, but the chapter on cockles and other seafood was more unfamiliar.

Cover of The Last Contract of Isako by Fonda LeeWhat will you be reading next?

I’m not sure, but I’d like to add some fiction into the rotation with the other three. There are a few books I have already started that I could pick up, so I might just randomly reactivate one of those and see how I get along. Since I have 32 books marked as “paused” on StoryGraph… it’d probably be sensible.

That said, I do also have some ARCs I should get to or should’ve got to already, so maaaybe one of those — Fonda Lee’s The Last Contract of Isako, maybe, or John Wiswell’s The Dragon Has Some Complaints.

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Top Ten Tuesday: Titles with the Word “City”

Posted July 7, 2026 by Nicky in General / 24 Comments

This week’s Top Ten Tuesday is a fun prompt: “Book Titles That Include the Word [insert word of your choice here]”, and I glanced around my shelves and took a bit of a guess at what might be interesting, picking the word “city”. Let’s see what I’ve got!

Cover of The Masked City by Genevieve Cogman Cover of A City on Mars by Kelly & Zach Weinersmith Cover of The City in Glass by Nghi Vo Cover of The Buried City by Gabriel Zuchtriegel Cover of City of Stairs by Robert Jackson Bennett

  1. The Masked City, by Genevieve Cogman.
    I don’t entirely know why, but this is one of my favourites of this series — something about the atmosphere, and we’re still learning about the world, and because it’s strong on the Fae elements… And perhaps because it’s Venice.
  2. A City on Mars, by Kelly & Zack Weinersmith.
    A great non-fiction look at how we could settle on Mars, what technology we’ve got that would work and what we still need to develop. Sadly, they’re not very optimistic — but it’s still a fascinating read, and they’re fun writers.
  3. The City in Glass, by Nghi Vo.
    An absolute fever-dream of a book: I keep repeating that description, but it’s apt. It’s gorgeous and grotesque and weird, and I had a great time with it.
  4. The Buried City, by Gabriel Zuchtriegel.
    The author is the director of archaeology at Pompeii, and this book is about Pompeii, so of course I was interested! It isn’t only about Pompeii, also musing on why archaeology is worth doing and what archaeology can do.
  5. City of Stairs, by Robert Jackson Bennett.
    I actually want to reread this one so I can finish the trilogy — I only read the first two books. Both were really fascinating, and I do enjoy a fantasy mystery.
  6. The Drowning City, by Amanda Downum.
    I’ve got to admit it’s been a long time since I read this one, but I remember enjoying the series a lot (though perhaps especially the second book, The Bone Palace). I can’t vouch for it as current-me, but past-me really enjoyed it.
  7. The Shambling Guide to New York City, by Mur Lafferty.
    This is also a book I read quite a long time ago, and the details are somewhat obscured by time… but I know I enjoyed it, and found it a lot less gimmicky than I’d expected from the title.
  8. The Just City, by Jo Walton.
    This is a fascinating thought experiment about how people might enact a thought experiment for real, and I really enjoyed the ride.
  9. In the Watchful City, by S. Qiouyi Lu.
    This prompt is proving excellent at resurfacing books I’ve really enjoyed! In the Watchful City was a great novella, though perhaps not for everyone (I just stumbled across someone else’s review where they hated pretty much everything about it, haha — and I did understanding their points).
  10. City of Bones, by Martha Wells.
    There is so much going on in this book, from weird gender stuff to different species interacting and fantasy archaeology, and I really need to reread it.

Cover of The Drowning City by Amanda Downum Cover of The Shambling Guide to New York City by Mur Lafferty Cover of The Just City by Jo Walton Cover of In the Watchful City by S. Qiouyi Lu Cover of City of Bones by Martha Wells

NB: some of my linked reviews are quite old, and I don’t know if I stand by my thoughts and feelings from back then! The suck fairy might’ve visited in the last decade+ in some cases. I’m just going by fond memories and enthusiasm, and maybe I’ll revisit some of these books myself.

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Review – Dinosaur Sanctuary, vol 7

Posted July 6, 2026 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Review – Dinosaur Sanctuary, vol 7

Dinosaur Sanctuary

by Itaru Kinoshita

Genres: Manga, Science Fiction
Pages: 200
Series: Dinosaur Sanctuary #7
Rating: four-stars
Synopsis:

Suma Suzume, the newest dinokeeper at the struggling Enoshima Dinoland, stops by the lab to see her old friend Benkei...but will he have a place to stay much longer? Back at the park, the crew from a local TV station that's hoping to capture a day in the life of a rookie dinokeeper gets more than they bargained for when an unexpected visitor shows up in the Dilophosaurus paddock! And to top it all off, it's time for Suzume to learn the ropes at the park's facilities for disabled dinos...

Volume seven of Itaru Kinoshita’s Dinosaur Sanctuary is the last one that’s already out in translation at the time of writing, and I feel bereft. I love this series and how sweet it is, with Suma’s deep care for the dinosaurs, the supportiveness of (most of) her coworkers, and the sheer enthusiasm of the series’ consultant in the fact files between chapters!

This particular installment includes Trom, a blind Deinonychus, who has been trained with a clicker! He doesn’t go on display because he’s blind, so the park just takes care of him, and Suma learning to understand that he’s not necessarily to be pitied is pretty neat. We also get a bit with the psittacos in the petting zoo, which is so cute.

But really, the fact files are full of such enthusiasm, they especially made me smile in this volume.

Rating: 4/5 (“really liked it”)

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Fantasy with Friends: Magic Systems

Posted July 6, 2026 by Nicky in General / 6 Comments

Fantasy With Friends: A Disccusion Meme hosted by Pages Unbound

Monday’s here again, so we have a new Fantasy with Friends prompt to consider! All the prompts are hosted at Pages Unbound, if you’d like to join in. This week’s prompt is all about magic systems:

What are some of your favorite magical systems in fantasy? Do you like magic to be explained in detail or to be a bit vague? Do you think magic should have a “cost” or not?

Let’s set the general rules first, I think: for me, it depends a bit on how important the magic is to the plot. If the main character doesn’t have magic, and magic exists in the world but not as something they need to access or understand, to me it’s fine (even better, sometimes) if the magic is a bit vague. It’s there to give flavour, and when magical things happen, in a limited POV narrative it makes sense for the character/s to potentially not know very much about it. Sometimes even when a character does use magic (like using magical items, or using magic on an instinctive level), it makes sense for them to not understand: I don’t totally understand why my PC works, but I can use it!

What bothers me is when magic is repeatedly used to solve problems without any indication of what the limits are. Obviously an author can set any limits they want and make the magic system as convenient as they please, but it works best for me when the rules and constraints are introduced early on, before magic gets used as a solution. It’s much more convincing if we know a thief-mage can unlock a plot-relevant door by smearing blood on it and murmuring an enchantment beforehand, rather than at the moment the thief gets to the locked door — even if that is shown to us by the thief-mage doing that to some other, less consequential door earlier in the story.

And while I don’t think magic always necessarily needs to have a cost, to keep tension and the ability to suspend disbelief in the narrative you do definitely need it to have limits. Maybe the limit is that the thief-mage can only work the spell once a day, or during certain phases of the moon. Maybe it’s not just a little blood, maybe the spell consumes two pints and you definitely don’t want to work it again for a good while. Maybe it only works once per door. These kind of constraints can give you the drama your story needs: on the way back, the door’s been relocked, the moon’s set, the thief-mage is way too low to do another blood donation, there’s no other door they can open instead… now how will they get out? What if they use someone else’s blood, does that work?

(These are all my own examples, by the way — I’m not saying they’re great, they’re just here to illustrate my points!)

I think The Lord of the Rings is a good example of where we don’t get clearly defined limitations on magic, but it’s clear that Gandalf can’t just do whatever he wants. He works within a framework, and we know that, so we’re not shocked when he can’t simply teleport out of the Mines of Moria — even though he’s a powerful wizard, and we can believe other amazing feats of him. Likewise Galadriel: we don’t know exactly what she can do, but we believe that she can’t just make Frodo invisible to Sauron. This also works in part because Gandalf and Galadriel aren’t the main characters, so we don’t need to be able to follow their decisions exactly in the same way as we need to understand Frodo’s mind and limitations.

For something with clearer boundaries, I quite like the world of Daniel M. Ford’s The Warden. I can’t say I’ve bothered to memorise the types of magic or even which types Aelis can use, but the fact that the clear delineations exist show me that she does have boundaries. We see her tire, we see her spells fail, and we know that no matter how powerful she is, she can still die. The fact that she’s so competent in multiple forms of magic is where the story sometimes strains belief a little… but because she’s within a system, and because things sometimes come as a struggle, we can accept that we probably have a fair idea of what she can do and what kind of foe might stretch her limits.

I’d be hard-pressed to really name favourite magic systems, because there are so many fun ones and so many of them draw from very similar ideas (without being carbon copies, because what authors do with it depends on the needs of the plot). I think I tend to enjoy things that are a unique take on something familiar: Julie Leong’s The Teller of Small Fortunes, for example, in which the main character tells fortunes… but endeavours only to tell small ones, ones with little impact. The fact that some small things (such as telling someone “you will give your daughter a kitten”) turn out to have large meanings is one of the joys of that book, to me.

I definitely also enjoy stories where there are multiple forms of magic, like in the aforementioned The Warden. In a world where someone can be skilled at alchemy but useless at divination or amazing at battle magic but unable to so much as mend a pot, there are loads of ways for magic to provide as much friction as it does a way forward.

Another type of magic I liked is where you have to understand something deeply in order to be able to use magic on it — A Wizard of Earthsea comes to mind, where Le Guin has someone explain why a mage can’t simply quiet the whole sea: you have to name what you want to change by its true name, and the sea has many names, many parts. A mage who turns themself into a dolphin can indeed swim vast distances, but at risk of losing their true self and even their name. Ged’s first master, Ogion, doesn’t even do “small” magics like shunting a cloud aside, because he knows that every change he makes can have unforeseen consequences.

I could go on for days, so I’ll stop here!

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Review – Welcome Back, Aureole

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

Review – Welcome Back, Aureole

Welcome Back, Aureole

by Takatsu

Genres: Manga, Romance
Pages: 210
Rating: three-stars
Synopsis:

Outgoing and popular Kazu and shy and serious Moto grew up together as childhood best friends. But something changes during junior high, and the familiar, easy rhythm of their friendship begins to break apart as Kazu starts nursing deeper feelings for his oblivious friend. When Kazu's troubled home life and Moto's budding romantic forays create a clash of misunderstandings, secrets, and hurt feelings, will their relationship be able to survive these growing pains?

Welcome Back, Aureole is a bittersweet yet tender exploration of the maturation of young love. Two boys growing up side by side... their stars drift apart and come together again.

I didn’t love the art in Takatsu’s Welcome Back, Aureole, but it’s a cute story nonetheless: Kazu and Moto have been best friends for a long time, but we quickly learn that Kazu has fallen in love with Moto, who doesn’t return the feelings. Nonetheless, he’s determined to remain Kazu’s friend and help him with what he’s going through (the abusive alcoholism of his father and his parents’ divorce), even if Kazu just tries to go away.

There’s a happy ending, of course: their feelings start out of step, with Kazu’s attempt at kissing Moto just confusing and angering him. Moto starts to see Kazu differently though, especially after his 2.5 year relationship with his girlfriend ends with purely friendly feelings between them.

There’s a bit of pining along the way, and background trauma on Kazu’s part, but it works out pretty cute.

Rating: 3/5 (“liked it”)

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Review – Night Sky with Exit Wounds

Posted July 4, 2026 by Nicky in Reviews / 4 Comments

Review – Night Sky with Exit Wounds

Night Sky with Exit Wounds

by Ocean Vuong

Genres: Poetry
Pages: 89
Rating: two-stars
Synopsis:

An extraordinary debut from a young Vietnamese American, Night Sky with Exit Wounds is a book of poetry unlike any other.

Steeped in war and cultural upheaval and wielding a fresh new language, Vuong writes about the most profound subjects – love and loss, conflict, grief, memory and desire – and attends to them all with lines that feel newly-minted, graceful in their cadences, passionate and hungry in their tender, close attention: ‘
the chief of police/facedown in a pool of Coca-Cola./A palm-sized photo of his father soaking/beside his left ear.’ This is an unusual, important book: both gentle and visceral, vulnerable and assured, and its blend of humanity and power make it one of the best first collections of poetry to come out of America in years.

Ocean Vuong’s Night Sky with Exit Wounds is a rare book of poetry I’ve actually heard about/seen around elsewhere, rather than stumbling across. I’ve heard it might work a bit better if you’ve read Vuong’s other work, but I haven’t, so I came to this cold.

And… left it pretty cold, unfortunately; there are some amazing images, some sharp sentences, but the overall effect just… didn’t quite come off for me. Some of the poems felt scattered, disjointed, and not necessarily intentionally so: I just couldn’t follow the train of thought, or in a couple of cases, simply didn’t care to.

Some beautiful language, that can’t be denied, but not my thing stylistically.

Rating: 2/5 (“it was okay”)

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Stacking the Shelves & The Sunday Post

Posted July 4, 2026 by Nicky in General / 38 Comments

Happy weekend! And I’m glad to see it, especially since it’s going to be a pretty busy week ahead. Gotta soak up some relaxation now!

Books acquired this week

A couple of books I was excited about came out this week, but so far I’ve stuck to one — and everyone who knows me is very thankful I managed to get a copy, because when Bookshop.org didn’t have it on the release date and Waterstones turned out to not even be listing it as a book that exists, I was very pouty. Buuut Bookshop.org had copies a day after release, so, whew.

Cover of Mistakenly Saving the Villain vol 3 by Feng Yu Nie

I dived in already… and accidentally flicked ahead and saw a new and confusing character name?! So I’m not sure where this is going, and I might regret not waiting for the last book in October.

I did also get an ARC and a library book, which I allllmost forgot about because I’ve already finished both of them!

Cover of Find Me Where It Ends by Cassandra Khaw Cover of Tigress by Jessica Mookherjee

And that’s everything… for now.

Posts from this week

Let’s do a bit of a recap: reviews first, as usual!

As ever, most of these are books I read a while ago, since I hold reviews back to make sure I get a good mix of genres, rather than flooding everyone with 250 manga reviews at once. (Not quite literally, but the backlog of graphic novel and manga/manhwa/manhua reviews is longer than any other genre.)

As for the other posts from this week:

And if it tempts you, the June wrap-up has a photo of my bunnies and of my crochet project progress!

What I’m reading

I read a whole bunch of books last weekend, and then slowed down a bit during the week, but it’s definitely been a good week for reading. I got a blackout on the BookSpinBingo challenge from Litsy for the first time in a while, and generally felt really happy and energised about reading, hurrah!

So, a quick peek at the covers of the books I finished and intend to review on the blog…

Cover of A Man, A Woman and a Hippopotamus by Selima Hill Cover of Omniscient Reader's Viewpoint vol 3 by singNSong Cover of Chi's Sweet Home vol 1 by Konami Kanata Cover of Sweet Poison by Mary Fitt

Cover of Game Changer by Rachel Reid Cover of How To Kill a Language by Sophia Smith Galer Cover of The Home Child by Liz Berry Cover of Moon-flash by Patricia McKillip

Cover of Tigress by Jessica Mookherjee Cover of Semantic Error vol 1 by J. Soori and Angy Cover of Find Me Where It Ends by Cassandra Khaw

Considering I haven’t finished a book since Tuesday, that’s quite the collection of titles — I hadn’t quite realised how much I was reading. Here’s hoping this weekend is good for reading too: I know I’m going to read more of Mistakenly Saving the Villain vol 3, and I’d like to finish Charlotte Booth’s Lost Voices of the Nile. Other than that, I’ve got back to Stephanie Burgis’ Wooing the Witch Queen, and have a couple of other non-fiction books on the go that I’ll probably dip in and out of.

I also want to find plenty of time for crochet and gaming, of course, so we’ll see exactly where my whims take me this week! Maybe it’ll be somewhere completely different to what I expect right now, and that’d be fine.

Hope everyone’s had a good week!

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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