Review – Snake-eater

Posted April 19, 2026 by Nicky in Reviews / 4 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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Review – The Irresistible Urge to Fall For Your Enemy

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

Review – The Irresistible Urge to Fall For Your Enemy

The Irresistible Urge to Fall For Your Enemy

by Brigitte Knightley

Genres: Fantasy, Romance
Pages: 384
Series: Dearly Beloathed #1
Rating: two-stars
Synopsis:

A slow burn, enemies-to-lovers romantasy featuring a scholarly healer and a gentleman assassin, set in an exquisite fantasy world, perfect for fans of The Love Hypothesis and Emily Wilde's Encyclopaedia of Faeries.

Osric Mordaunt, member of the Fyren Order of assassins, is in dire need of healing. Naturally – such is the grim comedy of fate – the only healer who can help is Aurienne Fairhrim, preeminent scientist, bastion of moral good, and member of an enemy Order. Aurienne is desperate for funding to heal the sick - so desperate that, when Osric bribes her to help him, she accepts, even if she detests him and everything he stands for.

A forced collaboration ensues: the brilliant Woman in STEM is coerced into working with the PhD in Murders, much to Aurienne's disgust. As Osric and Aurienne work together to heal his illness and investigate the mysterious reoccurrence of a deadly pox, they find themselves ardently denying their attraction, which only fuels the heat between them.

The main problem for me with Brigitte Knightley’s The Irresistible Urge to Fall for Your Enemy was that the characters were both insufferable. This would make absolute sense if it were only when we’re in one POV talking about the other, but one of Aurienne’s early chapters just made her sound like she was completely up herself:

It was hard, being perfect in an imperfect world, but Aurienne managed. If she had a flaw, it was that she was the Best, and she knew she was the Best. Some called it arrogance. She called it competence untainted by performative humility. But if she was the Best — as brilliant as she was beautiful, a researcher unparalleled, a daughter beloved, a lover sometimes (did anyone truly deserve her? Frankly, no) — why, pray, had she just been asked to care for the Worst? Tasked to heal [an assassin], of all the foul things in the world?

Frankly, she can go off and fuck herself, since she thinks she’s the only one who’s worthy.

Mostly in a romance, you expect some ability to actually like the characters. And also some chemistry between the two would be nice. Unfortunately, they’re both awful, and the chemistry between them isn’t great. That they dislike each other, I can believe; that that turns to attraction/love, I can’t, particularly as those sections go all purple prose (in comparison to the quippy banter of the rest of the thing).

You’d think I had absolutely no fun at all with that lead-in, but the weird thing is that I did have fun with it. I don’t know if I’ll read the next book, but I finished this one pretty quickly! It was fun in a trashy way (which I say because most people know what I mean by “trashy” and not actually as a value judgement on “trashy” books which can be deeply enjoyable), and I can kinda understand why some people adore it. It feels like a fanfic, for the very good reason that it was.

On which note, I will warn as well that the veneer is very thin at times. Harry Potter lingers on it like a bad smell. Not all of us pickled ourselves in that fandom, but there’s stuff even I realised was mostly find-and-replace (deofols = owls, for instance). If you don’t like accidentally finding yourself perpetuating the worship of a series written by a transphobe who uses her platform to try to hurt as many trans people as she can, children included — well. Now you’re warned!

Rating: 2/5 (“it was okay”)

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Stacking the Shelves & The Sunday Post

Posted April 18, 2026 by Nicky in General / 19 Comments

Happy weekend! It feels genuinely springlike at last here in the UK — sure, we’ve had our rainy days, but also some lovely sun. Hope everyone’s had a good week!

Books acquired this week

Unsurprisingly, after the spree of my London trip (documented over the last couple Saturdays!), I haven’t been looking to acquire new reading material this week. Still, predictably enough new reading material has found me. First up, two borrows from the National Poetry Library:

Cover of milk and honey by Rupi Kaur Cover of Ambush at Still Lake by Caroline Bird

I picked up milk and honey because of this week’s Let’s Talk Bookish discussion topic (both my review and my answer to the topic are below in the roundup, if you’re curious!). Ambush at Still Lake was a random choice based on amusement at the pulpy cover; the brief excerpt of poetry I saw suggests I may well not enjoy this volume, but I do like trying random poetry anyway.

I also got a couple of review copies, excitingly — Del Rey sent me a link to get A Trade of Blood on Netgalley, woooo, while I have autoapproval from Tor so simply pounced on The Killing of a Chestnut Tree. I’d seen Tammy talk about it as an upcoming book a few weeks ago, and my interest was piqued, especially given the Holmes pastiche.

Cover of A Trade of Blood by Robert Jackson Bennett Cover of The Killing of a Chestnut Tree by Oliver K. Langmead

Finally… somehow, I’d left a book out of my posts about the London trip! I realised once I was finally getting everything properly shelved. I kinda can’t believe I’d forgotten it, because the title kinda tickles me:

Cover of City of the Sharp-Nosed Fish by Peter Parsons

I’m looking forward to digging into that one, too!

Posts from this week

First, as always, let’s round up the reviews I posted this week (though some of them have been written for months):

And of course, the other posts:

What I’m reading

I’m still having trouble settling down to read, finding myself more interested in messing around with casual games (currently doing a lot of hidden object games like A Park Full of Cats), but I did finish a few books this week anyway, so here’s a preview of what will (eventually) be coming up for review on the blog!

Cover of Seasons of Glass & Iron by Amal El-Mohtar Cover of milk and honey by Rupi Kaur Cover of Ancient Egypt in 50 Discoveries by Stephanie Boonstra & Campbell Price

Cover of Boring Postcards USA by Martin Parr Cover of Jack on the Gallows Tree by Leo Bruce Cover of Clean Sweep, by Ilona Andrews

For this weekend, I have a few books targeted that I want to finish: Daedalus is Dead (Seamus Sullivan), A Palace Near the Wind (Ai Jiang), The Murder at Gulls Nest (Jess Kidd), and — even though I only just got it! — The Killing of a Chestnut Tree (Oliver K. Langmead).

Other than that, we’ll see. Maybe it’ll be mostly hidden object games. If so, that will be fine!

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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Let’s Talk Bookish: Poetry in the Age of Social Media

Posted April 17, 2026 by Nicky in General / 8 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 theme is about Instagram poetry and the like:

A few years ago, poetry saw a surge of popularity on social media thanks to “Instagram Poetry” or “instapoetry” by authors like Rupi Kaur, Amanda Lovelace, and Atticus. Do you think social media platforms have changed how people discover poetry? Do you think “instapoetry” makes poetry seem more approachable, or do you agree with critics who say that it’s not “real poetry”? Have you read any instapoetry, and if so, what are your favourite authors/poems/collections?

So let’s take it bit by bit…

Do you think social platforms have changed how people discover poetry?

Like any change in how people communicate, yes, and also because it proves a different potential poetic form as well as a different platform, just like artificial character limits created a trend for very short fiction among a subset of people.

It hasn’t changed how I discover poetry, since I’m not on Instagram and I’ve been a reader (and writer) of poetry since I was a child, before anything even generally like Instagram was accessible: I read poetry collections and anthologies (often via my libraries by just picking at random), follow recommendations from other readers via reviews and blogs (though there aren’t a ton around that talk about poetry much), and am a member of the National Poetry Library (UK folks interested in poetry should sign up!).

Do you think “instapoetry” makes poetry seem more approachable, or do you agree with critics who say that it’s not “real poetry”?

I’m not super interested in artificial cutoffs here; if someone says they’re writing poetry, they’re writing poetry, whether it’s poetry that I like or not. I suspect “instapoetry” is indeed more accessible for some, in part because it’s out there on a social media platform they use, rather than tucked away in specific poetry collections that they might not have access to or know about. Poetry is often seen as less accessible than prose anyway, and putting it out there in people’s Instagram feeds is often getting it in front of people who wouldn’t otherwise seek out poetry.

A lot of people who want to create artificial barriers and say something isn’t “real poetry” or “a real novel” or a real anything else are threatened by it and frightened of change, contemptuous of what “young people” (or other trendsetting subgroups) like as a reflex to prove their superiority, etc. There are reasons why critics may not like a given poem, instapoetry or not, and those are valid… but dismissing the whole form/format? That’s sour grapes about something becoming popular of which they don’t approve, and I don’t have time for it.

Have you read any instapoetry, and if so, what are your favourite authors/poems/collections?

Not much that I’m aware of, but it’s not that I wouldn’t; I don’t promise to like it, but I’d happily try it. I borrowed Rupi Kaur’s milk and honey from the National Poetry Library this week, and didn’t love it, though I could see the appealing factors.

Any other suggestions I should try?

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Review – Tied to You, vol 4

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

Review – Tied to You, vol 4

Tied to You

by WHAT, Chelliace

Genres: Fantasy, Manga, Romance
Pages: 320
Series: Tied to You #4
Rating: four-stars
Synopsis:

Wooseo's heart has been swayed, and Jigeon is determined to win it over completely, once and for all. But a meeting between Wooseo, Jiseok, and the Connector may throw a wrench in his plans when Jiseok reveals his brother has been deceiving Wooseo. The lies, the manipulations, the mind games--when all is laid bare to Wooseo, will he choose to stay tied to Jigeon?

Volume four of WHAT/Chelliace’s Tied to You brings everything to a head: Jigeon lays all his cards on the table, Jiseok does too, and Wooseo has to choose what he wants and decide whether he wants the Connector to change anything, or whether he loves his fated partner after all.

There could be some really fascinating stories in this world with non-fated partners, even without the existence of the Connector — Jigeon clearly doesn’t trust to fate, after all, so perhaps there are other pairs out there who make do with ring connections that don’t reflect their feelings. But in this one I don’t think there’s much doubt about what Wooseo will choose in the end…

Even though Jigeon confesses to manipulating the situation, it doesn’t suddenly become a healthy romance — even if Wooseo now chooses it open-eyed. Jigeon’s nature isn’t trusting, not even of fate; I think he’d treat Wooseo well, and carefully avoid any chance of things cooling by manipulating the situation, no matter what. It’s not a relationship I’d choose for myself, for darn sure!

But… maybe it’s good for them. Certainly it was satisfying to see the decision made, and for Wooseo to realise that he has feelings for Jigeon in his own right, not as a stand-in for Jiseok. Still, once more, a warning that this isn’t a fluffy romance (and isn’t intended to be).

Rating: 4/5 (“really liked it”)

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Review – Domination

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

Review – Domination

Domination: The Fall of the Roman Empire and the Rise of Christianity

by Alice Roberts

Genres: History
Pages: 432
Rating: four-stars
Synopsis:

This is the story of the fall of an Empire – and the rise of another.

Who spread Christianity, how, and why? In her quest to find the answer, Professor Alice Roberts takes us on a gripping investigative journey. From a secluded valley in south Wales to the shores of Brittany; from the heart of the Roman Empire in a time of political turmoil to the ancient city of Corinth in the footsteps of the apostle Paul; from Alexandria in the fourth century to Constantinople.

As the Roman Empire crumbled in Western Europe, a shadow of power remained, almost perfectly mapping onto its disappearing territories. And then, it continued to spread. Unearthing the archaeological clues and challenging long-established histories, Professor Roberts tells a remarkable story about the relationship between the Roman Empire and Christianity.

Lifting the veil on secrets that have been hidden in plain sight, this story is nothing short of astonishing.

It took me a little while to properly get into Alice Roberts’ Domination, because it wasn’t as directly related to my interests as the other books of hers I’ve read. Late Roman and Christian history isn’t really my thing for the most part, but I wanted to give it a shot because I liked her other books (like Crypt) so much — and ultimately I was glad I gave it a try, because once the stage is set (after a certain amount of digging through hagiographies and looking at place names), there’s some very interesting analysis.

My favourite part was the discussion of the famous “conversion” of Constantine. Did he in fact paint Christian symbols on the shields of his men, or put a Christian symbol on a banner, in order to bring his men victory? I hadn’t really thought about what evidence we had for this, which would’ve tipped me off right away that it sounded a bit weird: the info comes mostly from a biography of him written by a Christian after his death. But even with that, it still sounded like he used some Christian imagery, like the chi-rho, on his coins… right?

Well, no, again it’s more complicated than that. The same symbol was used by pagans before that to mean “archon”: it seems the use of it as “chi-rho” for Christ post-dates Constantine, possibly even invented in order to co-opt Constantine for Christianity.

At the same time, Roberts makes it clear that Constantine did definitely engage with the growing early Church, offer it support, and seems to have legitimately preferred to discourage blood sacrifices. So there is a basis for considering him a supporter of Christianity, if not a Christian himself — but it’s complicated by all the things people have wanted him to be, and the things they want his action to have meant.

For me, that was the most interesting part of the book, along with the conclusion (painstakingly teased out) that the Roman Empire didn’t so much fall as become transmuted into the Roman Catholic Church. Much of the things that pertained to being Roman, Romanitas, simply became Christian, Christianitas, instead. The state was never separate from religion (the emperor was a living god, starting with Augustus), and Christianity displaced paganism quite readily, taking over various aspects of managing towns and cities.

I did find a couple of things annoying: first, no footnotes, only selected bibliography. Blargh to that. And secondly, Roberts keeps chipping in to remind us not to talk about abstract concepts (“the Church” as a whole) as if they have agency, when things are actually being done by individual people. It’s fair enough, but when she keeps doing it and then correcting herself multiple times (rather than merely doing better about it and editing herself if need be, at least some of the time), it gets in the way of the narrative a bit.

I didn’t like this as much as her books focused on archaeology (and specifically on archaeology of human remains), but in the end, it gave me a lot of interesting new stuff to ponder.

Rating: 4/5 (“really liked it”)

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WWW Wednesday

Posted April 15, 2026 by Nicky in General / 4 Comments

Here we are, on Wednesday again somehow…

Cover of Ancient Egypt in 50 Discoveries by Stephanie Boonstra & Campbell PriceWhat have you recently finished reading?

Thanks to a certain friend, the last thing I finished was actually a book called Boring Postcards USA by Martin Parr. It’s… pretty much what it says on the tin: a book full of postcards depicting highways, motel rooms, tools, etc — some of them looking very like tourist postcards, but boring. And sometimes a little horrifying, in terms of the interior decorating. It was very entertaining, all in all, in part because I also know that some Postcrossing members would love to receive and collect things like this. I might review it for Postcrossing’s blog!

Earlier yesterday I also finished Ancient Egypt in 50 Discoveries, which has some excellent choices and images, but feels a bit fragmented due to being written by various different contributors.

Cover of Murder at Gulls Nest by Jess KidWhat are you currently reading?

I have a lot of books on my currently reading ‘shelf’ (both physical and on StoryGraph), but realistically I’m only focusing on a couple. One of those is Jess Kidd’s Murder at Gulls Nest, which is going… okay. There’s something awkward about the way it’s written sometimes, like maybe someone’s taken out a thesaurus and got things a bit wrong, or used words they don’t quite understand, e.g. Nora refers to someone as “pertaining to be” a given name, implying that it’s a fake name. That’s… not what “pertaining” means.

I actually quite like the present tense for writing short pieces, but I’m also not sure how well it’s working at this length.

The only other book I’ve actually picked up in the last couple days is Leo Bruce’s Jack on the Gallows Tree, this month’s British Library Crime Classics release. I’m enjoying it more than I feared so far, since it features one of Bruce’s other detectives, not Sergeant Beef (a character I don’t enjoy).

What will you read next?

I’m not sure, but I’m hoping something will grab me soon! Realistically, I should probably focus on some of the books I’ve technically started but haven’t made progress with.

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Review – milk and honey

Posted April 15, 2026 by Nicky in Reviews / 2 Comments

Review – milk and honey

milk and honey

by Rupi Kaur

Genres: Poetry
Pages: 204
Rating: two-stars
Synopsis:

milk and honey is a collection of poetry and prose about survival. About the experience of violence, abuse, love, loss, and femininity. It is split into four chapters, and each chapter serves a different purpose. Deals with a different pain. Heals a different heartache.

milk and honey takes readers through a journey of the most bitter moments in life and finds sweetness in them because there is sweetness everywhere if you are just willing to look.

I ended up picking up Rupi Kaur’s milk and honey collection because Let’s Talk Bookish will be discussing “instapoetry” (Instagram poetry) on Friday, and I hadn’t knowingly read any, so I figured I’d try one of the famous ones and see what I think.

I get that people look down on Instapoetry and similar so I want to be clear, I don’t dislike it because it’s instapoetry — actually, I think that’s kinda cool, in that it makes poetry accessible to different people, and it’s written and enjoyed by people who might not have written or enjoyed poetry in more “traditional” formats.

Personally, I didn’t connect that much with Rupi Kaur’s poetry: it’s certainly easy to read, and I kinda liked the way it was matched with sketches that expressed something about each poem. She does have a way of putting things sometimes that puts something stark and horrible out there (particularly in the early section where sexual assault is a major theme) in a way that’s very clear and just… encapsulates a dreadful moment. For the most part, though, I didn’t find her poetry really got to me: it tends to the simple, clear, freeform style, and in a way it sometimes just feels like reading her disjointed thoughts — which is not my thing, much as it’s a valid way of self-expression and of playing with words even when those aren’t your actual thoughts (important not to assume the two are always the same).

Overall, not for me, though I understand the appeal.

Rating: 2/5 (“it was okay”)

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Top Ten Tuesday: Book Titles That Describe Me

Posted April 14, 2026 by Nicky in General / 30 Comments

This week’s Top Ten Tuesday theme is “book titles that describe me/my life”… and I’m not sure where to start, but it sounds like a fun one. Let’s see what I can come up with!

Cover of I Will Judge You By Your Bookshelf, by Grant Snider Cover of Book Lovers by Emily Henry Cover of The Constant Rabbit by Jasper Fforde Cover of A Palace Near the Wind by Ai Jiang Cover of Everything is Tuberculosis by John Green

  1. I Will Judge You By Your Bookshelf, by Grant Snider.
    To be fair, I didn’t love this book and I don’t actually judge people for what they like to read… but I do like to get an idea of a person based on what they read, if anything!
  2. Book Lovers, by Emily Henry.
    Not a favourite book, but it was fun… and the title is irresistible when trying to describe me. I’m a little worried about how much of my personality this list is implying revolves around books, but it’s not terribly wrong, and also it’s just easy to find titles of books about books.
  3. The Constant Rabbit, by Jasper Fforde.
    Admittedly I haven’t read this one, but I couldn’t resist the title; my rabbits Eclair and Biscuit are never far away, particularly Biscuit.
  4. A Palace Near the Wind, by Ai Jiang.
    One of my current reads, which I’ve been enjoying. I don’t quite live in a palace, admittedly, but I live in Yorkshire and it can be very windy here!
  5. Everything is Tuberculosis, by John Green.
    Tuberculosis has been a major interest of mine ever since I read Catching Breath (Kathryn Lougheed), and John Green’s book is an excellent update to that. And friends can attest that I am far too good at dragging TB into conversations somehow…
    In my defence, write a dissertation about something and you’ll never stop seeing it everywhere.
  6. The Story of Classic Crime in 100 Books, by Martin Edwards.
    By this point, you could possibly tell that story from my own shelves, ahaha. I studied the development of crime fiction as a genre in my undergrad, and maintained an interest, collecting almost all the British Library Crime Classic reissues and various others.
  7. Solo Leveling, by Chugong.
    Okay, I’ll never be even a tenth the badass that Jinwoo Sung is, but I play video games a lot, and often solo! The only multiplayer games I usually play are co-ops like Split Fiction with my wife, or of course, the MMORPG Final Fantasy XIV… otherwise it’s mostly solo leveling… 😉
    Yeah, okay, I know, I’m not that funny.
  8. Paladin’s Hope, by T. Kingfisher.
    Speaking of Final Fantasy XIV! My main class is Paladin, which I play in high-end content, so it can hardly be left out of an autobiography of myself in book titles. I promise I don’t go berserk like Kingfisher’s paladins, though, and I don’t have the same degree of guilt complex. I try not to make playing Final Fantasy XIV my whole personality, but I spend a lot of time with my raid group and other friends from the game, so it’s a significant part of my life, all the same.
  9. The Invisible Library, by Genevieve Cogman.
    I said I wasn’t going to keep banging on about books, but I was getting stumped, and I have so many ebooks that the physical books you can see in my house are only the tip of the iceberg.
  10. To Be Taught, If Fortunate, by Becky Chambers.
    One of the most important themes of my life has been learning, and continuing to learn… nope, more than that. My family feel it’s pretty inevitable that I will return to formal education before long; the only question is when, and what. I have two degrees in English literature, a degree in biology, and a degree in infectious diseases, so it’s probably time to break off on another tangent — maybe classical studies, with Latin? But who knows. Either way, I believe I have been very fortunate to have the opportunities to learn that I have, and hope never to take it for granted.

Cover of The Story of Classic Crime in 100 Books by Martin Edwards Cover of Solo Leveling vol 1 by Chugong Cover of Paladin's Hope by T. Kingfisher Cover of The Invisible Library by Genevieve Cogman Cover of To Be Taught, if Fortunate by Becky Chambers

Oof, that took me forever to put together; I probably put waaaaay too much time into it. Very curious what other people will choose this week!

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Review – Murder Offstage

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

Review – Murder Offstage

Murder Offstage

by L.B. Hathaway

Genres: Crime, Historical Fiction, Mystery
Pages: 220
Series: Posie Parker Mystery #1
Rating: three-stars
Synopsis:

Like your mysteries cozy and set during the Golden Age of Crime? This is the first book in the Posie Parker mysteries, although this novel can be enjoyed as a stand-alone story in its own right. Set in London in 1921, 'Murder Offstage' is full of intrigue and red herrings. This is a classic murder mystery which will appeal to fans of Agatha Christie and Downton Abbey.

When Posie Parker’s childhood friend is robbed of a priceless jewel and becomes a suspect in a cold-blooded murder case, budding detective Posie vows she will clear his name. Aided by her seriously gorgeous assistant Len, Posie soon realizes things are not quite as they seem, and the darkly-glamorous world of London’s theatre and glittering nightclubs prove far more dangerous than she ever could have imagined.

Just who exactly is the dangerous Lucky Lucy Gibson? And who is it she has killed in the lobby of the Ritz Hotel? And more importantly, what on earth has happened to Mr Minks, the much-loved office cat?

I must admit I don’t quite remember why I picked up L.B. Hathaway’s Murder Offstage — possibly just when in a mood for mysteries, or looking for something to fill the Phryne Fisher-shaped void — but it definitely hung around on my shelves awaiting the right moment for quite a while. Even now, I actually picked it up on a bit of a whim, wondering whether maybe it was going to be an easy way to clear out a spot on my shelf with a DNF.

I found it was more compelling than I’d feared from reading a couple of reviews. I have a high tolerance for anachronism, which is what I’d seen other people complain of, and I was quickly curious how the mystery was going to work out… something about the friendly relationship between Rufus and Posie, the way she cared about him despite him being a bit of a wreck, I think. (I was less interested in the romantic relationship between her and Len, though.)

There were several factors that were annoying — rank lack of caution on Posie’s part, for example, taking risks and being taken in easily mostly for the sake of moving the plot to a conclusion rather than because they were sensible risks that a businesswoman/detective would take if they thought about it for two seconds. And of course the obvious problem with Babe, her secretary, plus the way she reacts at the end: acting deeply hurt and betrayed, even though she’d known all along there was something off? And on the other hand, her fervent and immediate defence of Dolly, despite not really having any history to base it on.

It just feels a little unpolished, disconnected, at times. That said, I was never tempted to DNF or skim, so it does have something going for it! I probably wouldn’t read more in the series, but it was a fun distraction.

Rating: 3/5 (“liked it”)

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