Top Ten Tuesday: Bookish Wishes

Posted June 16, 2026 by Nicky in General / 8 Comments

Every so often, the Top Ten Tuesday theme is all about the books you’re hankering for right now, and sharing your wishlist so that people can get them for you if they feel so moved! So let’s see.

Cover of Beyond Belief: How Evidence Shows What Really Works, by Helen Pearson Cover of If This Be Magic: The Unlikely Art of Shakespeare in Translation, by Daniel Hahn Cover of A Widow's Charm by Caitlyn Paxson Cover of Murder at the Black Cat Cafe by Seishi Yokomizo Cover of Charlotte Brontë's Life through Clothes by Eleanor Houghton

  1. Beyond Belief: How Evidence Shows What Really Works, by Helen Pearson.
    This was reviewed recently in New Scientist, and it sounds like an intriguing look at how evidence-based science works!
  2. If This Be Magic: The Unlikely Art of Shakespeare in Translation, by Daniel Hahn.
    I saw someone mention this (I think Keira?) and it sounds fascinating. Translation is such a knotty problem, and Shakespeare is extra difficult because there’s a double-barrier of time as well as language.
  3. A Widow’s Charm, by Caitlyn Paxson.
    I’ve seen some good reviews of this, and it sounds like fun!
  4. Murder at the Black Cat Cafe, by Seishi Yokomizo.
    It’s always interesting to broaden my experience of crime/mystery stories and read in translation, so I’m curious about this one.
  5. Charlotte BrontĂ«’s Life Through Clothes, by Eleanor Houghton.
    Clothes tell us so much about the period they came from, the person who wore them, and the kind of life they lived. I’m very curious.
  6. All Consuming: Why We Eat the Way We Eat Now, by Ruby Tandoh.
    I’ve been curious about this one for a while, as food history is another thing that I enjoy dipping into.
  7. The English House: A History in Eight Buildings, by Dan Cruickshank.
    I’m a sucker for histories that are a history of X in Y things… and while I’m not super into architecture, it’s still a field where buildings of the past tell us an awful lot, and I’m capable of being interested!
  8. The Apothecary’s Wife: The Hidden History of Medicine and How it Became a Commodity, by Karen Bloom Gevirtz.
    I haven’t heard much about this, but the topic is fascinating!
  9. Ode to the Half-Broken, by Suzanne Palmer.
    This doesn’t seem to be out yet in the UK, but Amazon has it, and I’ve been reading some very positive reviews! It sounds right up my street.
  10. The Nightmare before Kissmas, by Sara Raasch.
    I’m not sure that Raasch’s books are 100% my thing, but I’m happy to try outside my comfort zone, especially since I’ve been seeing glowing reviews from people I trust! So I’d like to give this one a shot — though I’d have been interested in The Entanglement of Rival Wizards instead if it’d been out in paperback in the UK, so I wouldn’t mind an ebook copy of that if it fell into my ereader, ahaha.

Cover of All-Consuming: Why We Eat the Way We Eat Now by Ruby Tandoh Cover of The English House: A History in Eight Buildings by Dan Cruickshank Cover of The Apothecary's Wife by Karen Bloom Gevirtz Cover of Ode to the Half-Broken by Suzanne Palmer Cover of The Nightmare Before Kissmas by Sara Raasch

My Amazon wishlist is here, and I’m also game for ebook copies if you’d rather buy a book voucher for me to get an ebook with, in which case I suggest a National Book Token or Kobo voucher, since I prefer not to use Kindle anymore. My email address is bibliophibianbreathesbooks [at] gmail [dot] com.

(Buying me Kindle books and sending them to that email address does work as well, since I do have a Boox ereader and can still access the Kindle app, it’s just not my preference. Kobo deserves more love!)

Excited to peek at other people’s lists and spread a bit of bookish love today!

Tags: ,

Divider

Review – Solo Leveling (light novel), vol 7

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

Review – Solo Leveling (light novel), vol 7

Solo Leveling

by Chugong

Genres: Fantasy, Light Novels
Pages: 288
Series: Solo Leveling (light novel) #7
Rating: four-stars
Synopsis:

The murders of several distinguished S-rank hunters rock the world, and Jinwoo knows it's only a matter of time before the perpetrators strike again. The declaration of war comes earlier than expected, however, in the form of a colossal gate looming in the skies above Seoul. With the Hunter's Association of Korea struggling to adjust to its new normal and the Monarchs picking off the top hunters one by one, will Jinwoo be able to keep everyone safe from the biggest disaster mankind has ever faced?

Volume seven of Chugong’s Solo Leveling light novel is a little bit uneven. The plot is really accelerating at this point, with Jinwoo ready to fight all comers, Monarchs or Rulers, and the mystery about Jinwoo’s father being resolved as well… but the pacing doesn’t work amazingly, with an interlude in the middle of pitched battle while Jinwoo essentially watches a flashback of what happened to the original Shadow Monarch.

I don’t know how I’d prefer that section to be done — maybe the flashback was necessary! But it feels a bit rushed, like the author has to suddenly cram in all the info we need to make the upcoming conflict make sense. Obviously an extended flashback with Jinwoo just watching wouldn’t be super enjoyable, but… maybe we should’ve seen stuff from Ashborn’s point of view again?

All the same, the final chapters of the book ratchet things back up again, with Jinwoo’s minions appearing, and then the beginning of the end — perhaps for the whole world. It genuinely feels high stakes, and I think does it better than the manhwa for my tastes. I felt a bit choked up when Jinwoo asks what his future will be. Knowing how the story ends makes that more poignant, of course.

Rating: 4/5 (“really liked it”)

Tags: , , , ,

Divider

Fantasy with Friends: Merch

Posted June 15, 2026 by Nicky in General / 2 Comments

Fantasy With Friends: A Disccusion Meme hosted by Pages Unbound

Another new week, and thus a new Fantasy with Friends post: the prompts are hosted at Pages Unbound, if you’d like to join in. This week’s prompt is about the merch you’d like to see:

If you could design merch based on any fantasy books, what items would you want?

I don’t buy a lot of merch because I don’t have a lot of room for it — or rather, there’s room, but I tend to find it feels cluttery and I don’t know of many items that have uses that I’d want to be fantasy-themed. Except the biggie: bookmarks. I collect free bookmarks, of all stripes: my favourites are ones that advertise bookshops, especially indies, but I have a soft spot for ones that display books I’ve actually read, too. I got into the habit because of the free bookmarks the Book Depository used to do, and now… well, I have far more than I can use, even though I tend to use multiple bookmarks at a time (marking out stuff like where the chapter ends or other convenient stopping-points).

And even though I have more than I can sensibly use, I’d still love more. I’d love some danmei-themed ones: I think I have a couple based on Heaven Official’s Blessing, if I remember rightly, but I’d love them for other danmei as well, because the illustrations are often gorgeous. These covers in particular, for example:

Cover of The Scum Villain's Self-Saving System vol 4 by MXTX Cover of The Disabled Tyrant's Beloved Pet Fish vol 2 by Xue Shan Fei Hu Cover of Heaven Official's Blessing vol 6 by MXTX Cover of Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation vol 5 by MXTX

But really I could go for bookmarks of anything I’ve read, even if the cover isn’t particularly pretty! There was a fun set somewhere with stats from a book/series, maybe Game of Thrones? With like a body count and other stats like number of battles… that kind of thing could be neat.

Some stuff like that is out there, but it’d be kinda nice if every book came with it — my British Library Crime Classics books do, for instance, due to my subscription!

Other than that, I do enjoy bookish t-shirts: I have some for Mo Xiang Tong Xiu’s books, like a t-shirt with “OOC OOC OOC” on it (from The Scum Villain’s Self-Saving System) and one with cute bunnies representing Lan Wangji and Wei Wuxian (from Grandmaster of Demonic Cultivation). I’m always game for that kind of thing. Maaaaybe a tote bag here or there? And I’ve had a few necklaces with pendants that looked like specific books, or earrings like that. I have some Hua Cheng-inspired earrings, too; I don’t wear earrings a lot, but I do like to be able to be nerdy when I do.

Anyway… “mostly bookmarks” is probably a fairly boring choice, but it’s honest, haha.

Tags: , , ,

Divider

20 Books of Summer: Getting Started

Posted June 14, 2026 by Nicky in General / 8 Comments

 

20 Books of Summer graphic, showing an open book in the grass, noting that the event is hosted by AnnaBookBel

NB: I made my own banner for this as the official one used generative AI. I used a stock photo from Pexels.com, and added some text. It’s not the most beautiful, but please feel free to use it if you would like to.

I’m a little late to the party, and I don’t think I’ve ever participated before… but better late than never, right? The challenge is a simple one: read 5, 10, 15 or 20 books over the summer, between 1st June and 31st August. You can sign up over at AnnaBookBel’s blog and join the monthly link-ups there.

I usually read a lot more than 20 books over the course of the summer, so I’m going to narrow things down a bit and use it to try to read specific books — but if that starts feeling unpleasant or annoying in any way, I’ll stop or swap in other books: the below are just a preliminary list of ideas, though I’ll try to stick to the categories I’ve set up here.

So let’s see…

Five non-fic:

I love non-fiction, especially when I’ve been stressed and struggling to read, so let’s start with some of those! (Not that I’m planning to read these in any order, but I’m hyping myself up here, shush.) I’m not going for any particular theme here, just picking some that I feel enthusiastic about in this moment.

Cover of Life Changing by Helen Pilcher Cover of Egypt's Golden Couple: When Akhenaten and Nefertiti were Gods on Earth by John Darnell and Colleen Darnell Cover of Voices of the Nile by Charlotte Booth Cover of How Queer Bookshops Changed the World by A.J. West Cover of A History of Booksellers and the Bookshop by Jean-Yves Mollier

And yet a bit of a theme emerged anyway, ahaha. Technically I’ve started the first three, but I’m not far into them. Which reminds me of my next section…

Five in-progress:

I started a lot of books at once and ended up feeling a bit guilty about not getting back to them, and truthfully, a bit overwhelmed at having so much on the go. So let’s lock in and agree that I’ll try to finish these five.

Cover of The Book Eaters by Sunyi Dean Cover of Queen James by Gareth Russell Cover of The Water Outlaws by S.L. Huang Cover of Wooing the Witch Queen by Stephanie Burgis Cover of Game Changer by Rachel Reid

I haven’t even got far into the latter two, but the whim changed after I’d read a couple of chapters, and I drifted away.

With the other three, I’m solidly in the midst of ’em. I won’t say they’ll be easy wins, because The Book Eaters and The Water Outlaws haven’t quite been gelling for me, and Queen James is dense.

Five ARCs:

I’ve been well in control of my ARCs for the last year or so… until I got a bit overwhelmed again, and pulled back on reading. I’ve got some catching up to do! So let’s get these read, if possible!

Cover of The Poet Empress by Shen Tao Cover of The Last Contract of Isako by Fonda Lee Cover of The Dragon Has Some Complaints by John Wiswell Cover of Radiant Star by Ann Leckie Cover of A Trade of Blood by Robert Jackson Bennett

Five danmei:

I got a lot of new danmei at once, and ended up a bit overwhelmed/wondering if I should read one series at a time, or wait for more to come out (so I can get the next book right away if I’m really into it), etc. But I wouldn’t normally do that, and at least since they just need translating, we know new volumes are coming soon! So I think I’ll just jump in.

Cover of Mistakenly Saving the Villain vol 2 by Feng Yu Nie Cover of The Wife Comes First vol 1 by Lv Ye Qian He Cover of Thrice Married to a Salted Fish vol 1 by Bi Ka Bi Cover of Peerless vol 1 by Meng Xi Shi Cover of After the Disabled God of War Became My Concubine vol 1 by Liu Gou Hua

I’ve been looking forward to several of these for a while, after all! So should be some good light reading over the summer.

Five wildcards:

I know, this brings us to 25 in total, but I wanted to give myself the easiest possible out if I’m struggling with any of the above books. Without a specific backup plan, I might just feel like I’m cheating (I know, I know, the rules are very flexible, but my brain isn’t). So here’s a wildcard for each of the above in order, and a spare!

Cover of The Threads of Empire by Dorothy Armstrong Cover of The Astral Library by Kate Quinn Cover of Servus by Emma Southon Cover of Remnants of Filth vol 1 by Ruo Bao Bu Chi Rou Cover of Straight Acting by Will Tosh

And you never know… maybe I can make it the 25 specific books of summer, and really flout the rules, ahaha.

So here we go, for at least as long as this sparks joy!

Tags: ,

Divider

Stacking the Shelves & The Sunday Post

Posted June 13, 2026 by Nicky in General / 22 Comments

Happy weekend, folks! I have plans for the day, so I’m looking forward to that… but I’m hoping for a quiet Sunday to go with it. For now, let’s look at my week in books, though it’s been a pretty quiet one.

Books acquired this week

I thought I hadn’t got anything, but actually I was wrong! I got offered the first one to review, and I’ve been curious about this author for a while and enjoying other pre-release reviews. Plus, my British Library Crime Classic for this month arrived!

Cover of Puzzles of the Parish ed. Martin Edwards

I’ve already tucked into Puzzles of the Parish, since short stories sounded exactly my speed this week. What a contrast in those covers, ahaha.

Posts from this week

First up as always, the reviews:

None of these were read this week, since I have a long backlog of reviews ready to post and try to mix it up and keep a range ready to post!

Other posts:

What I’m reading

This week, the line-up of books I’ve finished is very small, because I’ve been busy with a new work thing and also just letting my brain rest and do whatever in my downtime. I did finish one book, though — a random pick from Kobo Plus!

Cover of 100 Unforgettable Dresses by Hal Rubenstein

I’m not sure how much reading I’ll get done today, since I’ll be out for most of it, but I hope to finish Puzzles of the Parish. Other than that, I’d like to finish up volume two of Mistakenly Saving the Villain, but we’ll see! I’m still trying to let myself settle down and just read whatever’s fun to me in the moment.

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.

Tags: , ,

Divider

Let’s Talk Bookish: Pride Month Reading

Posted June 12, 2026 by Nicky in General / 4 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! It’s just moved to a lower-frequency posting schedule which you can check out here.

June’s prompt is as follows:

Happy Pride! ️‍ What are your favorite books with LGBTQIA+ representation? Are there authors or series you always recommend? What books are on your Pride Month TBR? What do you think makes representation feel genuine?

I have to say that I don’t really think of what I read in terms of representing minority groups at the moment: not that it doesn’t, because I am interested in books that are by and about and for groups that are marginalised in society on all kinds of different axes. It’s mostly because I pulled back on the number of obsessive stats about books I was keeping for my mental health, and also because I got somewhat uncomfortable about some of the associated baggage like “own voices”, which became an intense pressure on people to come out and share personal details. I’m thinking about e.g. the situation where Becky Albertalli was pressured to come out because of Leah on the Offbeat.

Given my swing to reading more non-fiction as well, I kind of naturally fell out of the habit of thinking about books this way, so despite the fact that I read plenty of queer fiction, I didn’t have an immediate answer here, but let’s see if I can do better!

Cover of Mistakenly Saving the Villain vol 2 by Feng Yu NieAt the moment, a lot of the queer stuff I’m reading is danmei, which I wouldn’t necessarily refer to as being good LGBTQIA+ representation in general. I think it does things which are radical, particularly in context, where queerness is common and people are accepting… but there are also a lot of issues baked in, like gong and shou dynamics, and the fact that the shou sometimes ends up with a rather feminised role (sometimes down to being referred to as “wife”), authors insist that the dynamic is immutable, etc. Still, I don’t think ruling danmei out entirely as queer fiction is fair, and I’ve been deeply enjoying Mo Xiang Tong Xiu’s work, Priest’s Guardian, Xue Shan Fei Hu’s The Disabled Tyrant’s Beloved Pet Fish, and currently Feng Yu Nie’s Mistakenly Saving the Villain.

Cover of The Mimicking of Known Successes by Malka OlderMost of the other queer books I read are sci-fi or fantasy, where I really enjoy hopepunk takes like Becky Chambers’ A Long Way to a Small Angry Planet and sequels, where homophobia just isn’t a thing, or Ann Leckie’s Ancillary Justice et al, which play with gender and relationships — everyone in the Radch is referred to as “she”, no matter what. Malka Older’s murder mysteries set on Jupiter are a lot of fun too, with a gender-swapped Sherlock and Watson duo who are, yes, in a romantic relationship as well…

There’s so much I’m missing here: I love K.A. Doore‘s roundups of each year’s queer SFF for this, which often help me find books I’d somehow never come across at all that sound amazing. I highly recommend keeping an eye out for these.

When it comes to romance, of course there’s plenty out there: favourites of mine include Jordan L. Hawk (usually his work has SF/F and horror crossover), KJ Charles (sometimes has fantasy elements too) and Cat Sebastian.

Cover of Queer Georgians, by Anthony DelaneyIn my non-fiction reading, fear not, there have been some queer books there too! Most recently Anthony Delaney’s Queer Georgians, which uncovers various stories of queer people in the Georgian period in the UK. I have Will Tosh’s Straight Acting on the go, which is about Shakespeare’s sexuality and all the debate there is around that, and I’m quite looking forward to picking up a copy of A.J. West’s How Queer Bookshops Changed the World when I can, especially after reading Jane Cholmeley’s A Bookshop of One’s Own.

As you may have guessed from the preamble above, I don’t have a Pride-specific reading list. I’m queer all year round, and so is my reading.

I’d say that’s also the key to what makes representation feel genuine: you can’t just be checking a box. The queerness has to be lived in, baked into your story (even if that’s in small ways) in the way it’s baked into the world. If you can cut it out by simply swapping the pronouns of your side character’s partner and omitting to mention the pride flag in the coffee shop window… well.

Tags: , ,

Divider

Review – Seasons of Glass and Iron

Posted June 11, 2026 by Nicky in Reviews / 2 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”)

Tags: , , , ,

Divider

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”)

Tags: , , , ,

Divider

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.

Tags: ,

Divider

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”)

Tags: , , , ,

Divider