Review – Seams Like Murder

Posted March 30, 2025 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Review – Seams Like Murder

Seams Like Murder

by Tilly Wallace

Genres: Crime, Fantasy, Historical Fiction, Mystery
Pages: 234
Series: Grace Designs Mysteries #1
Rating: two-stars
Synopsis:

There are two things that can’t talk—moving pictures and dead showgirls…

1920, Wellington, New Zealand. Grace Devine is poised to build her thriving dress design business as the twenties begin to soar. But when a fashionable client is murdered, suspicion falls on Grace as the last person to see Agatha alive.

As wary clients cancel and business begins to fail, Grace decides there’s only one way to prove her innocence and save her career…this seamstress will turn sleuth to find who really murdered the showgirl.

The more she learns, the more she uncovers of the darker side of the dead woman’s personality. Agatha liked to collect secrets and use them against people. But what target snapped that fatal night? Can Grace stitch together the clues before her life is torn apart…

These heart-warming historical mysteries will send you on a unique New Zealand adventure.

Tilly Wallace’s Seams Like Murder is a short, quick read, set in New Zealand post-WWI. Grace is trying to set up her own fashion house, starting small, and hampered by being a single mother with a “husband” who died in the war (and, the subtext suggests, because she wasn’t actually married to him at all, though I don’t think that’s confirmed in so many words in this book). She has a strong support network, though, with a mentor, a close friend who lives nearby, her father, a cousin, and her husband’s brother — and this was an aspect of the story I rather enjoyed, since they each supported her in their own way.

The mystery itself is relatively obvious, and works out in a relatively obvious way. There’s a hint that there’s potentially to be a romance with the “dishy” detective, which leaves me pretty cold: there’s some genuine chemistry between Grace and her husband’s brother, in a complicated way, and that’s what we actually see any build-up for at all. There are other books in the series, so I guess any further development with the detective happens there, but I’m not super inclined at this moment to follow.

I should note as well that there’s a fantasy element to the story, totally not discussed in the cover copy: Grace has the ability to touch someone and pick up memories that they’re thinking about at the time. The constraints of the gift are fairly undefined in this book, and I find it a bit odd that this element is played down so much in the copy. Seems like a good way to annoy one audience (the historical mystery fans) and miss another completely (the fantasy mystery fans).

In any case, as I mentioned, I’m not really inclined to read more of this series. This book was entertaining enough that I didn’t think about stopping it, and I did enjoy Grace’s family and support network, which felt genuine and warm. There’s nothing that makes me feel it’s going to go in a direction I’m particularly interested in, but I might read a second book if I run across it in a subscription service I use like Kobo Plus or something (I see the first book is available in Kobo Plus in the US at least, after all), and I want something light. It’s not that I disliked it or anything, it just didn’t click with me in the way I hoped.

Rating: 2/5

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Stacking the Shelves & The Sunday Post

Posted March 29, 2025 by Nicky in General / 8 Comments

Greetings! It’s been a quiet-ish week for me in most respects, though the new raid tier has been released in FFXIV, and the Savage version releases on Tuesday, so getting ready for that is keeping me busy.

But we’re here to talk about books, so let’s get to that.

Books acquired this week

I didn’t get chance to go to the library this week, and though I technically have some money to buy a couple of books, I haven’t 100% decided which to get, so this week there’s just one book, the latest British Library Crime Classic via my subscription. It’s a bit late this month because of printing issues, and it doesn’t seem to have a matching bookmark, which makes me very sad.

Cover of Not To Be Taken: Puzzles in Poison by Anthony Berkeley

I have mixed feelings; I like reading the novels from this series as an academic interest, but sometimes misogyny etc bleed through, and that’s the case with several of Anthony Berkeley’s books, if not all. Still, I’ll give it a shot.

Posts from this week

Time for a roundup!

What I’m reading

I’ve fit in quite a bit of reading considering how much I’ve been playing FFXIV, so let’s start with the usual peek at the books I’ve finished this week which I plan to review on the blog:

Cover of Fence vol 4 by C.S. Pacat and Johanna the Mad Cover of Fence vol 5 by C.S. Pacat and Johanna the Mad Cover of Fence vol 6 by C.S. Pacat and Johanna the Mad Cover of Mortal Follies by Alexis Hall

Cover of Jane Austen in 41 Objects by Kathryn Sutherland Cover of Solo Levelling (manhwa) vol 1, by Chugong, Debu Cover of Strange Pictures by Uketsu Cover of A Breviary of Fire by Marie Brennan

Not sure what’s next, actually, but I’ll be following my whim as always.

Linking up with Reading Reality’s Stacking the Shelves, Caffeinated Reviewer’s The Sunday Post, and the Sunday Salon over at Readerbuzz, as usual!

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Review – The Bloodless Princes

Posted March 28, 2025 by Nicky in Reviews / 2 Comments

Review – The Bloodless Princes

The Bloodless Princes

by Charlotte Bond

Genres: Fantasy
Pages: 151
Series: The Fireborne Blade #2
Rating: three-stars
Synopsis:

A tale of death, honor and true love's embrace. Come for the journey through the underworld. Stay for the minacious dragon-cat.

It seemed the afterlife was bustling.

Cursed by the previous High Mage, and following an...incident...with a supremely powerful dragon, newly-promoted High Mage Saralene visits the afterlife with a boon to beg of the Bloodless Princes who run the underworld.

But Saralene and her most trusted advisor/champion/companion, Sir Maddileh, will soon discover that there’s only so much research to be done by studying the old tales, though perhaps there’s enough truth in them to make a start.

Saralene will need more than just her wits to leave the underworld, alive. And Maddileh will need more than just her Fireborne Blade.

A story of love and respect that endures beyond death. And of dragons, because we all love a dragon!

Charlotte Bond’s The Bloodless Princes is a pretty immediate follow-up to The Fireborne Blade, so definitely start by reading that. It took me a little bit to get myself back into the world and characters, especially as I experienced the end of the first book as being rather dark and ambiguous, and all signs point here to Bond not… having intended that, and thinking of Maddileh and Saralene as unambiguously “good guys”, totally justified in what they did, without any hint of darkness about it. But… sorry, no matter how awful someone has been, using weird dragon/blood magic to take over their body and thus kill them isn’t morally neutral.

Once I got past that dissonance, it was still a fun enough read, but I wasn’t expecting as much from it, since it kind of retroactively edited The Fireborne Blade to be more straightforwardly heroic than I’d originally thought it. Maddileh and Saralene become a romance plot with more than a hint of Orpheus and Eurydice, and it’s kind of predictable. There’s some fun lore, and it’s nice to understand more about the dragons and how they view their relationship with humans.

It ticks along at a good pace, and I enjoyed it for what it was, but depending on how you felt about The Fireborne Blade other than “ooh, female knight! girl power!”, it might be rather disappointing.

Rating: 3/5

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Review – If You’ll Have Me

Posted March 27, 2025 by Nicky in Reviews / 2 Comments

Review – If You’ll Have Me

If You'll Have Me

by Eunnie

Genres: Graphic Novels, Romance
Pages: 336
Rating: four-stars
Synopsis:

Momo Gardner is the kind of friend who’s always ready to lend a helping hand. She’s introverted, sensitive, and maybe a little too trusting, but she likes to believe the best in people. PG, on the other hand, is a bit of a lone wolf, despite her reputation for being a flirt and a player. Underneath all that cool mystery, she’s actually quick to smile, and when she falls for someone, she falls hard.

An unexpected meet-cute brings the two together, kicking off the beginning of an awkward yet endearing courtship—but with their drastically different personalities, Momo’s overprotective friend, and PG’s past coming back to haunt her, Momo and PG’s romance is put to the test.

Eunnie’s If You’ll Have Me is a really sweet book with cute character designs and a fairly simple story. Momo and PG meet at college: PG’s known for seducing every pretty girl she meets, while Momo’s never had a girlfriend. Inevitably, they meet, and PG starts to pay a lot of attention to Momo — going to events with her, comforting her when she has a bad day, replacing the charm on her bag when she loses it, etc.

Inevitably, they eventually kiss… and inevitably, their pasts get in the way. Momo’s afraid that no one will ever be interested in her because she’s not special, while PG’s been burned in the past by someone she loved assuming she was just messing around with them as well (because she didn’t speak up and say how she was feeling).

They each hurt each other in the traditional misunderstanding, and get back together in the traditional reconciliation; it’s not groundbreaking, but it’s cute, and I really like the character designs. Momo’s insecurity is well portrayed, as is PG’s sadness about not being seen for who she is. It’s a pretty quick read, and doesn’t bog down too much around the misunderstanding.

Rating: 4/5

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WWW Wednesday

Posted March 26, 2025 by Nicky in General / 2 Comments

Hello all! Yesterday was “patch day” in FFXIV, with a new raid wing released — which might mean nothing to most of you, but mostly it means “ouch, busy time with a hobby!” So I haven’t been reading a whole lot, but I’m hoping to fix that somewhat tomorrow.

Cover of Mortal Follies by Alexis HallWhat have you recently finished reading?

The last thing I finished was Mortal Follies, by Alexis Hall. I went into it really not sure if I’d get along with the prominent non-involved narrator’s voice, and ended up loving it. I feel like maybe it could’ve been trimmed and tightened here and there, but mostly when it was over I was annoyed there wasn’t just a bit more.

I’ve also been mainlining the Fence graphic novels by C.S. Pacat and Johanna the Mad, and I’m also annoyed there wasn’t more! I love Seiji and Nicholas, and the supporting cast too.

What are you currently reading?

Actually… nothing, which is kind of the problem. If I had something I was partway through, I’d probably be doing a better job at picking something up… but nothing’s really grabbing me. Or the books I want to read are not the ones I think I “should” be reading (in order to make progress on the book spin bingo challenge on Litsy).

Which strikes me as very silly now I write it out — who cares if this isn’t a book I put on this month’s card? Gaah, brain.

Cover of Jane Austen in 41 Objects by Kathryn SutherlandWhat will you read next?

I don’t know! Same problem applies. I’m currently tempted by a book on Jane Austen I got recently (Jane Austen in 41 Objects, by Kathryn Sunderland), or Molly O’Neill’s Greenteeth. I’m not a huge fan of Jane Austen, but I love that kind of format for non-fiction… and Greenteeth sounds really good too.

So I guess it depends whether my brain keeps on insisting on the bingo card books!

How about you?

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Review – Close Encounters of the Fungal Kind

Posted March 25, 2025 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Review – Close Encounters of the Fungal Kind

Close Encounters of the Fungal Kind

by Richard Fortey

Genres: Non-fiction, Science
Pages: 336
Rating: three-stars
Synopsis:

There are three great kingdoms of life – Animals, Plants and Fungi – but the fungi always come in third place. This may be because fungi seem alien to many their strange forms, their rapid appearance and disappearance, their hidden means of feeding and propagation. In Close Encounters of the Fungal Kind, acclaimed scientist and author Richard Fortey acknowledges this otherworldliness, marvels at their unique charm and boots-up as a guide through this great, mysterious Kingdom of life.

To Fortey, the strangeness of fungi is what makes them so exciting. Many people find them alien and the way so many toadstools appear so quickly and disappear with equal dispatch; their strange forms and colours; their reputation as poisoners. But for Fortey, the extraordinary nature of fungi makes him wonder, think and marvel. In Close Encounters of a Fungal Kind, Fortey leads us on a glorious literary journey, narrated through field trips to real places in search of the strangest, most extraordinary, or even most delicious fungi.

Writing with characteristic warmth, wit and wisdom, Fortey focuses on a selection of the larger fungi, the kind that might be spotted on a country walk, and a handful of microfungi that have particularly caught his attention. His enthusiasm and passion as a life-long ‘mushroom twitcher’ is infectious as he shares his own ‘close encounters’ and brings us along on his treks through this magnificent Kingdom.

The unique charm of the mushrooms themselves is centre stage in this gripping narrative that explains what fungi do in the natural world and rejoices in their profusion and diversity.

Richard Fortey’s Close Encounters of the Fungal Kind is all about obsession with fungi, and often, about collecting them. He’s fascinated by every aspect of them, including identifying them, about how they grow and where they grow, about fungal diversity and whether (as with a lot of other species of all kingdoms) fungi are declining in the modern world.

His interest in eating and collecting fungi is not one I share, but it’s a clear passion, and that’s always fun to read. I think I’d have liked something more focused on the science of fungi — how they work, and even more of their diversity, e.g. delving into fungi like yeast (like baker’s yeast and Candida). But that’s my obsession, not his.

I think I found his writing more engaging about fossils and so on, a thing I think I’ve said before. Maybe that’s because he was younger then and his tone’s evolved, maybe it’s just that that was a topic where he was on surer ground. (It definitely isn’t always my ground, to be clear: I enjoyed his books that discussed lots of geology, which I find dead boring for the most part.)

Fun enough, in any case, and if you’re interested in collecting fungi, it’s not exactly a reference book but it is a fun description and discussion of such a hobby.

Rating: 3/5

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Review – Book Curses

Posted March 24, 2025 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Review – Book Curses

Book Curses

by Eleanor Baker

Genres: History, Non-fiction
Pages: 118
Rating: four-stars
Synopsis:

Have you ever wanted to protect your books from forgetful borrowers, merciless page-folders or outright thieves? Perhaps you have even wished harm on those who have damaged your books, but would you threaten them with hellfire, hanging or the plague? This book contains a collection of some of the most ferocious and humorous book curses ever inscribed, from fearsome threats discovered emblazoned on stone monuments from the ancient Near East, to elaborate manuscript maledictions and chilling warnings scribbled in printed books. Book curses are entertaining writings in themselves, but they also offer a tantalising insight into how passionately texts and books have been valued by their owners and readers over the centuries. Here you will find an engaging introduction to the history and development of the book curse and perhaps some inspiration to pen a few of your own.

Book Curses has commentary and selections by Eleanor Baker, but is largely taken up with reproductions of various curses people have written in books, from ancient times to modern, in order to “protect” the books from being stolen. I was hoping for a little more commentary, personally, though there is enough to provide context (both general, for each block of time discussed, and specific to each curse).

I wasn’t 100% sure I agreed with all of the translations, personally. It’s been over a decade since Middle English was my field, though (and I have a lot more practice with Anglo-Saxon and Icelandic), so probably I should concede that Baker likely knows what she’s doing. There was a translation of a word “pokke” (I think — I can’t quickly find the exact spelling again to check) which can mean “sleeve” or, more obviously, “pocket”. It was translated in this volume as “sleeve”, with a comment about a particular kind of sleeve that might have been meant. Pocket might have been a more common-sense translation there, if you’re going to be offering a translation and assuming your audience therefore can’t (all) translate the original.

That said, that’s quibbling, and I appreciated some of the other decisions very much (like keeping the original choice of where to break lines, for the most part). It’s an interesting little compilation!

Rating: 4/5

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Review – The Leavenworth Case

Posted March 23, 2025 by Nicky in Reviews / 2 Comments

Review – The Leavenworth Case

The Leavenworth Case

by Anna K. Green

Genres: Crime, Mystery
Pages: 368
Rating: two-stars
Synopsis:

THIS DETECTIVE STORY CLUB CLASSIC is introduced by Dr John Curran, who looks at how Anna Katherine Green was a pioneer who inspired a new generation of crime writers, in particular a young woman named Agatha Christie.

When the retired merchant Horatio Leavenworth is found shot dead in his mansion library, suspicion falls on his nieces, Mary and Eleanore, who stand to inherit his vast fortune. Their lawyer, Everett Raymond, infatuated with one of the sisters, is determined that the official investigator, detective Ebenezer Gryce, widens the inquiry to less obvious suspects.

The Leavenworth Case, the first detective novel written by a woman, immortalised its author Anna Katharine Green as 'The Mother of Detective Fiction'. Admired for her careful plotting and legal accuracy, the book enjoyed enormous success both in England and America, and was widely translated. It was republished by The Detective Story Club after Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin, speaking at the 1928 Thanksgiving Day dinner of the American Society in London, remarked: 'An American woman, a successor of Poe, Anna K. Green, gave us The Leavenworth Case, which I still think one of the best detective stories ever written.'

I’m glad I got round to reading Anna Katharine Green’s The Leavenworth Case, because it’s one of the early detective novels, and one of the rarer female voices that hasn’t been totally forgotten from the early years of the genre. That said… I’m glad I read it via Serial Reader, and thus in small bites, because it’s pretty tedious at times — overwrought, and of course, sexist.

Even with a female author, you ask? Yes: the detective ultimately says he didn’t really suspect a woman because (drumroll) a woman would never clean a pistol after firing. All the women are beautiful angels with amazing manners (though Mary Leavenworth does show a bit of spirit and isn’t totally vilified for… well, I won’t spoiler, even at this late date).

Really, it’s just very much of its time. The culprit was fairly obvious to me, and it was a bit excruciating how long it took to gather up the evidence.

In the end, glad I read it, but glad it’s finished.

Rating: 2/5

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Stacking the Shelves & The Sunday Post

Posted March 22, 2025 by Nicky in General / 22 Comments

Good afternoon, folks! It’s still a weird and busy time around here, but that’s almost the “new normal” for me. It isn’t going to get less busy anytime soon, so I’m just trying my best to do stuff that I enjoy whenever I can.

So, let’s talk about books!

Books acquired this week

First, I got a couple of gifts from my wife, just ’cause:

Cover of Strange Pictures by Uketsu Cover of Jane Austen in 41 Objects by Kathryn Sutherland Cover of Mood Machine: The Rise of Spotify and the Costs of the Perfect Playlist by Liz Pelly

I’m not a mega-fan of Jane Austen (though I have enjoyed some of her books, sorry Mum), but I’m a sucker for “x in y objects” type books. As for Strange Pictures, I read about it and I’m kinda mesmerised by the idea — and Mood Machine sounds like the perfect way to really understand some of the issues around Spotify. (I’ve been aware of general problems forever, and I always buy the music I like… but it’s hard to resist the convenience of Spotify, so one likes to be at least open-eyed about it.)

And I got a pre-order of a much-awaited book (see below for my review):

Cover of Everything is Tuberculosis by John Green

Other than that, I also had a quick library trip, partly to pick up my hold of Greenteeth, and partly for a quick browse, in which I picked up a mystery novel I’ve seen around quite a bit, and a non-fiction book that hadn’t been checked out of the library for a few years, on impulse. Here they are:

Cover of Greenteeth by Molly O'Neill Cover of How to Solve Your Own Murder by Kirsten Perrin Cover of The Byzantine Lady by Donald M. Nichol

A random mix, as usual, which is always nice for me.

Posts from this week

First up, a round-up of the reviews I posted:

And other posts:

What I’m reading

As ever, first let’s have a peek at the books I’ve finished this week that I plan to review!

Cover of The Ten Teacups by Carter Dickson Cover of Seams Like Murder by Tilly Wallace Cover of Emily Wilde's Compendium of Lost Tales, by Heather Fawcett Cover of Everything is Tuberculosis by John Green

Cover of Fence vol 2 by C.S. Pacat et al Cover of The Graves: Srebenica and Vukovar by Giles Peress and Eric Stover Cover of Fence vol 3 by C.S. Pacat et al

As for this weekend, I’m not sure yet what I’ll be reading. Maybe The Apothecary Diaries (light novel), vol 3. We’ll see!

Linking up with Reading Reality’s Stacking the Shelves, Caffeinated Reviewer’s The Sunday Post, and the Sunday Salon over at Readerbuzz, as usual!

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Review – Volatile Memory

Posted March 21, 2025 by Nicky in Reviews / 0 Comments

Review – Volatile Memory

Volatile Memory

by Seth Haddon

Genres: Science Fiction
Pages: 176
Synopsis:

With nothing but a limping ship and an outdated mask to her name, Wylla needs a big pay day. When the call goes out that a lucrative piece of tech is waiting on a nearby planet, she relies on all the swiftness of her prey animal instincts to beat other hunters to it.

What you found wasn’t your ticket out—it was my corpse wearing an AI mask. When you touched the mask, you heard my voice. A consciousness spinning through metal and circuits, a bodiless mind, spun to life in the HAWK’s temporary storage. I crystallized and realized: I was alive.

Masks aren't supposed to retain memory, much less identity, but the woman inside the MARK I HAWK is real, and she sees Wylla in a way no one ever has. Sees her, and doesn’t find her wanting or unwhole.

Armed with military-grade tech and a lifetime of staying one step ahead of the hunters, Wylla and HAWK set off to get answers from the man who discarded HAWK once before: her ex-husband.

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 needed to sit with Seth Haddon’s Volatile Memory after I’d finished it, because it left me feeling surprisingly unsettled by its violence and vengeance, the dysphoria of the characters, the intensity of the situations they go through — the book never stops, lurching from one crisis to another, so that the shock of one event never fully catches up to the characters before the next hits them.

The characters are both queer and both messy and, I guess, “problematic”. Wylla isn’t the perfect transwoman, Sable’s not the perfect… well, let’s not get into spoilers. The point is that they turn to violence, they roil in fear and indecision, they rush into things, and you root for them anyway while knowing they are making some awful choices. (Knowing, too, that there aren’t any better choices, because that’s what their society does, the hands they’ve been dealt.)

I found the narration really well done: it begins as second person POV, addressed to Wylla, but the speaker also resolves into a character who starts talking about themself in the first person as well. Still, the tone is intimate — this story is being told to Wylla, in a sense. It makes it all feel very immediate. The story doesn’t try to explain itself too much: you have to get on board yourself and figure things out — and I found that it all fell into place beautifully, without too much of a pause for exposition.

Rating: 4/5

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