Dinosaurs by Lydia Millet

Title: Dinosaurs
Author: Lydia Millet
Format: ebook
Genre(s): Literary fiction
Rating: ★★★★☆

Millet writes a deceptively simple novel about a man named Gil who, in the wake of a failed relationship, walks from New York City to Phoenix; we follow his story as he settles in his new home, discovers the desert landscape and wildlife, and builds new connections, starting with the family next door.

We only really see glimpses of the other people in Gil’s life, the bits and pieces of them that Gil encounters — and yet they show up as whole people, with their own messiness and complex motivations. In the process, we also experience the tension between the individual and the community, between one’s desires and one’s obligations, and the way that our lives play out in a web of relationships. And there all along, sometimes coming to the fore, are the ways that nature shapes our experiences (and how we shape it back, climate change and reckless hunting and all).

While the novel touches on difficult and dark subjects, they mostly stay on the fringes as Gil meanders through, making this a well-crafted, smooth read that never makes you directly confront the challenges it raises.


Dinosaurs is part of the Tournament of Books, a sort of March Madness for 16 books from the previous year. If this sounds like an interesting event to you, I’d recommend checking out the list and trying at least one or two books that catch your eye!

The Locked-Away Life by Drew Davies

Title: The Locked-Away Life
Author: Drew Davies
Format: Audiobook
Genre(s): Fiction
Rating: ★★★☆☆

Over the past few weeks I have been listening to the story of Esther, an older woman living alone and away from society in her large house, and Bruno, a young man she hires to teach her how to use the internet.

It’s a story that manages to be heartwarming without getting saccharine: Esther is lively and sharp-witted while Bruno is caring but guarded, and the two build a friendship as they spend time together during their lessons. Both characters have a bit of mystery and hurt that they need to work through, and my main critique is that I don’t feel either of their stories is paced or played out in an entirely satisfying way. For Esther’s part, we repeatedly hear snippets of her past that we can piece together, but it all happens so piecemeal that as a result her growth and resolution also feels a bit uneven and incomplete; Bruno, on the other hand, has a gutting experience that plays out strikingly on the page, but the aftermath feels a bit rushed — summarized more than experienced — and wraps up faster than I’d like.

All in all, this is an enjoyable book (and wonderfully narrated as an audiobook!) that’s recommended if you’re looking for a story of human connection, love, and support from seemingly unlikely friends.

Seven Exes by Lucy Vine

Title: Seven Exes
Author: Lucy Vine
Format: ebook (ARC)
Genre(s): Fiction
Rating: ★★☆☆☆

This book’s synopsis set me up for a fun premise: a possible second-chance romance, but with seven exes and not knowing which might be The One for Esther. But although it was interesting to revisit their relationships with a combination of flashbacks and present day reunions, and there was an attempt to balance these stories with her friendships, Esther spent most of the book far too self-centered and insufferable for me to find her or her personal journey relatable.

If we could have seen Esther being really great in some parts of her life — say, rocking it at work and getting on with her coworkers — while struggling with personal relationships, it could have made her more likeable. And if we saw her growing slowly and incrementally improving things as she reconnected with each ex and worked through the conflicts with her friends, maybe I could believe in her growth and great connections at the end. But everything seemed to come together at the eleventh hour, with a romance that didn’t feel supported by enough on the page and a lesson that was both far too on the nose and didn’t feel entirely earned.


Thank you to NetGalley and Simon and Schuster for providing an advanced reader copy of this novel in exchange for an honest review. Seven Exes comes out on 25 May 2023.

A Restless Truth by Freya Marske

Title: A Restless Truth
Author: Freya Marske
Format: ebook
Genre(s): Romance, Historical, Fantasy
Rating: ★★★☆☆

This is the sequel to A Marvellous Light, following Maud Blythe as she tries to solve a magical murder mystery while traveling on a ship back to England from New York — it is, as Marske calls it, “a bubbly Wodehousian romp.”

Unfortunately, the first book didn’t set me up for this one to be a romp, and I found myself jarred by the change in tone as well as the lack of intimacy-building between Maud and Violet, a striking actress who Maud recognizes from Robin’s earlier visions about the journey. The romance storyline is mainly about Maud’s self-discovery as she is captivated by Violet, whereas Violet plays the fairly predictable part of the more worldly, guarded flirt, creating a frustratingly insurmountable emotional distance between the two (although that does come across as more realistic in the end than a whirlwind romance). The magic/mystery storyline also fell flat for me, not offering enough new substance about magic and magical society aside from the revelation about Maud, and exasperating me when they make an enormous and completely avoidable blunder as the crisis is coming to a head.

The word that most describes this book for me is claustrophobic: I felt stuck on the ship, wishing for the end of the journey and a change in cast or setting, and ultimately left hoping that the next installment (perhaps following Alan Ross and Lord Hawthorn, who I loved seeing more sides of, although I’d be thrilled to get more of Adelaide Morrissey) will bring a breath of fresh air and some added depth to the series.

5 Notable Books on the Tournament of Books Long List

Have you heard of the Tournament of Books? It’s a fun book “competition” (discussion) that puts a shortlist of books head to head in a tournament bracket until a winner is chosen. I first heard about it years ago when a group of work colleagues decided to divvy up the shortlist and use the tournament format for our own book club discussions. (In the process, I discovered All the Light We Cannot See, which absolutely blew my mind.)

This week they announced the 2023 Tournament of Books long list, which contains 68 books (all fiction) that will be whittled down to the shortlist soon. I wanted to take a moment to share five books on the list that caught my eye:

  1. Babel by R. F. Kuang: This has been on my TBR for quite some time, and I just got a copy from my library; as a former translator and fantasy lover I’m fascinated to see where it takes me!
  2. You Made a Fool of Death With Your Beauty by Akwaeke Emezi: I read this romance earlier this year — shortly before starting this blog — and it was incredible; my notes simply say, “Wow.”
  3. Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow by Gabrielle Zevin: A friend just recommended this book to me so it’s on my TBR; I’ve lived most of my life on the fringes of gaming culture (lots of gamer friends and family, mostly drawn to puzzle and trivia games myself) and am curious to see where this story takes me.
  4. Olga Dies Dreaming by Xochitl Gonzalez: I keep seeing this title and have been hesitating because I don’t always connect with books set in New York (I know lots of people love New York, but I’ve never clicked with it!) but I might take this as a sign that I should finally give it a chance.
  5. Sea of Tranquility by Emily St. John Mandel: I’ve seen Mandel’s name pop up repeatedly in book discussions (I already have her Station Eleven on my TBR) and I’m intrigued by its exploration of the simulation hypothesis and time travel.

Are there any books on the Tournament of Books long list that stand out to you, or that you’ve read and would recommend?

The Holiday Trap by Roan Parrish

Title: The Holiday Trap
Author: Roan Parrish
Format: ebook
Genre(s): Romance
Rating: ★★★☆☆

This is a cute rom-com that’s essentially a queer version of The Holiday: Greta in Maine and Truman in New Orleans are both in need of a change; when a mutual friend encourages them to swap houses around the holidays, they both find an opportunity for love and new adventures.

I finished this book with all the warm fuzzies I’d expect from a romantic comedy, mostly driven by Truman and Ash’s adorable storyline and their respective insecurities and challenges. I felt less connected to Greta and Carys’s story, possibly because the conflict and growth mostly happened on Greta’s end whereas Carys’s growth was part of her backstory rather than on the page. I also found the sheer number of side characters challenging — I was surprised and disappointed that some of them (including characters who had close relationships with the main characters as well as others who felt like fully fleshed-out personalities) appeared only once or twice, but I also can’t imagine weaving them into the story more fully while also juggling both storylines.

If you don’t mind some slightly heavier topics alongside the fluff (heads up that there is family conflict and past cheating), I’d recommend this as a fun escape from real-life stress for a quick weekend or holiday read.

A Deadly Education by Naomi Novik

Title: A Deadly Education
Author: Naomi Novik
Format: ebook
Genre(s): Fantasy
Rating: ★★★☆☆

While reading this book, I couldn’t stop thinking about the parallels to Cassandra Clare and Holly Black’s Magisterium series:

  • A boarding school where students have to prove themselves capable of great feats of magic to graduate;
  • a main character who wields dark magic and is prophesied to do great evil;
  • the main character’s best friend who is a golden child and viewed as the hero;
  • a developing group of friends/allies so the main character isn’t alone and has some reinforcement around their desire to stay good.

I don’t mean to say that this book felt cribbed; Novik brought a darker, more mature perspective to her story, with a different plot, a more dangerous world, and a clear message about inequality. I appreciated how the main character, Galadriel, had to navigate systemic bias and decide how to interact with students who were unaware of their own privilege. I also enjoyed seeing Galadriel’s friendships develop — and how naturally those friendships arose from her fair and respectful, albeit prickly, interactions with her peers — although I had trouble understanding how Orion had managed to get by so long being so incredibly dumb.

But in the end, whether it was the similarities to other books about coming of age in a magic school or my own fatigue around young adult fiction, I just couldn’t get excited enough about this story to continue the series.

The Stationery Shop by Marjan Kamali

Title: The Stationery Shop
Author: Marjan Kamali
Format: ebook
Genre(s): Historical
Rating: ★★★★☆

This is a beautifully written novel about a woman’s journey from her first love, discovered as a teenager in a stationery shop just before the 1953 coup in Tehran, through her life in the United States — influenced at each stage by the expectations, challenges, and often trauma of those around her.

I’ll admit that if I were judging the plot on its own, this would probably be a three-star book at most: central to the plot are the dubious lack of communication between young Roya and Bahman after the coup and the way their love never wanes or even really changes shape over time. But if you can accept that part of Roya’s story, the rest of the book elegantly portrays how she (and the other people in her life, at various points) faces cultural and familial expectations; immigration, culture shock, and a new language; doubt and roadblocks in her career; and grief and uncertainty. Throughout it all, there are also evocative descriptions of the food that frequently serves to bring people closer together.

I probably enjoyed this book more because of my personal connections to Iran and my love of Persian food, language, and culture, but I think it’s also worth reading for the writing style and exploration of themes like love, alienation, loss, and self-determination.

Magic in Manhattan series by Allie Therin

Title: Magic in Manhattan series: Spellbound, Starcrossed, and Wonderstruck
Author: Allie Therin
Format: ebook
Genre(s): Fantasy, Romance, Historical
Rating: ★★★★☆

This series took my favorite fiction genres and wrapped them up in a fast-paced, entertaining, touching story with a diverse cast of characters who are dealing with magical conundrums in New York. Although many interesting characters play a role, the books are definitely centered on Rory — a feisty young man who’s scraping by and trying to stay under the radar to hide his magic — and Arthur — a slightly older, rich congressman’s son who is mundane but wrapped up in the magical world — as they try to address the challenges both between them and around them.

There are so many things to enjoy in these books: witty dialogue, but not to the point of being outlandish; some characters who defy categorization as heroes or villains; many instances of people facing and working through issues of class, race, language, nationality, gender, and sexuality; the way prohibition, World War I, and other historical notes play a role in the plot; and a story that blends action and romance. It does have flaws here and there (like some pretty heavy exposition to get some of the backstory in the first book, a bit of a quick transition in the romance, and the use of some very fiendish, one-dimensional villains) but they didn’t get in the way of me gleefully devouring the series. It may not be the most sophisticated story I’ve read this year, but it was great fun!

The Forgotten Promise by Paula Greenlees

Title: The Forgotten Promise
Author: Paula Greenlees
Format: ebook (ARC)
Genre(s): Historical
Rating: ★★★☆☆

I was very drawn in by the premise of this book: Best friends Ella and Noor make a promise to always be close, but as they grow up they are separated by class and then further by World War II arriving to Malaysia (then British Malaya), as Ella flees with her son to England while her husband puts their daughter into Noor’s care. Sadly, just as Ella and Noor had trouble keeping their promise to each other, I felt that the story had trouble delivering on the promises it made to me.

It felt like almost everyone in the story was, to some extent, just a sketch or a stand-in for anyone who might find themselves in that particular situation, defined primarily by their backgrounds, hobbies, or jobs rather than unique character traits. I was thoroughly captivated by the history, and Greenlees made me care and even do further research about the people and events in Malaysia before, during, and after the war— if you are primarily interested in seeing depictions of what it may have been like for people and especially women at the time, this book really delivers. It also kept me curious about what would happen, but as it wrapped up, I was disappointed by how little Noor appeared on the page and how little I felt about how Ella’s story ended.


Thank you to NetGalley and Cornerstone (Penguin Random House) for providing an advanced reader copy of this novel in exchange for an honest review. The Forgotten Promise comes out on December 29, 2022.