I can't give this book a rating because I dnf'd at around 30 pages in. The premise seemed interesting, but the prose came off as pretentious. The narrator kept monologuing and I didn't feel like slogging through page after page of hand-holding so the reader can understand exactly what the author wanted. It's a bit disappointing because I was excited to read it. Maybe I'll pick it up over the summer.
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Actively moving from Goodreads, hopefully more people start using this site. :) My star ratings are: 1 - did not like, 2 - it was ok, 3 - liked it, 4 - really liked it, 5 - loved it A three star book is still a good book!
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QuinoaQueen finished reading A Far Wilder Magic by Allison Saft
QuinoaQueen wants to read The Red Mother by Elizabeth Bear

The Red Mother by Elizabeth Bear
Auga, a wandering sorcerer, follows his brother's fate-thread into the village of Ormsfjoll, where he expects to deliver good news …
QuinoaQueen wants to read Viscera Objectica by Yugo Limbo

Viscera Objectica by Yugo Limbo
A humble tailor is very skilled at his work, but finds the complex patchwork of love painful to stitch together. …
QuinoaQueen stopped reading Too Like the Lightning by Ada Palmer (Terra Ignota -- Book 1)
QuinoaQueen started reading Too Like the Lightning by Ada Palmer (Terra Ignota -- Book 1)

Too Like the Lightning by Ada Palmer (Terra Ignota -- Book 1)
"The world into which Mycroft and Carlyle have been born is as strange to our 21st-century eyes as ours would …

steampunkLemur reviewed A Prayer for the Crown-Shy by Becky Chambers (Monk and Robot, #2)
Beautiful book. I am amazed at Becky Chamber's magic abilities.
5 stars
Content warning General spoilers
When I finished the first book I wondered why, being the two books so short, were they not just a single book. After finishing the second book I understand.
The second part of the Monk and Robot books is a completely different story. The apparition of Mosscap changes everything, and what was a book centered on Dex and their relationship with the world in Panga transforms into an exploration of the relationship between the monk and the robot.
Cozy as the first book, but slow in a good way. Just like the travelers in it, we have no rush to finish it. There's no big buildup to anything, and that amazes me. Like the first book, the author manages to create an engaging story without resorting to common narrative tools. It makes the book someone who's just sitting on your bedside table telling you "I'm here if you want to cuddle". The feel-good transcends the story and permeates into your everyday life, your imagination, and the things you think are possible.
The theme of purpose in this book made me shed a tear, even while on antidepressants. People telling me it's okay to just be me, I don't listen to them. But if a rusty robot says that to a monk and I'm just eavesdropping, you will be certain that I will heed the robot. And believe that it is ok to just be.
QuinoaQueen reviewed A Prayer for the Crown-Shy by Becky Chambers (Monk and Robot, #2)
Another refreshing slice of life story about Dex and Mosscap's travels
4 stars
Becky Chambers has a way of bringing the text down to the little details, reminding the reader to slow down and look at the flowers for a while. There are so many good lines in here that talk about self love and the importance of rest and community.
I adored getting to see more of the setting that Dex and Mosscap travel through. Seeing the different ways of life and philosophies surrounding survival (or in this utopian world, comfort) called me to reflect on how I live, and brought my understanding of myself into better focus.
4/5 for being another beautiful book. I truly believe that everyone will be able to get something positive out of reading this duology.
QuinoaQueen finished reading A Prayer for the Crown-Shy by Becky Chambers (Monk and Robot, #2)

A Prayer for the Crown-Shy by Becky Chambers (Monk and Robot, #2)
After touring the rural areas of Panga, Sibling Dex (a Tea Monk of some renown) and Mosscap (a robot sent …
QuinoaQueen reviewed A week in winter by Maeve Binchy
Cozy and Delightful
4 stars
Focusing on the relationships developed throughout life, young and old, and how bringing people together can change people. The focus on female characters and life as a woman felt very real, and Binchy adds it to her stories in ways that don't feel unplanned or added for shock.
This book feels like life, and a reminder that we don't know where life takes us, and that in the end, more often than not, things will be okay.
4/5 Recommended for readers who enjoy multiple POVs, a wide array of characters with different voices and outlooks on life, and cozy books that focus on people and the little things.
QuinoaQueen finished reading A week in winter by Maeve Binchy

A week in winter by Maeve Binchy
"The Sheedy sisters had lived in Stone House for as long as anyone could remember. Set high on the cliffs …

WhiskeyintheJar reviewed What Moves the Dead by T. Kingfisher (Sworn Solider, #1)
Second half was great
4 stars
It did not try to escape. That was somehow the most horrible part of all. It crawled back to its position in the circle of hares and it sat up, despite half its skull being missing. It turned its head so that its remaining eye pointed at me and tucked its paws against its chest like all the others. Whatever looked out at me through that eye was not a hare. My nerve broke and I ran.
First off, this isn't the sort of story you should read when your neighborhood is bunny central, no more morning tea saying softly good morning to them anymore.
Inspired by Poe's The Fall of the House of Usher, Alex is back from the war and going to their friend's house in the country to check on childhood friends. They received a letter from Roderick claiming that his sister Madeline has fallen ill. When …
It did not try to escape. That was somehow the most horrible part of all. It crawled back to its position in the circle of hares and it sat up, despite half its skull being missing. It turned its head so that its remaining eye pointed at me and tucked its paws against its chest like all the others. Whatever looked out at me through that eye was not a hare. My nerve broke and I ran.
First off, this isn't the sort of story you should read when your neighborhood is bunny central, no more morning tea saying softly good morning to them anymore.
Inspired by Poe's The Fall of the House of Usher, Alex is back from the war and going to their friend's house in the country to check on childhood friends. They received a letter from Roderick claiming that his sister Madeline has fallen ill. When they get there, they meet Miss Potter in the country side studying mushrooms, as the area has a multitude of varieties, and a severally ill Madeline, not looking to great himself Roderick, and an American doctor. Alex likes to take the piss out of the doctor in their thoughts: I offered Denton my hand, because Americans will shake hands with the table if you don’t stop them. and Sometimes it’s hard to know if someone is insulting or just an American. So there's some touches of humor in the first half until things start to deteriorate.
“I hear things now,” he said. “Everything. My own heartbeat. Other people’s breathing sounds like thunder. Sometimes I fancy I can hear the worms in the rafters.”
I have to say that I know the author is setting the scene and working to build the suspense but I still thought the first half read fairly slow and it was hard to put myself in the late 1800s mindset of not really knowing what was going on when the mushroom, fungi, and the like is dripping down the walls. I also thought it was a little too convenient that Miss Potter was in the neighborhood, an expert in the field to explain everything; unluckiest luckiest people in this house. This is a little shorter page count, 150ish pages, so while you're introduced to the characters and get some of their personality, Alex, who is telling the story all from their pov, is the only one you really get to know. At the halfway point, when things go south for Madeline, is where I thought the story really picked up.
“What if I told you those were growing out of human skin?”
The second half had some great horror visuals, bunnies with heads half blown off getting up, crawling around, and eyeballing people, and other scenes did give me the creeps and will linger in my mind. I was thinking a two or three star rating and the second half bumped it up to four stars to almost 5. We do get an explanation as to what was going on, a horror taking care of business scene, and then an ending that does and doesn't quite sit well with you that everything will be all right now. If you've been missing episodes of The Last of Us, this would be a great quick story to tied you over.
QuinoaQueen wants to read Galaxies and Oceans by N R Walker

Galaxies and Oceans by N R Walker
Seizing his one chance to escape, Ethan Hosking leaves his violent ex-boyfriend, leaves his entire life, and walks into the …
QuinoaQueen reviewed What Moves the Dead by T. Kingfisher (Sworn Solider, #1)
Mmmm, Gore and Fungi
4 stars
So…probably should have read House of Usher first. As such, references and the quality of the adaptation is lost on me. But otherwise, what a delightfully horrible book! It takes quite a lot for horror to get to me, but Kingfisher’s prose is vibrant, detailed, and wonderfully skin-crawling.
The main character has great narration with lots of care put into kan descriptive choices and dialogue. This book touches on many topics; fungi, war and PTSD, the unfortunate state of being American (lol), and queerness that is respected and ingrained in the man characters culture of kan home country.
4/5 and an excellent, quick read! Recommended for those who want body horror, queer rep, characters with actual personalities, and thrilling writing that had me eating up the pages.
QuinoaQueen finished reading What Moves the Dead by T. Kingfisher (Sworn Solider, #1)

What Moves the Dead by T. Kingfisher (Sworn Solider, #1)
From T. Kingfisher, the award-winning author of The Twisted Ones, comes What Moves the Dead, a gripping and atmospheric retelling …