4/5 Stars – The Prisoner’s Throne

Another amazing read, once again into the story of Oak. His love interest really frustrated me, but I loved watching his character develop. The world building was fantastic, but the ending seemed rushed and didn’t make much sense to me, hence my 4 star instead of 5. I’m glad to be finish with this duology, even if it did leave me with more questions than answers.

4/5 stars

4/5 Star Review: The Gate of the Feral Gods

This book was amazing. Princess Donut makes the book, as always. I listened to it as an audio book – HIGHLY recommended for all of the Dungeon Crawler Carl series. Rough story about Maggie & Chris. Frank. I wonder how Agnes manages each floor. I’m excited to start the next book and it’s probably the only book that I suggest people listen to the audio instead of reading it.

4/5 stars

February Reading Wrap Up

It’s that time of the month where I go over how I did in my reading stats! That’s right, a new feature because I’ve never actually done a reading wrap-up before. Why not start now?!

The graphics are from TheStoryGraph which is my book tracking site of choice these days. If you’re into statistics, this is where you want to be. They even include a calendar of all your reading updates. Looking at February, I see it was another big month for books and I really hope that carries over into March, but if it doesn’t that’s alright too. I read a total of 7 books (29% of those were audio books, the rest were physical & ebooks) and my average rating was 3.57 – I only had one 5 star read, and that was ‘What I ate in One Year’ by Stanley Tucci.

I’ve decided moving forward I’d like to devote an entire spread to any 5 star books I read, mostly because I don’t often have a lot of 5 star reads, and I think it would be a neat little bit of creativity I could toss into my reading journal. I’m not 100% pleased with how the journal went this year, but I am determined to keep with it (as best I can) and then next year I can implement changes like moving to a square journal and organizing some things better. Right now the journal is a lot of statistics, and while I do love stats, I’d like a little more creativity to flow.

In January I read 6 books (I may actually backdate a post to represent this) which I also thought was a lot for me, but hey maybe this is the year for massive reading (so I can protect my mental health with all of the crazy that is going on in the world these days). I certainly have no complaints – and I really hope that March involves just as many (if not more) amazing reads.

I Joined a Book Club – and I LOVE It

It started out small, like most ideas. Jaedia (good friend who I adore) was talking about setting up a reading journal for 2025 – and I loved that idea. I’ve had lots of journals before, but never a reading journal. Why not start one. So I started browsing YouTube for spread ideas. That’s where I found JashiiCorrin. I watched a few of her videos and then before I knew it, I joined her reading club discord – the BBBC (Bujo Buddies Book Club). There, they have a monthly book club that works much as you would expect any book club to, along with reading buddies and other book related chatter.

I lucked out, because their next meet up was only a few days away, and it was a book that I had already read last month, The Spellshop, by Sarah Beth Durst. Even though I’m pretty shy, I wanted to throw myself into this community so that’s exactly what I did. The club meeting started, and they had it set so that you could either talk (I didn’t have a microphone set up yet) or you could type in the channel, and participate that way – if you just wanted to lurk, that was perfectly fine, too.

Normally when I read a book I might delve into the review section on goodreads, or I might see something about it posted to tiktok or instagram, but here were 35 people discussing their opinions in such an open and frank matter – I loved every second of it. I loved seeing how people interpreted things, and while the discussion did tend to slant to a very harsh review of the book, most people did finish reading / listening to it and almost everyone agreed that while it was not an earth shattering piece of literary writing, it was an overall good book that they did enjoy. We also learned how voting for the next books would take place in the new year, and we were presented with a theme to then make book suggestions from. The theme for January is book covers that have bones and flowers on it. I decided to recommend The Bone Orchard, by Sara A. Mueller. Two books will be chosen, and then we’ll vote on them around mid-December. I’m excited to see how that goes!

Over all, it was just a really good time hanging out with people who love books. It was something I’ve never really participated in before, and I’m already looking forward to the December meet up even though the book is one that I’m a little less enthusiastic about (I believe it falls under a self help / productivity category, which is not exactly my genre of choice – but I’ll still read it). Do you belong to a book club? Do you enjoy it? Let me know in comments, and who knows, maybe I’ll find myself in another club or two over the months, we’ll just have to see.