Book Bingo Update

I wasn’t expecting much with this update but given how much I have been reading this year I actually had plenty of candidates for these squares. I even had multiple choices for a few too which was exciting.

I’m glad I have so many completed spaces, and many bingos (yay!) because now I can focus on getting a whole card completed and with only a few left I have faith I can do it even with everything that is going on. Famous last words I know and I will be reading late into the night at the end of December to make this complete if it doesn’t happen before then so I don’t have to renege on my goal.

Looking at my categories and rereading my original post from earlier this year, I’m glad I have so much diversity because even without planning too I have followed this well and diversified my reading quite a lot. Not that I hadn’t done before, but I know my reading has improved because I have been able to find fantastic stories with great characters to enjoy, not only enjoy the genre or themes within that story. Seeing it so clearly by filling out a bingo card has shown me the range my reading has covered and I’m really proud of how I’ve managed to do that unintentionally, and as I say, I had multiple options for so many categories which is wonderful.

19/25 is a great position to be in with two months to go and I am going to start looking into titles I can track down in order to win.

 

2020 Release

One of Us Is Next (One of Us Is Lying, #2)One of Us is Next by Karen McManus

This was an interesting sequel to One of Us is Lying. It was curious to see the aftermath of the end of the first book and seeing it from a different point of view, someone not really connected to the original story but still affected by it. It isn’t quite as engrossing as the first, but there is a mystery going on and teen drama to focus on.

 

Reread

Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone (Harry Potter, #1)Harry Potter Series by JK Rowling

There is something special about these books that the movies cannot capture. I love the small details that get excluded and random scenes that don’t have an impact on the larger plot. Even the additional information and story around the main plots is worthwhile. There is more emotion, depth and growth in the characters that I adore in these books that is always worth revisiting.

Set in Australia

The ExThe Ex by Nicola Moriarty

This was a great read as it had a lot of twists and turns but never where you expected them. I loved the way Moriarty set up her characters and when you thought you knew exactly what was going to happen suddenly everything changes and you have to reassess. It is incredibly clever.

 

POC Author

Ten Things I Hate About Me10 Things I Hate About Me by Randa Abdel-Fattah

As a story trying to demonstrate the experience of growing up as a Lebanese Muslim in Australia I don’t think Abdel-Fattah succeeds in the way she intended to but there is some merit to her story if people can learn from it and gain some perspective.

 

Transgender MC

I Was Born for ThisI Was Born for This by Alice Oseman

With a dual narration there is so much to love about this story. I loved that being transgender isn’t the point of the story but it isn’t brushed aside or diminished either. The way Oseman balances the two narrators and their own unique lives is done remarkably well and as they join together it felt like it was meant to be. It is a story that constantly surprised me and I loved it never went where I was expecting.

Non Fiction

Queerstories: Reflections on lives well lived from some of Australia's finest LGBTQIA+ writers (16pt Large Print Edition)Queerstories ed. by Maeve Marsden

Each of these personal essays offers insight into the lives of all the contributing authors. The range of identities and experiences is diverse and getting to read about the everyday, the ordinary, and the extraordinary is the epitome of the “reflections on lives well lived” theme. There’s love and heartbreak but also lessons and fun experiences. Each story captures a certain something and it’s expressed brilliantly through each story.

Lesbian MC

PulpPulp by Robin Talley

I loved this story so much. A YA with a foot in the historical and the contemporary that shows the stark contrast of the lives and rights of LGBTQIA teens and how far they’ve come and how far there is left to go. There is romance and drama and a great historical element that shows off the ingenuity and resourcefulness of those oppressed in the past and how it inspires those in the future.

Mystery

The Hand on the Wall (Truly Devious, #3)

The Hand on the Wall by Maureen Johnson

The third and final book in the Truly Devious series and it does not disappoint. There are answers to those pesky questions plus resolutions that feel real and appropriate for all involved. It has wonderful mystery and intrigue but also great mental illness representation and that Johnson charm and wit that I’ve come to expect from all her books.

Debut Author

The Library of Lost ThingsThe Library of Lost Things by Laura Taylor Namey

This isn’t the most enjoyable book but it does explore the life of a bookworm and the secretive ways she tries to hide her mother’s hoarding from being discovered by anyone. For a debut it has promise but there wasn’t a real hook to grab me and while there is a romance of sorts it wasn’t developed enough to raise my interest. A good premise and with the temptation of books and reading I expected more but sadly it was an average execution.

Own Voices

Love From A to Z

Love From A to Z by S.K Ali

This is such a cute story that combines two worlds that are similar but the same and brings them together in an unexpected way. The dual narration was fun and I loved how it could be simple and sweet but also tackle larger issues with ease. The diary entry format helps break up the two voices and it was such a fun way to read the story. There’s big issues like family, religion, illness and love, but there’s also the fun smaller things as well, not to mention two fantastic characters who are just simply adorable.

Fairytale Retelling

Fairytales for Feisty Girls

Fairytales for Feisty Girls by Susannah McFarlane

These retellings were creative and enjoyable and while there are so many retellings for al the well known tales already, these stories still managed to be unique and be surprising. The famous fairytale characters we meet have new skills and talents and a certain feistiness that means they are certainly going to play out differently than the expected stories we know so well.

Free Choice

Once & Future (Once & Future #1)

Once & Future by A.R Capetta

King Arthur in space was all I needed to know to get my hands on this book. It is a masterful retelling and I loved Capetta’s genius mind for conceptualising this entire thing because while it is so clearly a retelling of Arthur when you see the clues and plot points, it is also so not a typical Arthur retelling and I loved that. There’s diversity in characters and fantastic representation, the futuristic world is brilliantly created and there is enough action, drama and medieval fighting to satisfy everybody.

Finish A Series

Cinder (The Lunar Chronicles, #1)

The Lunar Chronicles by Marissa Meyer

It’s a small miracle but I actually finally finished this series after it has been on my list and on my bingos for so many years it’s actually shameful at this point. Meyer’s world is masterfully created and the traditional characters we know are there but are taken and turned into something else entirely while still seeing their recognisable origins. There is romance and action, drama, tension and so many wonderfully intricate and complex plots that I was amazed at how it all fit together. It was a delight to finally finish this series but it was pure joy to read in the first place.

On TBR Pile

The Lightning Thief (Percy Jackson and the Olympians, #1)

The Lightning Thief by Rick Riordan

This has been on my list for so long and it is so incredible I can’t believe it’s taken me until now to read. The Greek myth retelling is phenomenal, the action is divine, the writing is incredibly clever and from page one I was sucked into this world where I never wanted to leave. I can only plan now to inhale the rest of the series because I want to keep experiencing the high I had while I read because I adored it so much.

Romantic Suspense

Charlotte Pass

Charlotte Pass by Lee Christine

A fantastic romantic suspense that has great mystery, great characters, and a setting where anything could happen both romantically and nefariously. The Australian setting was familiar and Christine has done a great job building a fictitious world around a real Australian location and real events through history while adding her own criminal twist.

Movie Adaptation

The Sun Is Also a Star

The Sun is also a Star by Nicola Yoon

There is something wonderful about books that take place within a single day. The hour by hour events and lives of characters makes you realise how much can happen and change within the space of a day. This is a great story about finding yourself, fighting for your rights and fulfilling dreams, whatever they may be. I loved the two main characters and I love the big important issues they tackle, the passions and the dreams they have and how Yoon has created such complicated and flawed characters that they felt complete.

Gay MC

Heartstopper: Volume One (Heartstopper, #1)

Heartstopper by Alice Oseman

This entire three book graphic novel set is all kinds of wonderful but the first one is where it all begins. Charlie and Nick are adorable, and seeing their beginnings and their relationship grow is pure and wholesome and perfect. There are issues explored about bullying, mental health and other things but there is so much heart as well that you can’t help but love every one of these characters.

Historical

Pennies for Hitler (Hitler Trilogy, #2)

Pennies for Hitler by Jackie French

This was a heartfelt and emotional book as you follow Georg’s story and hear how his country is changing around him. French knows her historical stories and you are definitely transported into Germany just prior to the war and feel each of the fears and terrors as they unfold.

 

Classic

The Animals of Farthing WoodAnimals of Farthing Wood by Colin Dann

Another book I have been wanting to read forever. It was a great story and one that the TV show followed quite closely. The long trek to safety is full of danger and slightly depressing as animals die but it plays into the realism. Dann puts us in the minds of these animals and how they see the human world around them by keeping them natural with natural instincts but also giving them a bit of awareness about human behaviour.

 

What I Like About Me by Jenna Guillame

Published: 26th February 2019Goodreads badge
Publisher:
Pan Australia
Pages: 256
Format: Paperback
Genre: Young Adult
★   ★   ★   ★   ★ – 5 Stars

You know all those movies where teenagers have, like, THE SUMMER OF THEIR LIVES?

This summer is probably not going to be that.

Source: Everything that’s happened since yesterday…

The last thing sixteen-year-old Maisie Martin thought she’d be doing this summer is entering a beauty pageant.  Not when she’s spent most of her life hiding her body from everyone. Not when her Dad is AWOL for Christmas and her gorgeous older sister has returned to rock Maisie’s shaky confidence. And her best friend starts going out with the boy she’s always loved.

But Maisie’s got something to prove.

As she writes down all the ways this summer is going from bad to worse in her school-assignment journal, what starts as a homework torture-device might just end up being an account of how Maisie didn’t let anything, or anyone, hold her back.

There has only been a handful of times that I’ve known I was giving a book five stars before I had even finished it and this is one of those times. I think I had decided in the first chapter that I loved this book. I love this book because it is simple, full of heart, full of growing up and friendships, not to mention that is felt real from page one through to the very end.

This story is the epitome of teen behaviour, teen angst, teen impulse and teen support. Guillaume has captured the voice so well that you felt like these characters were real life teenagers living their lives in front of you. Doing that and doing that well creates a story that is believable and has a powerful impact on how you interpret a story. When you have a good voice you’re able to be caught up in the events rather than cringing constantly by bad dialogue and Guillaume has excelled.

The family dynamics explored were wonderful in that they were complicated and not perfect. There is no perfect sister relationship and the fact that Maisie often feels like a side character in her own family was really interesting. I loved how the parent relationship is shown too; through a kid’s eyes there is always going to be a limited perspective and coupled with Guillaume’s choice of formatting it allows for a lot more personal interpretation and unease.  

The diary format allows Guillaume to mess with form and fill in details in a creative way and use a casual voice and casual language. It is also a great way to capture Maisie’s voice as she is the one telling the story. This means the events described are already edited by herself and with her own bias and naivety included which adds drama and tension. 

The romance element was absolutely adorable and I did guess it but only just in time and it was even better because it confirmed what I wanted to happen which honestly is the best result to get. It is incredibly sweet but there is another focus on friendship and traditions with friends too which was fantastic. The strange relationships you have with friends you see once a year but have been doing so for most of your life.

One of the reasons why I loved this book from start to finish was that it felt real, it always felt real and believable. It doesn’t try to live up to the United States kind of summer which goes for three months and the goal is always to have “the perfect summer experience”. This is a week over Christmas and New Year and it is exactly what I know and can relate to, going to a small coastal town for a holiday and seeing the same people you always see on that holiday but with a chance of meeting new people along the way.

It is fun, a delight to read, but it is filled with heart too that can hit your emotions all over the place. A favourite book from the first few pages and it stayed that way right until the end. 

You can purchase What I Like About Me via the following

Booktopia | Book Depository

DymocksFishpond | Amazon | Amazon Aust

Stormy: A Story About Finding A Forever Home by Guojing

Published: 17th September 2019Goodreads badge
Publisher:
Schwartz & Wade
Illustrator: Guojing
Pages: 34
Format: Picture Book
★   ★   ★   ★   ★  – 5 Stars

In this wordless picture book a woman visits a park and discovers a pup hiding under a bench–scruffy, scared, and alone. With gentle coaxing, the woman tries to befriend the animal, but the dog is too scared to let her near. Day after day, the woman tries–and day after day, the dog runs away. With perseverance and patience–and help from an enticing tennis ball–a tentative friendship begins. 

Why do I keep reading bittersweet books about abandoned dogs?! Honestly it is a real problem. Finding forever homes for little sad and lonely dogs breaks my heart but apparently I don’t mind always crying at the end of these books and getting emotional in the middle of these books and sad before I have even begun these books. And it turns out now I don’t even need text to do it.

This story is part of my new favourite type of picture book: one filled with stunning illustrations and no text whatsoever. The entire story is told in pictures and you do not need words to know what is happening. Whether this is to show the events from Stormy’s silent perspective or because Guojing’s illustrations have enough emotion and intent in them to make words redundant I’m not sure but it 100% works.

I cannot stress how divine these illustrations are. Guojing has done a brilliant job in showing emotion and scale, as well as the environment and how it reflects mood. Some pages are broken up into panels like a comic book which acts like stills from a movie so you can see the events, but others are stunning full pages . I was captivated as I “read” because as you study the images you know the story and can understand what is happening. Filled with the colours of nature and beautiful drawings I wanted to hang these pictures on my wall as well as become melancholic about them.

Of course there is a happily ever after because Guojing isn’t allowed to make us feel those emotions with no reward. But it is just another example of how beautiful storytelling not only can be wordless, but can be about real stories and full of heart.

You can purchase Stormy via the following

 Booktopia | Book Depository

Wordery | Fishpond | Amazon | Amazon Aust

 

The Gentleman’s Guide to Getting Lucky (#1.5) by Mackenzi Lee

Published: 26th November 2019Goodreads badge
Publisher:
Katherine Tegen Books
Pages: 128
Format: Paperback
Genre: Young Adult
★   ★   ★   ★   ★ – 5 Stars

In this funny and frothy novella that picks up where the New York Times bestselling The Gentleman’s Guide to Vice and Virtue leaves off, freshly minted couple Monty and Percy fumble through their first time together.

Monty’s epic grand tour may be over, but now that he and Percy are finally a couple, he realizes there is something more nerve-wracking than being chased across Europe: getting together with the person you love.

Will the romantic allure of Santorini make his first time with Percy magical, or will all the anticipation and build-up completely spoil the mood? 

It was a complete shame I didn’t get to read this as an audiobook because I am still living off the high that those books gave me. Instead I had to read it myself but I had all those wonderful voices stored in my head so I could re-enact it as I went along.

There is so much to love about this novella. Not only the further adventures of Monty and Percy, but the joy of seeing them trying to navigate their new relationship in all its awkward and blushing glory.

Narrative wise it is amazing. There are actual proper conversations about feelings and insecurities, not to mention an overflowing display from these two emotional boys who adore one another. The premise of trying to progress their relationship is dealt with in a fun but respectful manner. Lee has already established these characters are flawed but wonderful and seeing the exploration about love and waiting, and the amount of self-reflection about this entire endeavour was so refreshing and I loved that Lee took the time to do that.

Once again Monty steals the show. Monty who is broken but healing, who is insecure but is trying his hardest. His character growth in Gentleman’s Guide was incredible but is clearly hasn’t stopped. There are heartbreaking lines like “Why do you think everyone needs some sort of recompense for being around you?” which crushed my soul, but there is also a lot of the fun and jovial nature we’ve seen between Monty and Percy as well.

This is truly not in a younger YA scope because Monty is not entirely shy about describing various parts of Percy that he enjoys. Considering this novella’s entire premise is trying to find the right time and a bit of alone time to finally be together it is more suited to older readers.

This story also contains new characters which bring their own fun and help set the mood. Felicity makes an appearance as well, Monty’s fabulous sister who deals spectacularly with her brother. I mentioned this in my review of the second book but her character around Monty is divine and I loved seeing the sarcasm and sibling interactions once more.

This is a relatively quick read but there is an emotional depth and a detailed story throughout. With new places and people to introduce their introductions are woven into the narrative well so there is no unnecessary clunky exposition. The blending of a Santorini adventure alongside trying to navigate your own emotions and relationship is juxtaposed wonderfully. I honestly could read about the Montague family forever, no matter how trivial their lives or adventures may be.

You can purchase The Gentleman’s Guide to Getting Lucky via the following

QBD | Booktopia | Book Depository

Dymocks | WorderyAngus and Robinson

 Fishpond | Amazon | Amazon Aust

AWW Update

This update includes all the AWW books I have read so far this year. Ideally I would have broken this up into three posts but so I don’t create too many out of place posts I’ve added them into one. There will still be the last update and final wrap up in December though. Looking at the list I have once again come out of the gate with a bang, then the April-June slump is to be expected but not a bad effort there, and as we head back on track with July-September it is a tad directionless but still some good titles in there. I am hoping I can actively direct my reading back to Aussie women, the last few months have only caught AWW titles around the edges, I’m aiming for some intentional reading for the final quarter.

Reviews obviously are behind but I have a lot of these coming up over the next few weeks so hopefully that will boost my review numbers significantly.

January-March

Fairytales for Feisty Girls by Susannah McFarlane

Growing Up Queer in Australia ed Benjamin Lee – Review

Summer Time by Hilary Bell

Goodwood by Holly Throsby – Review

A Day at the Show by Gwyn Perkins – Review

Just the Way We Are by Jessica Shirvington – Review

Shout out to the Girls Review

Meerkat Choir by Nicki Greenberg – Review

Celeste the Giraffe Loved to Laugh by Celeste Barber – Review

Charlotte Pass by Lee Christine

Wundersmith by Jessica Townsend

The Mistake by Wendy James

Meet Me at the Intersection ed Rebecca Lim

Welcome to Orphancorp by Marlee Jane Ward

Clancy the Quokka by Lilli Wilkinson – Review

Star Crossed by Minnie Darke – Review

A Trip to the Beach by Gwyn Perkins

Graffiti Moon by Cath Crowley

Cocaine Blues by Kerry Greenwood

Faking It (#2) by Gabrielle Tozer – Review

April-June

The Ex by Nicola Moriarty

Those Other Women Nicola Moriarty

The Incredible Adventures of Cinnamon Girl by Melissa Keil

What I Like About Me by Jenna Guillaume

The Anzac Bilby by Claire Saxby

The Easter Bunnyroo by Susannah Chambers

Archibald the Naughtiest Elf in the World Causes Trouble for the Easter Bunny by Skye Davidson

Ten Things I Hate About Me by Randa Abdel-Fattah

Before You Forget by Julia Lawrinson – Review

July-September

Queer Stories ed. Maeve Marsden

Ella and the Ocean by Lian Tanner

My Friend Fred by Frances Watts

Blinky Bill: The Quaint Little Australian by Dorothy Wall

Blinky Bill Grows Up by Dorothy Wall

Blinky Bill and Nutsy by Dorothy Wall

AWW20 TOTAL

Read: 35/40

Reviewed: 11/35

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