🌻 June Reviews 🏖️
June 1st-30th
Another incredible month of reading. I cannot believe the amount of great books I have found this year so far. During June, I read 15 books with a total of 3649 pages.
By Emily Tesh
Read June 1st
Pages: 112
Release Year: 2019
Book 89: Stung with Love: Poems and Fragments
By Sappho
Read June 3rd
Pages: 95
Release Year: -550
By Olivia Waite
Read June 5th
Pages: 103
Release Year: 2025
By Shannon Chakraborty
Read June 7th-9th
Pages: 496
Release Year: 2023
By Marco Ventura
Read June 10th
Pages: 160
Release Year: 2025
It follows an older man named Ned who has been having problems with his memory. He is a retired literature teacher who lacks excitement in his life other than when his grandchildren come to visit. Each night he loves to tell them bedtime stories, but they always fall asleep before he can finish them. On the night of the story, he goes to sleep and wakes up in his own fantasy world. Adventures ensue.
The illustrations are stunning and bring this imaginative story to life. Ned reminded me quite a bit of Carl from Up. This is as story filled with a lot of emotions and I love how they are reflected in the fantasy world Ned has created. Really shows how an author can reflect so much of what they are feeling in their writing. I love how it shows the importance of imagination and how adults can keep the joys of it in their lives. Such a beautiful message for younger and older readers alike.
I highly recommend this book.
*Thank you NetGalley and the publisher for my ARC of this book. All opinions are my own.*
By Allison Ashley
Read June 10th-11th
Pages: 314
Release Year: 2025
By Amal El-Mohtar
Read June 12th
Pages: 133
Release Year: 2025
I highly recommend the audiobook which has music performed by Amal and her sister, Dounya El-Mohtar and the words sung by the narrator. The audiobook is one of the best I've listened to in a long time. It is just so special to have two sisters help narrating a story that is all about a sisterly bond. Beautiful!
This tale was the perfect length. I am looking forward to reading more of Amal's writing.
Hekate is a character that I enjoy quite a bit from mythology since she is the Goddess of Witches among many other things. I did not know much of her backstory before she becomes the formidable Goddess I have come to love in stories. Nikita uses her beautiful lines of verse and prose to tell Hekate’s story.
We see Hekate from a young girl and see her coming of age story in this book. It was interesting to read another book about a daughter of Titans from their own perspective, there aren’t many of them. Many Greek Myth stories focus on the Olympians. Hekate’s story includes many famous events we have come to know from Greek Mythology, such as: the Titanomachy (the war between the Titans and the Gods), among so many others. I enjoyed reading about these from Hekate’s perspective as she comes into her powers.
This is a wonderful book for fans of Greek Mythology, novels written in verse, and powerful female stories. There were so many quotes I highlighted in my eARC of this book. Nikita’s writing shines. I will definitely be adding Hekate to my collection when it comes out and look forward to the rest of the series.
*Thank you to NetGalley and the publisher for my ARC of this book. All opinions are my own.*
By Ireen Chau
Read June 16th-18th
Pages: 424
Release Year: 2021
By Oliver Darkshire
Read June 19th
Pages: 256
Release Year: 2025
This story made me think of a Terry Pratchett book in the way it was written, though it was never as funny as his books are. I would rather reread a Discworld book.
The story kept me invested and wanting to know what would happen with Isabella and I quite liked the world-building. The book entries were a clever way of giving various information. My favorite part of this book was the grimalkin. When I saw there was a talking cat-like creature in this book, I knew I had to read it.
*Thank you to the publisher and NetGalley for my ARC of the book. All opinions are my own.*
By Terry Pratchett, Ian Stewart, Jack Cohen
Read June 20th-22nd
Pages: 368
Release Year: 2013
By T. Kingfisher
Read June 23rd-25th
Pages: 368
Release Year: 2025
📚📚📚📚📚
I enjoyed reading about the mirror world and learning about it along with Anja. The mystery of what was going on with Snow was intriguing and I love where T. Kingfisher took this tale. Such an interesting twist! She always has such interesting twists on classic tales and I look forward to reading even more of her books.
There was a great amount of mystery, some darker elements, and a cute romance. It was utterly perfect and I cannot recommend it enough.
*Thank you very much to the publisher, T. Kingfisher, Goodreads, and NetGalley for my physical and eARC of this book. All opinions are my own.*
By Cristin O'Keefe Aptowiz
Read June 26th
Pages: 102
Release Year: 2011
This is my third time reading this book. The first was about thirteen years ago. I had just started college and related to so many of the poems. Over a decade later, I find myself connecting to it on a different level.
My life is very different. I've dealt with heartbreak in ways I could have never imagined at eighteen. It's always interesting to pick up a book you loved years before and see how you feel about it now. See how the experiences you have had affect your enjoyment of it.
Cristin O'Keefe Aptowicz has many poems in this collection which made me laugh and one that made me tear up. I love the stories she is able to tell in her lines of verse. The emotions she is able to express in such a small amount of space.
It is not my favorite poetry collection anymore as it was when I was eighteen, but it brings me back to that moment in time. There are so many poems which stand out in this collection, which all show a range of emotions and topics. Ones about her parents, love, friendship, and even someone stealing the family lawn gnome (a personal favorite of mine).
It was a great experience coming back to this collection again.
September 2017 reread:
This was a re-read for me of this poetry collection. When I read it again, it made me remember how much I enjoyed reading it over five years ago. It was in my first year of college and the topics she wrote about were very relatable for me. I connected with Cristin then and I continue to connect with her now. There are many poems in this collection that I have read multiple times over the years since I had first read it: "Mother," "Father," "Lit; Or to the Scientist Whom I’m Not Speaking to Anymore", "Science," and especially "Ode to the Person Who Stole My Family's Lawn Gnome".
I have read plenty of poetry collections, whether that be through a college class or in my own free time but I have not connected to a poet like I have this. I adore poetry, writing and reading it and this is a collection that I know I will get something out of everytime I read it.
Cristin writes about love, heartbreak, family, and even about someone who stole something very important to her. The poems are funny and also heartbreakingly sad.
As a poet myself, I enjoy analyzing poems for their content and as a reader, I love the stories that she can create.
I will be picking up more of Cristin's poetry collections, hopefully soon.
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