Tag: tbr

  • November Book Haul

    Well, a lot of books made it on my book haul list and are now on my TBR shelves. Hope all of you had a wonderful and grateful Thanksgiving. Happy Holiday to all. Remember to Like, Comment, Share, and Subscribe.

  • God of Malice — Rina Kent (Legacy of Gods #1)

    A Techie Scrapper Story & Scrap book review: dark romance, elite drama, and a world bigger than my TBR pile

    CAWPILE Rating: 3.6
    Spice: I’m calling it a 3/5 on my Sierra Simone, New Camelot Trilogy (American Queen/Prince/King) yardstick. Heat is present early and often, but it’s not the most incendiary trilogy-level inferno. If you’re here for angsty chemistry + dark edges, box checked.
    Premise: Mafia meets British Posh, enemies-to-lovers
    Pacing: 553 pages that were a steady-paced read.  The final act felt rushed, as if some connective scenes had been moved to companion books. It’s readable; it just leaves you suspecting the “missing pieces” live elsewhere in the universe.

    Reading Dates: Started 03 October 2025 / Completed 15 October 2025

    Libby Listening Time: 15 hours : 25 Minutes
    Heads-up: Check the trigger warnings (seriously). Knowing the parents’ books helps a lot.

    Synopsis: “God of Malice” is the first book in the Legacy of Gods series by Rina Kent. It toes the line between romance, suspense, and dark obsession. The premise revolves around Killian Carson, a brilliant, dangerous, emotionally detached medical student with mafia and sociopath tendencies.  There is Glyndon (Glyn) King, a quiet, talented artist, constantly measured against her famous family.  An artist whose life is unraveling. This is due to how she feels about her place in her family and a close male friend unaliving himself.  They shouldn’t mix; of course, they do. Expect obsession, secrecy, and territorial tension. The power imbalance is pronounced. If fragile-heroine/alpha-hero pairings aren’t your jam, tread carefully. If you enjoy morally gray energy and messy attractions, you’ll be fed.

    You get a feel of this when the story opens with them crossing paths on that cliff, it becomes a twisted dance of desire, power, and the suppression of darker impulses, leading to an awakening.

    The World (It’s…huge).  Rina Kent’s universe is expansive—think more than 34 interconnected titles spanning series like Royal Elite, Kingdom Duet, Lies & Truth, Throne/Thorn, and company.  The Legacy of Gods focuses on the kids of prominent couples from earlier books.

    God of Malice is marketed as a standalone within the arc, but let’s keep it real: going in cold is like opening the last book of Harry Potter and trying to bluff your way through the family tree. You can track the plot, but the emotional echoes (especially between parents) are richer if you’ve sampled the earlier pairings.  My point is that if you’re new to Kent, at least start with the books about the parents.  If you choose not to go this way, then for sure start with God of Malice, since it introduces all of the children.

    Characterization:

    Glendon grows from closed-off to more self-voiced. I wouldn’t label her a classic “strong heroine,” but she does claim space by the end. Killian (“Kill”)…well, Rina Kent warns us early: there’s no soft redemption arc. Whether you buy any late-book softening will depend on how much of the larger world you’ve read.  Kent clearly posts trigger warnings. Read them first. Some beats will not be for every reader, and that’s okay.

    Should You Read It?  Yes, if you enjoy:

    • Dark romance with mafia threads
    • Enemies-to-lovers tension
    • Interconnected families and legacy drama
    • High-heat scenes with ethical grayness

    Maybe skip/prepare if:

    • Power-imbalanced dynamics frustrate you
    • You prefer self-contained standalones with minimal outside lore
    • Triggering content is a concern (check warnings first)

    Reading Order Tip (for Newcomers). If you want maximum payoff:

    • Start with God of Malice (since you’re here).
    • Then sample the parents’ stories (e.g., the King line, the Knights, etc.).
    • Return to the rest of Legacy of Gods with that context in your pocket.

    You’ll recognize names, grudges, and alliances when they reappear, and the late-book cameos will click harder.

    What’s Next on My Nightstand

    I will be circling back to Zodiac Academy: The Awakening (Book 1). I don’t DNF books I’ve bought—old-school rule, modern budget. Pray for my time management.

    Final Word

    God of Malice is dark, dramatic, and unashamedly extra—a gateway into a sprawling world where legacy carries teeth. Go in eyes-open about the warnings, expect elite-vs-mafia friction, and decide how much backlist lore you want to bring to the party. If that sounds like your brand of chaos, you’ll have a good time.


  • Currently Reading in October

    God of Malice by Rina Kent

    God of Malice is the first book I am reading in October. It is also my first Rina Kent read. Defiantly be aware of the trigger warnings. Below is my YouTube video. Like…Comment…Share…Subscribe.

  • TJR Continues to Have Me in My Feelings

    June Book Review of “Atmosphere” written by Taylor Jenkins Reid

    Well, we are the stars”, Joan said. “And the stars are us. Every atom in our bodies was once part of the universe. Was once a part of them. To look at the night sky is to look at pars of who you once were, who you may one day be.” Quote by TJR

    Book Started: 13 June 25

    Book Completed: 20 June 25

    Total Pages Read: 337

    Total Libby Listening Time: 9 hours and 40 minutes.

    Overall Star Rating out of 5 stars: ★★★★½ (4.5/5)

    Goodreads Book Synopsis:

    TJR authors another epic new novel set against the backdrop of the 1980s Space Shuttle program about the extraordinary lengths we go to live and love beyond our limits. Joan Goodwin has been obsessed with the stars for as long as she can remember. Thoughtful and reserved, Joan is content with her life as a professor of physics and astronomy at Rice University and as aunt to her precocious niece, Frances. That is, until she comes across an advertisement seeking the first women scientists to join NASA’s Space Shuttle program. Suddenly, Joan burns to be one of the few people to go to space.

    Selected from a pool of thousands of applicants in the summer of 1980, Joan begins training at Houston’s Johnson Space Center, alongside an exceptional group of fellow candidates: Top Gun pilot Hank Redmond and scientist John Griffin, who are kind and easy-going even when the stakes are highest; mission specialist Lydia Danes, who has worked too hard to play nice; warm-hearted Donna Fitzgerald, who is navigating her secrets; and Vanessa Ford, the magnetic and mysterious aeronautical engineer, who can fix any engine and fly any plane.  As the new astronauts become unlikely friends and prepare for their first flights, Joan finds a passion and a love she never imagined. In this new light, Joan begins to question everything she thinks she knows about her place in the observable universe. Then, in December of 1984, on mission STS-LR9, everything changed in an instant. Fast-paced, thrilling, and emotional, Atmosphere is Taylor Jenkins Reid at her best: transporting readers to iconic times and places, with complex protagonists, telling an enthusiastic and soaring story about the transformative power of love, this time among the stars.

    My Review:

    Because the world had decided that to be soft was to be weak, even though in Joan’s experience being soft and flexible was always more durable than being hard and brittle. Admitting you were afraid always took more gut than pretending you weren’t. Being willing to make a mistake got you further than never trying. The world had decided that to be fallible was weak. But we are all fallible. The strong ones are the ones who accept it.” Quote by TJR

    As a young child, I was always fascinated by Space and NASA. When NASA decided to open its program to minorities, it was a momentous day for me as a Black female. I used to watch the launches at school because they were always such a huge deal and cool to watch. I say all of this because this is why I chose to read this newest book by TJR.

    The book begins in the present, with some of our primary and supporting characters on their first space mission. Then the book flashes back to the past. It’s the past flashbacks that allow you to get a better understanding of what is happening in the present. TJR draws you in and twists you all up in knots (in the best way possible). Her writing completely immerses you in the world. You ended up being so invested. Even her supporting characters are given enough teeth to have you in their world as well. TJR writing has you falling in love, and an unexpected twist leaves you heartbroken. I laughed and cried. I am still thinking about this story to the point that I watched the National Geographic documentary on Sally Ride called “Sally.”  This book was set during that same time. This book is also a work of historical fiction. The characters are fictional, but the story incorporates historical events. The book focused on females being selected into the NASA astronaut program.

    The character of Joan wasn’t the only carefully crafted character. Each character had such detail that their motivations and actions always felt true to who they were. TJR’s character development is also what made the love story so incredible. Without spoiling too much, let’s just say it wrecked me in the best way possible, and I would read a ten-part series just following their most mundane days. Heck, “Daisy Jones and the Six” and “The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo” still live rent-free in my mind. These were the first books I read when I started reading again.

    Mainly, this story is about love…forbidden love between Joan and Vanessa. TJR reminds us that the courage it takes to ignore societal pressure is just as brave as literally risking your life to go into space. Especially in a world that forces LGBTQ+ relationships to hide to preserve their careers, and women must prove themselves repeatedly just to get the opportunities men are handed, those still ring true, even 40 years after the book is set. This book goes far beyond the NASA Space program or being an astronaut; I think it served as the perfect backdrop for this story, which mirrored some truths during that time. The way TJR manages to make something as vast as space feel so accessible and even relatable is unbelievable.

    Final Thoughts:

    I hope, even more, that Joan Goodwin can convince you to go outside tonight, after the stars have come out, and look up. I hope, with all my heart, Joan can convince you to be open to wonder.” Quote by TJR.

    At the end of this story, I felt enlightened, sad, and hopeful. Love is Love. The right LOVE can heal and strengthen. I highly recommend this book; once again, Taylor Jenkins Reid books never disappoint. This book is still sitting with me. This book also includes Joan’s family. The dynamics between Joan and her baby sister Barbara. At times, you feel as if Joan is the mom and not the older sister. Then there is the relation between Joan and her niece Frances. If you did not know better, you would assume that Joan is Francis’s mom instead of Aunt. The way Joan cares for Francis and drops everything for Francis when she is either left or neglected by her mom, Barbara. Brought me to tears their relationship. She did all this while being an astronaut at NASA. Again, this book left me in my mood and I’m still there. Again, a MUST read.

  • Book Review: The Conditions of Will

    Book reviewed by Yvette

    The Conditions of Will by Jessa Hastings

     

    Author: Jessa Hastings
    Genre: Literary Fiction / Contemporary Fiction / Family Drama
    Themes: Grief, identity, family estrangement, addiction, legacy, love
    Rating: 4.75 out of 5

     

    The Setup

    Jessa Hastings trades the high-gloss world of Magnolia Parks for something quieter, more introspective, and deeply affecting in The Conditions of Will. The novel follows Georgia Carter, a 24-year-old lie-detection expert in London who called back to South Carolina after the death of her estranged father, Will Carter. The death is jarring, but what unravels from it is even more destabilizing—a surprise inheritance left to a stranger, a hidden side of her father, and the reopening of wounds the Carter family buried long ago.

     

    Character Deep Dive

    Georgia Carter is messy, smart, cynical, and emotionally layered. Her voice carries both biting wit and unflinching vulnerability as she tries to reckon with the version of herself that left the South—and the one who is forced to return.

    Oliver Carter, her brother, is battling addiction and haunted by their shared past, his storyline is both redemptive and tragic.

    Sam Penny, Oliver’s AA sponsor and Georgia’s complicated love interest, is not your typical romantic lead. He is soft, present, and understanding Aussie.  A man who listens, rather than saves. His presence is as healing as it is disruptive. 

    The rest of the Carter family especially the mother, Margaret, and siblings Maryanne and Tennyson are shades of resentment, denial, and slow-burning revelations.

     

    Plot & Pacing

    The story unfolds like a Southern summer—slow at first, then sticky with secrets. The pacing is measured, intentionally so. This is not a plot-heavy thriller, but a character study one that unearths buried truths at the precise moment the reader is ready for them.  The catalyst for much of the tension is Will Carter’s will, which bequeaths a lake house to a mysterious man named Alexis Beauchêne, a figure no one in the family has ever heard of. What follows is a slow-burning unraveling of Will’s hidden identity, Georgia’s past shame, and the real conditions—emotional, spiritual, personal—that define family.

     

    Themes & Emotion

    At its core, The Conditions of Will is about the legacy of silence.  What we do not say to the people we love, and the truths we withhold to survive our own stories. Hastings beautifully explores:

    • Grief and estrangement
    • The illusion of the “ideal” Southern family
    • Addiction and recovery
    • Queerness and generational shame
    • Feminine rage and forgiveness

    Hastings does not shy away from tough questions: What do we owe to family? Can love and harm exist in the same space? What happens when someone you loved turns out to have lived a life you never truly knew?

     

    If you love:

    • Multi-layered family drama
    • Emotionally intelligent romance
    • LGBTQ+ representation handled with care
    • Stories about women coming back home to reclaim their power
    • Southern Gothic settings without the ghosts, but all the haunting

    This book is for you.

    My Final Thoughts:

    The Conditions of Will is not a book you race through. It is one you linger in. I found myself stopping the audio several times to reflect and even to highlight or annotate in the book.  It is a literary meditation on the quiet violence of secrets and the soft redemption of being seen. Hastings proves herself not just as a romance writer, but as a true literary voice.  This story can be seen and reflected in many families.  Parents DO have favorites whether they admit it or not.  Worse is when parents actually voice or favor that child(ren) over the other.  What that does to the child impacts either positively or negatively for a lifetime.  To grow up in a world when not even your parents will help or love you or even ask how you are doing in the world.  The story made me sad as a inner child and as a parent.  Read with caution but READ the book.  It’s worth it.