Bookoplathon TBR

This month I decided to join in on Bookoplathon! I decided to do 6 rolls and made my way around the board and built my TBR for September through the prompts that I landed on. Unfortunately I rolled a couple doubles so I ended up with 9 rolls.

My TBR for Bookoplathon is:

Dice Roll Roulette (7 so between 325-374 pages) – The Night Swim by Megan Goldin

Favourite Setting – The Last Graduate by Naomi Novik

Autumn – Chain of Gold by Cassandra Clare

Multi Perspective – King of Scars by Leigh Bardugo

Big Book – The Rage of Dragons by Evan Winter

Community Shelf ( A Yellow Cover) – Recursion by Blake Crouch

Spring – Wild is the Witch by Rachel Griffin

Published/Set 2000-2019 – The Shadow of the Wind by Carlos Ruiz Zafon

Chance – House of Sky and Breath by Sarah J Maas

August Wrap Up

This month Im pretty happy with what I completed! I wanted to try and finish 10 books but I’ve been a little slumpy this last week so I’m giving myself a bit of a break from pushing myself to read.

Slewfoot: A Tale of Bewitchery by Brom⭐️4/5 stars

Feed Them Silence by Lee Mandelo⭐️3/5 stars

Master of Iron by Tricia Levenseller⭐️2/5 stars

The It Girl by Ruth Ware⭐️3/5 stars

Into the Riverlands by Nghi Vo⭐️4/5 stars

Just Like Home by Sarah Gailey⭐️3/5 stars

Crooked Kingdom by Leigh Bardugo⭐️4/5 stars

Vicious Spirits by Kat Cho⭐️2/5 stars

Books with School/University Settings

Once again it’s Top Ten Tuesday time friends! 

Here are 10 books I’ve read in the last year or so that have a school/college/university setting:

The It Girl by Ruth Ware

I Kissed Shara Wheeler by Casey McQuiston

The Atlas Six by Olivie Blake (kinda)

All’s Well by Mona Awad

We Ride Upon Sticks by Quan Barry

The Monarchs by Kass Morgan & Danielle Paige

Where the Drowned Girls Go by Seanan McGuire

In My Dreams I Hold a Knife by Ashley Winstead

For Your Own Good by Samantha Downing

The Maidens by Alex Michaelides

Library Haul

It’s been a couple months now since I’ve done a library haul!! I haven’t been doing the best in terms of actually reading most of the books that I borrow from the library so I am going to try and get to a few of them in the coming weeks at least!

Vicious Spirits Review

Miyoung and Jihoon are picking up the pieces of their broken lives following the deaths of Miyoung’s mother, Yena, and Jihoon’s grandmother. With the support of their friend Somin, and their frenemy, Junu, they might just have a shot at normalcy. But Miyoung is getting sicker and sicker by the day and her friends don’t know how to save her. With few options remaining, Junu has an idea but it might require the ultimate sacrifice and, let’s be honest, Junu isn’t known for his “generosity.”

The characters just didn’t seem to evolve and learn from everything that happened in the first book. It was just this never-ending cycle of each of them trying to protect each other and then getting mad that the other person was doing the protecting. They all read a lot younger than what they actually were and their conversations just didn’t seem believable or realistic to me. These are supposed to be 18-19 year old’s and yet they continue to act like angsty adolescents.

I didn’t like the fact that Somin and Junu fall in ‘love’ so quickly. Usually I don’t mind a hate to love trope but this felt so rushed and juvenile to me. Somin as a character was kind of annoying, she just took on way too much for her to handle and would put everyone else and their feelings above her own. I liked the fact that Junu called her out on this and just told her to chill out

Miyoung and Jihoon didn’t really change at all from the first book either. Even though so many traumatic things have happened to them they just seem to stay the same. I didn’t really understand why Miyoung was still holding on to her mother, from what I can remember from the first book I thought she treated her horribly and isolated her from anyone her age. I understand that it would still be traumatizing to loose the one person you depended on the most but that whole plotline didn’t really make sense to me until the end.

I still quite enjoy the lore and myths surrounding the Dokkaebi and learning all about Junu’s background and how he became one. Also learning about the Sansin and the Reapers were also really interesting to find out about. There just wasn’t enough action to keep me entertained throughout the book. The pacing was up and down and there were periods of time where all the characters were just sitting around waiting and it wasn’t very enjoyable.

⭐️2/5 stars the characters just didn’t do it for me