WWW Wednesday—July 1, 2026

WWW Wednesdays Logo

This meme was formerly hosted by MizB at A Daily Rhythm and revived on Taking on a World of Words—and shown to me by Aurore-Anne-Chehoke at Diary-of-a-black-city-girl.

The Three Ws are:
What are you currently reading?
What did you recently finish reading?
What do you think you’ll read next?

Seems easy enough, right? Let’s take a peek at this week’s answers:

What are you currently reading?

Cover of Eyes of Empire by JCM Berne Cover for True Romance edited by Troy Lambert & Vincent Zandri
Eyes of the Empire
by JCM Berne
True Romance: A Noir Anthology
edited by Troy Lambert & Vincent Zandri

Berne wastes no time in getting Rohan over his head with trouble in Book 5. And I’ve barely started it–I fear for our friendly neighborhood Tow Chief.

I’ve got myself another anthology to work through for the next few weeks. It started off with a bang, and I hope that continues.

What did you recently finish reading?

Cover of The Shadow Carver by Nadine Matheson Cover of Whack Job by Rachel McCarthy James
The Shadow Carver
by Nadine Matheson
Whack Job: A History of Axe Murder
by Rachel McCarthy James, read by Jennifer Pickens

This might be Matheson’s best yet–it’s at least comparable to her debut, which knocked my socks off. I lost sleep (some) and writing time (plenty) to this one.

James’ book didn’t live up to the humor or brilliance promised. It was on the bloody side, so I’ll give them that. Really, I finished it because I didn’t have anything else downloaded or want to start something so late in the work week (my employer is giving some bonus days off for the holiday).

What do you think you’ll read next?

Cover of Killer Vibes by Jack Friday Cover of The Patient by Tim Sullivan
Killer Vibes
by Jack Friday
The Patient
by Tim Sullivan, read by Finlay Robertson

I’m looking forward to meeting the supposed “laziest private investigator in Texas.” I expect he’s not, but it sounds like a fun contrast to those who are driven to action.

I’m taking a few days off work, so I’m not listening to any audiobooks over them. I think I’ll start with the third DS Cross book next week (barring a Library hold coming in and reprioritizing things)

What kinds of things are you reading to celebrate the holiday this weekend? (or read while you, like your furry companions, are avoiding the bombardment)

Highlights from May: Lines Worth Repeating

Under a picture of someone highlighting lines in a book, the words: 'Highlights of the Month: Lines Worth Repeating'
This is a few weeks late–but I think these lines are worth it.

Personally, this was one of the more enjoyable lists to compile in this series. Hope I’m not alone.

Cover of Cherry Baby by Rainbow Rowell

Cherry Baby by Rainbow Rowell

The tears on Cherry’s cheeks were fat.

In the months after Tom left—and the months after it became clear that he wasn’t coming home—Cherry’s tears had changed.

There were days when her eyes felt so full, the tears ran in rivulets. She’d swear that crying had never felt that way before—that before, she’d cried drops, and now, she cried streams. There must be some science to it, one sort of crying for transient pains and another sort for crippling grief.

Cherry should mind her own business… But the point of holidays—the point of family—was to mind everyone’s business.

A fat girl can’t wait for boys to pluck her like a flower or find her on the beach like a seashell.

Cherry had never been Cinderella. She’d always been the prince chasing down what she wanted. (She’d been a witch, enchanting apples.) She’d had to reach for things. For love. For attention.

Cherry had trusted Tom. She’d taken him for granted—she’d thought that she was supposed to. She’d believed they were a settled question.


Cover of We Solve Murders by Richard Osman

We Solve Murders by Richard Osman

“If someone does try to shoot me this week, do you have to dive in front of the bullet?”

“That’s the idea,” says Amy, without conviction. “Though that’s mainly in films.”

It’s hard to dive in front of a bullet, in Amy’s experience. They go very fast indeed.


Cover of The Frame-Up by Gwenda Bond

The Frame Up by Gwenda Bond

Memory was a House that always seemed to win, rewriting history for either maximum escape or maximum pain.

When she took the dog to the local shelter, they’d said, “Her owner died. We can’t keep her from escaping, she’s a Houdini.”

“Is it a kill shelter?” she’d asked, a last-ditch. It had been.

So then she had a dog.

Yet, in the lowest, quietest moments of life, a dog made you feel redeemable. If a dog loved you, you must not be all bad.


Cover of Out Law by Jim Butcher

Out Law by Jim Butcher

…relax, kid,” Bear said quietly. “I’ve been doing this a long, long time. I’m better at avoiding trouble than most. And if I can’t, I can at least promise you a glorious death.”

Fitz grimaced at her and said, “I know you mean that to be reassuring.”

Bear grinned. “Like the wizard said—this is the job, kid. Make peace with it.”

I’ve been through a lot. Some of the scars show. I do not look like a pleasant person. I have resting wizard face, which is to say I often look like I have had it up to here with everyone’s nonsense.


Cover of Book of Spores

Book of Spores edited by Frasier Armitage, Eleni Argyró, Adrian M. Gibson & Ed Crocker

“On the Magic of Mushrooms: An Introduction” by Eleni Argyró

Stories are psychedelics in narrative form, and writers the shamans, healers, diviners, mediators, priests. With each word, the folds of readers’ brains expand, the doors of their perceptions open, and the fabric of reality shifts to encompass new ways of thinking, seeing, and believing.

“Farlen and The Tower of Decay” by Ryan Kirk

“You’ve got the look about you. I’ve seen it before, and it tells me you aren’t likely to see the sunrise.”

“But if I do, they’ll sing songs about me long after death eventually claims my soul.”

The stranger stared a moment longer, then shrugged and turned away, as though he’d just been in conversation with a ghost.

“The Fungitive” by Tom Bookbeard

So, make no mistake, starting my day with a guy grinding a bowie knife into my palm before I’ve flicked on my espresso machine isn’t high up on my list of morning routines.

“A Serious Track” by Krystle Matar

He was especially watchful over Eddie, because he saw— like most adults around us saw— that Eddie desperately needed someone to be especially watchful over her. From the time we were kids, she had a distance in her, a kind of distance that gave the impression that she’d just as soon disappear into the aether if you took your eyes off her for too long. A distance that drew people in, made them want to lean close and catch ahold of her before she vanished.

“A Serious Track” by Krystle Matar

I was too young to know that Uncle Victor’s supper club was at least thirty years out of fashion— too young to understand that it was mostly gold leaf and overly wrought, a pretender’s attempt at approximating wealth. It was a child’s understanding of luxury, built on the assumption that if it glittered, it must be glamorous. In that way, I was the perfect audience for Uncle Victor’s display. With my child’s covetous perspective, I wanted to touch every gilded chair, every sparkling lamp, every crystal cut candle holder on every gleaming wooden table. I wanted to sink into that place, to become a feature of it, wanted to be the sort of person who commanded so many beautiful things, empty though they were.

I remember wondering what living in Washaw must have been like, with all those nice lawns and clean alleyways and freshly painted front doors, what it must have been like to live a life where being busy was optional, where you could just hide from the world and the weather when a storm was brewing. Back in the Flats, our streets were always busy, rain or shine, because no one had the luxury of waiting for the clouds to clear in the interest of staying dry.

A gun has a habit of betraying the slightest tremor as the metal pieces clunk together, but my hands were always steady when I was doing dangerous things, no matter how much my heart raced or my breath rattled or stomach twisted itself into knots.

“The Road to Fungaddicticon” by DB Rook

Simeon was lost to the shrooms. Had he been straight- headed, he would argue he was found, but his drooling, slackened face and his ebbing pulse would have you believe otherwise.

Near-death experiences, hallucinogenics, mile after mile of hard travel, not to mention radiation and bacterial infections, had somewhat disheveled them.

“The Toadstool Witch” by Greta Kelly

Juliote didn’t cry the words, for a woman only wept for a hope that had been betrayed. And it had been many years since Juliote had felt the taste of hope on her tongue. She didn’t scream the words either, for all that her voice was hoarse it had no fight left in it. No, Juliote’s was the voice of a person utterly devoid of anything but jagged-edged desperation. The kind that drove people to crossroads at midnight to treat with nameless devils.

“A Dangerous Donation” by Emma L. Adams

…she of all people knew that deeming a situation ‘impossible’ was usually an admission of a failure of imagination rather than a statement of fact.

“The Book of Hries” by M. J. Kuhn

The rest of the work was done without my hand. Instead of leaning on the piousness of priests, I leaned on man’s hubris. Honestly, of the two, it’s always been the much sturdier cane.


Cover of Kings of the Wyld by Nicholas Eames

Kings of the Wyld by Nicholas Eames

“They used to call us the Kings of the Wyld, remember?”

“Yeah, they did. When we were twenty years younger. When our backs didn’t ache every morning and we didn’t wake up five times a night to piss. But time did what it does best, didn’t it? It beat us up. It broke us down. We got old, Gabriel. Too old to do the things we used to, no matter how good we were at doin’ ‘em.”

No king meant no law; no guards to keep the peace or discourage violence before it got out of hand. No taxes meant no one to clean gutters or lay down stone for roads, and so Clay and Gabriel sloshed through what they hoped was mud as they passed through the wide-open gates into the city whose parents had hired a prostitute as a babysitter and never come home.

He suddenly wished he were elsewhere, anywhere—or petter yet someone else entirely. A simple man doing simple things. A cobbler, maybe. Cobblers rarely, if ever, made enemies of vengeful immortals, or so he figured.

They had a saying up north: *the coin that broke the dragon’s back*. It was derived from the idea that a dragon hoarding one trinket too many might drown beneath the weight of its own avarice, and it meant—or at least Clay thought it meant—that even the mightiest of things (dragons, for example) had a point at which even the smallest detail could signify their doom.

They had a similar saying down south: *the straw that broke the camel’s back*—though why you’d put a piece of straw on a camel’s back was, to Clay, an utter mystery. They were a curious people, southerners.

Clay smiled like a man who’d won first place in a “Whose Life Sucks the Most” contest.

What was it about fathers, Clay wondered, that compelled so many of them to test their children? To insist that a daughter, or a son, prove themselves worthy of a love their mother offered without condition?

Someone, probably Gabriel, had once told him that to be courageous you had to first know fear. As Clay saw it, he would need a reserve of courage in the hours to come that demanded more fear than he had ever known, and so he let the horror of what they were about to face wash over him, soak into him, clamp around his soul like an iron fist, and squeeze

A battle, as relayed by a poet, is a glorious thing, full of heroic stands, daring charges, and valiant sacrifice. But a battlefield, as experienced by some poor bastard mired in the thick of it, is something different altogether.

The word clusterfuck came to mind.

Matrick plied his knives like a parade drummer, his rhythm so fast his enemies didn’t know he’d murdered them until their god asked them if they took milk in their tea.


Cover of Bloody Rose by Nicholas Eames

Bloody Rose by Nicholas Eames

“We all have our rituals,” he said, without taking his eyes off the action below. “Necessary vices that enable us to conquer our fear. Or, if not conquer it, then to at least pile furniture against the door while we duck out the back. It’s not enough to survive what we do, Tam. We must also endure it.”

“What’s the difference?” she asked.

“One concerns the body, the other the mind. Every battle has a cost,” he said quietly. “Even the ones we win.”

Tam didn’t fully understand what he meant, but decided to pretend she did, and nodded sagely. “So what’s your vice?” she wondered.

“Love,” said Freecloud, flashing his jaguar smile. “And I suspect one day it will kill me.”

She glowered like a gargoyle with an incontinent pigeon perched on its head.

You didn’t get to be the villain of one story, she supposed, unless you were the hero of another.

Some people knew how to kill a conversation. Cura, on the other hand, could make it wish it had never been born.


Cover of Go Gentle by Maria Semple

Go Gentle by Maria Semple

It’s a thing Stoics do: meditate on worst-case scenarios. Which is not about working yourself into a neurotic doom loop. It’s about preparing for things not to go your way. So when they inevitably don’t, you can say, “I expected that.”

Think of it as inoculation against emotional extremes. Because who needs those?

Having a teenage daughter is like Choose Your Own Adventure, a constant set of junctures in the road. She’s in a mood? How do you respond? Do you snap? Do you sympathize? I chose my go-to: ignore.

I stepped into the grand entry. The walls were plaster, the color of cream, and enriched by an exuberance of gold molding. Crystal chandeliers danced abundantly from on high. Underfoot, polished wood floors inlaid with marble. If Liberace had a mood board, this would be it.


Cover of Booked by Alison Gaylin

Booked by Alison Gaylin

He smiled. “One of the many things I like about you, Sunny,” he said, “is that you get things without my having to explain them.”

I smiled back. “That’s possibly the most patronizing compliment I’ve ever received.”

“Hey, it’s from the heart.”

“You must have been in a constant state of terror,” I said.

“You want to know the truth?” Blake said. “I don’t remember him at all.”

“You don’t?”

“Not from when I was little.” Blake sliced off another hunk of sausage and shoved it into his mouth. Then he put the rest back into the bag, dropped it on the backseat, and returned his hands to the steering wheel as he finished chewing. “It’s funny,” Blake said. “People always say little kids are resilient, but it’s just that their brains aren’t fully formed. They can’t remember shit, which is a blessing.”

I looked at him. “I bet you’re right,” I said.

“I’m pretty sure I am.” Gently, he placed the knife on the dashboard. The sun glinted off the blade. “Resilient,” he said. “That’s just a word to make bad parents feel better.”


Cover of Remington Platypus by Steve Nash

Remington Platypus by Steve Nash

‘But that’s the thing about evil. You can try, but you can never properly clip its wings.’


(Image by DaModernDaVinci from Pixabay)

20 Books of Summer 2026: June Check-In

20 Books of Summer 2026
Annabel from AnnaBookBel carries on the work started by Cathy of 746 Books . You can read her kick-off post here.

I have read 8 of the 20 so far, which is not bad. One of that 8 is the biggest by page count (but probably one of the easiest reads), so I’m feeling pretty good about being able to check this one off the list. Sadly, I’ve written about only…let me check my math here…none of them. That’s not good. I have 80% of a post done for The Devils, but am so busy second-guessing myself that it’s now been 7 days since I meant to post it. Ooops. I think I’ll catch up on those pretty quickly. I hope to, anyway.

Not that it matters, but I’ve also finished one off of my Top Ten Tuesday: Books on My Summer 2026 to-Read List (That Aren’t on My 20 Books Challenge) list, too.

This summer, my 20 are:

✔ 1. The Devils by Joe Abercrombie
2. Trade of Blood by Robert Jackson Bennett
3. Eyes of Empire by JCM Berne
4. Cold Iron Task by James Butcher
5. Eaters of the Dead by Michael Crichton
✔ 6. Dungeon Crawler Carl by Matt Dinniman
7. Detained: A boy’s journal of survival and resilience by D. Esperanza and Gerardo Iván Morales
✔ 8. What’s Next: A Backstage Pass to The West Wing, Its Cast and Crew, and Its Enduring Legacy of Service by Melissa Fitzgerald and Mary McCormack
9. Killer Vibes by Jack Friday
✔ 10. Manitou by Glen Gabel
✔ 11. Wool by Hugh Howey
✔ 12. Eternal Blades by Vlad V. Imakaev
13. First Mage on the Moon by Cameron Johnston
14. Left Hand of Darkness by Ursula K. Le Guin
✔ 15. The Shadow Carver by Nadine Matheson
✔ 16. Squeaky Clean by Callum McSorley
17. Dial A for Aunties by Jesse Q. Sutanto
18. Crownfall by Michael Vadney
✔ 19. We Be Dragons by Michael Weitz
20. Everybody Wants to Rule the World Except Me by Django Wexler

(subject to change, as is allowed, but I’m going to resist the impulse to tweak as much as I can).

What do you think of this list? Any warnings—or anything you think I should be really excited about?

20 Books of Summer '26 Chart June Check-in

LITERARY LOCALS: A Q&A About a New Little Free Library in Idaho

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A couple of weeks ago the algorithm that decides how little of what my friends post on Facebook decided that I needed to see a local woman announcing the opening of her Little Free Library. Now, I actually liked this post, and thought it was great to hear about the growth of these little things in the area. So I reached out to her to see if she’d be interested in talking about it a little. I, for one, had never talked to anyone about a LFL, so this was pretty cool for me. Hopefully, you enjoy it too.


Tell the people a little about yourself and your Little Free Library.
Maggie and Her LibraryMy name is Maggie, I’m a 28 year old book lover, nurse, newly graduated nurse practitioner, and a race car driver! My boyfriend would tell anyone I’m a grandma at heart so I also have a whole bunch of grandma hobbies like needlepoint, gardening, making jam, & really any craft I can get my hands on. Though, very first and most beloved hobby is reading. I have my mom to thank for kickstarting my love for reading. As a child, she was always reading to me or providing me with books to read on my own. If I had a bad day, she’d say “well, let’s go get you a book” & I would spend the rest of my day lost in whatever book I got. Truthfully, it was the same if I had a good day too (any excuse to have a book in my hand, really!). My love for reading is what started my little dream of having a little free library!

What was it that made you decide to do it—and why now?
I’ve always loved little free libraries & the accessibility to books it provides people, so I’ve always wanted to have one of my own to help get more books into the hands of my community. I love stumbling across a LFL while on a walk or on vacation & I wanted my neighborhood and community to get to stumble across one everyday while walking their dogs or taking their kids to the park. I also have a soft spot for my elderly neighbors who don’t/are not able to get out and about much, so bringing a library close to them made me happy. Though I’ve wanted a little free library for several years, it couldn’t happen until now because I’ve been in the trenches of grad school for the last 3 years with such little time to read anything but textbooks, let alone build a library and maintain it. My sweet little library was a gift from my boyfriend, Joel, for graduation. He helped me build it & he and my dad spent a whole day installing it and planting flowers around it for me. How lucky am I!

Are you a veteran patron of these kinds of Libraries?
I am definitely a patron of LFLs! I especially love finding them on vacation and it’s so sweet to come across them by accident. The charter map is also so helpful if I’m desperate to find one and short on time, though! There’s just something about stumbling upon one that I find so fun and sweet. My favorite LFL that I came across was in Scotland! I didn’t think I’d see one there but it was such a fun surprise. I recently picked up a patio set from a local gal on Facebook marketplace who had one in her front yard, so I got a cheap patio set and a new book to read while lounging on my new purchase!

Is there something distinctive of yours (I’m talking content here, not appearance) that makes it different from others? Or is it simply that yours is in front of your house and not a mile away or something?
I don’t think there’s anything too distinctive about mine. I’ve seen some LFLs have themes, which I think is so fun, but my goal here was just to be as inclusive as possible with a wide range of types of book genres and books for all ages! I even stock my library with learning flash cards for the little ones, mini uno decks & puzzles for people who may struggle to read but enjoy games, book marks, reading stickers, and I even put a few packets of wildflower seeds (as an ode to my love of gardening)! I really just want this to be a place for everyone. The placement in front of my house versus at a park or other location was also important for me because it truly brings me joy to see someone stop by and grab a book or drop a book off. It’s so funny, because the best way I can describe how I feel when someone stops by my library is like a kid on Christmas. Every day I walk down the driveway to see what’s new in the library and what books have been taken from the library and I get so giddy when I see books getting rotated in and out. It’s become my favorite part of the day.

Maggie's LFLOkay, I can’t imagine that people (especially overthinkers like me) don’t plan out the design/look of their library. What were you going for? Did you achieve it?
I knew my library would be yellow. It’s my favorite color & I think it’s a color that many people associate with being a “happy” color. Bright and cheery and colorful is very on brand for me so my library had to be a reflection of that. I still have a little bit of painting to do on it, I’m planning on adding flowers & painting “Little Free Library” on the side but I wanted to get it in the ground and at eye level before I do that so that’ll be coming soon! My first priority was getting it open for business, so final touches coming soon!

I know it’s new, but what’s the reception like? I don’t know enough to know what makes a Little Free Library successful—does it seem to be achieving that?
Reception has been pretty good so far! I stocked the library initially, but I’ve had quite a lot of traffic and different books be added in the last couple weeks! It’ll be officially chartered later this week, so I think that’ll attract a bit more traffic but I’m very happy with the traffic so far! I don’t think there’s a definite measure of success when it comes to a LFL. Being able to facilitate getting books into the hands of people big and small is a win in my book! I was so extremely fortunate to have unlimited access to books growing up, and I know many families don’t have that luxury so if I can help a family stock their own shelves with bedtime stories for the kids and beach reads for mom to escape to, I feel like I’ve been successful.

One quick follow-up (that really demonstrates my ignorance of the whole LFL thing). Could you define what “chartered” is?
To charter your LFL, you can pay the organization for the “official” plaque which comes with a number unique to your library and it places your library on the map for others to find libraries in a specific area!

One final question, is there a book (or two…or 18, if you get really carried away), that embodies Idaho/the Idaho spirit to you to recommend to my readers?
I think I would say Housekeeping by Marilynne Robinson (literary fiction). It focuses on family, identity, relationships between people and nature, the feeling of “home”, and society’s expectations of women. It’s a very interesting read and I think it really captures the “wildness” of nature and the human spirit. It’s also set in a fictional Idaho town!
[you really can’t go wrong with Housekeeping by Marilynne Robinson] Another read I’ve recently loved is Yesteryear by Cara Claire Burke. I wouldn’t say it captures the spirit of Idaho but it is set in Idaho and I think it really captured how someone’s life is truly not what it seems on social media which I think is a prevalent conversation and the themes throughout the book explore various prevalent topics – i.e. religion, politics, mental health, impact of social media, etc. It also has some pretty crazy twists and turns throughout and is very funny at times too. I wouldn’t say it captures the spirit of Idaho anymore, I think we’ve progressed beyond many of the themes within the book, but it does touch thematically on conflict we’ve seen recently in surrounding areas (think Ruby Franke from Utah and the cult child abuse case) which is definitely more common in rural areas. You don’t have to include that one but it’s a very fascinating fiction read with a satirical vibe and heavy themes!
I keep hearing about Yesteryear, and while I don’t see me reading it–I’d love to hear more of your thoughts about it.

Thanks for your time and participation! Hope you enjoyed it! And I hope your LFL finds its audience!
A photo of Maggie's Little Free Library


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MUSIC MONDAY: “American Tune” by Paul Simon

The Irresponsible Reader's Music Monday logo

Music Monday's originated at The Tattooed Book Geek's fantastic blog and has shown up hither, thither, and yon since then.

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Quick-Take Catchups: The Leftovers from April

Once again, I’m a few weeks behind on this, but that “To Write About” stack is still calling. Time for me to do a few more of these—emphasizing pithiness, not thoroughness.


Cover of Violet Thistlewaite Is Not a Villain Anymore by Emily KrempholtzViolet Thistlewaite Is Not a Villain Anymore

by Emily Krempholtz, Emma Ladji (Narrator)

DETAILS:
Publisher: Penguin Random House Audio Publishing Group
Publication Date: November 18, 2025
Format: Unabridged Audiobook
Length: 11 hrs.
Read Date: March 31-April 2, 2026

A nice little story about a supervillain (however coerced into it she might have been) trying to go straight and live a quiet life. Naturally, it doesn’t go that well, people learn who she is/was and…things get dicey. It’s a very cozy little story with just a hint of danger. This is primarily a Romance with a streak of Fantasy. Not totally my cup of tea, but a very pleasant book.

Cover of Guns of Brixton by Paul D. BrazillGuns of Brixton

by Paul D. Brazill

DETAILS:
Publisher: Fahrenheit Press
Publication Date: November 15, 2025
Format: Paperback
Length: 181 pg.
Read Date: April 15, 2026

This is a dark noir full of insane comedy and violence. Peopled by characters you love reading about and never want to meet the likes of in real life. The various plotlines and character arcs overlap and weave together in a way that is really impressive–and is very typical for this kind of read. Just kick back and enjoy it.

It’s fast and furious read that will make you want more from Brazill. I have to leave it for a catch-up post like this, where I’m forced to be vague, I’d end up telling you too much about it in a full-length post.

My only complaint is that as an American with little (read: no) understanding of FIFA history, I had to hit up a friendly-neighborhood search engine to understand the ending. I’d be clearer there, but I don’t want to ruin anything. It’s worth getting to that point and then learning what it meant–the delayed gratification is still gratifying.

Cover of Replaceable You by Mary RoachReplaceable You: Adventures in Human Anatomy

by Mary Roach

DETAILS:
Publisher: Penguin Random House Audio Publishing Group
Publication Date: September 16, 2025
Format: Unabridged Audiobooks
Length: 8 hrs., 37 min.
Read Date: April 13-16, 2026

Overall, a really good look at the frontiers of human transplant technology—and other ways to replace broken/sick/malfunctioning human parts. Oh, and hair. There was a lot about hair replacement and the various technologies there.

As is typical for a book by Roach, there’s a lot of good information here. A couple of chapters that don’t seem worth it. Some jokes were winners. Some jokes didn’t seem worth the effort.

Frog and Toad Are Doing Their Best by Jennie EgerdieFrog and Toad Are Doing Their Best [A Parody]

by Jennie Egerdie, Ellie Hajdu (Illustrator)

DETAILS:
Publisher: Running Press Adult
Publication Date: October 5, 2021
Format: Hardcover
Length: 96 pg.
Read Date: April 17, 2026
Buy from Bookshop.org Support Indie Bookstores

As I recall, I always thought that the Frog and Toad were pleasant enough, but needed something more to be something I’d read when there wasn’t anything else handy. Things were similar with my kids and the books. This is a little better—only because it’s updated and vaguely amusing to see the pair in 2020s mode.

The art is as perfect as it could be, like it was by the original artists.

It’s not a must-read, but it’s a quick shot of pleasure.

Cover of Worse than a Lie by Ben CrumpWorse than a Lie

by Ben Crump

DETAILS:
Publisher: Bantam
Publication Date: February 17, 2026
Format: Hardcover
Length: 368 pgs.
Read Date: April 16-17, 2026
Buy from Bookshop.org Support Indie Bookstores

I had huge hopes for this one, expecting that I’d read the series to follow. That is not going to happen. The dialogue is atrocious. The plot was…fine, but executed messily, yet predictably. The bad guys are as evil as evil can be—no subtlety to it at all. Actually, that was one of my notes about the book as a whole—there’s nothing subtle about it. The solution and the aftermath were practically a fairy tale. I really can’t think of anything positive to say. The promising premise deserved a whole lot better.

Cover of This Book Made Me Think of You by Libby PageThis Book Made Me Think of You

by Libby Page, Zadeiah Campbell-Davies (Narrator)

DETAILS:
Publisher: Penguin Random House Audio Publishing Group
Publication Date: February 3, 2026
Format: Unabridged Audiobook
Length: 10 hrs., 26 min.
Read Date: April 16-20, 2026

Oh, golly, this book was so heartwarming and sweet. It’s also a great look at grief and the way it lingers in the lives of those affected by death. Primarily it’s a sweet book about a (dead) husband’s love expressed through his wife’s passion for reading. Each month, a book is waiting for her at a local bookstore.

Oh, yeah—this is also a tribute to local bookstores and what they can mean for a community.

Grief, books, love, and bookstores. What more could you want?

Cover of A Memory Called Empire by Arkady MartineA Memory Called Empire

by Arkady Martine

DETAILS:
Series: Teixcalaan, #1
Publisher: Tor Books
Publication Date: February 25, 2020
Format: Paperback
Length: 480 pg.
Read Date: April 20-24, 2026
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Oh, there were just so many great ideas packed into this volume. Several layers of political machinations—with two cultures that are new to the reader. A mind-blowing technology that raises all sorts of questions about identity, memory, and life. A character death that makes me mad months later. And a looming threat that’s so far in the background that few characters realize it’s a thing.

I did enjoy it, I’m just not sure how much —but I’m so glad that I read it. I need to find time for book two.

This post contains affiliate links. If you purchase from any of them, I will get a small commission at no additional cost to you. As always, opinions are my own.

Fantasy with Friends: Which Order to Read Fantasy Series In: Chronological, Publication Order, Something Else?


Fantasy with Friends A Discussion Meme Hosted by Pages Unbound

Fantasy with Friends is a weekly meme hosted by the good people over at Pages Unbound. Fantasy with Friends poses questions each Monday about fantasy, either as a genre as a whole or individual works.

This week’s prompt is:

When reading a favorite fantasy series, which reading order would you recommend? For instance, when reading Narnia, do you think people should go by publication order or by chronological order? Or, if you like to recommend Tolkien, do you think readers should start with LotR or The Hobbit? Feel free to discuss any favorite fantasy series you have!

Generally speaking, for your first read it should always be in publication order. Period.

For re-reads, that’s up to the reader and their interests. Maybe once in chronological order, just for giggles. But that’s only on a re-read.

The exception I’d make to that (at this point in my life, I can think of one—I’m open to others) is reading The Lord of the Rings prior to The Hobbit. I came to LotR later in life than I should have—having been unable to get through The Hobbit in childhood. Yes, yes, I know—there are so many red flags raised by this admission. I have no defense. Anyway, in college, I had several friends tell me to skip The Hobbit and jump right to LotR. A few years later, I didn’t pay attention to them and started with it—and not only finished, but then went on to read the rest. As the two were clearly written for different audiences, it totally would’ve worked to do skip The Hobbit, LotR tells you everything you need know about its predecessor, and does so at the level of the rest of the series.

Narnia, on the other hand needs to be read in the publication order the first time. Spoilers ahead. In The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe, the reader—like the children—don’t understand who the witch is or who this Aslan everyone’s talking about it. You’re confused and in suspense just like them. If you, as some will tell you, read The Magician’s Nephew first—you will run into problems. 1. You won’t give a hoot about the lampstand bit. 2. You will know who Aslan is, how much greater his power is than the White Witch’s. So when everyone’s telling the children to wait for Aslan, the reader can go “oh yeah,” he’ll sort it out. 3. You’ll wonder why no one is using Jadis’ name—and really, someone who’s only known by a title rather than a name is more ominous. 4. The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe is a better book than The Magician’s Nephew and is more likely to get people to read on. There are likely better and more reasons along those lines, but I’ll save that for better writers than me—and I need to get going anyway.

Yes, there’s that letter that Lewis wrote to a young reader where he said he didn’t care, but suggests the chronological order. I’d point out that Lewis isn’t infallible. But also, he’s writing to someone who’d read the books at least 4 times. Not a new reader.

Before I get into things more—let me talk about a couple of other series.

Let’s start with Harry Connolly’s Dark Fantasy/Urban Fantasy series, Twenty Palaces. Del Rey published three books in the series and decided not to continue (tragically, oh, so tragically). We pick up with our protagonist after he’s been on a mission with an enforcer of a society that controls/polices magic for some time. After Del Rey declined to continue the series, Connolly published a prequel where the protagonist meets the enforcer. Frankly, I cared more about Annalise coming into Ray’s life as a flashback. You can stomach the way she treats Ray when she first meets him better than if that were your intro to her. Seeing Ray get his first/only spell is more enjoyable when you’ve seen it in action, etc.

The next series isn’t fantasy. But it’ll make my point better. Gregory Mcdonald’s Fletch series (don’t judge them by the Chase movies, which are fine for what they are, but they can’t hold a candle to the books). Here are the two orders to choose from:

Publication Order of Fletch Books

Fletch (1974)
Confess, Fletch (1976)
Fletch’s Fortune (1978)
Fletch and the Widow Bradley (1980)
Fletch’s Moxie (1981)
Fletch and the Man Who (1983)
Carioca Fletch (1984)
Fletch Won (1985)
Fletch, Too (1986)

Chronological Order of Fletch Books

Fletch Won (1985)
Fletch, Too (1986)
Fletch and the Widow Bradley (1980)
Fletch (1974)
Carioca Fletch (1984)
Confess, Fletch (1976)
Fletch’s Fortune (1978)
Fletch’s Moxie (1981)
Fletch and the Man Who (1983)

source: Book Series in Order

I’d add that reading them in any order works, too. When I first encountered the series, Fletch Won hadn’t been published, and I got the rest in a haphazard fashion by buying whatever was available at a used bookstore or two. Now, Fletch is the best way to encounter the character for the first time. I’d argue that the publication order is a really good way to read them—with the random way I stumbled onto coming in a close second (although you should do Fletch Won and Fletch, Too last even then). Like with The Magician’s Nephew, Fletch Won answers questions raised by Fletch and maybe Fletch and the Widow Bradley. And that’s a big factor. But the biggest is that when Carioca Fletch (a direct sequel to Fletch—starting hours after it) Mcdonald starts flexing different authorial muscles, and his storytelling shifts. Fletch Won is closer to the style of the other books in the series, but is still closer to Carioca. Fletch, Too is clearly more of the same kind of storytelling that started in Carioca—it’s deeper, not as dialogue-driven, there’s more atmosphere, it’s about the locale as much as it is the story and characters. Also, there’s a lack of concern for news stories, which is a driving force in the others.

This gets us back to my main point—prequels come along and explain things that the reader already knows—no one cares about the lampstand in Nephew, no one will care about the origin of Ray’s Ghost Knife (well, it’s a fun scene regardless, but you won’t care as much), or no one will care about Fletch meeting a woman right before his wedding if we don’t already know that the new woman will be his second ex-wife. If you read them in publication order, on the other hand…

But all three point to something else—the author has grown, their ideas about the series have matured and changed—in some cases, the first book or two were written without any plan of books to come in the series, and were written that way. It’s only in retrospect that an author decides to go back and explain some things—or play with things we already know.

Of course, that’s just my opinion; I could be wrong. I look forward to seeing what other people writing on this have to say. I expect it to be better (and likely shorter) than this..

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Saturday Miscellany—6/27/26

Odds ‘n ends about books and reading that caught my eye this week. You’ve probably seen some/most/all of them, but just in case:
bullet ‘Erasing histories and voices’—Oh good, another export from the U.S. (that’s hyperbole, but that kept running in the back of my head as I read)
bullet Louis Pope Gratacap, A Curator in Lost Worlds—The total tonnage of what I don’t know about Lost Worlds fiction could stun a team of oxen in its tracks, yet I somehow think I have a decent understanding of it. This fascinating review shows I don’t.
bullet My breakup with Amazon—a good essay in drawing.
bullet Future folklores: how new traditions can root us in hope
bullet Late Night Mars: Josephine Baker, flying Lamborghinis, and film criticism—Like I wasn’t hyped enough for Trang’s upcoming book
bullet The 61 Greatest Indie Books of All Time—No news to anyone, but the problem with Indie Books is that almost all of them fly under the radar. I think I’ve heard of 2 of these. Maybe. Several of these look like I want to hear more about them.
bullet The Way to Read More Is to Read More: This isn’t a “just do it” pep talk, I promise.—Molly Templeton’s latest
bullet Is There a Magic Number of Books to Read Per Year That Makes You a “Reader?”—The amount of time that I spent trying to come up with a witty comment for this post…it’s not an easy question to answer, but Briana’s headed in the right direction (maybe arrived there, too)
bullet Bookmark This: What I Use as Bookmarks (First Edition, Maybe)—A fun listicle from Witty & Sarcastic Book Club. As was this reply
bullet Mad Mabel: Captivating Characters of June 2026 —I haven’t finished my post for this month yet, but wanted to take a minute to point again to this fun link-up.

A Book-ish Related Podcast episode (or two) you might want to give a listen to:
bullet The Writer’s Dossier Podcast Rob Hart—THREE HITMEN AND A BABY—I had to wait to finish my post about the book before I’d let myself listen to this.

My favorite sentence/passage/phrase (or two) that I read this week:
“…I kept working on the article, answering emails, Alt-Tabbing to social media in case someone had uploaded a video of a guy putting a lemon up his nose. Normal writer stuff, in other words.”—The Reverse Centaur’s Guide to Life After AI by Cory Doctorow

To help talk about backlist titles (and just for fun), What Was I Talking About 10 Years Ago This Week?
bullet So Long, and Thanks For All The Fish by Douglas Adams
bullet We’re All Damaged by Matthew Norman
bullet Yes, Please by Amy Poehler
bullet Hexed (Audiobook) by Kevin Hearne, Luke Daniels
bullet I mentioned the releases of: The Pursuit by Janet Evanovich & Lee Goldberg ; Play Nice by Michael Guillebeau; Waypoint Kangaroo by Curtis C. Chen; New Pompeii by Daniel Godfrey. Only one of which I read. Alas.

This Week’s New Releases that I’m Excited About and/or You’ll Probably See Here Soon:
bullet The Reverse Centaur’s Guide to Life After AI: How to Think About Artificial Intelligence—Before It’s Too Late by Cory Doctorow—Didn’t go scortched-earth on AI as I’d expected. I had to re-think a lot of what I’ve been thinking about AI (but not everything!! Especially regarding illustrations/writing/etc.). Typical good stuff from Doctorow.
bullet Foundling Fathers by Meg Ellison—”The Antediluvian Society—a shadowy cabal of right-wing billionaires—is fed up with a country they cannot fully control or understand. So they have done what any reasonable American patriots would do: Clone the Founding Fathers and raise them in secrecy. The plan, unbeknownst to the boys, is for them to restore America to its “original glory.” And then one of the clones finds an iPhone. Whoops.
bullet The Tinder Box by M.R. Carey—a dark fairy tale about a former soldier, a witch, and a magic box that can grant wishes.

An image of text that says 'One glance at a book and you hear the voice of another person, perhaps someone dead for 1,000 years. To read is to voyage through time. Carl Sagan'
Image source: @artlovergirl.bsky.social

The Brothers McKay by Craig Johnson: A Contemporary Take on a Classic Murder—and Walt Gets a New Pet?

Cover of The Brothers McKay by Craig JohnsonThe Brothers McKay

by Craig Johnson

DETAILS:
Series: Walt Longmire, #22
Publisher: Viking
Publication Date: May 26, 2026
Format: Hardcover
Length: 349 pg.
Read Date: June 8-9, 2026
Buy from Bookshop.org Support Indie Bookstores

It wasn’t so much of a surprise that Pepper McKay was dead as much as it was an amazement to everyone in the county that it had taken so long for him to die, or for somebody to kill him.

What’s The Brothers McKay About?

That’s the opening paragraph of the book—and we keep getting reminded of this point. A chapter or so later, Walt is interviewing a witness:

“Have Pepper and Manx been having any difficulties lately?”

“Lately?” She laughed and then covered her mouth with a hand as if to capture the sound. “You mean beyond the last twenty-two years?”

“Manx didn’t seem very torn up about Pepper’s passing.”

“Do you honestly think anybody in the county will be?”

That won’t be the last time the sentiment is echoed.

Pepper has three (legitimate) sons, and one known illegitimate son. And more enemies—or at least people who actively disliked him—than the population of Absaroka County. At least it seems that way.

Walt Longmire happens to be one of them (but not a suspect). But that’s how much this man is disliked. I really can’t understand how he was able to convince the mothers of his children to sleep with him, but he seems to have plenty more lovers, too. I’m really not sure Johnson established that to my satisfaction (one of two problems I have with this book, so take it with a grain of salt).

Soon, he, Vic, and Double-Tough find themselves with too many suspects—including all of the man’s (known) children—and at least one monk! Motives range from revenge to greed to jealousy. And there are multiple suspects for each motive, too.

It’s noticed by several people that the murders—oh yeah, there are multiple killings (eventually)—resemble a certain Russian classic. But I’ll talk about that in a minute.

Chekov’s Wildfires

One of Johnson’s—and the series’—strengths is highlighting the stark beauty of Wyoming, the nature around Absaroka County, the wide stretches of uninhabited land, and the forces of nature. We’re really used to seeing storms wreak havoc on Walt and the rest of his Department.

This time, it’s fire.

We learn early on about a couple of fires that are being fought near—but not too-near—the crime scene. Now, everyone who’s watched TV or read more than one book reads about them and knows that before the end of the book, at least one of those fires is going to play a role. This is made even clearer by Walt getting regular updates about them getting closer.

Sticking with one of themes of this book, let’s borrow an idea from Russian literature and call them Chekov’s wildfires.

Johnson brings those fires to life in much the same way he has done with blizzards—but the danger seems (and probably is) greater for Walt and those with him. It’s an extended part of the book—a lot longer than I expected it to be. But once the flames started nipping at their heels, it engulfed my attention and wouldn’t let go. It was some really exciting material.

The Brothers Karamazov

Now, what I know about Russian literature couldn’t fill up a decent blog post. When it comes to [author’s] The Brothers Karamazov, my knowledge is even more limited.

It was expanded a lot by this book—both in what I can tell were parallels Johnson was drawing, and what Walt and Sidorov mused about it.

From what I gather, people better read than I can probably easily see what Johnson was doing there and appreciate it. Not unlike Walt’s version of the Inferno back in Hell is Empty.

I also have to say, learning that The Brothers Karamazov is volume 1 of an unfinished trilogy pretty much guarantees I’m never going to get around for it. People complain about Martin and Rothfuss, but 146 years is far too long to wait for a sequel. Where are the songs and memes about Dostoevsky?

Why did I pick this up? Why did I keep reading?

I grabbed this reflexively because it was a new Walt Longmire novel.

I stuck with it because you just don’t walk away from Walt. But more importantly, because it worked in so many ways that you really didn’t notice you’d been reading for a while—all you know is that you’re in the middle of a puzzle for Walt and you’re having a good time. I’m really not sure how aware I was of anything else.

So, what did I think about The Brothers McKay?

She studied me. “What’s the matter?”

I slumped back on the bench, taking off my hat and staring up at the delicate design of the pressed-tin ceiling. “It’s all just so abstract, stupid, and petty.”

Vic glanced at Henry and Sidorov, and then back at me before making her way over to the mini fridge and pulling out four cans of Rainier. Sauntering over, she popped the top of one and handed it to me. “How long have you been in law enforcement?”

“Most of my life, but I keep hoping that our species will evolve.”

“Yeah, good luck with that.”

This is the best Longmire in a while. The interplay with the characters, the complexity of the case, the characters that were created just for this book—and the little glimpse we got into Walt’s younger years…and a few other things I can’t think of at the moment, really elevate this to one of the best in the series. I don’t think Johnson’s written a bad novel, but some are clearly better than others. This falls into the “better” column.

As usual, I really enjoyed Vic in this book. As usual, I wanted more of her—but what we got was great. Henry didn’t show up in this as much as he could’ve—and that worked for the best. And we got some good time with Double-Tough—it has been far too long since he graced the pages of this series.

What I said above about Chekov’s wildfires started off as a line or two here…but I won’t repeat myself. The other bit of nature that worked really well in this book was a mule. Johnson did a good job in making you care as much about the mule as he did many of the humans.

Oh, and we shouldn’t forget Walt’s dry wit, Vic’s less subtle humor, and Walt’s deep font of trivia. Who knew you’d get the history of a boardgame in the book?

Johnson really brought Sidorov (the Russian that’s been lurking around Walt lately) into the spotlight for both this novel and to set up the next one (at least). When we got his first big update about Ruth One Heart, the writing was on the wall for Walt’s future, sadly. I’m not crazy about: a. the set-up for the next novel—as much as I figured something like it was going to happen; b. the way that Johnson set it up—as well as it was executed. I’ll save my complaints for the next book (hopefully after Johnson changed my mind).

But that’s for 2027, for now? I can focus on what a great book this was.

This post contains an affiliate link. If you purchase from it, I will get a small commission at no additional cost to you. As always, the opinions expressed are my own.
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The Photonic Effect by Mike Chen: Chen’s Most Out-of-This-World Novel Yet

Cover of The Photonic Effect by Mike ChenThe Photonic Effect

by Mike Chen

DETAILS:
Publisher: S&S/Saga Press
Publication Date: April 21, 2026
Format: Paperback
Length: 431 pg.
Read Date: May 19-23, 2026
Buy from Bookshop.org Support Indie Bookstores

What’s The Photonic Effect About?

The Horizon is a science/exploratory vessel that was stuck out in deep space for a decade. Many adventures were had, new crew members were added, challenges faced. Think the U.S.S. Voyager. When they come home, they find that The Cluster (think Federation) has broken into Civil War. Members of the crew by family, origin planet, or perspective belong on both sides of the conflict.

But peace pretty much reigns on the ship (while strained) while they’re able to focus on their mission–an experimental drive. But their fleet commanders are dragging the Horizon into the conflict–and things start going wrong there.

On every level–levels that her captain, Demora Kim, probably wasn’t aware of. While Kim tries to keep her crew together, keep her command, and keep Horizon from having to fire a shot–some important allies the ship made while being stranded send a distress call.

If Kim can’t find a way to help–the destruction that follows could be devastating to their ally, the Horizon, and both sides of The Cluster’s War.

An Atypical Chen Novel

I’ve said this before—and Chen has talked about it frequently. Basically, Chen’s novels are only technically genre tomes. You have a love story, a story about fatherhood, relationships between siblings, family, etc.—and then he injects some SF or other genre elements into them.

This is straight-SF. Chen lets his geek run free here. Yes, there’s a lot of heart, he has a lot to say about romantic love, found family, loyalty, duty, and whatnot.

And it’s utterly fascinating—Chen puts us right in the middle of a saga. It almost feels like this should be book two or three of a series, and the reader has to play catch up with the history of the ship and its crew. The previous books* would be action-packed and full of great concepts. Getting thrown in like this was a great setup—we have to focus on this aftermath-type of story.

* I feel like I need to stress that these don’t exist. They’re purely theoretical previous books.

Why did I pick this up? Why did I keep reading?

Chen’s been an auto-pick-up for me for years. And I’ve never seen a reason to depart from that.
I kept on with this because this world, the characters, and the story were just so fascinating—there was no reason to walk away. I started here to list 2-3 things in particular that drove me on, but I couldn’t just pick a couple. I needed to know everything Chen wanted to tell me about this ship and crew. Period.

What does this book tell us about humanity?

One of the—if not the—most prominent things I picked up is trust. The need for trust, how people react when someone breaks that trust, and how hard it is to re-establish it. But for those who can rebuild—or have the grace to keep it—how great a safety it is. And, sadly, the damage that can be done when the wrong people are trusted.

In this book, that goes beyond humanity to other races, too.

There’s also a great deal to say about loyalty–and combating loyalties. The Horizon‘s crew has a great deal of loyalty to each other (tested by some trust issues), but they also have loyalties to their families, loved ones, planets, their government, and so on.

Loyalty and trust are both tested and broken on several levels for every character, and the question is–what do you (and the rest of your crew) do in the face of a common challenge when those don’t remain?

So, what did I think about The Photonic Effect?

I don’t think this is Chen’s best work. But I did enjoy watching him cut loose on a Space Opera.

I loved, loved, loved the way that we’re dropped into this thing mid-story–or mid-arc–and had to catch up. Getting to figure out what’s going on while guessing/assuming details of what came before was an extra layer of enjoyment.

There are two primary characters–the Captain and Chief Engineer (I think that’s his title, or maybe I’m just assigning that to him. He’s a Scott/LaForge/Lamarr-type character). I would read a multi-part series with these two–or with either of them. Watching them navigate their way through the twisty plot and strange events is more than enough for me.

I was on the edge of my seat throughout the book, while filling in the backstory all the while; the cast of characters was outstanding, with many competing motivations throughout (all of them believable); the universe this was set in could be the framework for a huge series, and it was nice to be introduced to. It missed the je ne sais quoi to make me rave about–but I can’t imagine someone picking it up and not coming away satisfied.

This post contains an affiliate link. If you purchase from it, I will get a small commission at no additional cost to you. As always, the opinions expressed are my own.
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