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Review of Pisces Hooks Taurus by Anyta Sunday

December 3, 2018 by Roger Hyttinen Leave a Comment

Pisces hooks taurusThis is at the fourth book in the Signs of Love series by Anyta Sunday. I actually started with book two in this series, Scorpio hates Virgo and I loved it so much a went out and got the rest of my series. I’m really a fan of this author and have now read several books by her. She writes gay romance book and many people refer to her as the “Queen of Slow Burn” because she specializes in the slow burn romance. I think that’s why I enjoy her books so much because I love this trope. She also does the enemies to lover trope in some of her novels which I also really enjoy.

So onto Pisces Hooks Taurus. The story follows Zane, a Kiwi who has a month left on his Visa before he’s shipped back from the US to New Zealand. But he wants to stay in the US more than anything especially because he wants to stay close to his brother and his brother’s wife who is also his best friend and the two of them have just become parents. So Zane has a plan: he will find the perfect girl of his dreams on one of his dating apps, fall in love, marry her and get to stay in the states. That’s the plan, anyway. Oh, and all this is to take place within 30 days.

But first off, he needs to find another place to stay and asks a friend of his brother’s wife, a professor named Beckett, if he can crash with him temporarily. So what follows is a delightful slow burn romance between the two of them. But it’s not an easy road. Zane is clueless that his so-called “Bromance” with Beckett may be something more profound and we learn that Beckett is still broken-hearted and deeply scarred from a past relationship and is determined not to get his heart broken again.

I really loved both of their characters. Zane, our Pisces is young, naïve, romantic, and somewhat of a dreamer, so in this way, he comes across as quite innocent. He is also charming and super-sweet. Beckett, our Taurus, is mature, more serious, intellectual and studious though somewhat insecure and mistrusting of others following that horrible breakup.

So it was a delight watching the slow-burn between the two of them as Beckett would continuously erect borders with our clueless Zane unknowingly tearing them down. What I liked is the balance in the story. We have two very different personalities; a totally innocent and naïve character and one who’s jaded and mistrusting. As the tension builds, we see our bull lowering his guard and our fish growing in maturity and wisdom. I also loved how much both of these characters grew by the end of the story.

All in all, I felt that this slow-burn romance was realistic and heartfelt. It was a story full of banter, humor, affection, the building of tension as these two men realized their attraction to the other, and the blossoming of love, without too much angst.

I found it interesting that though Zane was initially searching for the perfect woman, his falling in love with Zane didn’t strike me as a gay-for-you trope, one that I typically don’t like. Rather, it felt like Zane’s bisexuality naturally unfolded as true affection developed between him and Beckett. Actually, I got the impression that Zane didn’t really experience sexual attraction to someone unless he has a strong emotional connection with them. So in this way, he struck me as possibly being more demisexual rather than bisexual.

Pisces Hooks Taurus was another lovely and sweet story by Anyta Sunday that made me a little misty-eyed at the end (as do most of her books). It’s the kind of story that makes you laugh and cry, and really ends up tugging at your heartstrings. Excellent plot, with lovable characters, endearing meddling family and neighbors, plenty of humor and snark and a sweet romance with a couple of steamy scenes thrown in at the end. It’s a story in which both of our characters knew what they wanted — it just took them some time to get there.

I’m loving this series and can’t wait to read the next book.

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Filed Under: LGBT Romance

Review of Edge of the Known Bus Line by James R. Gapinski

December 2, 2018 by Roger Hyttinen Leave a Comment

Edge of the known bus line book coverI won this novella in a Goodreads drawing and wow…what a strange, disturbing little book it was.

This is a dystopian/apocalyptic novel that follows a woman — I don’t think we ever even learn her name — whose daily bus commute takes an abrupt detour one day, ending up in the town of “Not in Service,” population 66.

She and her fellow passengers are forced off the bus via gunpoint, and she learns pretty quickly that the town is brutal, gruesome and horrifying. The townsfolk, who were all at one time passengers like herself, are dressed in rags, appear sickly, live in tattered tents or huts and in order to survive, they eat bugs, rats…and each other.

They’ve developed a strange sort of surreal society divided into two main factions: the Chicago Faction and the Pittsburg Faction, and if you want to survive, you need to join one of them. The people in the town, who for the most part have been stripped of any human dignity (though they convince themselves otherwise), have created a crazy religion around the idea that someday a bus will arrive with the destination of Chicago or Pittsburg — somewhere other than Out of Service.

So from the moment our main character arrives, we follow her as she desperately searches for a way out of the hellhole, refusing to believe that there is no way to escape, as the other townspeople have claimed. Fearless and hopeful, she makes one failed attempt after another to escape which renders the story all the more horrifying. So in this way, the book was sort of a survival story. What’s interesting is that our main character ends up being kind of an anti-hero as she’s harboring some pretty serious secrets of her own.

This truly messed up world was also fascinating in a morbid kind of way — it was gross, disturbing and super cringe-worthy. Yet, this story with its twisted plot was also a page-turner as we want to see if our heroine would finally manage to escape the nightmare in which she’d been unwillingly placed. It’s like the morbid fascination one has with a car accident: I can’t bear to look yet I can’t look away.

It’s also interesting that no matter how dark and twisted the story was, there was a good peppering of humor thrown in. Dark humor, mind you but humor nonetheless, and I actually did catch myself laughing out loud several times. But still, you’ll want to keep in mind that the book was filled with grotesque scenes of violence and cannibalism and is definitely not for the faint of heart.

All in all, Edge of the Known Bus Line is a great read! I found this a dark, compelling and mesmerizing story with rich, multi-faceted characters with an enthralling storyline. The world-building is phenomenal, and the delightfully twisted and chilling plot sucked me right in so much so that I read the entire novella in one go. This unsettling story certainly provides a lot of think about well after the last page has been turned.

I don’t think I’m going to be taking a bus anytime soon.

In the spirit of disclosure, I won this book in a giveaway and was under no obligation to write a review.

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Filed Under: Horror

Review of Blue is the Warmest Color by Julie Maroh

November 30, 2018 by Roger Hyttinen Leave a Comment

Blue is the warmest color book coverBlue is the Warmest Color is a wonderful graphic novel that follows our main character Clementine, a French junior in high school. One day while walking down the street she notices a girl with blue hair. What Clementine isn’t prepared for, is an unexpected tinge of desire, so much so that the girl begins to enter her dreams….in an erotic manner causing all kind of confusion for our heroine as she begins to question her sexuality for the first time.

Later, she wanders into a lesbian bar with her best friend where she reencounters the blue-haired girl and learns that her name is Emma. Their attraction is instant and electric, and it doesn’t take long before Clementine realizes that she has fallen in love with Emma.

But acceptance of her newly-emerged sexuality doesn’t come easy for Clementine, and we experience the battle she faces not only internally but also amongst her peers at school surrounding her forbidden attraction. It’s about finding and accepting yourself even though everyone around you tells you that you are wrong, that the love that you feel is wrong.

What follows is a heartfelt coming-of-age story of first love, self-discovery, and ultimately tragedy. Yes, there’s tragedy, something we learn in the opening pages of the novel. So though it’s a beautiful love story, it’s also a heartbreaking one, one that was difficult to read in parts. This is as much a coming of age story about a girl’s awakened desires, as it is a story of hardship and loss.

The medium of a graphic novel is surprisingly effective in telling this raw and very intimate tale. Blue is the Warmest Color is an emotionally expressive and exquisitely drawn book about love, loss, depression, trauma, bullying, acceptance, homophobia and so much more.

It’s a dark book in places, filled with angst and fear, but it’s also a beautiful, swirling romantic sweep of a book chock full of gorgeous, evocative images which render this graphic novel a beautiful work of art. Maroh’s drawing skill is exceptional and smart, the rich and bold drawings expertly capturing the nervous and exciting awe of first love as well as uncertainty, guilt, shame and tragedy, panel after panel.

All in all, I adored the characters, the story and the illustrations and I’m so glad I came across this. It was not only a well-told, deeply moving tale but also a heart-tugger of a story that sticks with you and gives you plenty to think about afterward — or at least it did for me. Recommended!

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Filed Under: Graphic Novels, LGBT Romance Tagged With: lesbian graphic novel, lgbt graphic novel

Review of The First Fifteen Lives of Harry August

November 28, 2018 by Roger Hyttinen Leave a Comment

First fifteen lives of harry august book coverThe First Fifteen Lives of Harry August follows our main character Harry August who lives his life, over and over and over. But it’s the same life, and he always returns to exactly where he began: as his mother gave birth to him in the ladies restroom. Once he reaches the age of 6 or 7, all of his memories return, complete with all of the knowledge he’s amassed in his previous lives. Think of the movie “Groundhog Day” except for an entire lifetime. It’s also worth mentioning is that Harry is extraordinarily gifted in that he was a mnemonic, meaning he remembers every single detail from each of his lives.

What’s interesting though, is that he doesn’t live the exact same life and he can choose to do whatever he wants during his lifetime, whether it be teaching at a university, becoming a scientist, a lawyer, a doctor, or a physicist, living in Russia — whatever he wants to do. So in this way, he does have free will to live whatever kind of life he wants, to go in whatever direction he wants. For example, throughout his lives, Harry has lived in an amazing variety of places such as England, Russia, China, and the United States. He can also choose to fall in love with the same person as a previous life or move on to someone new.

Finally, during one of his lives, he learns that there are others like himself who call themselves the Kalachakra which I believe was Buddhist terminology for the wheel of time. The word Ouroboran was also used to describe those who live, die, and are reborn to relive their lives again. This comes from the word “Ouroboros” which is the serpent eating its tail, which represents the never-ending cycle of death and rebirth.

So the Kalchakra have formed a club called the Chronus Club with branches all over the world, and they try to help each other out, especially during the challenging childhood years. Imagine being 800 years old and having to live as a child under the thumb of your parents until you come of age. That’s where the other Kalachakras step in and help, as they often extricate the Kalachakra children from ridiculously repetitive or overly difficult childhoods.

But they do have their rules: they are not allowed to do anything that will drastically change the future. For instance, they cannot kill Hitler or try to prevent JFK’s murder, or introduce future science, or anything for that matter that could cause a ripple effect throughout the course of history.

Of course, there are always those bad apples who abuse their power. But members who knowingly break these rules are severely dealt with in one of two ways: an electrical clearing of the mind which means that none of their past memories will return in their next life, or a pre-birth termination, in which they will not be born, thus terminating the cycle for good.

What I found fascinating is that the club members pass messages to each other through time. How this works is that a child will give a message to another member when he or she is old, so when that person is born again, they can, in turn, pass the message on to other members who are nearing the end of their life. So in this way, the past connects to the future, and the future connects to the past from one lifetime to another.

But one day, it all changes. At the end of Harry’s 11th life, a little girl appears at his bedside and warns Harry that in the future, a global catastrophe occurs and that he and the other members have to do something to try to stop it. But as Harry and the others investigate, they figure out that one of their own is to blame — one of the Kalachakra is breaking the rules, and now it’s up to Harry figure out who is doing it, when they’re doing it, how they’re doing and to somehow stop the catastrophe from happening.

I loved the immense scope and scale of this story and felt that this was an exceptionally well fleshed out version of time travel. Through Harry’s various lives, we get a peek into history, especially the highs and lows of the 20th century. Additionally, the story was a chance to explore Harry’s individuality as well as his connection with others, all the while dealing with major themes of good vs. evil, birth, death, science, religion, love, hate and so much more. How many times have most of us thought about how different our life would have been had we chosen a different path? This book explores just that question. It’s a book about what we could accomplish if we had an eternity. Absolutely fascinating. But then again, I love time-travel books, and this was for sure one of the better ones.

Now I will admit that initially, it was rough going with this book. I actually considered DNFing it about 60% in. The story is told from multiple timelines which took a bit of getting used to. But more than that, this is a dense book, and it takes quite a bit of time for the story to develop. But once it did, boy oh boy, what a ride it was! I’m thrilled I stuck it out because it was so worth it in the end. The story really picked up speed and ended up being exciting and gripping, engaging me all the way to the surprising and stunning (yet entirely satisfying) ending.

All an all, The First Fifteen Lives of Harry August is a profound and gripping story with a compelling and relatable protagonist, an exciting, well-developed plot line and a fun supporting cast of unique and interesting secondary characters. As people drift in and out of the story, I was struck by how full and complete all of the characters are and how much they added to the storyline. This was an emotionally intense, and deeply engaging novel that had me on the edge of my seat until the explosive ending. I felt that The First Fifteen Lives of Harry August was not only cleverly written but also eloquently narrated and I’m so glad I read it.

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Filed Under: Fantasy/Urban Fantasy Tagged With: reincarnation, Time Travel

Review of The Dreadful Objects by Chris Cooper

November 26, 2018 by Roger Hyttinen Leave a Comment

The dreadful objects book coverThe Dreadful Objects follows our main character Jamie Lawson who has been in a major rut and has been unable to move on with his life, following the death of his girlfriend a year earlier. He then learns that his uncle, a famous and quite wealthy horror author, has committed suicide and has bequeathed Jamie all of his possessions including a couple of million dollars and a big, creepy and spooky mansion, filled with macabre horror memorabilia.

From the cover, I thought that this might be a haunted house story, but it wasn’t. It was more about haunted objects, which made me think of the television show a few years back entitled Warehouse 13.

So Jamie inadvertently discovers that the events in his uncle’s horror books actually happened in real life. Now that might not seem all that surprising except that all of the events that took place in the books occurred after the books were written.

Jamie decides to dig a bit to see if he can discover further connections and learns that two items that are locked in glass cases appear to be linked with real-life deaths and might hold the key to figuring out why his uncle killed himself. As Jamie puts together more pieces of the puzzle, he begins to realize that the mystery may be even stranger than he’d initially thought and may, in fact, be paranormal in nature (hint: it is)

I’ve read a ton of haunted house novels, so I found the idea of haunted objects to be a refreshing change of pace from the usual haunted house trope (though I have to admit that I do have a soft spot for haunted house stories). I also really enjoyed the vivid and vibrant descriptions of the house and all of the spooky off-the-wall objects contained therein, which I felt added to the richness and the atmosphere of the story.

Though this novel is classified as a horror novel and it is a bit on the scary side, true horror fans may be tad disappointed. It’s true that the story is dark at times and definitely tells a suspenseful, spooky tale, but it does so in a more lighthearted way. As such, I felt that this novel might be better placed in the cozy mystery genre (or perhaps the cozy horror genre, if there is such a thing).

All in all, The Dreadful Objects was a twisty, wildly entertaining story with relentless pacing, rich, lifelike characters and a brilliant ending which made this novel a real page-turner for me. It’s a wonderfully mysterious thriller that I had a difficult time putting down right until the surprising and utterly satisfying conclusion. Recommended!

In the spirit of full disclosure, I won this book in a Goodreads drawing and was under no obligation to leave a review.

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Filed Under: Horror Tagged With: cozy horror, Cozy Mystery

Review of Reincarnation Blues by Michael Poore

November 25, 2018 by Roger Hyttinen Leave a Comment

Reincarnation blues book coverSo I went into this book knowing absolutely nothing about it. I was browsing at the library, and it caught my eye, and after having read the blub, I loved the concept of the book so much that I picked it up. And I’m glad I did.

Reincarnation Blues follows our main character Milo who has reincarnated 9,995 times and is one of the oldest if not THE oldest soul on earth. But — he only has five lives left to gain perfection, and when he does, he earns a place in the great cosmic soul — gets to become part of the Oversoul of the universe. But if he doesn’t, he ceases to exist. Completely. He just fades into nothing.

But there’s another interesting complication. At the end of every life, he awakes on the bank of the river in the arms of the anthropomorphic manifestation of Death also known as Suzie (she prefers to be called Suzie as she doesn’t like to be referred to as death). But it is Suzie who comes to him as Death at the end of every one of his lives.

For millennia, Suzie and Milo have loved each other, and they are both facing the future with a kind of dread as Milo’s lives count down. So in this way, it’s a great love story, though that is not the focus of the book.

It’s also worth mentioning that when he’s on earth living out a life as a human, he has no recollection of any of this other lives nor does he remember that the love of his life — or should I say his soul — is waiting for him on the other side. His wisdom does tend to grow with each life, however, so we do get to see his evolution.

What I found especially fascinating about this book was that the book the author provides us with small glimpses of many of his incarnations. Several of them, however, are much more detailed and I found them all riveting. Some take place in the way distant past while others take place in the far future, some even in space. What’s interesting about these stories is that they are chronological so we have no idea where we were going to end up after turning the page; though the author does an excellent job of weaving all these lives — including Milo’s time in the afterlife — together into a cohesive story. The author shifted seamlessly and elegant from one time period to the next.

I loved the fact that if you really screwed up during one of your lives, then you have to live a life of penance such as coming back as a ladybug or a housefly. Of course, the author goes into quite a bit of detail with Milo’s five remaining lives, and it’s in these stories where we truly get a feel for the kind of person he is.

This book wasn’t just about one man’s search for perfection. Suzie (AKA Death) also had her own search for meaning, and I enjoyed seeing Death’s evolution as the story unfolded. But it was also about the power of choice and those terribly gray areas between right and wrong. But I don’t want to mention any more lest I delve into spoiler territory.

I think one reason I enjoyed this so much was that the book had a Terry Pratchettesque feeling to it, especially the humor I felt. Hell, Death, who is featured in many of the Terry Pratchett Discworld books, is also one of the main characters in this tale.

Reincarnation Blues was part sci-fi, part fantasy, part dystopian, with a good sprinkling of philosophy and humor. It’s a magical and quirky book that makes you think long after the story is finished. It is also wildly entertaining and uplifting, though some parts of Milo’s lives were rather brutal and a tad difficult to read about.

But all in all, this book was a home run for me, and I ended up loving it.

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Filed Under: Fantasy/Urban Fantasy Tagged With: past lives, reincarnation

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