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My Favourite Books Read in 2019

17th April 2020 By Julianne 1 Comment

I’m really excited to be sharing my favourite books of 2019 today! I didn’t have a standout favourite but these books are all brilliant.

Convenience Store Woman by Sayaka Murata

This is a funny, strange, short novel about a woman who loves her job at a convenience store, much to the consternation of her family and friends. I read it near the start of the year and I’m still thinking about it. It raises so many questions!

Buy: Kindle | Print (affiliate links)

Beauty Queens by Libba Bray

Listen to the audiobook. Trust me. I have a print copy of this but ended up borrowing the audio version from the library and it is just fabulous. Read by the author, it really comes alive. This is a satire with a generous heart about a group of beauty pageant contestants whose plane crashes on a desert island, where they struggle to agree on survival tactics and discover a conspiracy.

Buy: Kindle | Print (affiliate links)

Freshers by Tom Ellen and Lucy Ivison

Tom and Lucy had already marked themselves out as the comedy geniuses of the UKYA world with Lobsters and Never Evers and this continues to cement their status. It’s about settling into university life, making new friends, figuring out who you are – and trying not to completely mess everything up along the way.

Buy: Kindle | Print (affiliate links)

Nightingale Wood by Stella Gibbons

This is a 1930s retelling of Cinderella with three Cinderellas – Viola, a former shop assistant, now an upper-class widow, her sister-in-law, bored Tina, and her love interest’s cousin Hetty. Unfortunately there’s one paragraph that includes the n-word twice – spoken by an unsympathetic character, but it’s still there. Again, it’s a book from the 1930s but it could have been taken out by the publisher!

Buy: Kindle | Print (affiliate links)

Off the Clock by Laura Vanderkam

This is, in my not so humble opinion, Laura Vanderkam’s best book so far, focusing on how to feel like you have more time for all the things you really love and want to do. I’d suggest you read 168 Hours: You Have More Time Than You Think first, before this, to get the most out of it, but I think Off the Clock really solidifies her ideas about how to make the most of your time and builds on her previous work.

Buy: Kindle | Print (affiliate links)

The River of No Return by Bee Ridgway

Will I ever get over the book hangover this has left me with?! This is an utterly spectacular novel, a time-travel adventure romance featuring a global conspiracy. Regency manners meet modern mores, magic and mystery abounds. When will we get a sequel? And how can I get my hands on the digital-only, not published in the UK prequel? All I can think to do is beg as many people to read it as possible, the eBook isn’t expensive and maybe if sales go through the roof someone will do something!

Buy: Kindle | Print (affiliate links)

The House of Secrets by Sarra Manning

As my Instagram caption says I was surprised to find myself swept away by the grief, sadness, and hope that the protagonists of this story experienced. Zoe and Libby are two women decades apart united by a house and their experiences as would-be mothers. It’s a moving and beautiful read.

Buy: Kindle | Print (affiliate links)

My Sister, the Serial Killer by Oyinkan Braithwaite

I love books about sisters, especially sisters with a complicated relationship, and this takes complicated to a whole new and incredibly dark level! Korede’s sister Ayoola has an unfortunate habit of killing her boyfriends and Korede has always helped her hide the bodies. But then Ayoola catches the eye of Korede’s long-time work crush, leading to a lot of second thoughts… It’s very funny and I would highly recommend it.

Buy: Kindle | Print (affiliate links)

Margot & Me by Juno Dawson

In the 1990s, Fliss and her mum, who is recovering from cancer, go to live in a tiny country village with Fliss’ grandmother, Margot. Fliss hates her new life until one day she discovers Margot’s teenage diary from the Second World War. I was completely absorbed in both their stories and loved listening to this so much, I would definitely read it again.

Buy: Kindle | Print (affiliate links)

The Loneliest Girl in the Universe by Lauren James (review copy provided by publisher)

Romy is literally the loneliest girl in the universe, the only person left alive on a spaceship going to start a second Earth. Her only contact is her NASA-supplied therapist, Molly and as she gets further away from Earth, a place she’s never seen, having been born in space, it takes longer and longer for them to email each other. Everything changes when one day, she receives a message from Molly that there’s another, faster, ship on the way and the Captain, a young man, will be able to contact her soon. This is an incredible thriller and perfectly captures all of Romy’s emotions, from loneliness to hope and fear.

Buy: Kindle | Print (affiliate links)

The Quiet at the End of the World by Lauren James (review copy provided by publisher)

I read this shortly after The Loneliest Girl in the Universe and was delighted to find that although it’s another sci-fi thriller, the tone is remarkably different. Lowrie and Shen are the last children ever to be born on Earth after mass infertility sweeps the globe and they grow up surrounded by a small, ageing community in a solarpunkesque central London. When the adults start getting sick, they are the only ones who can help – but can two teenagers save the human race?

Buy: Kindle | Print (affiliate links)

The Poet X by Elizabeth Acevedo

I hadn’t read any novels in verse for years but I bought this based on a friend’s recommendation. It languished in my Kindle purchases for several months until while on holiday, getting bored waiting in a queue for a bus, I decided to give it a go. I was very quickly obsessed! It’s about a young aspiring poet, Xiomara, and her relationship with her religious and disapproving mother, a very powerful, moving read.

Buy: Kindle | Print (affiliate links)

The True Queen by Zen Cho

This is the sequel to Sorcerer to the Crown, my favourite read of 2018. It  The True Queen is about two young women, Sakti and Muna, who find themselves washed ashore on Janda Baik after a storm, with no memory of anything but each other. Mak Genggang takes them in and ends up sending them to Regency England to get help restoring their memories. Funny cultural misunderstandings abound and the romance is delightful.

Buy: Kindle | Print (affiliate links)

Sofia Khan is Not Obliged by Ayisha Malik

When Sofia Khan is asked to write a book on Muslim dating, shortly after breaking off her engagement – her former fiance refused to reconsider living in a house adjoining his parents’ with a hole in the wall – she realises she better start actually Muslim dating. It’s a funny, interesting read and although I didn’t quite warm to the sequel, I loved it as a standalone novel.

Buy: Kindle | Print (affiliate links)

Our Stop by Laura Jane Williams

This is a lovely romance that is basically about very nice people falling in love! A missed connection column in one of the free London newspapers is intended to help people find each other, but our protagonists keep missing their stop. It’s very cute and full of wonderful London things, the perfect read if you want to visit but can’t!

Buy: Kindle | Print (affiliate links)

Wed Wabbit by Lissa Evans

This is a spectacularly high-concept kids book about Fidge, a girl who gets transported to the world of her sister’s favourite book. Something’s very wrong, as the land of the Wimbley Woos is ruled over by an evil dictator – Fidge’s sister’s favourite toy – Wed Wabbit.

Buy: Kindle | Print (affiliate links)

Code Name Verity by Elizabeth Wein

I was really excited to read this as I’d heard a lot of hype about it and I was not remotely disappointed! Code Name Verity is breaktakingly good and deserves all of the praise it’s received. I smiled, I cried, and immediately requested the prequel The Pearl Thief from the library.

Buy: Kindle | Print (affiliate links)

Deeplight by Frances Hardinge (NetGalley copy)

This is a stunning book set in the islands of the Myriad, about a boy who gets caught on a smuggling job and sentenced to work on the island of the priests, a generation after all the gods died. His new boss sets him to work as a spy, greedy to get her hands on the gods’ secrets, as the corpses of the gods, when dragged up in pieces from the bottom of the ocean, provide relics that can be used to power weird and wonderful inventions.

Buy: Kindle | Print (affiliate links)

Filed Under: Book Chat, Recommendation Lists, Reviews, YouTube

December 2019 Book Review Wrap-Up: Audiobooks Galore

14th April 2020 By Julianne Leave a Comment

Books mentioned and mini-reviews:

Fly by Night, by Frances Hardinge

This is a delightful book about a runaway and her terror of a pet goose who take up with a mysterious stranger who may or may not be a murderer. She hopes to find out more about her father’s life and go to school, but the city they travel to is plagued by political plotting. This was delightful – I loved the worldbuilding, the political backdrop for the story is really interesting, and the goose is brilliant.

Buy: Kindle | Print (affiliate links)

The Sun is Also a Star, by Nicola Yoon

I was completely absorbed by this story about two teens, one of whom is due to be deported from the USA to Jamaica with her family the next day, who despite this, meet and fall in love over the course of 24 hours.  Despite the unlikely premise it is realistic and moving.

Buy: Kindle | Print (affiliate links)

The Night Circus, by Erin Morgenstern

Two magicians are chosen by their mentors as children and entered into a battle for dominance before they are old enough to understand what that means. A magical circus becomes their arena and as they create ever more beautiful spectacles they fall in love, but the competition may be the doom of both of them and everyone else attached to the circus. I really enjoyed this stunning story and was captivated by the idea of this magical circus. If only I could visit!

Buy: Kindle | Print (affiliate links)

Christmas at the Palace, by Jeevani Charika

This is basically the story of Harry and Meghan if Meghan was a northern second-generation immigrant doctor! It was very cute but also tackled what I see as the grim reality of being royalty without flinching – the author made sadly very accurate predictions about the issues with racism that Meghan would have to face, but also writes very realistically about the pressures any royal bride would be under.

Buy: Kindle | Print (affiliate links)

One Christmas Star, by Mandy Baggot

Another social justice infused romance! Primary school teacher Emily dreams of making it to the deputy head position so when her headteacher asks her to write the school’s Christmas musical she feels she has to say yes, but the school has no budget and Emily no musical ability. Everything changes when she and her class stumble upon pop star Ray Stone sleeping in the school shed! I really enjoyed this, it was fun and moving in equal measure, tackling issues including bereavement and emotional abuse.

Buy: Kindle | Print (affiliate links)

All I Want for Christmas, by Keris Stainton

This is a short, sexy, Christmas novella about a young woman who meets a cute guy at work and works very hard to resist him…

Buy: Kindle (affiliate link)

The Queen of Nothing, by Holly Black

This is the third in this series about faerie politics, magic, and tricks, so I can’t say much else other than that it was a great end to the series!

Buy: Kindle | Print (affiliate links)
If you haven’t read any books in this series before start with The Cruel Prince (Kindle | Print), or even better, Tithe (Kindle | Print), the first in Holly’s Modern Faerie Tale series, as some of the characters are in both series. And don’t miss The Darkest Part of the Forest (Kindle | Print), a standalone with characters that show up in the Folk of the Air (Cruel Prince) books. In this video I also mentioned the Curseworkers series, which begins with White Cat (Kindle | Print).

Filed Under: Book Chat, Reviews, YouTube

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Hi! I'm Julianne and this is my book blog. Click my picture to read more about me.

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