Friday, September 26, 2025

Chloe's Crusade (The Teddy Bear Chronicles Book 2) by Donnalyn Vjota; The Bears Are Back in Town

 

Chloe's Crusade (The Teddy Bear Chronicles Book 2) by Donnalyn Vjota; The Bears Are Back in Town

By Julie Sara Porter

Bookworm Reviews 

Spoilers: I should let you know that because this book refers to events from the previous volume, Hope in Paris, I suggest that you read that review first and be forewarned that this review contains MAJOR SPOILERS for the first book. Proceed with caution.

The plush bears and their attached humans are back in the second volume of Donnalyn Vjota's The Teddy Bear Chronicles Series, Chloe's Crusade. and this time they have added a couple of new bears to their Comfort Circle and some new humans with new conflicts. More trouble arrives and the stuffed ones are caught up in from their furry feet all the way up to their adorable wide eyes. 

Things have changed since our last encounter with the bears and humans. Love Bear’s human owner Richard and his girlfriend, Tori have married, Tori’s mental health has improved, and they adopted two of the orphans from the orphanage where Tori worked under the name of Rachel Verona. Fair Bear’s human friend, Kelli, who is also Tori’s sister, has recovered from her abusive relationship with her ex Mark and married Detective Sidney Lukas. Both couples live in Paris in close proximity to each other and are pretty tight. 

But there are some new problems on the horizon overseen by two new members of the Fur Squad. One is Tiny Bear, a small bear hanging on a keychain belonging to FBI agent Chloe Stodgson, Tori and Kelli’s friend, who is investigating a drug ring out of Venezuela. The other bear is Rocco Bear who lives with the family of Santi Alesso including him, his wife Anna, and daughter Kiara whom Rocco affectionately calls “Munchkin.” Chloe’s investigation ties all of these characters together as the Alessis have to join Witness Protection because of their proximity to organized crime and Chloe needs help from a scientist to make fake drugs to trap the dealers and an outside police officer with experience in narcotics. Luckily Richard and Sidney respectively fit that bill.

This book is almost as good as its predecessor however it loses a lot of the charm and magic of the original. This intricate plot involving drug deals, criminal investigations, stalkers, organized crime, and assassinations comes out of an entirely different genre and runs away from the original premise of bears talking about the personal dramas and conflict of humans. There are some genuine moments of suspense particularly while Chloe is dealing with betrayal within her team, the Alessis have to go on the run for their lives, and Kelli and Tori receive gifts and break ins from a potential stalker. But these plots could be within any book that doesn't need inanimate toy bears to narrate it.

Much of the conflict of the previous book lay in the bear’s inability to understand the subtleties and struggles within their human companions. Their narrative voices hover between childlike curiosity and wizened understanding with the occasional sardonic and humorous quip at their friend’s expense. This book throws a Thriller plot, actually several of them, around and reduces the bears to side characters whose narration becomes muted. They are just reporting the on the scene action as would any generic first person or third person human narrator.

That's not to say that there isn't anything to recommend in this book. To their credit, the characters, both real and stuffed, are still just as memorable as they were in the previous book.

There are some great moments where Tiny, the little adrenaline junkie, gets excited on “helping out” with the case even though its main involvement ends at just hanging on Chloe's belt while she does the real work. Tiny thinks of itself as a Sherlock Holmes in a bear suit and takes pride in being part of an awesome investigative team like when the boss calls Chloe and her partner, Sanchez in for a private conference. Tiny reminds us that she actually has two partners and insists that it is an important member of the investigation team. One of Tiny’s most adorable moments is when it reacts with jubilation and glee when it finds itself pictured in a news story about Chloe's investigation. Okay granted the pic just got the top of its head but it counts!

Rocco is a tough little guy who is protective of his family, especially “Munchkin.” He has issues with her parents and when the family is forced to separate, Rocco ends up with them instead of Kiara. He has to witness the Alessis change their names, relocate possibly forever, watch what they say because they are being monitored, and take their anger and discomfort out on each other. Rocco sees their flaws magnified in this stressful situation, particularly Santi’s quickness to anger and infidelity. Rocco reacts with fear and anxiety but is also surly towards Santi whom it holds responsible for this mess. Rocco acts like an angry adolescent holding trauma inside a tough exterior that tries to brush off fear, worry, and hurt but only increases their vulnerability.

The original bears also have some great moments. Love Bear accompanies Richard to work as he prepares the drugs and responds with the usual support and humor at its geeky human friend (When Richard yells, “Fiddlesticks!” Love responds with embarrassment that his human is an 80 year old in the body of a man in his 30’s.). Love is proud when Richard makes a breakthrough and terrified when it sees someone break into the office to tamper with Richard’s work. 

Fair is enamored with Kelli and Sydney’s romance but is worried when Kelli’s life is in danger. It also empathizes with her concern about Sydney when he's on the job, always ready with a comforting snuggle as she sits down for movie night to get her mind off of her troubles. Even our old friend Sleepy Time Bear is back to remind us that it is doing fine while still living at Tori’s old orphanage and comforting children who can't sleep.

While Chloe's Crusade is a near miss with its thriller plots and abandonment of the original narrative structure, this second volume still has enough warmth, humor, and heart to make it bearable. 









Wednesday, September 24, 2025

The Amazing Flight of Aaron William Hawk vol 2. Wings of Emifra by J. Bruno; Steampunk Fantasy Science Fiction About An Aviation School Takes Flight

 

The Amazing Flight of Aaron William Hawk vol 2. Wings of Emifra by J. Bruno; Steampunk Fantasy Science Fiction About An Aviation School Takes Flight 

By Julie Sara Porter 

Bookworm Review

This review is also on Reedsy Discovery

Spoilers: J. Bruno's, The Amazing Flight of Aaron William Hawk vol. 2 Wings of Emifra is another in the trend of a Magical Boarding School but unlike Miss Mabel’s School For Girls by Katie Cross, The Fearghus Academy by I.O. Scheffer, The Peacebringer Series by Raymond W Wilkinson, or their most famous cousin Harry Potter, which teach different magical skills and talents, this one is more specialized. It is laser focused on one particular special skill, the gift of flight.

In the previous novel (unread by me), Aaron grieves the death of his father in a flying crash and is treated as an outcast in his seaside village. He discovers a pair of metal wings and a map to an island called Solistasia. His mentor tells them that there is a place where he can learn how to fly. Not with an airplane, he can build a pair of wings and fly with them.. Aaron takes the wings and map and heads straight for Solistasia.

In this volume, Aaron wakes up on the island and is welcomed to the School of the Skies. Aaron takes many classes taught by some really cool teachers, has some great friends, receives a bully/rival, and tries to fit in this strange place. The students study, train, and practice hoping for the day when they can show their academic excellence by flying a dangerous route to Mt. Emifra, which is a great distance from the school. The mountain is surrounded by unpredictable wind currents, enormous land masses that obstruct flight paths, and unidentified species that live on the mountain.

There are many standards that The Amazing Flight of Aaron William Hawk follows. It carries the usual tropes found in many school stories: the newcomer protagonist, the close friends, the potential love interest, the snobbish arrogant bully, the academic lessons that fit the theme, and the life lessons. The tropes exist and some of them don't do anything new here, but others provide some interesting twists and deviations from the normal procedures in these books.

One of the more interesting aspects to the book is the school’s central focus on flying. They revere Icarus from Greek Mythology who in this version survived his plunge to the earth and taught a younger generation the secrets of flight with wings. The School of the Skies teaches classes on how to construct wings. They learn how to use the wings properly, how to let gravity be their accomplice, how to avoid obstacles, and how to manage their speed and distance from the ground. It’s a fascinating curriculum unless you have aviophobia or acrophobia. But if you ever had dreams of flying with wings and without the assistance of aircraft it brings those fantasies to life. 

The teachers know their craft and how to share it with their students. Tarras, a young teacher whom Aaron meets on his first day in Solistasia, acts like a cool big brother mentor figure to the new recruits. Professor Thunderstruck is a thrill seeking aviation instructor who teaches students the basics of flying including the excitement and potential dangers that come with it. Professor Guildenstein not only teaches the students how to make their wings but how to incorporate their own personalities into them like increasing their speed, giving it a more airy design, or increasing elevation properties. Then there’s mysterious Professor Mangus, an export on wind charting whose Glamour AKA Shape Shifting ability seems out of place in an aviation school but proves to become a key talent later on. 

Aaron makes some friends including Eno who shows him the ropes and gives him and the reader much needed exposition before fading into the background,Trevin, his goofy roommate, and Alya, who like Aaron is an outsider invited to Solistasia and acts as the moral center but still can be one of the gang. She is the potential love interest and some of the book falls into a 

“Will-they-won’t-they” subplot. They are good loyal friends but there isn’t much that separates them from other similar characters in other similar stories. 

What is unique to this book is how the arrogant bully character is written. Drake Corvus at first appears as the typical rival challenging Aaron every chance that he gets. He mocks his background, his deceased father, and his mistakes. He appears jealous of his achievements and potential for success. He is a walking stereotype, almost too much like a stereotype. 

There are moments where Drake shows vulnerability like crying when he is alone, quietly analyzing Aaron’s movements, and showing concern for his plight, usually covering it up with a sarcastic remark. In one moment, he actually saves Aaron’s life when he is in a tight spot. It shows more depth to his character, leads to an interesting reveal about his origins, and answers questions about his arrival at the School.

There is a long section where Aaron is left on his own and explores many darker issues from his past, most of which were probably elaborated upon in the previous book so don’t make any sense if you haven’t read it. It also puts the book into another territory which started out as a school story but became a fight for survival in a fantasy landscape. 

This section has some interesting aspects to it particularly the arrival of Emberly, a witty saucy fairy who occasionally saves Aaron’s life while bantering with him making his attractions clear. There are also some interesting cliffhanger suspense like when Aaron faces an opponent who knows more about him than she should. But it all seems to belong to another type of book than the one that we were given so far. It flirts with Fantasy while the academic aspects flirt with Steampunk Science Fiction. 

Despite the complexities of the survival subplot, The Amazing Flight of Aaron William Hawk is an excellent YA novel that really takes flight. 





Monday, September 22, 2025

The Red Wedding by Alessandra Oddi Baglioni; Dear Emperor Yours Jane by Robin Robby; Small Worlds by Gail Vida Hamburg

 The Red Wedding by Alessandra Oddi Baglioni; Dear Emperor Yours Jane by Robin Robby; Small Worlds by Gail Vida Hamburg 

By Julie Sara Porter 

Bookworm Reviews


The Red Wedding by Alessandra Oddi Baglioni

The Red Wedding by Alessandra Oddi Baglioni is a short but captivating novella about a notorious Renaissance era family that faced an organized bloody and violent attack. This is actually based  on Baglioni’s family history.

In the 15th and 16th century, the city of Perugia, Italy was considered rich and cultural enough to compete with Florence's sophistication. The Baglionis were a powerful family with a lot of political, financial, and cultural influence in Perugia. They had alliances and rivalries with other families like The Medicis of Florence, The Borgias of Rome, The Doges of Venice and others. 

This book focuses on the family from 1492-1501 after the death of patriarch Braccio Baglioni. Since Braccio’s son Grifone was killed in battle, he did not have an immediate heir so he left the legacy to his brothers Guido and Ridolfo. The brothers decided to create a diarchy shared between them. Their sons, Giampolo and Astor married Hyppolite dei Conti and Lavinia Colonna Orsini respectively, who came from illustrious Roman families. However, Grifone’s son, Griffonetto would not give up his own right for succession. He also had an advantageous marriage to Zenobia, the daughter of the Count of Santa Fiora. He participated in a conspiracy to eliminate the diarchies and their successors. During the night of Astor and Lavinia’s wedding, Griffonetto and his allies struck. They killed the couple, Guido, Ridolfo, and their relatives. Only Giampolo survived to kill Griffonetto who died in the arms of his mother, Atalanta. 

The Red Wedding is an intricate work that captures the culture, class, and conspiracies that made the Renaissance. There are plenty of moments of whispered conversations, feigned friendships, and harsh betrayals. Many are on the hunt for financial gain and family power. 

The Red Wedding itself is a graphic slow moving plot that fills various pages. It is tightly potted as though it were a secret invasion during war. The attackers hide until their targets are separated and at their most vulnerable and unobservant. Then they overwhelm them in a surprise synchronized mass murder. 

One of the hardest passages to read is the deaths of Astor and Lavinia. They  consummate their wedding night and contemplate a wonderful future together in their private chambers. Their assassin appears from the shadows lying in wait and suddenly that future is ended in the bloodiest way possible.

Most of the characters are duplicitous, cunning, and looking to outdo one another. Everybody is hiding something whether it's murderous intent, secret alliances, or extramarital affairs.
It is hard to like any of the characters but it is very easy to become drawn in and seduced by their goals and actions.

The Baglioni Family are fascinating characters but one of the most fascinating is Atalanta, widow of Grifone and mother of Griffonetto. As a noblewoman and widow, she has very little public influence. She was property of her father, then her husband,then her son but that never meant that she couldn’t seize power covertly. In many ways, she acts as the true head of the Baglioni Family behind the scenes.

Atalanta forged allyship with other influential families which helped her and her family survive the aftermath of the Red Wedding. She was also very involved in patronage of the arts and culture. Her most prominent artist was Raphael, whom she commissioned for his painting, The Deposition. 

She makes her opinions about her household rather clear and isn’t shy about her feelings towards others such as Zenobia, her daughter in law with whom she shares a mutual animosity. However, Atalanta also can put her personal feelings aside as when she shelters Zenobia and her children from the abusive domineering Griffonetto. It says something about her as a woman that she was willing to side with the daughter in law that she didn't always get along with over the son that she spoiled and indulged when he was younger. She recognizes when it is time to put her family legacy first and when it is time to listen to her conscience instead.

There is also a very heart wrenching final encounter between Atalanta and Griffonetto after his confrontation with Giampolo. She realizes that in this competition between scheming family members, there are no winners. People are ruthlessly murdered and family members mourn their loss and have to survive another day.




Dear Emperor, Yours Jane by Robin Robby 

Robin Robby’s previous short novel about Jane Austen, Jane Austen’s Totally Unexpected New York Adventure was a gentle comic Time Travel Science Fiction in which three 21st century travelers go back to 1817 to take Miss Austen to futuristic New York to be treated for the disease that would eventually kill her. Austen becomes captivated by the future and has a romance with one of the time travelers.
Robby’s next short novel about the Regency-era Romance novelist, Dear Emperor, Yours Jane, is a sharper, less genteel and more satirical Alternate Universe where Austen encounters another noted historical figure from her time period, Napoleon Bonaparte. 

In 1815, Napoleon returned from Elba and roared with vengeance. On the heels of her recently published novel, Emma, Austen decides that the French Emperor “needs editing.” She travels to France to get an audience with Bonaparte so he can change his megalomaniacal ways. The two engage in several conversations where they talk in circles around each other. Writing about disagreeable men isn’t the same as encountering one in real life, especially if he is the leader of an Empire and is determined not to change his ways. Austen has her work cut out for her.

The short novel gets a lot of humor about the contrast between the two main characters. Austen and Napoleon represented different aspects of the 18-teens. Politics vs. Literature. Battlefield vs. Drawing Room. Weapons vs. Words. Battle of Waterloo Vs. Battle of the Sexes. Masculine Vs. Feminine. They come from different hemispheres so it’s natural that they would butt heads upon meeting. 

Because Austen is a writer, she often uses literary analogies. She tells Napoleon that she believes Napoleon “to be written” and he needs revision “posthumously if necessary.” Napoleon, a military leader and strategist, speaks in war metaphors such as bragging that he conquered kingdoms and assesses Austen’s worth by asking what she conquered. (“Hearts,” she answers.) 

Napoleon sees Austen as an adversary who needs to be conquered or removed. Austen sees the Emperor as similar to her fictional characters, a man full of too much pride that needs an intelligent witty woman to make him see reason. Ironically, the thing that made her a good writer to millions makes her a terrible judge of character in this story. 

Napoleon and others around him remind Austen that they are not fictional characters. They can’t be redeemed by a few words, a comedy of errors, a grand ball, and an unexpected illness. They are real people and real people can’t always be changed. Austen is persistent but is deeply troubled by this revelation. This is a revelation that becomes more real when world politics comes between them and challenges Austen's drive to make the world a better place by redeeming the tyrant before her.

Dear Emperor, Yours Jane is an Alternate Universe but it is played realistically. It doesn’t end with a sudden change in history and things go on as before. Austen and Napoleon’s conversations are more of just an interesting meeting of minds but not impactful in history. (Though it is implied it did lend significance in literature by inspiring one of Jane Austen’s final novels, her darkest one, Persuasion). It’s a dark perspective that says some things are inevitable and can’t be changed even in Alternate History. 

Small Worlds by Gail Vida Hamburg 
This review is also on Reedsy Discovery.

Gail Vida Hamburg’s anthology, Small Worlds, specializes in flash fiction, brief short stories often under 1,500 words or five pages that tell a complete beginning, middle, and end. They focus on character, conflict, and tension within a limited scope. It's a challenge for an author to capture such actions, emotions, and development in such a short time but a good author can. Hamburg is a great author who captures those moments when lives are changed, decisions are made, and protagonists are left for better or worse.

The best stories are: 

“Signal Love”

The Protagonist becomes fascinated by Nate, the human sounding AI who helps her with a computer problem. She then calls him a few more times resulting in a friendship and potential romance.

The Protagonist is a lonely woman looking for some connection. She has exquisite taste in wine and gourmet cooking but it's hard for her to enjoy those things when she is alone. She has had many relationships that ended badly and has little to show for it except a broken heart and low opinions about the dating pool.

Though as an AI, Nate cannot fully emote; he can recognize changes in voice and demeanor and respond with limited emotions. To her, it doesn't matter. She finds him more understanding and empathetic than any other man that she met.

Nate has a warm natural presence as he helps her. She finds him to be a good listener and understanding as she reveals more personal vulnerabilities. He may be an artificial intelligence who simulates responses, but she sees something that is completely human.

In a time when people act more inhuman by considering empathy a weakness, cruelly mock and bully others, and put themselves over the needs of others, it makes sense that AI would retain the traits that humans abandoned. It makes sense that the Protagonist would find such a companion in Nate that she was unable to find in human men.

“Unclaimed”

Janice, her children, Glory and Bruce escape their abusive husband and father and retreat into the Australian Outback with Janice's mother, Rhonda and sister, Nin.

This story is just as much about setting as it is about character. The Outback is described as arid, barren, dry, and surrounded by abandoned buildings and wild animals. It takes tough people to survive such a location. It gives some idea of the situation that the family was in that would have warranted such a difficult and dangerous decision.

Because of this escape and having to start over, the family bonds closer together. Janice, Nin, and Rhonda share laughs and hardship stories to take their minds off the trauma before and the uncertainty afterwards. Glory is protective towards Bruce and this emotional connection lasts into adulthood. 

The hardships result in changes within the family. Some succumb to illness, and others have encounters with violence and addiction. It is very realistic that while many thrive in hard times, they still encounter physical and emotional difficulties. What keeps this family together is unconditional love and support despite the trauma.


“Catfish Tango”

Mike, a warehouse worker, tries to look for love on social media. His friend, Darren encouraged him to elaborate his profile changing him into a wealthy tech CEO with a handsome pic. He connects with Nadia, a UX Designer with secrets of her own.

This story explores the complexities of social media and modern dating. On the Internet, people can pretend that they are someone else who works at an awesome job, looks like a supermodel or a movie star, goes on breathtaking vacations, and has an enviable life that is free of problems. 

They can literally role play as anyone provided that they don't get caught. While people have become more aware of catfishing, some people still like to create completely different identities and live separate lives online that are distant from their real ones.

Mike pretends to be everything that he isn't in real life, rich, successful, charismatic, the kind of man who would attract someone like Nadia. He has severe self esteem issues. He questions everything about himself like his job, his appearance, his interests, his friends, and living situation. He hides behind the role because he doesn't like the person that he really is. 

His insecurities manifest in his face to face meeting with Nadia. He recognizes someone else hiding her real self underneath a different identity. While they accept each other's frailties and flaws, they also are enchanted by their assumed identities and find a way to retain them as well. Mike actually found someone with whom he could be himself, or more than one version of himself. 

“The Trouble with Bianca”

This story is an epistolary between Mr. and Mrs. DiAngelo and various school employees about their 12 year old daughter, Bianca. 

The exchanges are full of anecdotes about Bianca violating the dress code, challenging authority, using provocative and political statements, saying and doing controversial things. The parents, teachers, and administrators are full of questions. What is going on with her? Is her problem psychological, emotional, social? Did her parents give her a bad upbringing or did she get a bad education? Is Bianca responsible for her own behavior or are the adults partially to blame?

Each character gives their own perspective about how they view this girl. Her principal thinks that she is a brat who needs punishment. Her teacher believes her to be an irredeemable bad seed. Her guidance counselor sees her as an eccentric creative. The school psychiatrist diagnoses her with Oppositional Defiance Disorder. Bianca's parents say that she is a highly intelligent young woman who needs freedom to express herself. 

They don't come to any real conclusions because they can't agree on a plan or what Bianca needs. Instead there is a lot of blame passing and finger pointing of who is to blame. It's also worth noting that while we get multiple perspectives or opinions about Bianca, we don't get any perspective or opinion from Bianca. Even though she is an object in other's lives, she isn't the subject in her own life or even allowed to have a voice towards how it should go.

There are no real answers about Bianca's situation or what should be done just like there aren't with any troubled child. It's a question that anyone who is around children, parents, relatives, friends, educators, medical professionals, social services need to find a common ground, work together on determining them, and learn what procedures are needed.

They need to remember that kids aren't a monolith. Not every kid responds or behaves the same way or requires the same kind of treatment. They are individuals and should be treated as such. Because of that, it's also incredibly important to get the child's perspective themselves to discover what is troubling them, what they are thinking and feeling, and what can be done to help them move forward in life. 

“The Lonely Passion of Helen B.”

47 year old Helen B. lives a lonely structured friendless life. She decides to place a “rent a friend” ad online. She meets a small group of weird but likable applicants.

This story is practically a companion to “Signal Love,” in that it also explores loneliness and the lengths people will go to find companionship. Though instead of finding it through an AI simulation, Helen finds it in human people. She just goes around meeting them in an unusual way.

Helen is a shy analytical person with plenty of oddities and eccentricities which makes her perfect to lead this strange group. From Helen’s interest in collecting and cataloging insect specimens, to Marvin's fascination with Naval history and his detailed descriptions of scoliosis and plantar fasciitis, Daphne's feminism, devotion to Simone Weil and non sequitur questions like whether whales mourn, Craig’s Feng Shui practice and divining her apartment as having “limited energy,” Nancy, a devout Catholic who always brings muffins, and Zoya, a tough foul mouthed Russian expat who wants to understand “American loneliness.”  This cast seems to come from a sharp witty sitcom about goofy weird friends. 

Helen's new friends give her laughs, comfort, shared interests, parties, and gold times. It's a stress reliever from her usual life but it can also be a bit much for someone who isn't used to that much attention and togetherness.

Susan has been an introvert for over 40 years so it's not easy for her to fit into a social group. While loneliness has been a problem in her life, the solitude also gave her opportunities to think, meditate, research, become independent, and study her insects. She actually finds great comfort and ease in solitude and she misses that.

This story reveals that there is a huge difference between being alone and being on your own.

“Kali”

Kali is a strong willed defiant woman raised by a mother who encouraged her to challenge the system around her. When she settles in an affluent mostly white community, she is met with  derision and hatred.

This story is a character study of a woman raised to fight against an oppressive system that has been present since long before her ancestors were born. She was clearly raised to be a fighter. She was named for the Hindu Goddess of Death.  Her mother raised her to embrace Feminism and Black Power and she takes those lessons to heart.

In a strange way, “Kali” could be an answer to “The Trouble with Bianca.” Where “Bianca” was about how a troubled young woman with a difficult background is viewed by the people around her but never gets to speak for herself, “Kali” is about a troubled young woman with a difficult background who has no trouble speaking or thinking for herself, thank you very much.

Kali was raised to challenge those who would threaten her. When she enters the beach, white beachgoers stare at her with focused suspicion. One could say that her upbringing made her hyper aware and paranoid of her surroundings and perhaps she imagines that others have hostile intent towards her. But she isn't imagining their racist words to describe her or the vulgar harassment that some of the men give her. Above all, she isn't imagining when one of the men rapes her.

Kali was raised to fight and fight she does. She commits extreme violence to defend herself against her rapist. The ending implies that the rapist unleashed Kali the Death Goddess inside Kali the Protagonist. What he leaves behind is a woman who has ancestral rage, an activist’s view of the world, suspicion towards white men, and a weapon that she is prepared to use. It is uncertain whether she will attack to defend others or just commit violence for violence’s sake. One thing for sure is that she will embrace violence as her answer to any conflict.

“Go Gentle In This Good Morning”

This is a journal entry of 102 year old Elias Nathan Hollingwood. It recounts his long life and his decision to end it.

Many of these stories are excellent character studies so it is fitting that the final story in this review covers an entire long life. 
Elias gives his perspectives of his upbringing in Brooklyn, his military career, his marriage, his children, the changing world, his views, and his grief and losses as he waits to die. 

He draws the reader in by his anecdotes such as describing his wife, Clara as a “red haired woman with a librarian's gaze and an Irish lilt.” After she died in 1988, he mourned “she was my girl, my bonnie lass. She deserved opera and skylights. She died before I could give them to her.” He also has similar affection and melancholy for his and Clara's four children.

While Elias's memories are melancholic and nostalgic, they are also realistic. He acknowledges his previous racist beliefs that he held until he encountered the Tuskegee Airmen and The Navajo Code Talkers during WWII. He admired that courage, devotion, sacrifice and love for a country that didn't always love them back or acted like it didn't.

Elias’ story is one of love, loss, joy, regret, many experiences, and satisfaction that he lived through it. It's not a situation where one feels angst at his passing but feeling that it was well earned. He made the decision to end it on his own with satisfaction and an almost joyful exuberance about what happens next. He ends his life as a happy and contented man.





 


Thursday, September 18, 2025

The Healer's Daughter by Myriana Merkovic; Bewitching Historical Fiction About A 17th Century Healer and Witch


 The Healer's Daughter by Myriana Merkovic; Bewitching Historical Fiction About A 17th Century Healer and Witch

By Julie Sara Porter 

Bookworm Reviews 

Spoilers: The Healer's Daughter by Myriana Merkovic casts a spell on its Reader. It is a bewitching Historical Fiction novel about a healer and witch in 17th century North America.

In 1692, Naida Galene and her mother, Zephyr, had to flee Andover, Massachusetts when accusers from the Salem Witch Trials went witch hunting. They escape to Charles Town, South Carolina to start a new life. After Zephyr dies en route, Naida takes to the woods to live in solitude around nature. Her reputation as a healer is spread through word of mouth and she receives many loyal customers, particularly women, who visit her in secret. She also gets into a relationship with Ambrose Neville, a botanist and scientist. Unfortunately, she also meets with animosity from Sable, a local witch who doesn't like this new upstart and Lord Harrington, a nobleman who is suspicious of and lustful towards the young healer.

The Healer's Daughter is a brilliant character study of a woman who lives in the outer fringes of society and survives and even thrives because of her inner power. 

Naida comes from a long line of healers and witches who taught her everything she knows. Her family is a matrilineal line where power is inherited and taught from mother to daughter. Naida  not only remembers her mother, Zephyr, but her grandmother, Vesta, and other ancestors. She has inherited ancestral memories where she recalls their own experiences with different herbs and potions or the lessons that they taught their daughters.

 Some of their interactions consist of Naida remembering them and others are actual conversations with their spirits, especially Zephyr and Vesta. While she respects their authority and her lineage, Naida isn't afraid to call them out for their lifestyle choices and that they expect her to carry on the tradition even if it's emotionally difficult for her. Among those choices are to live completely alone and only have sex for procreation. If the child is a daughter, they must raise them by themselves in isolation (the son is returned to his father). 

When Naida weighs a romantic relationship with Ambrose, she wants to break the tradition to find a way to use her abilities while being happily married and openly involved with the community. She is someone who isn't afraid to question society and tradition, even when they are hers.

There are plenty of moments where Naida and her family help people with their healing experiences. She recalls many women going to Grandma Vesta for help with insomnia, pregnancy, or keeping their abusive drunk husbands away from them. She also bitterly remembers that these same women would either turn a blind eye or actively take part in the trials that would send her grandmother to her death and then run Naida and Zephyr out of town. 

Naida herself uses her hedge witch abilities to help others. She treats Ambrose's injury which attracts him but also makes him suspicious where she learned her healing skills. She also helps soothe a pregnant woman’s physical and mental health. 

One of the more traumatic moments occurs when a woman asks Naida for an abortifacient because she has several young children and an abusive husband. Naida has her own internal conflict with the request. She knows that this procedure could result in her arrest and the woman could get hurt or even murdered by her husband. But the woman's health becomes the most important deciding factor and she respects her choice, so she helps her.

There are strong conflicts between Naida and the society that surrounds her. Anytime that Naida interacts with Sable, the sardonic and potentially psychopathic town outsider who has her own bad reputation, Naida faces suspicions that she's in a witch's coven. Whenever she gets into an argument with Ambrose using her natural personally trained healing magic against his scientific education and training, the information points towards training in witchcraft. Above all Lord Harrington has his own vested interest in accusing the young woman, so he gathers his own evidence.

Naida knows that she is going to arouse curiosity and accusations no matter what she does, then she might as well be herself. She might as well do what she is trained to do. If they call her a witch, then a witch is who she will be. This self-awareness is what strengthens her as she faces accusers, her family legacy, and has to decide how to live her life.

The Healer's Daughter is a compelling outlook at what life was like for independent women in the 17th century and how they often became outsiders and accused witches. That this woman is actually a witch is neither here nor there. 

Naida is using her abilities to heal people, create medicines and remedies, consult and advise others. 

There are some implications that the male government establishment is threatened by her knowledge. She is a woman outside the community box and they can't place her or fit her inside. As with many women throughout history, if they can't place her and can't force her to conform, then they will do everything they can to silence her. But Naida is a woman who resists being categorized and won't be silenced. She is from a family legacy of strength, independence, mindfulness, talent, and spirit.

 Naida is a truly bewitching presence throughout her fictional world and to the Reader.









Wednesday, September 17, 2025

Madame Fiocca by Suzy Henderson; Gripping Moving Historical Fiction Novel About Nancy Wake, WWII Spy and Resistance Fighter

 

Madame Fiocca by Suzy Henderson; Gripping Moving Historical Fiction Novel About Nancy Wake, WWII Spy and Resistance Fighter 

By Julie Sara Porter 

Bookworm Reviews 

Spoilers: Of the various spies and intelligence operatives that participated in WWII, one of the most well known and decorated was probably Nancy Wake (1912-2011). Her story is recounted in the gripping and moving Historical Fiction novel, Madame Fiocca by Suzy Henderson. 

Nancy Wake was born in New Zealand and raised in New South Wales, Australia. She had Maori ancestry through her great grandmother who was believed to be one of the first Maori women to marry a white European man. Wake’s father abandoned the family and she did not get along with her mother. At 16 she ran away from home and eventually traveled to New York City after inheriting money from an aunt. She eventually became a journalist and moved to London then Paris.

While Wake lived in Paris, Hitler rose to power in Germany. Wake's articles criticized the Nazis and described the oppression and attacks on Jews. In 1937, Wake met Henri Fiocca, a French industrialist whom she married two years later. She and Henri lived in Marseille when Germany invaded. Wake became a courier and part of the Pat O’Leary Line of Resistance fighters. When Vichy France was formed, the O’Leary Line was betrayed. The Fioccas separated as Wake left France but Henri stayed behind and was executed. Wake didn't learn of his death until after WWII ended.

On her own, Wake joined the Special Operations Executive (SOE) and worked directly under Vera Atkins. In 1944, Wake parachuted back into France. Using the code name, “Helene,” she delivered missives, money, and correspondence between Maquis groups. She participated in many daring missions including one where she had to ride a bicycle for 72 hours to transmit a radio message. She eluded the Germans and even though she was briefly arrested with a trainload of people, she was never discovered or detained. She was nicknamed “The White Mouse” because the Germans could never catch her.

After the war ended, Wake received the Companion of the Order of Australia, George Medal, The US Medal of Freedom, Legion of Honor, The Medaille de Resistance, RSA Badge in Gold, and was awarded the Croix de Guerre three times. She entered politics, remarried, and published her memoirs. She died in 2011 at age 98.

Madame Fiocca captures Wake’s courageous and independent spirit through her first person narration. She is written as a strong-willed determined spunky adventure seeker who is not thwarted by rejection. She finds her own way.

When she moves in with her aunt, Wake finds her to be an encouraging kindred spirit. Through her influence, Wake is able to travel and write. 

Wake's personality also resonates through her marriage to Henri. They are a couple that enjoyed sparring with each other as much as they did making love. Wake's spirited temperament contrasts with Henri’s steadier rational personality. Their marriage is a test of wills to the point that when Wake wants to join the Resistance that Henri realizes that he would be a fool to tell her that she can't.

Wake's trajectory from journalist to Resistance fighter to intelligence operative is an exciting one as she is put into situations that test her endurance. Sometimes it's a matter of trusting potential colleagues as she has to when trying to convince another Resistance group leader to join forces. Sometimes she survives by pure chance such as when she is arrested in a mass detainment only to be released after four days.

Most of all, her resilience and perseverance is on display throughout the book. Her bicycle ride is recalled through her physical exhaustion and pain during the ride, nervous suspicions of what she will find and who is waiting to capture her, and her frantic determination to reach the radio operator in time.

Madame Fiocca is about a woman with an adventurous independent spirit who became a hero. 










Thursday, September 11, 2025

Murder Under Redwood Moon by Sherri Dodd; A Realistic Mystery Thriller Starring a Modern Witch


 Murder Under Redwood Moon by Sherri Dodd; A Realistic Mystery Thriller Starring a Modern Witch

By Julie Sara Porter

Spoilers: Sherri Dodd’s murder mystery, Murder Under Redwood Moon is a Supernatural Murder Mystery that doesn’t feel like one. Many Supernatural Murder Mysteries that star witches or similar people, for lack of a better term, Harry Potter the book. They depict witches using superpowers like clairvoyancy, precognition, telekinesis and often depicts them going against paranormal characters like other witches, ghosts, demons, vampires and the like. The emphasis is less on mystery and more on the fantasy-like setting in which they live. Muder Under a Redwood Moon is a realistic Murder Mystery that happens to star a witch.

Arista lives in Boulder Creek, California near her Aunt Bethie who raised her and works at a New Age shop called Earth and Ocean. A former high school acquaintance, Michelle is missing and later her body is found. She has been murdered so Arista, Bethie, Arista’s best friend Maddie, boyfriend Shane and their other friends try to find out what happened to her. Could the new Goth couple, Jaxon and Yelena have anything to do with it? How does this correlate to another missing woman? Why is there a strange connection to Arista’s own past and those of her missing parents?

Murder Under a Redwood Moon is the closest many fiction writers can get to portraying what it’s like to be a witch in the real world. They may have different rituals, traditions, and invoke the names of gods, goddesses, or an unnamed deity. But the magic is very understated and not fanciful. It is based not on amazing magical things physically happening but on the power of belief over what witches can do. 

We don’t see magic spells work except in situations that could be interpreted as magical or mundane. Arista has flashes of insight that could be examples of psychic powers but could just as easily be signs of her being a good judge of character. There are communications with the dead mostly via Ouija board, but they are not set up as unspeakable demonic horror. It's depicted as a ritual to cleanse the mind of confusion and hopefully get some solid leads and answers. 

When Arista and her aunt chant to their gods, it’s treated like prayer, something that they believe in but is not noticeable by anyone else. It's a means to open their mind to possibilities and release tension during stressful and tense times. When they use magical objects like crystals and Tarot cards, the only power is what they put into them through their belief and intentions. 

The protagonists’ Pagan path is portrayed authentically and so is the antagonists’ path. In many Occult/Supernatural Based Mysteries, the antagonist is often something or someone magical. It could be a demon, a more powerful witch or wizard, or another fantastic creature that defies expectation. Here they are human, all too human. They have a sick perverted mind over how they think that the world should be and who they have to hurt to make it happen. 

The opening chapter which is a flashback to Arista’s childhood shows the kind of enemy the characters are stacked against. Someone who will hurt anyone, even those close to them, if it means their goals are met. It’s an all too real action, one we are exposed to every day through the myriad of true crime stories involving people with destructive violent impulses, no respect for those around them, and an outlook that dehumanizes their victims. 

Murder Under Redwood Moon is not the type of Supernatural Mystery that one reads for escape. It is the type that one reads when they want to find a path that helps them face the darkness that surrounds them every day.


Tuesday, September 9, 2025

The Sunflower Widows by Matthew Fults; Building Community Through War and Grief

 

The Sunflower Widows by Matthew Fults; Building Community Through War and Grief 

By Julie Sara Porter 

Bookworm Reviews 

This review is also on Reedsy Discovery.

Spoilers: War brings many victims not just those who were killed but in the survivors especially those who have lost loved ones during war. For the friends and family members, the loss brings long term grief and sorrow. Even when the reasons to go into war are understandable, it still brings violence, death, and heartache. Sometimes the only things that a survivor can do is continue and find positive means of survival. One of the ways is to form a community of those who have had similar experiences so they can share their loss together. That's what happens to the women in Matthew Fults’ novel, The Sunflower Widows.

The Sunflower Widows tells the story of four women from a small Ukrainian village who have lost husbands and other loved ones in battle, particularly during the recent Russo-Ukrainian War. They meet at the home of Kathryna, an elderly woman who is familiar with death and grief. She befriends three younger widows, Yulia, a newlywed, Anna, a middle aged wife of a career soldier, and Natalya, a suddenly single mother. They form a network of support, understanding, and love.

The women's stories are individually told through flashbacks that focus on their lives and relationships before the war then moves to the present as they form a tight bond of sisterhood that encourages laughter, tears, empathy, and understanding. They are fascinating characters coming into their own separate lives before they come together as a group.

Their past stories are moving, detailed, emotional, and sometimes even funny. For example, Yulia and her husband Maksym have a meet-cute when she and her female friends have a flirting match with him and his male friends. In their one and one battle of words, they both emerge as the winners because they agree to date. The date blossoms into a relationship that evolves into a happy marriage for a time.

The flashbacks feature memories that become precious because they are gone. Even the most mundane of activities carry significance that they didn’t before. Anna’s grief is haunted by conversations that were started but never finished about how she and Borys saw their future particularly with or without children.

Their past memories parallel with their new normal in which they have to live without their loved ones.Natalya tries to put up a brave front for her infant son while her world falls apart around her as she mourns her husband. Dmitryo’s death. Her conflicts in being present for her son while wanting to withdraw into herself and her memories are understandable and relatable especially by those who have experienced similar loss. 

They don’t even have to be widows to understand the pain that these women go through. Kathryna herself was unmarried but is no stranger to death. As a child, her father was killed in WWII before she had the chance to really know him. She empathizes with these women because her mother went through the same process.

Because the characters are at different stages in life, the deaths feel like an interruption of what would be a normal process of one life transition to another. Yulia wanted to have a longer marriage to Maksym than the one that ended early and abruptly. Anna was looking forward to Borys’s retirement and spending her twilight years with him. Natalya now has a child, Zdeno, who will grow up never knowing his father, Dmitryo. Putin robbed them all of those chances when his Russian Army invaded their country.

The cause of the war is to fight against the invaders and for Ukraine to maintain its independent sovereignty. The four women understand that and want to live in a country free of invaders and Russian authority disrupting their cities, homes, routines, and daily lives. But agreeing with the cause doesn’t make the grief any less bearable and their husbands any less missed. This acknowledgement of courage and sacrifice can be seen when Kathryna lays out two more chairs when she meets the other three women. The reason that she sets the two empty chairs is because “there will always be widows.” 

The Sunflower Widows has a strong theme of community and togetherness. In their mutual grief, the four women are there for each other. They listen to each other’s stories offering tea and conversation. The other women hold and sit for Zdeno becoming honorary aunts. They encourage each other to change jobs and relocate if they have to. They wipe away one another’s tears and wrap their arms around each other with loving embraces. 

In collaborating and communicating with each other and drawing other mourners in, the Sunflower Widows learn that while grief never really goes away, there can always be something positive found in sharing it with and helping others. 



Sunday, September 7, 2025

Sanity Test by K.E. Adamus and Fate's Last Melody by Vanessa Smith

 

Sanity Test by K.E. Adamus 
This review is a summary. The main review is on LitPick.

Sanity Test is a short but very disturbing look at two very troubled, conflicted, and potentially delusional men

This is a series of emails between Hubert Kawka and Wlodzimierz Pawski. Their emails reveal a great deal about their characters and perspectives through the emails. 

It appears that Kawka is a mentally ill patient in a psychiatric hospital and Pawski is his primary carer, but as the emails continue they become more frantic and questionable. The reader starts to wonder who is sane and who isn’t and who exactly these characters are in relation to each other.

Kawka straddles between childlike impulsivity and frightening sociopathic behavior. Through his emails, he describes a series of dramatic means to get Pawski's attention. He harbors an unhealthy fixation to an unhealthy obsessive degree and is gaslighting the other man. 

However, Pawski’s emails also raise concern. He is more emotional and threatening from the initial emails. This is definitely a potential sign that things are not what they seem and adds to the overall uncertainty that we can’t trust either of these men.

As Pawski becomes more unstable, Kawka becomes more reasonable which leaves the reader with questions about who is real, who is fictional, who is sane, who is insane, and who we can trust. The book gives us no real answers and leaves the reader to make their own conclusions to understand this strange and disturbing duo, 






Fate's Last Melody by Vanessa Smith 

This review is a summary. The main review is on LitPick.

Fate's Last Melody has a strong sense of setting and tone by depicting Hell with all of its overall darkness, graphic violence, scares, and ominous energy coming out from every corner. There is a sense of abandonment, hopelessness, and desolation that exists primarily throughout the book. 

Melody is a woman who is abducted during a night on the town with some friends and a potential boyfriend. Her abductor is not a human psychopath. He is a demon named Nyx who takes her to Hell, where she learns that she is the daughter of one of the Fates from Greek Mythology. Melody has to find her way through Hell and learn how to use her inherited powers of seeing and changing other's Destinies before she meets The King of Hell who has his own agenda involving Melody. 

Melody’s first view of Hell is a dark desolate place shrouded in shadows. The descriptions aggravate the senses and the landscape shapes itself to torture those suffering. Needless to say, it's not a pleasant experience.

Smith makes her version of Hell a composite of different mythologies most notably Abrahamic religions and Hellenic Mythology. Hell is led by The King of Hell who is so vaguely described that he could be either Lucifer or Hades, so it could go either way. The Judeo-Christian influence is shown primarily through the 7 Deadly Sins while the Greco-Roman aspects are revealed mostly through the presence of the Fates and the Titans.

There is an overall feeling of helplessness and abandonment until the end when Melody and other characters are inspired to fight against The King of Hell. But there are some potential questions about the actions that were taken to do this which suggests that Hell might end up with another dictator, one who will also torture others for eternity, inflict pain, and control others.

Friday, September 5, 2025

The Diminutive Defenders of Num (The Legend of Guts and Glory Freedom Fighters of Nil Book 3) by Jessica Crichton; The Final Chapter In This Legendary YA Series

 

The Diminutive Defenders of Num (The Legend of Guts and Glory Freedom Fighters of Nil Book 3) by Jessica Crichton; The Final Chapter In This Legendary YA Series 

By Julie Sara Porter 

Bookworm Reviews 


Spoilers: STOP! Before you read this book, I request that you read my previous reviews for Dr. Fixit's Malicious Machine and The Counterfeit Zombies of Noc, Volumes 1 and 2 of Jessica Crichton's The Legend of Guts and Glory Freedom Fighters of Nil to understand the series. (While you're at it, read my review of Crichton's stand alone novel, Tipani Walker and The Nightmare Knot. While it is not set in the Guys and Glory Universe, it retains many similar themes). This review will contain MAJOR HEAVY DUTY SPOILERS for the series, so please read this review with caution.

You're back? Oh good, now on we go with Volume 3: The Diminutive Defenders of Num.

Now we come to the potential end of this bold, brilliant, amusing, gripping, suspenseful, involving, surprising, and endlessly entertaining YA Dystopian Science Fiction series by Jessica Crichton. She clearly put a lot of thought into how to bring the adventures of wonder twins Trevor and Tabitha Tate AKA Guts and Glory respectively to a satisfying and memorable conclusion and she did.

To briefly recount the previous volumes. In Volume 1, Trevor and Tabitha’s mother was kidnapped. The twins and their older sister, Emily are recruited by Dr. Fixit who tells them that she was taken to the land of Nil. When they arrive in Nil, they discover that it's a dystopia in which gangs of Kids between 7 and 12 are formed to battle against gangs of Teens. Adults are nowhere to be found. Emily, later called Spirit, is taken by the Teens and eventually joins them. The twins in the meantime join the Kids, obtain the names Guys and Glory, and make new friends like Books, Turtle, Snot, Roach, Blaze, and Papercut. They also vie with the Kid's leader, Fist, who later is revealed to be their missing older brother. They learn that Dr. Fixit has villainous intentions for sending them to Nil. Then they encourage the Kids to team up with the Teens to fight the real enemy. 

After Fixit is temporarily defeated in the first book, the second volume features the Kids traveling to the nearby land of Noc where they encounter Fixit's formidable ex, Marie. She controls a group of elderly people to become zombies that obey her bidding. She uses her manipulative abilities to turn many of the Kids including Guts into zombies as well leaving Glory alone to fight against them. Meanwhile Guys and Glory explore the meanings behind their new names and what they can do to earn them. They discover that the Zombies are the Kid's grandparents and once they break them from Marie's hold, they receive new allies in the struggle against the tyrannical Dr. Fixit.

Now in Volume Three, The Kids and Teens are united so they decide to finally cut Dr. Fixit off at the source. They will enter his fortress in the Land of Num and defeat him once and for all. Along the way, they find brain washed Adults, and robots that obey Fixit without question. Along the way, the Kids rediscover missing family members and learn some interesting truths that reshape their worlds. Guts, Glory, and their siblings also learn the reasons for their existence and their real purpose for coming to Nil in the first place.

Crichton is a consummate YA author because she doesn't write for a young audience. She doesn't dumb down her writing style, hide traumatic and serious topics from her readership, and doesn't talk down to her Readers. She trusts that her Readers will understand her prose without sugarcoating or making it too juvenile.

One of the ways that she accomplishes this in this volume is through narration. Dr. Fixit's Malicious Machine is told through Guts' point of view and The Counterfeit Zombies of Noc was told by Glory. They were simple limited first person narratives and we got to exhibit the plot through one pair of eyes and voice each. With The Diminutive Defenders of Num, Crichton throws that out the window by giving multiple first person points of view. 

Instead of one specific narrator, this book has ten: Guts, Glory, Spirit, Fist, Snot, Papercut, Books, Roach, Turtle, and Blaze. Instead of capturing one voice, she captures all of them and makes them as diverse as possible. 

This is no doubt an insurmountable task that I do not envy Crichton for. However, it shows her immense trust that her young Readers will be able to follow such a narrative process without getting confused.

 It helps that she puts a name identifier at the beginning of each section to point out who is speaking and each chapter has a map which follows the path that our heroes take. But the variety of many voices and the multi layers of a complex narration cannot be understated. 

The complex narration helps to develop the characters and gives them opportunities to stand out. Guts and Glory have some great moments particularly after they are separated and take different roles in fighting against Fixit. Guts is thrown into Fixit's inner sanctum and finds out some traumatic secrets about their foe. Glory also has her heroic moments especially when she learns that her abilities have increased exponentially.

Other characters get to shine on their own showing courage, empathy, intelligence, defiance, and individuality. While they are all terrific, the two biggest stand outs in the ensemble are Guts and Glory's older siblings, Fist and Spirit showing that great characterization is a Tate Family trait.

Fist has been mostly the dominant dictatorial leader turned traitor turned antihero in the previous volumes. Now, he gets more depth as he bonds with Blaze, one of the younger kids and treats her like a kid sister. He also faces his own abandonment issues knowing that his mother and siblings left him behind when they fled Nil and traveled to Earth and ruminates the difficulties of being a member of the Tate Family of heroes and what it means to be one himself. 

Meanwhile Spirit has deals with her own insecurities about what role she should play in the resistance and acknowledges her complicated relationship with her family, particularly her mother. She also has to discover and accept her own inner power when danger approaches.

One of the more unique and humorous touches to this series is Crichton's use of dialogue. The Kids and Teens speak in a language that uses a strange composite of pidgin English and slang. For example Blaze at one point describes travel by boat as “Bein’ onna boat makes ya real tough. The wind’s blowin’ on yer face, but ya can just stand there an’ tell it ta shut it, cuz ya ain't goin’ nowhere anyhow.” 

It takes awhile to get used to but it definitely gives the impression of gangs of young people whose education has been limited, have to act and talk tough to survive, and learn to communicate by their own merits. 

The more hilarious aspect is the Numspeak language spoken by the Adults. It consists entirely of business communication jargon and cliches. For example “bottom line” is someone's name, “cutting edge” is now or today, and “level the playing field” is discussion or communication. 

As someone who has to review a lot of Self-Help, Personal Development, and Business books where these phrases occur so frequently that I inwardly roll my eyes when I see them, the concept of building a whole language around words like “think outside the box,” “synergy,” “zero sim game,” and “paradigm shift” personally amuses me. I also questioned and felt my current age when I realized that I understood the Adultspeak upon first reading it better and more clearly than I did the Kidspeak.

A slight and questionable flaw with this book is the muted presence of events and characters from the previous book, The Counterfeit Zombies of Noc. The Grandparents are introduced but don't play a huge part of this volume with the exception of The Tate’s grandmother. There is a lot about brainwashing and manipulation which is similar to Marie’s hold on the Zombies, but there is no direct link to that process. 

Most importantly, it would have been interesting to see Marie play a part in this volume. The idea of her  and Fixit, lovers turned exes vying with each other or working together for control of the people, is fiendishly delightful. The three books would have tied together better instead of giving the overall impression of jumping from Nil to Num without stopping at Noc along the way.

However this is a small flaw in a book that is filled with climactic moments that bring the series to an overall successful conclusion. In YA literature, it should become legendary. 







Tuesday, September 2, 2025

September and October Reading List


 







September-October List

Wow 13 reviews in one month! That's the most monthly reviews this year! 

I have news. I am still continuing the blog quite naturally but I am also working on some other projects. I am still editing and proofreading Elyria's Journey by Rina Hodson. I have also accepted positions for other book groups, three of which LitPick, MockingOwl Roost, and Reader's Views have strict rules about whether reviews can be shared with other outlets so even though I am working on reviews, they might not be shared on the blog at least for now. I also have a potential tutoring job starting this week. So my entries may not be as frequent as they are in other during other months. 

Murder Under Redwood Moon by Sherri Dodd

The Sunflower Widows by Matthew Fults

Madame Fiocca by Suzy Henderson 

Sanity Test by K.E. Adamus*

The Bluestockings: A History of The First Women's Movement by Susannah Gibson*

The Book of Outcasts by Martin Nagin*

The Diminutive Defenders of Num (The Legend of Guts and Glory Freedom Fighters of Nil Book 3) by Jessica Crichton

The Healer’s Daughter by Myriana Merkovic

Dear Emperor, Yours Jane by Robin Robby 

Chloe's Crusade (The Teddy Bear Chronicles Book 2) by Donnalyn Vjota 

Aliza in Naziland by Elyse Hoffman

Small Worlds by Gail Vida Hamburg

The Amazing Flight of Aaron William Hawk vol. 2: Wings of Emifra by J. Bruno 

Fate's Last Melody by Vanessa Smith*

Indiana Belle by John A Heldt*

Shut Me Up in Prose by Maithy Vu*

Rebirth Protocol: The Return of Earth's Guardian and The Sword Magus Supreme by Nyxaris

The Red Wedding by Alessandra Oddi Baglioni

Labyrinth of Shadows: The Witch's Rebirth Part 1 by Michaela Riley

The Hidden Raphael's Banker by Alessandra Oddi Baglioni 

The Orphanage on Cheswick Court: The Hollowbloods by Haule Voss

Survive The Cursed by Ashton Abbott 

If you have a book that you would like me to review, beta read, edit, proofread, or write, please contact me at the following:

Bluesky

Facebook

Goodreads 

Instagram

LinkedIn

LitPick

Reedsy Discovery

Threads

Upwork

Email: juliesaraporter@gmail.com 

Prices are as follows (subjected to change depending on size and scope of the project):

Beta Read: $50.00-75.00

Review: $50-100.00**

Copy/Content Edit: $100-300.00

Proofread: $100-300.00

Research & Citation: $100-400.00

Ghostwrite/Co-Write:$200-400.00

*These are books reviewed for LitPick, Mocking Owl Roost, or Reader's Views and will only feature a summary and a few paragraphs with links to the full reviews on their sites. Some may not be featured at all.

**Exceptions are books provided by Henry Roi PR, LitPick, Reedsy Discovery, Hidden Gems, Mocking Owl Roost, Voracious Readers, Reader's Views, and DP Books. Payments of short Nonfiction reviews are already facilitated through Real Book Review, Amazon Book Groups, Michael Cheng, Five Stars Books, and Book Square Publishing. 

Payments can be made to my PayPal, Payoneer, or Google Wallet accounts at juliesaraporter@gmail.com

Well that's it. Thanks and as always, Happy Reading.




















































































































































































































































*These are books that I review for other sources like LitPick, MockingOwl Roost, or ReadersViews. They will either appear as summaries or short reviews on my site with links to the longer version or won't appear at all



The Lindens by Barney Jeffries; Lovely History of a House and Its People




The Lindens by Barney Jeffries; Lovely History of a House and Its People 

By Julie Sara Porter 

Bookworm Reviews 

Spoilers: Barney Jeffries’ The Lindens is similar to Edward Rutherfurd’s Epic Historical Fiction novels like Sarum, London, and New York. Like Rutherfurd, Jeffries covers a large cast of characters for an extensive period of time in a specific location. This book covers approximately 150 years of a house in Marshmead, England called The Lindens.

The Lindens was built in 1885 by rising businessman Arnold Cann for his family. The various characters that live there are an eclectic group of people over the years who have their own rich and captivating stories to tell. There's Tessa Hobson, a highly intelligent milkmaid with an advantageous marriage, Henry Cook, a WWII evacuee who acquires a love of birds, Irene Cotter who is contemplating leaving her abusive marriage, Arthur and Eleanor Aldridge, a hippie couple who weigh their next steps after their successful children's book series comes to an end, The Blakes, a multigenerational family that has an eventful Christmas season with plenty of emotional baggage, Veronika Lambert, a Slovakian immigrant who is faced with xenophobic neighbors, and Marsha Wood, whose investigation into The Lindens and its residents brings all of the various characters together.


Like any good Historical Fiction novel about a particular space, Jeffries personifies The Lindens so that the house becomes a character in its own right, in fact the central character. Its solid brick exterior, gabled windows, and bay windows suggest a stable protectorate for those who live there. The four bedrooms, indoor bathroom, two smaller servant rooms, drawing room, cellar, lawn, walled garden, stables, coach house, and orchard reveal The Lindens as a home of tremendous wealth but restraint in showing it off. The various touches that are added over the years such as the row of lime trees, the pond, built-in swimming pool, fountain gardens, and additions give the home different traits and characteristics that are found within each family and over the generations. 

In general The Lindens is a house that can very quickly become a home. It is beautiful, stately, charming, steady, ornate, proud, imposing, warm, and inviting. It holds the various memories, voices, personalities, behaviors, triumphs, tragedies, loves, and losses of the people who lived there.

Besides capturing The Lindens’ many facets and changes, Jeffries also captures the various characters’ individualities and complexities. A truly insurmountable and impressive feat considering the large cast that covers hundreds of years of English history. There are many well written characters from different backgrounds, goals, personality traits, experiences, and memories that surround the book. Jeffries created a memorable ensemble.

Tessa Hobson starts the book out strong. She is a dairy maid from a lower class family, but instantly shows her vast intelligence that is beyond what most people think of her. She captures the eye of The Lindens’ heir, Roger Cann, as he reads Romantic poetry out loud. Tessa is amused that it appears he is reading out loud to the cows. This gesture becomes a running gag between the couple as they joke that they met when “Roger read Keats to the cows.” This moment of literary connection leads to others as Tessa reveals her own literary interests from Thomas Hardy, to the Romantics are as vast as Roger’s.

Tessa however isn’t just verbally intelligent, she reveals herself to be brilliant in numbers by keeping track of her family finances and tallying the gallons of milk that are collected and distributed. She also has an entrepreneurial mind as she has plans to modernize the Cann’s dairy farm and far reaching goals to see those plans through. It’s no surprise that Roger’s father, Arnold recruits Tessa as the farm’s manager and bucks tradition by putting a woman in charge of a growing business that ends up a success.

The importance of knowledge and learning is spread throughout the centuries as the characters receive opportunities to learn new things, express that knowledge in different ways, and pass that knowledge to others. One of those characters is Henry Cook, a boy from London taken in as an evacuee by Tessa in her old age. Henry gains a love of nature as he explores the gardens, the trees, the orchards, and especially the birds. Tessa and Henry bond through their bird watching trips where he learns to identify the various bird species that surround The Lindens.

This love of nature continues throughout Henry’s life as he becomes a respected ornithologist who writes a series of books about birds in England. In old age, he revisits the Lindens with his family and cries tears of joy as he locates the current avian inhabitants of the estate, no doubt descendants of the birds that he knew when he was a boy. He also passes this knowledge and love of nature to the young people that accompany him like his grandson, Laurence Wood, Laurence’s wife, Aleesha, and Aleesha’s sister, Marsha.

Besides knowledge, The Lindens becomes a therapeutic location that helps its residents and visitors explore their creativity and individuality. Arthur and Eleanor Aldridge wrote and illustrated The Brixton Bunnies, a series of satirical children’s books that also appeal to adults. They received plenty of inspiration, fame, wealth, and made their voices and opinions heard through these books. But they landed in a rut and felt the series ran its course. Buying the Lindens gives Arthur some much needed inspiration for his next project: a series of serio-comic stories and novels about life in the country. 

However, creativity and the results of that creativity can be all-consuming. The Aldridges were once united in working on The Brixton Bunnies as a duo, but since moving to The Lindens, their lives veer away from each other. Eleanor is enamored with this country home and continues to illustrate adaptations of children’s classics. Despite writing about the country, Arthur is interested in expanding his writing interests and his horizons. He wants to travel, see new places, and meet new people, including other women. Not surprisingly, these differences become insurmountable and the couple realize that their marriage has to come to an end which results in trauma for their son, Felix. He goes through a series of problems in his life including addiction, depression, constant relocation, and frequent job dissatisfaction before he returns to The Lindens to find a peace of mind and his own creativity and voice. 

The Lindens is a location of coming and going and is different things to different people. For Irene Cotter and her son, Eric, the house is a beautiful prison that stands as a symbol of their captivity by an abusive husband and father. The only way that they can achieve any freedom is to leave it. For Veronika Lambert, The Lindens is a symbol of freedom as she flees her troubled home country to a place of security and comfort. 

The Lindens is also a place of nostalgia among and is a place to come back to and relive a carefree innocent childhood. One of the best chapters that illustrate this is when the family of Julia and Glen Blake are reunited for the winter holidays. The parents and their three children come to terms with their adult struggles and conflicts while retaining those youthful memories, competitions, arguments, and family ties. The oldest daughter, Alex, has a high powered white collar career but is consumed with loneliness, envy, and alcoholism. Their only son, Robin and his wife, Kelly are at odds because of their different parenting styles towards their infant twins. Meanwhile Ruthie, the youngest, is concerned whether her family will accept her girlfriend, Marsha.

It’s worth noting that the majority of people who receive the house are not direct immediate descendants or heirs. It isn't primarily a home that is passed from parent to child. Nephews inherit from aunts and uncles. In-laws receive it instead of blood relatives. Mostly, families purchase the home from previous tenants. Most of the characters are not related by blood, nor do they arrive or leave the Lindens with the comfort of a wide ancestry which tell them that this space is and will always be theirs by birth. Instead they are united by their connections to the house and to each other. 

The various characters are drawn together by an investigation conducted by Marsha. Her curiosity about this place and its inhabitants opens a wide circle among them. Some purchase The Lindens from others. Some marry or become romantically involved with members of the other families. Visitors return to this beautiful house that once held their pasts. Even those who are long deceased are shouted out by current inhabitants visiting their graves or recognizing their contributions to the house. 

It’s a wide circle that is centered around this one space that meant so many things to so many people. The people that dwelled within, the characteristics and traits that were included, the memories and connections that are formed, the history, its current life, and the future generations are what turns this house into a home.