Micro Reviews: June
In which I review the books I've finished reading this month in one sentence.
Covers link to Goodreads.
Covers link to Goodreads.
All That is Lost Between Us by
Sara Foster
I really enjoyed this as a family drama, but it's not as psychologically thrilling as it promised.
Rolling with the Punchlines by
Urzila Carlson
Lucy Lawless said it was good and it was good - funny, sad, and altogether a moving and entertaining memoir.
Far from Home by
Lorelie Brown
A tense and hot f/f romantic comedy about a marriage of convenience, however the epilogue is cheesy and I would've liked to read more about the awkwardness their married life could have involved.
The Other Boleyn Girl by
Philippa Gregory
A well-written and interesting novel that I would've enjoyed more 5+ years ago when I was still in my Tudor/Elizabethan phase and was less wary of girl/girl hate.
Carolyn for Christmas by
Lucy Carey
A cheesy f/f novella that had jarring POV changes and should have been extended into a novel, but I liked the friends-to-enemies-to-lovers aspect of it.
The Further Adventures of Xena: Warrior Princess by various authors
An expanded universe anthology in which all the stories rely too much on dialogue and not enough on showing instead of telling.
I would describe June as an "okay" reading month - I didn't hate anything I read, but I didn't love anything either. I'm currently reading The Salt Roads by Nalo Hopkinson and
Between Shades of Gray by
Ruta Sepetys
Yet another WW2 book, and it didn't have the strongest plot line or climax in the world.
Carmilla by
J. Sheridan Le Fanu
This classic Gothic novella fits under both early vampire lit and early lesbian lit, and while the climax is obvious for 21st Century readers, the ending itself is quite horrific and sad.
Storm Season by
Pene Henson
A non-cliched f/f book that involves the good old trapped-in-a-cabin trope and is full of ethnic and LGBTQ representation, but even though it's set in Australia it doesn't feel authentically Australian as it uses American spelling and American words (bangs? Ass? Sidewalk??).
Unknown Horizons
(New Horizons #1) by
CJ Birch
An f/f sci-fi novel that I flew through because it's short and exciting, but it ends on a cliffhanger (noooo!). I would describe June as an "okay" reading month - I didn't hate anything I read, but I didn't love anything either. I'm currently reading The Salt Roads by Nalo Hopkinson and