Top Ten Tuesday – Romance Books on My TBR

Top Ten Tuesday - Books Set in a School

Today I’m participating in Top Ten Tuesday, which was created by The Broke and the Bookish in June of 2010 and was moved to That Artsy Reader Girl in January of 2018. It was born of a love of lists, a love of books, and a desire to bring bookish friends together. Each week there is a new theme/topic, and participants choose ten books that fit it.

This week’s theme is a “love freebie,” and I’ve chosen to use it to highlight my Top Ten Romance Books on My TBR. There’s a good mix of historical, contemporary, fantasy, and sci fi romances in this list because my tastes are quite eclectic. lol. I’ve had most of these on my TBR for longer than I’d care to admit, and I’m hoping to get to a couple of them later this month… maybe. 🙂 The covers link to Goodreads in case any of them catch your eye!

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ARC Review – The Trials of Empire

Hello, everyone! Today I’m reviewing the finale of one my favorite new fantasy series, The Trials of Empire by Richard Swan. Empire of the Wolf has been a phenomenal series so far, and I’ve been anticipating getting to see what kind of explosive end Swan crafts for this story. Did it meet my lofty expectations? Read on to find out! If you missed them, be sure to read my reviews of books one and two, The Justice of Kings and The Tyranny of Faith.

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Guest Post – Favorite SFF Books with Queer Rep by C. M. Alongi

Queer characters have gotten more and more visibility in media, and it’s about time, too. But they can still be hard to find, especially if you’re in a relatively unknown part of the rainbow like nonbinary or aromantic/asexual. So, these are my favorite sci-fi/fantasy books with queer rep to make that search just a little bit easier.

This list is very incomplete, as they are simply books that I have read and that I have personally enjoyed. Also—hi! I’m not the Biblio Nerd Chris, but a different Chris. I’m C. M. Alongi, sci-fi/fantasy author and content creator. I’m turning my (queer) urban fantasy TikTok series CaFae Latte into a book, and Chris was kind enough to let me take over his blog for the day to talk about other queer fantasy stories.

Now a note on definitions: when I say “queer” sci-fi/fantasy, I mean the book has a major or main LGBTQ+ character. They’re not pushed off to the wings for token parts, they are doing stuff “on screen” so to speak for at least 60% of the story. And they’re queer canonically, none of that baiting bullshit. However, the story itself may not necessarily be about the “queer experience,” so to speak. It may focus entirely on surviving a Civil War-Era zombie apocalypse, and the major character just happen to be bisexual while doing it.

Cool? Cool. Let’s get started! In no particular order:

Sawkill Girls by Claire Legrand

Sapphic, bisexual, and asexual rep
Young Adult fantasy/horror

Three girls become superheroes to fight a flesh-eating, woman-hunting, shapeshifting monster. …that’s it. It’s great. Trigger warning for this one, as there are themes of domestic violence. However, I think it’s handled quite well, especially when it comes to the struggle of breaking the cycle of abuse.

Witchmark Trilogy by C. L. Polk

Gay (m/m), lesbian, sapphic, and nonbinary rep
New Adult epic fantasy

Most of us have heard of Polk’s bestseller Midnight Bargain. I haven’t read that one, but I have read her Witchmark Trilogy, and oh boy, is it good. I can’t go into depth because of spoilers, but basically we have a fantasy-version of Edwardian/Victorian England where magic is considered too dangerous. Those born with magic are locked away in asylums…if they’re poor. The rich, of course, run the place, hiding in plain sight. If you’re born rich with storm magic, awesome. If not, then you’re essentially chained/enslaved to storm magic-users so they can use you as a battery pack. The protagonist of book one fakes his death to escape such a situation.

Also themes of domestic violence in this one, too. And classism.

Dread Nation and its sequel Deathless Divide, by Justina Ireland

Bisexual (sapphic), aromantic, and asexual rep
Young Adult alternative history

This one’s great if you want queer people of color—specifically Black. Dread Nation takes place twenty years after zombies first rise during the Battle of Gettysburg. Slavery is gone, but the Reconstruction Era isn’t exactly known for great tolerance (it is, in fact, when the KKK was formed).

The main character Jane is a young black woman who’s training to be a zombie-fighting specialist, which white women can hire as bodyguards. But she realizes very quickly that something rotten is going on in her city and sets out to find it. Hopefully without become undead in the process.

Her frenemy Katherine is, to date, the best representation of an aroace character I’ve ever seen.

The Mermaids of Eriana Kwai Trilogy by Tiana Warner

Sapphic rep
YA fantasy

This is basically lesbian Romeo & Juliet, but with flesh-eating mermaids. And also some indigenous rep—although the island and culture is largely fictional.

The island, home to a small human community, is slowly starving as mermaids fish out the waters—and also kill anyone who gets too close to shore. Every year, the island sends out a ship full of young men to kill as many mermaids as possible. Few ever return, largely because the mermaids have a siren-song effect that hypnotizes men. Until finally the island’s like, “Fine! We’ll go woke and send out girls!”

Only problem: one of those girls falls in love with a mermaid.

Warner also has a few other fantasy and contemporary stories out there, most if not all of them sapphic.

The City in the Middle of the Night by Charlie Jane Anders

Sapphic rep
YA/NA science fiction

…I have a lot of sapphic reps, don’t I? Ironically, I’m not a lesbian. I’m aroace. But I’m also a woman, which means I tend to be drawn toward stories with major femme characters. Sorry, not sorry.

Anywhoo: this one takes place on a tidally locked planet. That is, a planet where one side permanently faces the sun while the other faces away, leaving a single thin habitable layer in between. The main character explores three cities: a tyrannical one that tries to execute her for stealing a few bucks, a laissez-fare one that’s all party all the time (but no law and order, and certainly no support for its poorer population), and the alien-run City in the Middle of the Night.

This one’s really hard to describe, mostly because the prose is so unique and also so good.

The Invisible Life of Addie La Rue by V. E. Schwab

Bisexual/pansexual rep
Adult fantasy romance

I hesitate to add this to the list, simply because while both main characters are plainly stated as bi (or maybe pan? Hard to tell sometimes), all of the more explicit parts are cishet. Having said that, it’s a really good book, you’re still bi/pan even if you’re in a “straight” relationship, and rules are dumb.

This one took over TikTok and Instagram for a little bit, and for good reason. The main character, Addie, was born in 18th Century France. Why is she running around 21st Century New York? Well, she made a deal with a basically-devil who made her immortal. Only problem: nobody remembers her. If they walk out of the room, they instantly forget ever meeting her. She is unable to leave her mark, not in people’s memories, or paper, or stone, nothing.

Until one day Addie meets a man who remembers her.

This is another “yeah, the plot and characters are great, but oh my god the P R O S E!”

Everything by Rick Riordan starting from Magnus Chase and the Trials of Apollo series

Bi/pansexual, asexual, aromantic, gay, sapphic, transgender/genderfluid, and probably some others that I’m forgetting
Young Adult urban fantasy

You know who this is.

Heart of Iron by C. M. Alongi

Nonbinary, bisexual, sapphic, aromantic, and asexual rep
New Adult urban fantasy

Jennifer Charles (JC) is fresh out of prison and rehab, hoping to turn their life around and stay out of trouble. And they seem to be in luck, as they land a baking job at CaFae Latte, owned by the mysterious and powerful fairy known to her community as Violet.

However, JC soon learns that their dark, trauma-filled past has nothing on Violet’s, and soon, her enemies capture her with the intention of dragging her back to the Fae Realm for capital punishment. And to make matters worse, they frame JC for the crime, forcing them to team up with the knife-happy Cyrus and the witch Nicole to save their reputation and chance at a new life.

Of course, Violet’s no sitting damsel, and spends much of her time reminding her captors of why she was one called the Iron Witch, or “she with a heart of iron.”

But they all have a bigger problem: this book isn’t out yet! In fact, it hasn’t even been edited. I am self-publishing this novel, and to make sure I deliver a quality product (with full edits, audiobook narration and production, decent cover art, etc.), I am running a Kickstarter to raise the funds needed to do so. Check out the link here:

https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/cmalongi/heart-of-iron-a-cafae-latte-novel

Top Ten Tuesday – Books to Read When Time Is Short

Top Ten Tuesday - Books Set in a School

Today I’m participating in Top Ten Tuesday, which was created by The Broke and the Bookish in June of 2010 and was moved to That Artsy Reader Girl in January of 2018. It was born of a love of lists, a love of books, and a desire to bring bookish friends together. Each week there is a new theme/topic, and participants choose ten books that fit it.

This week’s theme is Top Ten Quick Reads/Books to Read When Time is Short. I don’t read a ton of novellas. So, I was curious to see if I could come up with ten books for this topic. I was pleasantly surprised to see that I could, as well as the variety of the choices. There is fantasy, ghost stories, science fiction, romance, and more. I will admit that I cheated a bit on the last one. It surpasses the 150-page maximum for this topic by two pages, but I love the book so much I had to include it. All covers link to Goodreads in case something catches your eye. 🙂

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Book Haul – January 2024

I’m starting the year off strong with lots of new books, which is the opposite of what I’d hoped to do. lol. In my defense, many of these books came in my subscription boxes or from pre-orders. I actually only went to a bookstore one time in the entire month of January, which is a new record for me that sort of hurts my soul. I know if I go that I’ll be up to no good, though, and I can get into enough trouble on Pango and with my subscription boxes. Now let’s take a look at how deep of a hole I’ve buried myself in during January.

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Monthly Wrap-Up: January 2024

The start of another year has come and gone. January was a bit of wild month, with deep freezes that lasted for days and rainstorms that seemed to never end. Seriously, it rained every day for a week straight. I thought I’d never see sunshine again. lol. We survived the weather without any damage, though, and I’m grateful to have avoided burst pipes, which so many in my area experienced. In general, it was a pretty good month despite the weather, and I managed to get quite a bit of reading done, mostly because I never wanted to go outside. 🙂

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