Reviews by Age

These books feature characters and content for adults.

  • The Hacienda: Gothic horror done right

    The Hacienda: Gothic horror done right

    After marrying a man she knows little about except his politics and that his first wife is dead, Beatriz moves to his hacienda in the country only to find something disturbing lurking within its walls.

  • The Night Shift: A much-needed break

    The Night Shift: A much-needed break

    Three main characters deal with the ripple effects of a gruesome murder that mirrors a crime from fifteen years earlier.

These books target an audience in the 18-23 age range. New Adult tends to straddle the line, featuring tropes or plot points beloved in Young Adult, but with Adult characters and content.

These books have characters and content for teenagers.

  • My Lady Jane: Funny and charming

    My Lady Jane: Funny and charming

    In an alternate history where some humans can shift into animals, Lady Jane Grey’s history is completely rewritten. In this version of events, King Edward, her cousin and dearest friend, marries her off to Gifford – who’s a horse. Not only that, but in the process, she’s unwittingly swept up in a plot to steal…

  • Tress of the Emerald Sea: Fun and whimsical

    Tress of the Emerald Sea: Fun and whimsical

    When the boy she loves disappears, Tress sets sail to find him – except on her planet, the seas are made of deadly spores.

  • The Isles of the Gods (Book 1): Surprisingly enjoyable

    The Isles of the Gods (Book 1): Surprisingly enjoyable

    In a world where slumbering gods are awakening, a young sailor, a prince, and a scholar must survive both the ocean and their enemies if they’re going to prevent a war.

  • Lies We Sing to the Sea: A decent YA debut

    Lies We Sing to the Sea: A decent YA debut

    Leto’s story begins with her death. After she is sacrificed to the sea god, she finds herself transformed – and saddled with a mission to kill the prince.

  • The Book of Essie: Compelling and interesting

    The Book of Essie: Compelling and interesting

    Essie, the youngest daughter in an evangelical family with a reality TV show called Six for Hicks, is pregnant. Now she must orchestrate her freedom.

  • Ruthless Vows (Book 2): An okay sequel

    Ruthless Vows (Book 2): An okay sequel

    Iris and Roman deal with the fallout as the war front heads toward Oath.

  • Throne of Glass: Full series review

    Throne of Glass: Full series review

    This series follows a young assassin with a mysterious past who was raised by an infamous Assassin’s Guild leader. Everyone wants to use her unique skills for themselves – or otherwise eradicate the threat she poses. As she struggles for freedom, she is also forced to confront her deepest secrets.

  • A Study in Drowning: Entertaining but predictable

    A Study in Drowning: Entertaining but predictable

    Effy, a freshman and the only girl in her college, is accepted to take on the daunting task of redesigning a mansion that pays homage to her favorite author – but things at Hiraeth Manor are stranger than she realized.

  • Little Women: Sweet as a toothache

    Little Women: Sweet as a toothache

    Little Women follows the four March sisters, Meg, Jo, Beth, and Amy, as they grow up in the American Civil War era.

  • Divine Rivals: Sweet and well-written

    Divine Rivals: Sweet and well-written

    Two competing young journalists navigate life, love, and the front line in the midst of war between gods.

  • August 2023 DNF Roundup

    August 2023 DNF Roundup

    In lieu of a review this week, I’m covering a quick list of some recent DNFs (books I gave up on). Come sip the tea.

  • A Deadly Education: Perfect for teen readers

    A Deadly Education: Perfect for teen readers

    At the Scholomance, half the students won’t survive to graduation. El is doing well enough – except her magic is powerful and inconveniently primed for evildoing, so she has to be careful not to raze the whole place down.

  • The Ocean at the End of the Lane: Whimsical and creepy

    The Ocean at the End of the Lane: Whimsical and creepy

    A middle-aged man suddenly remembers the strange, magical happenings he experienced as a child when he returns to visit the house at the end of the lane from his childhood home.

  • The Hawthorne Legacy (Book 2): Entertaining but not mind-blowing

    The Hawthorne Legacy (Book 2): Entertaining but not mind-blowing

    The plot thickens as Avery tries to find the one man who may know why a stranger left his billions to her instead of his own family.

  • Mary Jane: A delightful, cozy read

    Mary Jane: A delightful, cozy read

    In 1975 Baltimore, 14-year-old sheltered Mary Jane takes a summer nannying job in a home where the psychologist father is treating a drug-addicted rock star and his movie star wife.

Professional Reader 80% 10 Book Reviews

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