Saturday, April 18, 2026

THE BEAR by Andrew Krivak


This book was chosen as the "One Read" for the city in which I live so I decided to give it a try for the summer reading list at the high school. I was completely pulled in! It is weird because I don't like books about nature as a rule and I REALLY don't like books about animals (except Princess Donut in Dungeon Crawler Carl). There was something about this beautiful post-apocalyptic father/daughter survival story that just hit me hard. 

The father and the girl live off the land. The mother died when the girl was too young to remember her, not quite in childbirth, but shortly thereafter. The father has been teaching the girl all the things she needs to survive. Every year he gives her a gift that will help her with a new skill and by the time she is 11, she is adept at survival.

And this is a good thing because when they go to the ocean to get salt, they are separated and she has to make her way in the world alone. Alone except for the creatures of the forest, including the bear. 

The story was inspired by the area around Mt. Monadnock in New Hampshire - a mountain climbed by many a car from my area of the country - and the setting is vivid. The girl is focused on staying alive and it is interesting that because of that, her personality is practically nonexistent other than her cleverness and tenacity. I cared deeply about her in spite of the fact that her inner life was so fixated.

This book is not at all something I would ever have picked up on my own, but I am so glad I did. And I did put it on the high school summer reading list. It is so easy to booktalk - I just reference HATCHET by Gary Paulson and they are all on board! 

You Know What - part the second!

 So my most recent post was flagged and briefly put behind a warning label. So racy! But apparently someone read it and realized it was just book reviews for a slightly naughty class. Here are the second three books - the ones I actually enjoyed.

Contemporary Assigned Choice:
The Billionaires Wake-up Call Girl by Annika Martin

Summary:

Finally, I know my favorite genre. It HAS to be the rom com. I appreciate the humor in my romance so much. And I like a heroine who isn’t a victim. If she wants to get bossed around a little, that’s okay, but she doesn’t depend on it and she doesn’t let her bedroom antics influence her real life. Unless they teach her to love again. Then I’m 100% in her corner! The story is uptight guy meets flighty girl. She teaches him to enjoy life, he teaches her to trust again. And Lizzie and Theo are perfect for each other! I loved the secondary characters - Lizzie's bestie (the protagonist of the sequel that I am DEFINITELY reading once I finish my last book for this class) and Theo’s sister are both solid, supportive anchors for our lovers. The setting might as well have been Mars for all I know about corporate America and billionaires, but it worked for me. And the connection on the phone? As a child of the 80s who regularly called late night DJs to practice flirting, this was RIGHT up my alley. Five stars, I absolutely loved it. Even the naughty bits!

Trope:

Enemies to lovers, boss/subordinate, trust issues, with just a hint of manic pixie dream girl

Triggers:

Embezzlement, dead parents

Favorite characters:

How to choose??? I guess Lizzie because she had been through so much and still had a positive attitude and a plan. I respect a girl with a plan.

Favorite thing:

How they really fulfilled a need in each other - him for stability and stalwartness, her for a balanced perspective and sense of fun - but they were also smouldering!

Least favorite thing:

There always seems to be a point in every romance I have ever read where if the characters just admitted how they feel and what they need, communication wouldn’t break down. However, Lizzie was very clear in her communication and STILL they found a way to not speak to each other for a little bit before the denouement. 

Discussion Questions:

  1. What did you like most about this delightful book?
  2. What do you think of the “evil business woman trying to get ahead but also attracted to the boss/Sigourney Weaver in WORKING GIRL” trope?
  3. What is it about flirting on the phone? Is this only for those of us who have crossed the menopausal gauntlet? How do you youngsters feel about it?
  4. Why do so many romcoms have bakery themes?
  5. What is your favorite flavor of microwave popcorn and why?

LGBTQ+ Assigned Choice
Trans Girl High by Cami Kates

Summary:
Jenny is a stunning trans girl who was terribly bullied in Buffalo. She and her supportive parents have moved to the Pacific Northwest for her dad’s job, which allows her the chance to have her senior year in a new place where no one knows her past. She has sex with Zach by accident. Then she  is outed by the bully from her old school who - a little too coincidentally - is at her new school. And even though she is trans, Hunter, Zach’s bestie is super hot for her and they fall in instalove. Hunter has some issues and suggests they form a throuple with Zach when he learns of their history. They have a bunch of young people sex, a misunderstanding, a breakup, a life-saving reunion and a sequel where we learn how they all ended up.

Trope:
MFM throuple, trans life, high school

Triggers:
Bullying, religious intolerance, sexual assault

Favorite characters:
I loved the parents! Jenny’s folks are the gold standard (except her dad for a bit at the end, even though he was kind of right) who accept and love her and want what’s best for her, Hunter’s parents probably think they are great,  fostering independence in their high achieving son, but they don’t realize they are neglectful. Poor Zach’s batshit crazy, hyper-religious  mom and his drug-fueled ignorant father are the stuff of nightmares, but very effective with little screen-time. 

Favorite thing:
I love how these kids came from religious backgrounds but when their pal Riley came out and the church closed ranks against her, they thoughtfully looked at their faith and determined that there are many ways to interpret the Bible and it is important to put the love of your fellow human before a rickety dogma. 

Least favorite thing:
The bully was fat and had bad skin and our heroes were stunning. Ugly people need love too!

Discussion questions:
  1. What did you learn about male to female transitions from this book?
  2. How comfortable were you with the medical details (for want of a better term) of Jenny’s sex life?
  3. Could you have a relationship with two people who are also friends? Is this a generational acceptance thing?
  4. How did you feel about the religious aspects of the book?
  5. Did you find it the tiniest bit creepy that they were still in high school, even though the writer was careful to tell us everyone was over 18?

Disabilities/Neurodivergent Assigned Choice
Daydreamer by Susie Tate

Summary:
This is the story of Lucy who has social anxiety, Reynaud’s Syndrome and a tendency to disassociate from reality. When the book starts out we learn that, while she is a very successful high-fantasy writer, she has moved to London to take a job in business to force herself out of her comfort zone as well as to reconnect with her childhood crush, billionaire Felix something-Italian. Their dynamic is mostly Lucy being shit at her job and Felix trying to fix her. This does not go well. But when we get a bit of their backstory and mix in the office politics - including an abusive boss and some really badly missed communication - it all comes together. There is a lot of community building, which is one of my favorite tropes, as well as some fairly steamy, but not too yucky or physically impossible, sex scenes. And a very badly trained pony. It all ends happily and there’s a bit of humor so I was completely won over! I am so thrilled that the books in this class got progressively more to my taste as the course went on. It would have been my instinct to ease in slowly, but being thrown directly into the deep end, content-wise, and then getting to more conventional romance really worked for me!

Trope:
Childhood crush, boss/subordinate, crabby asshole to nice boy, childhood trauma, trust issues

Triggers: 
There is an assault that, refreshingly, wasn’t sexual, although the perpetrator’s reasoning seemed to be because Lucy wasn’t interested in his advances. 

Favorite characters:
I love Victoria and Lottie. Victoria is a high powered business exec whose autism actually helps her be successful. Lottie is her assistant who works to help her navigate social interaction. I was really hoping they would fall in love too, but apparently Lottie has a thing with Victoria’s brother in the second book of the series which I will definitely be reading!

Favorite thing:
While the characters were kind of just their tropes at the outset, I loved the two first person perspectives. It fleshed them out really well.

Least favorite thing:
Oh my gosh, the lack of communication was frustrating until they - particularly Felix - learned to just say what they mean!

Discussion questions:
  1. What did you think of the dynamic of Lottie and Victoria?
  2. Can you diagnose everyone in this story, please?
  3. What did you think of the epilogue, did it feel real? What would you change about it?
  4. What do you think about Felix’s obsession with keeping Lucy warm at the expense of the comfort of others?
  5. Did Lucy’s outburst at the family dinner feel real to you? Why or why not?
And there we have it! I really enjoyed reading a bit outside my comfort zone. But I'm not going to take a horror or true crime class any time soon!

Dirty Books - part the first

I am taking my last class at USM and the course is Service to Library Clients: Romance and Erotica. My professor is a researcher in erotica and really threw us into the deep end with her selections! I am putting the first four here and I am just going to copy and paste my class responses and my Goodreads ratings. 

Brace yourself...


Week #1 - PEN PAL by J.T. Geissinger

I read PEN PAL as a requirement for a special issues in libraries course about romance and erotica. Now I love some romance, but I have said of erotica (well, I said it of porn, but it tracks for erotica too) Reading/watching erotica/porn and thinking it is a realistic depiction of sex is like watching a Marvel movie and thinking that it accurately represents law enforcement. I just can't suspend my disbelief when people are having orgasm after orgasm at just the right time and with SO MUCH TALKING!! I know, it's a book, we need dialogue, but good grief.

And (mini-spoiler) the main character's husband has just died at the beginning of the book and she is hopping in the roofing guy's bed about 20 minutes after she leaves the funeral! And there is some master/slave stuff that I know people are into, but honestly straight-up irritates me. I am happy when people find something that makes them happy, no judgement, but I also don't want to read about veganism or crossfit. It's me, not them.

So about halfway through, I went to Goodreads to see how others perceived it and it has over 200,000 ratings and the average is 4.11! Granted, people who like this kind of thing are probably reading it, which explains the score, but 200,000 people?? That's a lot of ratings! And so I started to read a review and immediately saw a spoiler shield and clicked on it because I couldn't stand the book and didn't care if I read a spoiler. It was a HUGE spoiler and completely changed my opinion of the book. Of course I would have loved to seen the reveal come out a little at a time, but knowing the twist made me really appreciate the story more. And I am notoriously bad at "seeing it coming" for someone who reads as much as I do, so I would have had to hate-read this thing for another 100 pages or so. So thank you, stranger on the internet, for the info.

I can't really write much about the plot other than Kayla and her roofer get it on, she thinks her house is haunted and she likes getting spanked. And it has almost nothing to do with penpals. I probably wouldn't recommend it, but if someone told me they were reading it, I would definitely want to discuss it with them after. There is some excellent structure in the writing and some parallels to classic literature that were recognizable to me even though I try to avoid classic literature. I blew through it pretty quickly once I stopped judging Kayla for moving on so quickly, I was hooked.

So I guess I can read erotica. I am just looking for more of a ramp up. And maybe a male character who realizes that there is no foreplay more effective than vacuuming without being asked.

I gave it three stars on Goodreads. 

[Going forward, they will be in the format of the assignment.]


Week #2 - Week 2 Reverse Harem Assigned Choice

NANNY FOR THE BOSSHOLES by Rebel Bloom

Summary: Aggie (Who named their kid Agnes that late in the 20th century?? Already having to suspend my disbelief.) is great at her job as a business problem solver, but her toxic boss/boyfriend cuts her loose when she refuses to have his baby. She approaches his rivals, the Graves brothers - each of them hotter than the others - with an offer to work for them and destroy the jerk who fired her. They don’t believe her but she bonds with their orphaned niece so they hire her to be a temporary nanny. And then they have lots of sex with her AT THE SAME TIME!! The brothers never touch each other, but they are not shy about getting it on, industrial style, in front of each other and at the same time. They all fall in love, there is a misunderstanding and then a final act where I lost a little respect for them all, but the happilied-ever-after in a fairly satisfying way. 

Trope: Reverse harem

Triggers: Gangbanging, I guess? Abusive relationships, orphans

Favorite character: I loved Aggie’s old hippie dad who just accepts his daughter is in a relationship with all three brothers without batting an eye. 

Favorite thing: I loved the relationship between Aggie and Gracie. The fact that they both lost their mothers young is a bond that they have and I feel like the care Aggie took with her was very genuine. I loved the actual story part of this book and really enjoyed the unconventional love aspect of the brothers who share everything, if not the sex.

Least favorite thing: The sex, particularly the first scene where they all get it on in the library right out of the gate her first night at the house! What the heck - she seemed completely unfazed, but I was fazed. Very definitely fazed.

Discussion questions:

  1. Which brother did you like best?
  2. How messed up are Grace and Max going to be if they ever walk in on their uncles and aunt?
  3. How can she legally marry three men?
  4. Did you feel like the baby at the end was a stupid way to wrap things up and why was termination never even mentioned as an alternative? 
  5. How many problems regularly come up in business that have to be figured out and how do you quantify that?
I gave it three stars on Goodreads. 


Week #3 - Dark, BDSM, Mafia Assigned Choice

HIS PRETTY LITTLE BURDEN by Nicci Harris

Summary: Fawn is young and pregnant and ends up in the home of Clay Butcher, the head of the mob in Anytown, Australia. Clay is planning to use her as bait to get her father, a fellow mobster who turned on him, to come out of hiding. Instead he falls in love with her in a rather lovely way and has a bunch of sex with her in an exhausting, bossy way. There is lots of sex and murder, she was assaulted by her foster brothers and when Clay finds out he executes them in a, I must admit, pretty satisfying way. Fawn is often really stupid, but also brilliant. Clay is dreamy, but kind of a monster. He has a bunch of brothers, luckily, he doesn’t want to share Fawn with them. The writing was full of emotion and strangely satisfying and I think that the obvious emotional connection between Fawn and Clay made it actually less cringey than the other steamy scenes that I have read for this class. 

Trope: Dark, light BDSM, Mafia, age difference

Triggers: Where to begin?? The assault scene was brutal, but to the author’s credit, it wasn’t sexualized AT ALL, it was monstrous. (Needless to say, I only skimmed that part.)
So assault, bossyness, betrayal, aggressive blowjobs, power struggles (that may only be a trigger for me…)

Favorite characters: I loved Clay’s brothers! They each brought something to the table that was different and showed why he was basically a decent guy for a capo.

Favorite thing: I loved that they were devoted to each other and clearly, and somewhat annoyingly, they felt like they were with their soulmate. 

Least favorite thing: The whole using her as bait and the description of her assault by her foster brothers. 

Discussion questions:
  1. How do you think Fawn’s daddy issues will be resolved?
  2. How can Clay stay married to his wife and still provide the protection Fawn needs?
  3. What did you think of the age difference?
  4. What do you think of how emotional the writing was?
  5. What do you think happens next?
I gave it two stars on Goodreads.  


Week 4  - Monsters and Aliens

HOOKAH SMOKING CATERPILLAR by Beatrix Hollow

Summary: Well this is my bad for picking the book based on the title alone. I thought it was going to be a Jefferson Airplane/Summer of Love setting and it ended up being an Alice in Wonderland knock-off. There are not enough words in the English language for how irritating I find the actual Alice in Wonderland, so I actually liked this a bit better. But that is not saying much.
The premise is that Alice is maybe actually the White Rabbit (argh - rabbit metaphor again…). She is deeply in lust with the caterpillar (who is also kind of a man) but the Cheshire cat is obsessed with her and wants her to be his own private sex worker. There might be some poisoned tea murder. There are mushrooms. 

Trope: Retelling of a disturbing classic, monsters

Triggers: tails, drug use, monsters, forced prostitution, signing contracts before you read them

Favorite characters: The characters were described beautifully, but had basically no personality beyond the biggest picture stuff created by Carrol, but the physical description of the caterpillar was really stunning. And I am not one for physical descriptions, so kudos to Beatrix Hollow. 

Favorite thing: Honestly, the sex was pretty interesting. It still seemed worky and just a little too effective, but it was interesting to see how they do it in Wonderland. Perhaps the actual shift from a real world based erotica to a fantasy based was the space I needed to not be irritated by the steamy parts. 

Least favorite thing: The woman has basically been the victim of both society and her potential sex partner in just about every book I have read for this class. Are there no strong woman protagonists in erotica?

Discussion questions:
  1. What the hell did we just read?
  2. Cheshire cat or caterpillar - who do you choose?
  3. If you could smoke those pheromones, would you? What do you think would happen?
  4. What monsters do you think are hot? (I’m looking at you, Shape of Water guy!) 
  5. What other classics of literature do you think could use a smutty makeover?
This was my first one star review on Goodreads!

I don't know if I just got used to the course, or if I chose better, but I REALLY liked the last three books I read for this class. So I will post those little gems togeter. 

Wednesday, April 15, 2026

Leave Your Mess at Home by Tolani Akinola came out yesterday!


This story of four siblings at turning points in their lives is funny and heartbreaking in turn.

Sola, a former instagram influencer, has just moved back to Chicago after a humiliating breakup and is struggling with her new, less public, life, Her brother Ola is expecting his first child with his wife and trying to figure out how to be a good father and a good husband, even as he reconnects with an old girlfriend, Anjola is in love with her best friend and plans to tell him at an event where he proposes to his new girlfriend. And Karen, the baby, is struggling with family expectations regarding her studies and her sexuality. Their traditional Nigerian parents, particularly their prickly mother, play the roles of “oh THAT’S why they’re like this” in a realistic manner. 


The relationship between the siblings, their parents, their partners and friends is what makes this book so compelling. Past traumas are revisited, new connections are made and old patterns rear their ugly heads in the most entertaining and moving way. And while there is certainly tragedy, there is plenty of humor and love. 


I appreciated what felt like a window into a fully formed family and I found myself hoping that they could learn to accept each other as adults instead of repeating old, damaging patterns. I wish I could accurately describe how much I loved this book and how it felt so real. But honestly, you just have to read it for yourself!