February Wrap Up 2022!

Wow! What a month — it has absolutely flown by and I can see my year only getting more busy! I am so thrilled that Melbourne has come alive again (and honestly, so have I). There is this buzz of excitement constantly around and it has been so infectious. I haven’t posted much on my blog this month, but I am far more active over on my Instagram so be sure to check that out if you’re after more frequent posting!

I started this month off on a little getaway to one of my favourite places in Victoria, and it was genuinely the best way I could have possibly started this month. I have been so busy since returning home — my weeks have been filled with work and brunches and dinners and little adventures with friends. We have truly been making up for all that lost time. I also started tennis lessons on a whim. I’m three lessons in and I’m thoroughly enjoying it (although I haven’t quite figured out how to aim yet!) So with all that being said, I guess it isn’t surprising that I didn’t get quite as much read this month as I did last!

In February I finished listening to The Folk of the Air series with The Queen of Nothing and How The King of Elfhame Learned to Hate Stories. This entire series ended up being a solid ☆☆☆.5 — I definitely enjoyed listening to them and I was certainly invested in the story but I didn’t love them. They were the perfect books to listen to though, not only was the narrator great but I think they were perfectly suited for listening rather than the physical books. I have a feeling I may not have enjoyed them as much as I did if I read the physical book — I honestly don’t know. Maybe one day I will give them another go reading the physical. Overall I was entertained with the story and the characters, although I don’t love Jude all that much and I only like Cardan more now that I’ve read the novella from his point of view. I can’t really say much at all without ruining it, but overall it’s an easy series to read, the world is rich and well developed and its an entertaining story.

☆☆☆☆.5

Other than the two audiobooks I finished this month, I also read Queens of Jerusalem: The Women Who Dared to Rule by Medievalist Katherine Pangonis (** I was gifted the PDF of this book, but I have since gone out and purchased it myself). This book was such a brilliant read! Not only was it written in a really accessible way, but it was also incredibly enjoyable. Queens of Jerusalem focusses on the lives of the royal women who ruled in the Medieval Middle East (or Outremer) from 1099 to Saladin’s conquest of Jerusalem in 1187. These women have been consistently overshadowed by the kings and leaders of the crusades, and this book strives to change that. The women Pangonis writes of in this book are simply remarkable, what they achieve during their lives and how they work the system of Outremer politics is fascinating. A most interesting discussion that is carried through the book is the difference between having power and having authority and it made me reflect on other women in history and the balance of authority and power that they juggled with. This book will make you rethink the way modern readers and scholars approach ancient, medieval and renaissance women, and it fills the women shaped gap in Crusader history.

I still haven’t finished Assassin’s Quest by Robin Hobb, but I’ll just keep going with it until I do. I am also currently in the midst of reading River Kings by Cat Jarman and The Ancient Greek Hero in 24 Hours by Gregory Nagy. I am also re-reading House of Earth and Blood by Sarah J Maas because it has been about a year and a half since I first read it, and I remember nothing from it. I am also listening to Graceling by Kristin Cashore with I am really enjoying - plus the narrator is fantastic! Ideally in March (my birthday month, yay ✨) I will finish River Kings, Graceling and House of Earth and Blood but my new job is very reading-heavy so I have a feeling my recreational reading will drop a bit… but we shall see!

I would love to hear all about the books you read in February, so either let me know what you read and if you loved it in the comments below, or come find me over on Instagram

January Wrap Up 2022!

The first month of 2022 is already over, and I managed to read 8 books. This kind of number only happens when I have time off during the month so I definitely don’t expect to enjoy this many books every month. It was a very solid start to my goal of 40 books this year though! I have also decided to change my approach to reviews this year - I think up until December I had reviewed every single book I read, but I don’t think that’s a sustainable goal for this year. I will probably only do a full review of the books that I really loved or had a lot of opinions about and just do mini-reviews of the others on my Instagram, and in my monthly wrap-ups. If there’s ever a review you really want to see, please don’t hesitate to let me know!

This entire series is a ★★★★★ read!

The first books I finished this year (and this month) were my re-reads of The Mark of Athena, The House of Hades and The Blood of Olympus by Rick Riordan. This is the spin off series from the Percy Jackson and the Olympians Series and finishing these three concluded my re-read of all ten books! I enjoyed my re-read as much as I first enjoyed reading the series many years ago, if not more since now I feel like I get a lot more out of them considering I know more about the ancient world. I definitely appreciated the skill of intertwining so many myths and customs from both Ancient Greece and Ancient Rome into the spin off series - this series is genuinely an absolute masterpiece. The House of Hades has always been my favourite of this series, but I think the The Mark of Athena may be equal to it now - I cannot get enough of Percabeth which is why these are absolutely my favourite in the series (they were done so dirty in the final instalment, although getting a Nico POV was such treat). If you’ve read the Percy Jackson books but not the spin off, I implore you to pick them up. They are an absolute treat!

Next, we were all blessed with Part Two of Lynette Noni’s A Very Medoran Kaldoras, something I had made myself believe would never happen. This was a very short e-book, but it answered all of the burning questions I had after finishing the cliffhanger of Part One. In a sense, I was pretty lucky because I only had to wait a couple of months between the two e-books, but I feel so bad for those who waited a super long time. Personally, I really liked Part Two (I know there has been a bit of contention surrounding it). I though it was a lovely way to truly close the door on Alex’s story in the best way possible, but of course, leave the for wide open for potentially more stories in the future? Who knows. I’m just happing knowing that after all Alex went through, she got her closure and her happily every after.

Both have gotten a ★★★☆☆.5 from me!

I finished two audiobooks this month, The Cruel Prince and The Wicked King by Holly Black. The Folk of The Air series is one that had been on my radar for a while, especially since it’s all over bookstagram so I decided it was time to jump in. The narrator on Audible is pretty entertaining, although there have been some really weird edits and volume changes throughout them which have been a bit jarring. After Jude’s mortal parents were murdered, she was taken to live with her parent’s murderer to live in the High Court of Faerie, where its dangerous to be a mortal. Prince Cardan hates her, and the intrigues of the palace just get more and more bloody. Throughout these two books Jude steels herself to what she has to do to claw at the power, and keep it once it’s in her grasp. I am very on the fence about these books. I definitely enjoyed them, but I wasn’t blown away by them. Jude is really annoying and her character just doesn’t really make a lot of sense to me. Her tumultuous relationship with Cardan is frustrating at times, but I also enjoyed parts of their rivalry and tension. I know some people absolutely love these books, but they haven't become my favourite. Maybe I would have enjoyed them more if I read the physical books not listened to the audio - I’m not sure - but overall these books have been good so far, but not outstanding.

★★★★☆.5

This month I finally got to If We Were Villains by M. L. Rio. This book was sold to me as The Secret History but with Shakespeare and actors instead of classical history students, and honestly, that is pretty much the vibe I got from this. Set at a prestigious arts academy called Dellecher If We Were Villains follows the seven fourth year Shakespeare students as their lives start to look like the tragedy plays they love so much, their lives intertwine with the plays they are studying, their language is one of their own devising their identities teeter between the world of the living and Shakespeares world. This book was brilliantly written and read like a play in more ways than one. The charters were loveable and despise able and all too real. If you love Shakespeare or The Secret History, stop putting it off and pick up this book!

A hand holds up the paperback edition of Mythos by Stephen Fry against a white wall.

★★★★☆.5

The final book I finished this month was Mythos by Stephen Fry which was my answer to this prompt Crestfallenpages’ bookclub ‘a book thats been on your TBR for a really long time.’ I have been saying that I will read Mythos for years. I don’t even remember when I got it but I know it was ages and ages ago. I am so glad that I finally got it read! Especially since I really enjoyed it. Fry has such a way of telling stories thousands of years old as if they were new. Although I was familiar with many of the myths in this retelling, I still enjoyed it greatly, and his style of storytelling is hilarious. I laughed and snorted my way through this book with little dignity but tons of amusement. He definitely puts his own flare to these stories, he makes them easy to read, he adds dialogue but doesn’t lose the essence or the heart of these old tales. It would be a wonderful place for someone to start their Greek Mythology journey.

In February I am hoping to finally finish Assassin’s Quest by Robin Hobb which I have been putting off for months. I am definitely planning on reading Elodie Harper’s The House with the Golden Door, which is my most anticipated read of the year and which I was lucky enough to be given an ARC from Netgalley! I would also LOVE to finish Queens of Jerusalem by Katherine Pangonis and The Queen of Nothing audiobook by Holly Black.

Review: The Cruel Prince by Holly Black

★★★☆☆.5 | audiobook | book four of 2022


The Cruel Prince by Holly Black is the first book in The Folk of the Air series. The story revolves around a mortal girl named Jude who lives in the world of Faerie. When she and her twin was seven, her mother and father were killed in front of them by her mothers ex-fling and the father to their older half sister Vivienne. He was also a prominent general in the High Court of Faerie. Jude grows up as a mortal in faerie, taking classes with the rest of the faerie gentry. She sees mortals as slaves, drugged to work until exhaustion consumes their mind and body, not to mention the threats right in front of her with her faerie school fellows. As Jude fights for a spot at the High Court, she is consumed with intrigues and deceptions, trickery and bloodshed.

I’m going to be completely honest with you, I didn’t even read the blurb of this book before jumping into it. I was looking for a relatively easy read to listen to, and this one came with good recommendations. I definitely enjoyed the book but not as much as I was hoping I would. There was also something a bit weird about the narration, the volume kept fluctuating and there were some really obvious cuts in the recording, some of which I literally went back and had to listen to again to make sure I was hearing it right. That being said, the narrator did a really wonderful job.

This book starts off with a bang since their parents are literally killed in the prologue I’m pretty sure, but then nothing really happens until part two of the book. You don’t realise that the whole of Part One is basically not necessary until you get into the intensity of the second part. Jude wants to be a knight in the High Court, and her sister Taryn wants to marry a faerie, they’re both trying to fit into Faerie in different ways, but I found Jude’s character a little wishy washy. She didn't feel like a solidified character with purpose behind her actions until Part Two, when I actually started liking her. In contrast, Taryn acted exactly as I expected she would the whole time. I don’t love her character, but I guess she serves her purpose, as do many of the cruel faeries Jude comes into contact with during the course of the book.

I loved the political intrigue of the book, and how although some of it felt quite obvious, there were still events and choices that surprised me. There is a really great set of unique characters in this book which made it an overall enjoyable read, leaving you with the sense that you only know the surface of each of these characters. I have seen Cardan’s name everywhere on instagram, and so far he is definitely an intriguing character that obviously has a lot more going for him than just a drunk, broody, elite faerie who often acts cruelly (but I’m assuming thats just a front for how tortured he actually is). I really liked the rivalry and the ever brewing tension between Jude and Cardan, and I am sure this is only going to increase in intensity as I keep reading. Another part of this story I particularly liked is the Court of Shadows, and the level of intricacy in the intrigues and court politics. I hope these only grow in the next books.

I have a feeling this series is only going to improve with the next books and I am looking forward to starting the next one. Have you read this book / this series? Let me know your thoughts in the comments or over on my Instagram @kell_read