Posts

The Girl and the Raven (The Girl and the Raven series) by Pauline Gruber – Review by Rayne East

The Girl and The RavenThe Girl and The Raven by Pauline Gruber
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Amazing paranormal YA story.
Really enjoyed this story, it was very easy to read and had great pacing. The characters were well developed and Lucy was presented as a very typical 16 year old with all her attitude and ‘worries’. The unique aspect of the paranormal was refreshing and the underlying story for Lucy made me so much more vested in her character. I feel there is still so much more to explore in book 2 and I look forward to it.

View all my reviews

Grave Digger Academy (Grave Digger Academy Series Book 1) by C.A. King – Review by Ashley Dover

Grave Digger AcademyGrave Digger Academy by C.A. King
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Mikayla is the only daughter in a group of seven children. She’s always felt like the misfit of the family. She doesn’t excel the way her brothers do. Including her parents, her family all has blond hair and blue eyes but not Mikayla. Her hair is red and her eyes are emerald green. It is time for Mikayla to start school in the paranormal academies. Her choices are vast, but without excellent grades or skills, she is limited in her choices. She chooses three schools, but to her bewilderment, she doesn’t end up in any of them. On the first day of school, Mikayla wakes up late and has to ride the bus to school. She meets Thomas who winds up being at the same paranormal school as her, Grave Digger Academy.

Travel to the world of witches and follow Mikayle through her first semester at the Grave Digger Academy. With friends such as Thomas, Cali, and Leo, Mikayla starts to achieve in her courses with the help of a special gift from her mom. Keeping the dead in the ground is the main objective of learning so far at the Grave Digger Academy. What will the first years encounter at the paranormal academy that no one wants to attend?

View all my reviews

Grave Digger Academy (Grave Digger Academy Series Book 1) by C.A. King – Review by Erica Fish

Grave Digger AcademyGrave Digger Academy by C.A. King
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

C.A. King is an amazing author. She has written different books across different genres. I have never gone wrong when I buy a C.A. King book. This book was no different. It is a fun, fast-paced, paranormal story. The attention to detail is what makes this book a must-read. The characters are complex and fully developed. Makayla is the main character who wants to go to a paranormal academy but the small problem is that did not get into her first choices. She was accepted into Grave Digger Academy. There is a difference between “gravediggers” and Grave Diggers. One puts the body into the ground and the other keeps the body on the ground. Makayla and her classmates have a lot to learn about the dead and how temperamental they can be. Join along as we follow Makayla in this story to see what she learns at Grave Digger Academy.

View all my reviews

Travels Through Aqua, Green, and Blue: A Memoir by Mary E. Gregory – Review by Cora Ryan

Travels Through Aqua, Green, and Blue: A MemoirTravels Through Aqua, Green, and Blue: A Memoir by Mary E. Gregory
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

This book was so touching and emotional. You could really feel the struggle and pain the character felt being different. It really pulls at the heart strings but in such a powerful way! I definitely recommend this book to anyone who loves a great emotional story.

View all my reviews

Competing with the Star (Star Series Book 2) by Krysten Lindsay Hager – Review by Shelly Kittell

Competing with the StarCompeting with the Star by Krysten Lindsay Hager
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Hadley tackles dating drama and backstabbing female drama in this latest installment of the star series. Watching Hadley grow from the dilemma is the treat of the book. You’ll be transported back in time to your teen years as you read about the adventures of group dates, exes, dates to the nursing home and other adventures. Refreshing to see the same characters and a continuation of the series that doesn’t leave you confused. Really a good book for your young adults to enjoy. Clean and refreshing.

View all my reviews

Grave Digger Academy (Grave Digger Academy Series Book 1) by C.A. King – Review by Santana Hicks

Grave Digger AcademyGrave Digger Academy by C.A. King
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

You’ve heard of necromancers, but have you heard about the witches that stop the dead the necromancers have risen? This book takes a very well known dark magic and tells it from the other side. The good guys, the Grave Diggers.

I really enjoyed this book. I love tales about witches and other supernatural beings. This book was filled with fables and had a Harry Potter Vibe to it which was a bonus in of itself.

Makayla, the main character, is an outcast. In her family, she is the only girl, the only one with red hair and the only one sent to the Grave Digger Academy. With Necromancy being illegal, and as far as anyone is concerned, a “dead” craft, the Grave Digger Academy is where all of the untalented and rejected witches go.

Makayla starts off hating the fact that she is there but as time goes on, she realizes that maybe she, perhaps, belongs there. Things seem to be easier for her and all of the fables point to her being there.

The ending leads into another book being written. I can’t wait to read the next one in the series! I also think I found a new author to look into their other books!

View all my reviews

Grave Digger Academy (Grave Digger Academy Series Book 1) by C.A. King – Review by Kerry Baker

Grave Digger AcademyGrave Digger Academy by C.A. King
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Grave Digger Academy by C.A. King is a fun YA book that appeals to all readers. This author has become one or those that I will read even without looking at the book description. Her work is always fantastic and I know that whatever book I read is I’ll enjoy it.
This book is no different whatsoever. I was hooked the moment I started reading. I became invested in the characters and just found them so relatable. I could easily imagine everything they got up to and I just found them to be so entertaining.
The story was well written, as expected. It is fairly fast paced but for me that just added to the excitement. When I started this book I didn’t realise it was the first in a series but I an glad it is – I cannot wait to read the next books.

View all my reviews

Competing with the Star (Star Series Book 2) by Krysten Lindsay Hager – Review by Wendy Wary

Competing with the StarCompeting with the Star by Krysten Lindsay Hager
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

I really enjoyed this second book in the series. Where I had trouble relating to the obsession about celebrities and trying to fit in to the popular group in the first book, it really built a foundation for book two of the series, where Hadley’s character shined a lot brighter. Establishing a solid group of friends to rely on really helped Hadley shine through with more confidence and allowed the author to really show her kind and thoughtful nature, and she seemed to naturally help her newfound friends find their own footing to be themselves in the process, too. Where I felt like Hadley had come off kind of whiny in the first book, her portrayal in Competing With the Star was more relatable and showed her blossoming maturity. The second book almost makes me feel like I wasn’t giving her enough credit in the first book, as I really started to love Hadley by the end of the second one. The romance that develops between Hadley and Nick in Competing With the Star is sweet and tender, wrapped in honesty and vulnerability that stands in contrast to the fakeness and passive-agressive rude behavior of some of the others in their larger friends group. I also loved seeing more development of the stories surrounding the main characters’ relationships with their elderly family members, especially since that was one of my favorite things about the first novel. Although book two could certainly be read as a standalone, I kind of appreciated all the backstory that book one created for this book to really get the full picture of the characters.

Reviewed by @wendywary

View all my reviews

Next Door to a Star (The Star Series) by Krysten Lindsay Hager – Review by Wendy Wary

Next Door to a StarNext Door to a Star by Krysten Lindsay Hager
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I haven’t read a YA book in years, apart from some dystopian fiction, so this book was a little different than the typical adult novels I read. But, overlooking the teen girl obsession of appearances and celebrity gossip, I thoroughly enjoyed the characters and their wholesomeness. Not being much into fangirling or trying to impress the popular kids (even when I was in high school), I couldn’t relate much to the things the characters were focusing on, at times, but I wouldn’t have considered myself a typical teen, either, when I was in high school. I was more of a Charlotte, out of all of the characters. What I did thoroughly enjoy was reading the characters develop as they navigated teen friendships and worked out what was important to them. I struggled a bit with Hadley’s severe lack of confidence and always worrying about what everyone around her wanted her to say, do, wear, or act; this was balanced out a bit, too, though, with her loving family and their nurturing relationships and bonds. It was cute to see Hadley and her friends sharing gossip, television shows, and mutual interests with each other’s parents and extended family members; and there is a natural sweetness and innocence that draws you in as the story progresses.

Reviewed by @wendywary

View all my reviews

Grave Digger Academy (Grave Digger Academy Series Book 1) by C.A. King – Review by Karen Pearman

Grave Digger AcademyGrave Digger Academy by C.A. King
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

This is another great book by one of my favorite writers. It is the beginning of a series and I’m already waiting to get my hands on the next book because I didn’t want to put this one down. It’s reminiscent of the Harry Potter and the Simon Fayter book series of which I am huge fans of. This is filled with a lot of twists and turns and as the character is learning to come to terms with her talents as well as unknown family secrets. The main character reminds me a lot of Hermione Granger with her wits and talents so of course that was great to see. There aren’t that many female heroines in most of these young adult fantasy books. And unlike Hogwarts this academy isn’t the most sought-after school. But it turns out to be perfectly imperfect for the characters. I can’t wait to read the next installment of this wonderfully written book.

View all my reviews

Competing with the Star (Star Series Book 2) by Krysten Lindsay Hager – Review by Gillian Fawell

Competing with the StarCompeting with the Star by Krysten Lindsay Hager
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Having just read Next Door to a Star, I was so glad I had this book ready and waiting when I finished as the first book in the series was a very enjoyable read. Competing with the Start read just as well; another book I couldn’t put down and allowed me to live the childhood dream of being able to have a celebrity friend! I really hope Krysten Lindsay Hager writes more for this series as I want to know more!

Reviewed by @sparkinside

View all my reviews

Next Door to a Star (The Star Series) by Krysten Lindsay Hager – Review by Gillian Fawell

Next Door to a StarNext Door to a Star by Krysten Lindsay Hager
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

It’s been a long while since I’ve read a YA novel, but Next Door to a Star took me right back to those years; enjoying sleepovers with friends and drooling over the hottest celebrities in magazines. Well written with a plot that kept moving forward, I couldn’t put it down and was glad that the next book in the series was ready and waiting on my Kindle!

Reviewed by @sparkinside

View all my reviews

Competing with the Star (Star Series Book 2) by Krysten Lindsay Hager – Review by Angie Finley

Competing with the StarCompeting with the Star by Krysten Lindsay Hager
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

This is the sequel to Next Door to a Star.
Hadley is finally feeling like she’s fitting in, but is she? She has her group of friends, a boyfriend, and it seems like everything is falling in to place. But an overheard conversation in the ladies room has Hadley questioning her relationship with Nick. Is her best friend, Simone, after him and does Nick still have a crush on Simone? After a betrayal by Simone and Nick, who can she trust?
Hadley battles through the book on who to forgive, and finds a friendship in a person she least expected to.

This book gave me all the feels and took me back to my younger days. I was an emotional mess in parts of this book. I was really feeling all the turmoil that Hadley was going through.

View all my reviews

Next Door to a Star (The Star Series) by Krysten Lindsay Hager – Review by Angie Finley

Next Door to a StarNext Door to a Star by Krysten Lindsay Hager
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

This is my first time reading anything by this author. It was a cute YA story. Hadley is dealing with all the issues any teenager deals with. Her best friend moves away and even though she promises to text her, her friends has moved on. That and being bullied by two mean girls, Hadley decides to spend the summer with her grandparents. There she meets Simone, an actress, who at first is kind of giving the vibe of I’m better than you and I have better people to hang out with. And Hadley also gets bullied by Simone’s friends….. It’s happening all over, no friends and feeling left out. Hadley befriends Charlotte and they are hitting it off good. Then Hadley finds out she’s moving to the town and she is nervous to be starting a new school. Of course, things are different but as the school year gets to going, she finds out that she truly has a group and things are looking up!!

View all my reviews

Competing with the Star (Star Series Book 2) by Krysten Lindsay Hager – Review by Karen Pearman

Competing with the StarCompeting with the Star by Krysten Lindsay Hager
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

This is a follow up to the previous book by this author and I must say that it is another great YA read. As much as I loved the first one, I think I fell in love with the characters even more in this book. It picked up right where the previous one left off so I would highly encourage you read them in order. The characters in these books are so relatable to my own teenage angst years of high school friends and foes. It’s amazing how true to life it seems that even in a book they are trying to figure out who their real friends are and who they can and cannot trust. I think this book is great for preteens and teens. Not to mention adults that like to read young adult genre books.

View all my reviews

Competing with the Star (Star Series Book 2) by Krysten Lindsay Hager – Review by Carly Vogler

Competing with the StarCompeting with the Star by Krysten Lindsay Hager
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Competing with the Star by Krysten Lindsay Hager is the second story in the Star Series. Since this book follows right after the first story line, you should read them in order.

Krysten was once again able to capture the teenage feelings and emotions in this tale. As someone who has been out of school for a while, it can be hard to remember the issues we all faced in our younger years. It’s a crucial time in our lives and unfortunately, a time that normally gets blocked out because of how hard it is. I have a young teen daughter I wish would read this series so she knows she isn’t alone.

You can get lost in the story and feel as though you are back in school dealing with these same issues. I never once had to remind myself where I was or who I was reading about. I was caught up in the story the whole time.

Review by Carly Vogler

View all my reviews

Shield & Shade (Ascended Guardians Book 1) by Misty Hayes – Review by Natasha Mae

Shield & ShadeShield & Shade by Misty Hayes
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I didn’t mind the book. It was action packed right from the get go. I found it a little young for my taste, but other than that there was great character development, lots of intriguing action and it does leave you wanting more!

View all my reviews

Grave Digger Academy by C.A. King – Review by Erica Shoebridge

Grave Digger AcademyGrave Digger Academy by C.A. King
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

This is an engrossing read. Makayla, much to her chagrin, is accepted into the Gravediggers Academy as a witch. As she starts schooling, and learns about potions, magic, and stopping the dead from rising, I was reminded of Harry and Ron’s first days at Hogwarts. There is much to see and learn, and Makayla seems to be an unnaturally talented witch, despite her lackluster academic past. Lots of action in this story, and I was so involved in it that it was over before I knew it. Definitely looking forward to another book in this series to see how everything plays out for Makayla and her pals.

Reviewed by @ericalorraine
View all my reviews

Grave Digger Academy (Grave Digger Academy Series Book 1) by C.A. King – Review by Nikita Lesperance

Grave Digger AcademyGrave Digger Academy by C.A. King
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Grave digger academy is a fun YA book. Makayla is a spunky and likeable character. The other characters have good depth and are interesting as well. The plot was fast paced and had some twists. The details of the academy made it seem real. I like the world that the author created.

View all my reviews

Shield & Shade (Ascended Guardians Book 1) by Misty Hayes – Review by Helen Parsons

Shield & ShadeShield & Shade by Misty Hayes
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Following Zoey’s emotional turmoil learning her family drama is quite exhilarating! She realizes what truly happened ten years ago when she got lost in the woods. Characters that you don’t like at first surprise you. This book is a wonderful YA read and needs to be given 5 stars!
It’s not a super-fast read but you won’t want to put it down.
I really enjoy when books switch POV during reading so you can get more than one characters inner dialogue.

I did not realize this was a spin off of the Blood Dagger books and now I can’t wait to read that series.

View all my reviews

The Girl and the Raven (The Girl and the Raven series) by Pauline Gruber

~ ♥ ~ ♥ ~ ♥ ~ ♥ ~ BOOK SPOTLIGHT SHOWCASE ~ ♥ ~ ♥ ~ ♥ ~ ♥ ~
The Girl and the Raven (The Girl and the Raven series) by Pauline Gruber
Genre – Young Adult Romance, Paranormal Romance, Supernatural
Page Count – 408 pages

She just wants to fit in. But can a gifted teen find her place when she’s caught between good and evil?
After the sudden death of her mother, Lucy Walker leaves her small town for a fresh start in the City of Chicago. Lucy hopes life with her uncles will be less dramatic than the one she left behind. But her hopes are quickly turned upside down.
Beginning with a disturbing encounter at the airport, Lucy steps into a world she never imagined. From the discovery that she’s half-witch, half-demon, meeting the father she never knew, and run-ins with the mysterious boy who lives in the apartment upstairs, Lucy’s new life is not what she expected. And her world becomes even more complicated when the family’s treasured raven goes missing.
Persistent attacks from a dangerous stranger temporarily sideline Lucy’s search for the beloved family pet. Despite her reluctance to embrace her new gifts, Lucy is forced to team up with her brooding, dark-eyed neighbor to hunt down the truth. But when she discovers the connections between her own history and the secretive boy’s true nature, she’s thrust headfirst into an ancient battle…where choosing the wrong side could prove fatal.
Will Lucy accept her destined role before the darkness destroys everything she loves?
The Girl and The Raven is the thrilling first installment in The Girl and The Raven YA paranormal romance series. If you like imperfect witches with badass magic, young sorceresses trying to find themselves, and epic clashes between light and dark, then you’ll love Pauline Gruber’s enthralling tale.

~ AMAZON ~ APPLE ~ GOOGLE PLAY ~ BARNES AND NOBLE ~

You can find this video on our YouTube Channel

Visit us at https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCttf3qLZIeWgu0ZWDHc-hLg

Pauline Gruber is a self-professed music junkie, cat wrangler, and travel nut. She went to Paris in the 90’s where she discovered a love of three things: croissants, old cathedrals, and gargoyles. Deciding that the paranormal world could use a new kind of hero, Pauline translated her fascination with the protective gargoyle into a suspenseful love story. She is the author of the young adult series, The Girl and the Raven, The Girl and the Gargoyle, and The Girl and the Demon. By day, Pauline is a legal assistant for a Chicago law firm where she borrows identities and incorporates them into her books. If you tell anyone, she’ll deny, deny, deny.

 

Pauline lives outside of Chicago with her precocious black cats.

 

For more information about The Girl and the Raven series and the author, please visit: www.paulinegruber.com.

Author Interview With Pauline Gruber

~ FACEBOOK ~ INSTAGRAM ~ BOOKBUB ~ TWITTER ~ TIKTOK ~ PINTEREST ~ WEBSITE ~ GOODREADS ~

WEBSITE ~ FACEBOOK ~ TWITTER ~ PINTEREST ~ YOUTUBE ~ INSTAGRAMFACEBOOK GROUP ~ TIKTOK

 

 

Competing with the Star (Star Series Book 2) by Krysten Lindsay Hager – Review by Elizabeth Sanchez

Competing with the StarCompeting with the Star by Krysten Lindsay Hager
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Competing with the Star is the 2nd book in the Star Series by Krysten Lindsay Hager. You should read them in order, as this book picks up right where the first left off. We continue to follow the life of teenager Hadley Daniels. She has recently moved to a new town, and is figuring out where she fits in socially. Over the summer, she stayed with her grandparents, and made some new friends, but teen life is confusing. She and her crush Nick have decided to make things official, which should be great news. They have so much in common and find it easy to talk to each other. However, the insecurities caused by friends comments, and rumors are prying them apart. Add in a love triangle or two, and this story is packed full of drama. Some parts had me rolling my eyes, but then I tried to remember back to what it was like being a teenager, and its spot on. Hager really captured the feelings of teenagers, both boy and girl. I love that we got to see several characters weaknesses, and how they leaned on each other, discovering who their real friends are. I think this is a great coming of age story, geared toward tween and teens, but good enough to enjoy as an adult. I look forward to reading more by this author.

View all my reviews

Reviewed by @way2gosmartguy

Next Door to a Star (The Star Series) by Krysten Lindsay Hager – Review by Elizabeth Sanchez

Next Door to a StarNext Door to a Star by Krysten Lindsay Hager
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Next Door to a Star is the first book in The Star Series by Krysten Lindsay Hager. It is the first book I have read by her, and I enjoyed it. It is a somewhat of a coming of age book, and would be good for middle or high school kids (I am in my 30s and enjoyed it). This book follows Hadley through her awkward teen years, and finding herself. She has only one friend, who has moved away, and cannot fathom the thought of spending the summer alone. When her grandparents invite her to their home for the summer, she jumps on it. They live next door to another teen, who was a teen star actress. Hadley has dreams of becoming her friend, and in turn, increasing her popularity points. I loved seeing her transition and mature throughout the book. She learned the value of friendship, navigated her way through crushes/dating as well as how to handle backstabbing mean girls. This book has all the typical middle and high school drama, and we get to see it from the inside out. Hadley is stuck in the middle of the popular in crowd, and good friends that are not popular. I look forward to reading the second book to see what happens next.

View all my reviews

Reviewed by @way2gosmartguy

Travels Through Aqua, Green, and Blue: A Memoir by Mary E. Gregory – Review by Rachel Moss

Travels Through Aqua, Green, and Blue: A MemoirTravels Through Aqua, Green, and Blue: A Memoir by Mary E. Gregory
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Travels Through Aqua, Green, And Blue: A Memoir by Mary E. Gregory was a great read! I thought this was a very well written, coming of age story. This story is great for all ages, teenagers to adults. Gregory has led an incredible life, with tons of stuff that shouldn’t even have happened, and I felt very honored to he able to read her story. It must have taken so much courage to share not only her experience with her disability but her whole life story and I applaud her courage in doing so. I can’t wait to hopefully read more from her in the future!

View all my reviews“>

Travels Through Aqua, Green, and Blue: A Memoir by Mary E. Gregory – Review by Lorralei Hoerner

Travels Through Aqua, Green, and Blue: A MemoirTravels Through Aqua, Green, and Blue: A Memoir by Mary E. Gregory
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I started reading this memoir during vacation, and took my time to read this book. There were moments that made me sit back and think….the book was descriptive and was very good. This memoir tore at my heart strings as looking at Mary Gregory’s life, growing up with a deformity and hardships. This hit me a bit, while my own mild deformity differed, I can relate and overcome like Mary. We then learn of Mary’s mom having mental health issues and her father as a preacher coming out, with many ups and downs. This is truly a journey….and many pieces to this memoir but it was a very good read.

View all my reviews

Grave Digger Academy by C.A. King- Reviewed by Erin Clemence

“Grave Digger Academy” by C.A King is a little bit “Divergent” mixed with a little bit of “Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone”, all stirred with a creepy paranormal spoon!

Makayla hopes to be chosen for the school of her choice, like the rest of her six brothers who also attend one of the schools in the paranormal school system. However, Makayla worries that she will be selected for “The Grave Digger Academy”- every students’ last choice, the school for those not accepted anywhere else. At “Grave Digger Academy” they perform spells and potions intended to keep the dead…..well, dead. So when, of course, Makayla is selected for Grave Digger Academy she must face her entire first year alone, with the disappointment of her family heavy on her heart. But Makayla knows she must make the best of it, and when she comes into her powers and realizes that her family has deep secrets that go back generations, she realizes that Grave Digger Academy may be exactly where she was intended to be.

C.A King is an award-winning Canadian author, living in a town that is not too far from my own actually, which made me even happier to be able to promote and praise “Grave Digger Academy”.

The novel is more of a novella, really, at less than 200 pages, and it has short, page-turning chapters. I easily polished this book off in a day. It is also the first in a series of novels, and if the rest are anything like this one, this series will be an instant YA hit.

Makayla is the ideal protagonist- a socially awkward misfit who struggles to fit in, even within her own family. As she comes into herself and makes friends at Grave Digger Academy, it is immediately evident that she will be the one who changes things and makes a difference. She is the character to root for, right from the first page.

With the backdrop of a depressing, neglected school of magic, and quirky, eccentric teachers, “Grave Digger Academy” sets the stage for dark and magical things. The characters were well developed, the plot was poised and had great flow, and the short chapters made the novel a page-turning, addicting experience. I can definitely see King’s “Grave Digger Academy” series becoming the next big YA trend.

Travels Through Aqua, Green, and Blue: A Memoir by Mary E. Gregory – Review by Roxsanne Lesieur.

Travels Through Aqua, Green, and Blue: A MemoirTravels Through Aqua, Green, and Blue: A Memoir by Mary E. Gregory
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

This is the story of Mary E. Gregory told in her own words, it is the story of how her world changed when she was just five years old and what happened over the course of her life after that. Mary was born into a loving family in Nashville, Tennessee, she had her mum, her dad and two siblings, a brother who was the oldest and an older sister in between the two. They were well thought of and respected in the local community but from birth, Mary had challenges, she was born with a cleft palate and had multiple surgeries over her life to correct it and the issues which came with it, this would be something she would have to accept and learn to live with over the years. The main troubles started when her father, a preacher in the local church and a pillar of the community came out as gay, this was compounded upon with the HIV and AIDS crises which were starting to come into the mainstream media and create the stigma and taboos around the diseases ehich people believes they could catch just by standing near them. The life that Mary knew was going to change drastically after this as her parents separated and divorced, the church goers and friends of the family all retreated away from them and some started rumours and talking about the family behind their backs, it was also at this point that her mother started to develop mental health issues as well.

After the divorce went through, Mary and her siblings didn’t see their father for a while until the custody and maintenance payments were sorted out, it was during this time that their mother retreated into herself and began neglecting the household and them, her older brother had to grow up quickly and look after both himself and his sisters, trying to keep them going to school on time and not letting on how bad things were at home. The situation got to a point where the school called their mum and it finally broke through the wall she had built around herself and she started booking after things again, however, when the car broke down it started over again, plus when they got to see their father, she started arguments and it became too awkward for the arrangements to stick. Their mothers increased paranoia around the situation and what she believed people were saying about her she began to use her children to wage a war against their father, this led to her buying a car, packing them into it and driving away from the only home they had ever known without looking back.

On their road trip, they visited family members to say a last goodbye to them and in between staying in rest stops, spending the little money they had on food and gas, they passed through many places until they arrived in New York where the next stage of their adventures would be. This is where Mary and the others learned about life and how hard they would have to work to stay fed, warm and with a roof over their heads, sometimes this didn;t happen at all, they shuffled from hostels, to hotels, to apartments and back to sleeping in the car, going to food banks and soup kitchens so they could eat and their mother hopping from job to job between welfare checks, the had to attend school, even though it was hard for them and embarrassing, but they made some friends along the way.

The memoir continues as they keep moving along when their mother;s paranoia hits its peak, Mary learns a lot about life and how she should approach it and scattered in between the memories are snippets of her adult life and how she has grown and changed into the woman she is today. Overall, this is a wonderful story of adversity and how even childhood trauma can be used to create a strong sense of self, while teaching others how to observe, process and learn from life, no matter what it throws at you.

Reviewed by @roxsannel

View all my reviews

Travels Through Aqua, Green, and Blue: A Memoir by Mary E. Gregory – Review by Shelly Kittell

Intensely personal, Mary shares a large part of her personal life growing up. Finding out her father was gay threw her family life into chaos which caused her mom to pretty much break. She was already showing signs of schizophrenia. The journey ahead was long and quite the adventure. Overwhelming, frightening, and hard for a child, it is amazing that Mary was able to come through this to be strong and resilient. A hard read for me because it was a little close to home but worth it. Mental health is so very important. Thank you for sharing it.

Shield & Shade (Ascended Guardians Book 1) by Misty Hayes – Review by Kayla Bullock

Shield & ShadeShield & Shade by Misty Hayes
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Zoey, studious, with few friends, is desperate to graduate early, and escape the suffocating control of her parents. Overprotective after Zoey got lost in the woods at 5 years old, her family sees it as keeping her safe–including having a 7pm curfew at 15 years old! But when the truth is revealed about what really happened on that night 10 years ago, Zoey’s life is turned upside down.

Shield and Shade is a great story. The writing style is impressive and has a natural flow to it, and the descriptions, especially of the settings are perfect–I could visualize them easily. The characters are likeable, relatable, and realistic. The story drew me in from page 1. I was rooting for Zoey the entire story. Great writing! Will for sure be reading more from this author in the future! This book would make a great movie!

View all my reviews

Grave Digger Academy (Grave Digger Academy Series Book 1) by C.A. King – Review by Rayne East

Grave Digger AcademyGrave Digger Academy by C.A. King
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

An original YA fantasy book. I enjoyed the characters and the twist on magic and witches. There was a fair bit if foundation set in this first book of a series but it is executed well. Mikayla is easily relatable and her back story running parallel with witch folklore was intriguing. Like many academy books this takes place in an academic year. It can be enjoyed by all ages as it is clean and easy to read. Not a cliffhanger as such but I will be checking out book 2.

View all my reviews