
Linking to: It’s Monday! What Are You Reading? at BookDate; Sunday Post @ Caffeinated Reviewer; and the Sunday Salon @ ReaderBuzz
Life…
Maybe I should start making notes for this section because it gets to Sunday evening and I don’t remember a thing I did during the past week.
I know I sweated, a lot. We can’t get a technician to come out and assess our air conditioner until January 29th, and my guess is it will then take another week for them to repair it if they need to replace a part. The temperatures have cooled a bit for the moment, but instead of blistering heat we now have high humidity, which is almost as bad.
The main part of my daughter’s birthday gift also arrived. She’s loved the TV series Charmed since she was quite young, thanks to the influence of her older sister (there is 7 years difference between them), and one of the things on her birthday wishlist was the novelisation of the first episode, “Something Wicked This Way Comes’’ titled The Power of Three (by Eliza Willard). It was published in 1999 and finding a copy at a reasonable price here in Australia seemed impossible, because it has never been reprinted, secondhand copies are between $80 and $140. I’d pretty much given up on the idea when, on the day before her birthday, I stumbled on a listing for a bulk lot of 24 Charmed novels, including The Power of Three, for a comparative bargain of $120 from an Australian online bookseller (BookGrocer.com). They arrived on Monday, all in very good condition, and she has been reading practically nonstop since (she’s a reader, but not like me). Apparently there are a total of 41 books in the series, but I don’t think I will be that lucky again!
Hubby finally goes back to work today. The carport is still not fixed, he did finish the painting but then for some reason he decided to replace the outside stairs and railing that lead to our laundry instead. Now it’s true that they were falling apart, except we haven’t used those stairs in the 20+ years we have lived here because the laundry is tiny and the only position for the dryer is in front of the door…but I guess it’s something crossed off the list.
What I’ve Read Since I last Posted…
Project Hail Mary by Andy Weir
This Book Made Me Think of You by Libby Page
First They Killed My Father by Loung Ung
The Observer Marina Endicott
New Posts…
Top Ten Tuesday: Most Anticipated Books Releasing in the First Half of 2026
Review: Fundamentals of Being a Good Girl by Julie Murphy & Sierra Simone
Review: Wreck by Catherine Newman
Review: The Redline by Adrian Hyland
2026 Nonfiction Reader Challenge Inspiration #LOSTORFOUND #TELEVISION
2026 Nonfiction Reader Challenge Inspiration #SUBCULTURE #PUBLISHEDIN2026
What I’m Reading This Week…
Welcome to Harker Academy for Deviant Defense. Keep your daggers sharp, and your wits even sharper. Viv Abbot is an average twenty-one-year-old girl. She lives in an expensive city where the rent is too high, works long hours at a thankless job, and is dating a guy she doesn’t even like in the hopes of winning her prickly mother’s approval. She just also happens to be a demon hunter. Ever since her father’s murder, she’s been forced to hunt deviants alone, meaning everyone, including her family, sees her as an outsider. . . . Until the day she crosses paths with a dangerously alluring demon, Reid Graveheart. The reformed deviant tells her of a school for people just like her: Harker Academy for Deviant Defense. If she enrolls, she’ll learn to hone her craft, work with other hunters, and never be alone again. But Viv has a deadly secret. One that not even her new friends at Harker can know about. Not when the school might hold the answers to untangling the mystery surrounding Viv’s father’s death. When strange occurrences begin to plague the students, Viv will have to figure out who she can trust, and fast. All while trying to ace her classes, not fall for a demon, and make it through her first year at Harker in one piece. How hard could that be?
A whip-smart and darkly funny crime novel—perfect for fans of My Sister, the Serial Killerand The Maid—that follows a wife and mother with a deadly secret that she must suppress if she wants to maintain her picture-perfect façade. Meet Lalla Rook. Lalla has a lot on her plate: She needs to guarantee her husband makes partner, secure her dream house in Hampstead, and get her daughter into a prestigious prep school. And on the afternoon she stabs a stranger seven times after he breaks into her living room, she has a four-year-old’s birthday party to host. With an unambitious partner, two demanding children, and a barely adequate large house in a nice (if not quite fashionable) part of town, Lalla’s life isn’t quite perfect yet. And she can’t pretend she hasn’t missed the adrenaline rush that comes with transgressing. Besides, as a wife and mother, she’s already an expert multi-tasker. So, disposing of a body, framing a friend, and being the world’s best mother can easily be managed alongside the usual domestic minutiae. It’s just that her husband Stephen seems distracted, her daughter’s drowning of the class hamster is affecting her academic future, and then there is the unexpected intruder. Who is this man and what does he want from her? Because Lalla has a past she’d rather keep hidden—and the sudden appearance of the police means that avoiding them will be yet another task to cross off her to-do list. Funny, calculating, hypercompetent, and ambitious, Lalla is your next favorite antiheroine. Just don’t mention it to her mother-in-law.
Callie March is fascinated by human absurdity, including the habits of the upper class. So when she pushes her screen-addicted teenage son to join a local rowing club, she is thrilled to discover a whole new world of odd behaviours, irrational obsessions and riverside rooting. Thrust into a support crew and a very silly uniform, Callie has inadvertently volunteered for a season of pre-dawn parenting, endless fundraising, and pandering to insufferable dickheads. But she also finds friendship, intrigue and lust, while her son might just find love. Callie is torn between enchantment and repulsion, until a trail of corruption and scandal leads to deep suspicion. There’s something fishy in the rowing shed, and Callie is determined to find out what lurks behind the closed doors of this sports club. In doing so, she will rock the boat – or better still, capsize it altogether. This novel is set in northern Tasmania. It contains profundity, profanity, heart-ache, bum chafe, terrible winners and very good losers.
Thanks for stopping by!
It’s Monday! What Are You Reading? #IMWAYR @thebookdate #SundayPost @Kimbacaffeinate #SundaySalon @debnance I’m #reading a mix of genres this week #HalfCity #ASociopathsGuidetoaSuccessfulMarriage #TheGoodLosers


























































































































































