Category: TCO Reviews

  • TCO Reviews: The Starseekers by Nicole Glover

    TCO Reviews: The Starseekers by Nicole Glover

    Faithful readers already know I have a huge love of both mystery and fantasy novels. I love reading and writing about these genres, particularly when entries feature complex characters and social settings to match. What might be less familiar are my STEM roots. My father is a professor in the department of engineering; my mother,

    Read on…

  • TCO Reviews: Menu of Happiness by Hisashi Kashiwai

    TCO Reviews: Menu of Happiness by Hisashi Kashiwai

    Fall might be the season of warm sweaters and spiced beverages, but it’s also, rightfully, soup season. Between the cooling temperature and the harvest, there’s nothing better than gathering in community over a delicious meal. It’s with this feeling in mind that I cracked open Menu of Happiness, another delicious tour through Japanese food and

    Read on…

  • TCO Reviews: The Killer Question by Janice Hallett

    TCO Reviews: The Killer Question by Janice Hallett

    The air is crisp, orange is back in season, cinnamon has started to permeate – mystery season is back. And what better way to celebrate than a new Janice Hallett? Long-time readers will know that Hallett is one of my favorite modern crime authors. She’s one of the only authors working in epistolaries today, and

    Read on…

  • Reading roundup: Odds and ends

    Reading roundup: Odds and ends

    Because I’ve had so much travel since my last roundup, I haven’t had as much time to share my literary wanderings. So I thought I’d do a Very Special Reading Roundup. Some 52 Book Club updates, some TCO reviews, some other fun reads to keep an eye on. 52 Book Club – progress updates We

    Read on…

  • TCO Reviews: Hemlock and Silver by T. Kingfisher

    TCO Reviews: Hemlock and Silver by T. Kingfisher

    As summer turns early fall, it’s time to start putting aside the beachy reads in favor of cozier aesthetics. It’s early for true dark academia vibes – I don’t need roaring fireplaces just yet; but I also want something a little more thoughtful and grounded. I’m hoping that T. Kingfisher’s recent desert retelling of Snow

    Read on…

  • Fantasy politics with a mystery twist in A Drop of Corruption

    Fantasy politics with a mystery twist in A Drop of Corruption

    Robert Jackson Bennett is back! And he’s advancing the stories of Ana and Din, an imperial investigator and her assistant. Regular readers know how much I adore RBJ, and I’ve been extremely excited for this next release. A Drop of Corruption rejoins Ana and Din months after the events of The Tainted Cup. They’ve been

    Read on…

  • Masters of multimedia murder in Janice Hallett’s The Examiner

    Masters of multimedia murder in Janice Hallett’s The Examiner

    Long-time readers will know that I am an avid reader of everything Janice Hallett writes. Hallett is a master of the modern epistolary, constantly coming up with creative new ways to hide information in plain sight. And so I’m thrilled to wish a Very Happy Book Birthday to her latest and greatest, The Examiner! What

    Read on…

  • Authorial snark and serendipity in The Murders in Great Diddling

    Authorial snark and serendipity in The Murders in Great Diddling

    Many of the best cozy mysteries take place in an out-of-the-way village. From the earliest days of Miss Marple and Miss Silver, amateur sleuths have been digging up the roots of crime in small hamlets. Inevitably, what seems like a sleepy town is actually full of personal intrigue and even scandal. I assumed The Murders

    Read on…

  • Myth, magic, and madness in Hearts that Cut

    Myth, magic, and  madness in Hearts that Cut

    I have many, many apologies to make to my NetGalley list. Reading and reviewing new releases is one of my favorite parts of having this blog, and yet I’ve been extremely behind in doing my homework. We’ll be making up for that in the next month or two, starting with one of the books I’ve

    Read on…

  • Through a glass, darkly in Catchpenny by Charlie Huston

    Through a glass, darkly in Catchpenny by Charlie Huston

    LA has an – interesting – reputation. It’s the City of the Stars, but also all the machinations required to keep those dreams going. Wannabe actors (and now influencers) flock there, hoping for a Big Break, but the break can only come for so many. But what happens to those who get left behind? In

    Read on…