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TCO Reviews: Love and Other Scams by Philip Ellis

Cons, scams, heists – if there’s a story with a stylish crime in it, I’m in. And my 2022 was full of weddings, which can get tiring after a while. So I was excited to get a preview of Love and Other Scams by Philip Ellis, which follows two con artists who try to pull
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TCO Reviews: I Have Some Questions For You by Rebecca Makkai

2023 might be the year we have a good think about the role of the True Crime podcast. Last year, they were a huge trend in the books I enjoyed, but from a lighthearted stance – exploring the form and format. This year, Rebecca Makkai has brought the genre to a darker, more thoughtful space
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TCO Reviews: Death Comes to the Costa del Sol by M.H. Eccleston

When I’ve got the January blues, I find myself longing for sunshine and warm beaches. So when I came across Death Comes to the Costa del Sol by M. H. Eccleston, I was excited to escape endless rain to the seaside resort of Estipona. (Thanks to NetGalley and Aria & Aries for the digital review
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TCO Reviews: Crime and Punctuation by Kaitlyn Dunnett

When it comes to linguistics, I go back and forth between prescriptivist and descriptivist. I know, intellectually, that language flows with the people, and forcing “correct” rules on it ignores how languages evolve to accommodate new needs. Still, there’s part of me that loves the clear meaning that you get with a well-defined, broadly accepted
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TCO Reviews: VenCo by Cherie Dimaline

Since I was a young girl, I’ve loved fantasy novels, especially those in urban settings. It was never Big Battles that did it for me – instead, I preferred to see magic used in daily life, on human scale. To this day, I prefer this juxtaposition of the ordinary and extraordinary – whether it’s a
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The World of Pondside: Cozy mystery with a video-game twist

I’ve always loved the idea of video games as interactive art. Growing up, cozy puzzle-solving games like Professor Layton were a welcome interactive escape. Later, in college, I discovered channels like Extra Credits that got me thinking critically about how the interactivity of games sets them apart. And Cozy Grove, with its wholesome story of
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TCO Reviews: Everyone in My Family Has Killed Someone by Benjamin Stevenson

I was really excited to get the chance to read Everyone in My Family Has Killed Someone by Benjamin Stevenson. Many thanks to the publisher for the gift! This fun take on the manor house mystery will release January 2023, and I honestly liked it so much that I’ll probably buy myself a copy to
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TCO Reviews: Death Comes to Marlow by Robert Thorogood

In addition to mystery novels, I am also an avid fan of word games. I particularly love crossword puzzles: I regularly race my friends to complete the New York Times crossword, and got into cryptic crosswords over the pandemic. I’m still terrible at them – I can’t solve anagrams to save my life – but
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The Cozy Owlet’s favorite 2022 reads, Pt. 3: Fantasy

Happy New Year’s Eve! And welcome back to my end-of-year roundup of my favorite books of the year. Today, we’re taking a look at fantasy novels – a genre I hope to write about more in 2023 – and highlighting my favorite book of the year. My favorite fantasies: holding up a magic mirror to
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The Cozy Owlet’s favorite 2022 reads, Pt. 2: Mystery & crime

Welcome back to my end-of-year roundup of my favorite books of the year. Yesterday, we covered one of my favorite voyeuristic, meta-fictional genres, the epistolary. Today, we’re going to dive deeper into my “home base” genre – mystery and crime novels. These are: My favorite mystery & crime novels: clever protagonists making sense of our