All posts by skyebjenner

Tower of Dawn by Sarah J. Maas

Overview
Tower of Dawn : Sarah J. Maas : 9781408887974

Title: Tower of Dawn
Author: Sarah J. Maas
Series: Throne of Glass #6
Rating Out of 5: 5 (I will read this again and again and again)
My Bookshelves: Fantasy, Romance, Strong women
Dates read: 2nd – 17th October 2021
Pace: Fast
Format: Novel
Publisher: Bloomsbury
Year: 2017
5th sentence, 74th page: She straightened.

Synopsis

A GLORIOUS EMPIRE
A DESPERATE QUEST
AN ANCIENT SECRET

Chaol Westfall and Nesryn Faliq have arrived in the shining city of Antica to forge an alliance with the Khagan of the Southern Continent, whose vast armies are Erilea’s last hope. But they ahve also come to Antica for another purpose: to seek healing at the legendary Torre Cesme for the wounds that Chaol received in Rifthold.

After enduring unspeakable horrors as a child, Yrene Towers has no desire to help a young lord from Adarlan, let alone heal him. Yet she has sworn an oath to assist those in need – and will honour it. But Lord Westfall carries darkness from his own past, and Yrene soon comes to realise it could engulf them both.

And deep in the shadows of distant mountains, where warriors soar on might ruks, long-awaited answers slumber. Answers that might offer their world a chance at survival – or doom them all.

Thoughts

I did struggle with this book more than I had expected to. I’ve been putting off the last 2 books of the series. Partly because I know that it will destroy my heart (seems to be a talent of Maas). But, more so, because I just don’t want this series to be over! Sure, I can reread it… but it just won’t be the same. Having said that, I didn’t fall head first into this book like I have the others.

I think that the thing that takes me a while with this story is that Chaol spends the first part just being incredibly whiney. I get that he’s been dealt a hard hand, but my lordy, he’s just a bit too bitter and painful. For those who feel the same… Read on! Once I got to the second part, I started to fall head first into the storyline as expected.

Of all the characters in this, it was Yrene that I loved the most. The fact that she has an intertwined past (like many of the other characters) just makes her all that much better. I love how much of this story involves her fight to get over her horrible past and move forwards with her life. Her story, when Chaol’s was a bit painful made this book still a 5 star I my view.

Whilst I had a few moments of discomfort and “huh” throughout this, ultimately I loved this book. After the first 200 pages, the character development is so wonderful and intense that I couldn’t put it down. And, much of the whiney that was irritating made so much more sense.

<- Empire of StormsKingdom of Ash ->

Image source: Book Depository

Up the Duff by Kaz Cooke

Overview
Up the Duff by Kaz Cooke - Penguin Books Australia

Title: Up the Duff
Author: Kaz Cooke
Rating Out of 5: 5 (I will read this again and again and again)
My Bookshelves: Humour, Non-fiction, Pregnancy
Dates read: 5th June – 17th October 2021
Pace: Slow
Format: Non-fictional text
Publisher: Viking
Year: 1999
5th sentence, 74th page: According to one American pregnancy book cover, this is when you will wear an Alice band and a hideous lemon doona cover with a Peter Pan collar, and stare out the window holding a cup and saucer like a demented fool.

Synopsis

Kaz Cooke tells you everything you need to know about your pregnancy and birth. No bossy-boots rules, just the best, funniest and most reassuring practical advice, plus lots of cartoons. Up the Duff is backed by heaps of medical and other experts.

Thoughts

The moment I found out I was pregnant I told one of my close girlfriends. She immediately recommended this book. And wow. Am I glad that she did.

This book is realistic and fun. It gives you a whole heap of information without sounding preachy. And it just makes you feel less overwhelmed about the whole first time mother thing. Or at least, that’s what it did for me.

The sass and humour with which this book gives you important information makes some pretty scary topics feel much… less scary. I mean, whole chapters on labour that didn’t make me want to run to the bathroom and throw up. I can’t begin to explain how much better that made me feel.

Any expectant (or wanting to be expectant) mothers really need to invest in this book. Its amazing. It’s informative. And it most definitely made me feel less stressed and scared.

<- More humour booksBabies & Toddlers ->

Image source: Penguin Books Australia

When Breath Becomes Air by Paul Kalanithi

Overview
When Breath Becomes Air: Kalanithi, Paul: 9781784701994: Books - Amazon.ca

Title: When Breath Becomes Air
Author: Paul Kalanithi
Rating Out of 5: 4.5 (Amazing, but not quite perfect)
My Bookshelves: Death, Medical, Memoirs
Dates read: 2nd – 13th October 2021
Pace: Slow
Format: Novel
Publisher: Vintage Books
Year: 2016
5th sentence, 74th page: The surgeon got to work, passed a small endoscope through Matthew’s nose, and drilled off the floor of his skull.

Synopsis

What do you do when life is catastrophically interrupted?
What does it mean to have a child as your own life fades away? 8 What makes life worth living in the face of death

At the age of thirty-six, on the verge of completing a decade’s training as a neurosurgeon, Paul Kalanithi was diagnosed with inoperable lung cancer. One day he was a doctor treating the dying, the next he was a patient struggling to live.

When Breath Becomes Air chronicles Kalanithi’s transformation from a medical student in search of what makes a virtuous and meaningful life into a neurosurgeon working in the core of human identity – the brain – and finally into a patient and new father.

Thoughts

I knew that I was probably going to shed at least a few tears at the end of this book. I mean, it’s a book written by a man who is terminally ill. It’s going to make you cry. I didn’t quite expect how much I cried though. Partly because I didn’t think that it would be the epilogue written by Kalanithi’s wife that would really set me off… maybe not the best book to read when you’re pregnant and hormonal.

When Breath Becomes Air is incredibly humbling. It is filled with reminders that your world can change in a moment and everything you worked towards can just be ripped away. Yet, even though Paul was writing this in his final months and knew what was coming for him, he writes in such a way that you feel… at peace with his fate. Having been around numerous people with a terminal illness, reading about someone who faced their diagnosis head on like this… as I said, humbling.

The first part of this memoir focuses on Kalanithi’s decision to become a neuroscientist. About his constant battle to find a meaning in life where he isn’t entirely sure there is one. I love that he talks about his love for both literature and science. And how instead of being independent of each other (an assumption I’ve often come up against), they build upon one another. You can feel the passion for both fields streaming off the page as you read about Kalanithi’s numerous experiences and a life well lived.

This is one of those amazing memoirs that makes you feel… well, everything. It definitely left me feeling a little bit raw. But, mostly it just made me feel humble and aware of all of my own faults. But not in a bad way. I know that I couldn’t go through a terminal diagnosis like Kalanithi with the kind of calm and grace that he shows. And it’s kind of nice to read the words of someone who actually was capable of doing so.

<- Lab GirlIs Everyone Hanging Out Without Me? (And Other Concerns) ->

Image source: Amazon

The Summer Garden by Sherryl Woods

Overview
The Summer Garden (Chesapeake Shores, #9) by Sherryl Woods

Title: The Summer Garden
Author: Sherryl Woods
Series: Chesapeake Shores #9
Rating Out of 5: 4.5 (Amazing, but not quite perfect)
My Bookshelves: Contemporary, Contemporary romance
Dates read: 1st – 6th October 2021
Pace: Medium
Format: Novel
Publisher: Mira
Year: 2012
5th sentence, 74th page: He suspected that Mick himself would have said far worse.

Synopsis

New York Times and USA Today bestselling author Sherryl Woods proves once more that home is always where the heart is.

Falling for “Maddening Moira” O’Malley was the unexpected highlight of Luke O’Brien’s Dublin holiday. So when she pays a surprise visit to Chesapeake Shores, Luke is thrilled… at first. A fling with this wild Irish rose is one thing, but forever? Maybe someday, but not when he’s totally focused on establishing a business that will prove his mettle to his overachieving family.

Given Luke’s reaction, Moira has some soul-searching of her own to do. Scarred by her father’s abandonment, she wonders if Luke, with his playboy past, is truly the family man she longs for. Adding to her dilemma, she’s offered an amazing chance at a dream career of her own.

Deep down, though, Moira knows home is the real prize, and that love can be every bit as enchanted as a summer garden.

Thoughts

This kind of feels like the end of the first part of this series. I mean, each of the first nine books feel like they sit within their own trilogy anyway. And then this story just felt like it rounded out the three trilogies. I know that there are more Chesapeake Shores books to go, but Luke’s story finishes out the romances of the first and second generation of O’Briens. And highlights the appearance of a next generation soon to come up the ranks.

As someone who has always been told that she’s incredibly difficult, I kind of loved Moira from her very first appearance in An O’Brien Family Christmas. I mean, I can be rude and surly (especially when I was younger) and often got painted into a specific box. Just like Moira. Of all the women that I have loved thus far in this series (and I’ve loved them all), I think it’s Moira that I most strongly identified with. She’s unsure, confused and there are so many different possibilities laid out before her. However, unlike me, she actually manages to figure out what she wants at a fairly young age. And is able to find ways to fight for it.

One of the things that always confuses me about people and romance is that they have an image of their “ideal” person. Or the “ideal” timeline to fall in love and get married and have kids. In my experience, this is absolute stupidity. There is no ideal time to do any of these things. Rather, life happens and you may as well enjoy it and move forwards with it. Luke most definitely falls into this category of stupid. He just… keeps thinking that if he ticks off his list, he’ll get his happily ever after. To me, happily ever after is the everyday moments and points in life that happen on a daily basis. Luckily, Luke does manage to realise that before its too late.

All in all, this was a good and sweet book. I do enjoy the fact that Kirsten (of fame in Beach Lane) kind of gets a bit of a kick in the butt in this story. I would have liked a little more comeuppance. But, she does get a swift kick in the butt. It just gave an extra sense of joy throughout this story that left me smiling. Nothing better than an entitled brat getting their butt kicked in the name of true love…

As always, I thoroughly enjoyed visiting the mad O’Briens at Chesapeake Shores. They’re quite a clan, and honestly, what I’ve always wished family meant / represented.

<- An O’Brien Family ChristmasA Seaside Christmas ->

Image source: Goodreads

A Puzzlement Spell Challenge

Duration: 1st November – 30th November 2021
Number of books: 12
Hosted by: Crazy Challenge Connection

M – The Answer to the Riddle is Me by David Stuart MacLean
A Archangel’s Blade by Nalini Singh
N

I

P

U

L
– Cowboy and the Captive by Lora Leigh
A

T

I

O
– The Tea Dragon Tapestry by Kay O‘Neill
N

DURATION: NOVEMBER 1 – NOVEMBER 30, 2021

To go along with Barb’s scavenger challenge this month, choose one or more of these words to spell out in November. You may use the first letter of the first word in the book’s title (excluding A, An and The) OR the author’s first or last initial (middle names or initials can NOT be used).

puzzles
crossword
squares
blanks
vertical
horizontal
symmetry
(Arthur) Wynne
escape (room)
Japan
prison
zombies
guards
jigsaw
(John) Spilsbury
dissected map
logic
deduction
elimination grid
matrix
mechanical
manipulation
dexterity
tangrams
interlocking
Rubik’s Cube
multicolored
Lucas Etter
sudoku
row, column
numbers

CHALLENGE RULES:
See this thread for more detailed rules for all CCC challenges.

♦ If you want to participate in this challenge, please sign up by posting a challenge template. This gives us a post to link you to, which you can use to update your books as the challenge progresses.

♦ Unless otherwise noted, books must be at least 150 pages long. (See the link above for rules regarding graphic novels.) Books may only be used for one task in this challenge, but cross-challenge posting is encouraged 🙂 Re-reads are allowed, as long as you read the entire book. You must read at least half of the book AFTER the challenge begins in order to count it for this challenge.

♦ If you choose any of the spelling options, you may use the first letter of the first word in the book’s title (excluding A, An and The) or the author’s first or last initial (middle names or initials can NOT be used).
-In the case of a hyphenated first or last name (i.e. Sarah-Kate LynchKate E. Dyer-Seeley), the first letter of the hyphenated name may be used (not the second initial directly following the hyphen).
-If an author uses what appears to be “two last names” (usually a female author using her maiden name and then her married last name; i.e. Kathy Hogan Trocheck), the last initial of the two names counts since the maiden name is now serving in the place of a “middle” name.

♦ For each book you read, please post a link to the title, and indicate the author and the date you finished reading it. If you don’t, you won’t get credit for completing that task.
* If you don’t know how to post a link to the book title or author, see the instructions here: Add a link to book title or author

♦ If you want the challenge moderator to verify your books as you post updates, please copy/paste your update into a new message . If you do this while you still have the Edit window open, it will copy all of your formatting, etc. too. We don’t have time to scroll back through the entire thread looking for “message #15,” or to follow links back to an original post.

♦ For those who read books whose title is in a language other than English: For spelling challenges and tasks asking for a title beginning with a specific letter, please remember that words representing articles cannot be used in challenges where you’re asked to disregard A, An and The. If you’re unsure about your book title, post in the challenge thread and the mod will get back to you about it ASAP.

♦ When you complete the challenge, please post your entire list as a new message. If you do this while you still have the Edit window open, it will copy all of your links and formatting. If you don’t repost your list, your name will not be added to the list of those who have completed the challenge.

A Puzzlement Scavenger Challenge

Duration: 1st November – 30th November 2021
Number of books: 7
Hosted by: Crazy Challenge Connection

A PUZZLEMENT
DURATION : NOVEMBER 1 – NOVEMBER 30, 2021

Puzzles are a great way to pass the time, as many families rediscovered during the Covid-19 lockdowns. I love puzzles of almost any kind, so when I saw that the third week of November is Game and Puzzle week, I knew we had to come up with a challenge based on some of the most popular types of puzzles. Which of these is your favorite?

CHALLENGE RULES :
See this thread for more detailed rules for all CCC challenges.
PLEASE NOTE : When we ask for an item shown prominently on the cover, we should be able to see the item in the thumbnail, without having to click through to the book’s page.

♦ If you want to participate in this challenge, please sign up by posting at least a partial list of the challenge requirements. This gives us a post to link you to, which you can use to update your books as the challenge progresses.

♦ Unless otherwise noted, books must be at least 150 pages long. (See the link above for rules regarding graphic novels. Please remember that ONLY graphic novels can be combined.) Books may only be used for one task in this challenge, but cross-challenge posting is encouraged 🙂 Re-reads are allowed, as long as you read the entire book. You must read at least half of the book AFTER the challenge begins in order to count it for CCC challenges. If you listen to an audiobook, please be sure that the link you post indicates a page count for the book, even if that means linking to an edition different from the one you listened to.

♦ If you use books that are in a language other than English, please translate those titles into English (even if there is no English title here on GR) for the purposes of our challenges, unless you plan to use that language for the entire challenge. If you do use another language for the whole challenge, please remember that the translations of exempt words/phrases — for example, A, An and The — would be exempt as well.

♦ For each book you read, please post a link to the title, and indicate the author and the date you finished reading it. If a challenge task gives several options, please make it clear which option you’ve chosen. If the task calls for an item on the cover or specific author initials or name/s, you must include a link to the book cover and/or author’s name, respectively. To avoid spoiling a book for other readers, please use spoiler tags when explaining your book choices.*
    * For help with posting spoiler tags, see this post: Spoiler tags
    * If you don’t know how to post a link to the book title, cover or author, see the instructions here: Add a link to the book title, book cover and/or author

♦ When you complete the challenge, please copy and paste your entire list as a new message at the end of the challenge thread. If you do this while you still have the Edit window open, it will copy all of your links and formatting. If you don’t repost your list, with appropriate links, your name will not be added to the list of those who have completed the challenge. Please do NOT simply post a link back to your original post.

THE TASKS:


1. CROSSWORD
A crossword is a word puzzle consisting of a grid of squares and blanks into which words crossing vertically and horizontally are filled according to given clues. The first crossword puzzle was written by journalist Arthur Wynne and published in New York World in December 1913. In North America and Britain, it is considered traditional for crossword grids to have 180-degree rotational symmetry for the patterns of the puzzle to appear the same if the paper is turned upside down. Crossword puzzles flex a mental muscle known as fluency, which is an essential part of keeping your brain sharp.
⁂ Read a book with a cover that is ONLY black and white (author name and title may be other colors); post the cover OR a book originally published in a year ending in 13; tell us the year


2. ESCAPE ROOM (image from PRWeek.com)
An escape room is a game in which a team of players discover clues, crack codes and solve challenging puzzles in one or more rooms in order to escape from a room or building. The first escape room opened in Japan in 2007, and it is now estimated that there are over 50,000 escape rooms worldwide, with at least one in 44 different countries. There are hundreds of different themes of rooms to choose from, but the most popular themes are outsmarting guards to escape from prison, escaping from zombies (or finding a cure for them), and robbing a bank and fleeing before you’re caught. The average escape room is 60 minutes long, but there’s one in Greece that takes 3 hours.
⁂ Read a book in which someone has to escape from a dangerous situation; using spoiler tags, briefly explain OR a book where the first letter of every word in the title can be found in ESCAPEROOM, 2-word minimum (a letter can only be used as many times as it appears in the phrase) – Archangel’s Blade by Nalini Singh


3. JIGSAW PUZZLES
A jigsaw puzzle consists of a picture printed on cardboard or wood and cut into various pieces of different shapes that have to be fitted together. Most historians credit English engraver John Spilsbury with creating the first jigsaw puzzle when he mounted a world map to a sheet of hardwood and cut around the country borders with a handsaw. He sold these “dissected maps” as a tool to teach geography. The mass production of jigsaw puzzles began with the introduction of the die-cut machine in the 20th century. Now they’re available in every shape imaginable – including 3D puzzles. According to Guinness World Records, the largest jigsaw puzzle was completed in 2018 in Dubai, a feat that featured 12,320 pieces and was some 65,000-plus square feet.
⁂ Read a book by an author named John (reasonable variations accepted); post a link to the author’s GR page OR a book with over 12,320 GR ratings; tell us how many – What We Find by Robyn Carr (15,228 ratings)


4. LOGIC (image from PuzzlersParadise.com)
A logic puzzle is a puzzle that can be solved by deductive reasoning. This puzzle features a grid which the user fills in according to the clues provided. They were first produced by Charles Lutwidge Dodgson, better known as Lewis Carroll. The most popular logic puzzle is the elimination grid, where the correct pairing for a set of objects must be determined by the process of elimination. The set-up to a scenario is given, as well as the object (for example, determine who brought what dog to a dog show, and what breed each dog was), certain clues are given (“neither Misty nor Rex is the German Shepherd”), and then the reader fills out a matrix with the clues and attempts to deduce the solution.
⁂ Read a book whose title contains the letters L-O-G-I-C, not necessarily in order or in the same word OR a book by an author who writes under at least two different names; post a link to both/all of the author’s GR pages


5. MECHANICAL
A mechanical puzzle is a self-contained object, composed of one or more parts, which involves a problem for one person to solve by manipulation using logic, reasoning, insight, luck, and/or dexterity. The puzzles range from ancient tangrams, to modern-day sophisticated and complex three-dimensional interlocking solid puzzles. From simple wire puzzles which were so popular around the turn of the century to beautiful and intriguing Chinese ring puzzles to secret boxes with hidden openings to sequential movement puzzles, mechanical puzzles vary greatly and are probably the oldest type of puzzle.
⁂ Read a book with a standard geometrical shape (circle, square, triangle, rectangle) shown prominently on the cover; post the cover OR a book by an author whose first and last initials can be found in MECHANICAL; post a link to the author’s GR page – The Answer to the Riddle is Me by David Stuart MacLean


6. RUBIK’S CUBE
Originally called the Magic Cube when it was introduced in 1974, is a plastic cube covered with multicolored squares, which the player attempts to twist and turn so that all the squares on each face are of the same color. It was created by Hungarian sculptor and professor of architecture Ernő Rubik. In 1980, due to international patent challenges that arose, the name was changed to Rubik’s Cube. With six sides representing nine blocks of six colors – orange, yellow, green, red, white, and blue – a Rubik’s Cube is said to hold 43 quintillion potential configurations. In 2015, 14-year-old Lucas Etter solved the Cube in a world record time of 4.90 seconds. The world’s largest Rubik’s Cube is almost 7 feet (a bit over 2 meters) square.
⁂ Read a book whose title has changed at least once for reasons other than translation; post a link to at least two of the different titles OR a series book #3 or #4; tell us the series – The Tea Dragon Tapestry by Kay O’Neill


7. SUDOKU
A sudoku puzzle consists of a grid of 81 squares, divided into nine blocks of nine squares each. Some of the squares contain a number – more numbers in the easier puzzles, only a few in the harder ones. The goal is to fill in the empty squares so that the figures 1 to 9 appear just once in every row, column and individual block. Many have attributed the puzzle, which has a Japanese name, to the mysteries of the Land of the Rising Sun. But its true modern origin lies with a team of puzzle constructors at Dell Puzzle Magazines in Manhattan in the 1970s. The game didn’t really become popular until 2004 when The Times in London began to publish it.
⁂ Read a book whose MC works primarily with numbers in some way; tell us the career OR a book with an intact 81 in its total page count; tell us how many pages

Sources include:
www.wealthwords.com/blog/puzzle-types
clontz.org/puzzles/types/
Wikipedia

Funko Vamps November 2021

Duration: 1st November – 30th November 2021
Number of books: 6
Hosted by: My Vampire Book Obsession

description
Funko Vamps
Collect a Funko Vamp each month by completing at least 2 tasks from a set of 6.
A new set of tasks with a new Funko Vamp will be posted each month.

The dolls you collect will be in your Vampire Heart thread. Don’t have a thread? You can still do the challenge if you want 🙂

Rules
Complete at least two tasks to get the vampire heart
All genres welcome
Rereads welcome
No minimum page count
One book per task

description

November
Read a book with a black or white cover.
Read a book tagged magic.
Read a book in which the characters travel / take a vacation. – What We Find by Robyn Carr
Read a book with the author’s first or last initials found in WALT DISNEY. – Archangel’s Blade by Nalini Singh
Read a book in which the MC is royalty.
Read a book with a “Happily Ever After” ending. – Hot Summer Nights by Jaci Burton, Carly Phillips, Erin McCarthy & Jessica Clare

Monthly Challenge November 2021

Duration: 1st November – 30th November 2021
Number of books: 11
Hosted by: My Vampire Book Obsession

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Duration:
November 1st – November 30th

How it Works:
Ten books each month is a lot, so there will be 5 different levels. Pick which level you want to do and that’s how many items you will need to check off.

Levels:
Transitional – 2 books
Fledgling – 4 books
Vampire – 6 books
Master – 8 books
Vampire King or Queen – 10 books

1. November 1, 1848 was when the first medical school for women was opened in Boston. Read a book with a female doctor or read a book set in Boston. – What We Find by Robyn Carr

2. November 5 – Guy Fawkes Day in Britain. Read a historical romance, or read a book with a mask on the cover.

3. November 11 – Veteran’s day. Read book with a MC and/or love interest in the military or read a dystopia.

4. November 7 – Hug a Bear. Read a book with a bear shifter or read a book with a cute creature you’d like to hug. – Cowboy and the Captive by Lora Leigh

5. November 12- Chicken Soup for the Soul. Read a book by an author that always makes you feel better or a book you would suggest to a friend. – The Tea Dragon Tapestry by Kay O’Neill

6. November 13 – World Kindness Day. Read a book with a kind MC or a book that inspires you to be a better person. – Dawn’s Awakening by Lora Leigh

7. November 16 – National Tolerance Day. Read a book with diversity and/or read an lgbtq book.

8. November 20 – Universal Children’s day. Read a book with an MC that has children, or read a book with a child character you like. – Archangel’s Blade by Nalini Singh

9. November 23 – Dr. Who/Tardis day, this is the anniversary of the first ever transmission of Doctor Who. Read a science fiction book, or read a book with someone who travels to another country/time period. – The Answer to the Riddle is Me by David Stuart MacLean

10. November 26 – Buy Nothing Day. Read a free book from a friend, or a free book online.

Bonus
Read a book with something you are grateful for and find it on the cover. Do this as many times as you wish! – Hot Summer Nights by Jaci Burton, Carly Phillips, Erin McCarthy & Jessica Clare

Night Spawn Bingo November 2021

Duration: 1st November – 30th November 2021
Number of books: 9
Hosted by: My Vampire Book Obsession

description

description

Welcome to Night Spawn BINGO. Each month a new BINGO game will be posted with new tasks to complete. Get three in a row (Horizontal, Vertical, or Diagonal) to receive your Vampire Heart.

Rules:
Complete three tasks to get the vampire heart
All genres welcome
Rereads welcome
No minimum page count
One book per task

Read 3 books that have one of the following (Must be in a Horizontal, Vertical, or Diagonal pattern).

Top Row:

Read a book with a title starting with a letter found in GRATITUDE~ Dawn’s Awakening by Lora Leigh
Read a book with a character who is given a second chance (In love, life, health, etc)~ What We Find by Robyn Carr
Read a book with a character who helps someone who is in trouble.~ Your Coffin or Mine? by Kimberly Raye

Middle Row:

Read a book with an author’s first or last initial is found in FAMILY~ Cowboy and the Captive by Lora Leigh
Read a book where the MC is a single parent ~
Read a book where a family comes together to celebrate an event (Holiday, Wedding, Birthday, etc)~ The Tea Dragon Tapestry by Kay O’Neill

Bottom Row:

Read a book with a character whose name starts with a letter found in THANKSGIVING~ Archangel’s Blade by Nalini Singh (Honor)
Read a book where a family shares a meal ~ The Answer to the Riddle is Me by David Stuart MacLean
Read a book set in the Fall~

description

Moonlight Serenade November 2021

Duration: 1st November – 30th November 2021
Number of books: 6
Hosted by: My Vampire Book Obsession

Duration: 1 – 30 November

Rules
Complete at least two tasks to get the vampire heart
All genres welcome
Rereads welcome
No minimum page count

1. Listen to a book with a firefighter or police officer as the MC
2. Listen to a book with a character who is pregnant or gives birth – Cowboy and the Captive by Lora Leigh
3. Listen to a book with a character who has a psychic ability – Archangel’s Blade by Nalini Singh
4. Listen to a book where the MC works in the food industry or with food on the cover
5. Listen to a book where the MC is some type of criminal or does something illegal
6. Listen to a book with an MPG of sports