Sunday 29 March 2020

Sorcery of Thorns by Margaret Rogerson

Sorcery of Thorns by Margaret Rogerson
Fantasy, YA, Standalone
My Rating: ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

Goodreads Blurb:
All sorcerers are evil. Elisabeth has known that as long as she has known anything. Raised as a foundling in one of Austermeer’s Great Libraries, Elisabeth has grown up among the tools of sorcery—magical grimoires that whisper on shelves and rattle beneath iron chains. If provoked, they transform into grotesque monsters of ink and leather. She hopes to become a warden, charged with protecting the kingdom from their power.
Then an act of sabotage releases the library’s most dangerous grimoire. Elisabeth’s desperate intervention implicates her in the crime, and she is torn from her home to face justice in the capital. With no one to turn to but her sworn enemy, the sorcerer Nathaniel Thorn, and his mysterious demonic servant, she finds herself entangled in a centuries-old conspiracy. Not only could the Great Libraries go up in flames, but the world along with them.
As her alliance with Nathaniel grows stronger, Elisabeth starts to question everything she’s been taught—about sorcerers, about the libraries she loves, even about herself. For Elisabeth has a power she has never guessed, and a future she could never have imagined.



I actually love this book! A library full of magical, sentient grimoires guarded by sword-wielding librarians. Evil sorcerers making pacts with demons, and an MC who was “raised by booklice”. I love the world, and the magic and the characters, I just had so much fun with this book, and the story is pretty epic.

“There is always more than one way to see the world. Those who claim otherwise would have you dwell forever in the dark.”

Monday 23 March 2020

Twilight Seeker by Pippa Dacosta

Twilight Seeker (Daybreaker #1) by Pippa Dacosta
My Rating: ⭐⭐⭐⭐

Stay in the light, avoid locked doors, and resist silver whispers.

Meet Lynher Aris. Hostess extraordinaire. By night, she entertains the Dark Ones passing through the Night Station: vampires, demons, shifters, and worse. By day, she undermines them all, working with the resistance to unravel their enslavement of the human race.

But Lynher has a dark secret of her own, and with the imminent arrival of Ghost—a vampire overlord few have seen but all fear—she must play her role as the queen of the Night Station to perfection, keeping the resistance and her secret safe, or risk losing everything, including the powerful Night Station itself.



Thank you so much to Pippa Dacosta for providing me with a copy of Twilight Seeker in exchange for an honest review!

I've been meaning to read a Dacosta book for some time, and when this shiny new gothic urban fatasy came along, I couldn't resist jumping right in! It's been a while since I read a good vampire book, and this one really hit the spot! It initially reminded me a bit of the Innkeeper Chronicles, but the Night Station is darker and more dangerous.

"I’d been the Night Station’s hostess for almost two years, and every night I learned I’d never be ready. All anyone could do was hope dawn came quickly."