BOOK SPOTLIGHT: A Little Bird Told Me by Rachael Gray

This morning, I’m very pleased to welcome The BBNYA Finalst Tour for Rachael Gray’s A Little Bird Told Me. Be sure check out https://twitter.com/WriteReadsTours over the next week and change to see other people saying great things about the book, it came in 2nd in last year’s BBNYA competition, so you know it has die-hard fans. Let’s learn a little bit about the book, shall we?

The Book Bloggers’ Novel of the Year Award A Little Bird Told Me by Rachael Gray Tour Banner
Before getting to this Spotlight, let’s start with a word about BBNYA.

BBNYA:

BBNYA is a yearly competition where book bloggers from all over the world read and score books written by indie authors, ending with 15 (17 in 2025) finalists and one overall winner.

The Book Bloggers’ Novel of the Year Award 2025 badge

If you want some more information about BBNYA, check out the BBNYA Website https://www.bbnya.com/ or take a peek over on Twitter @BBNYA_Official.

Pilcrow

Book Details:

Title: A Little Bird Told Me by Rachael Gray
Genre: Mystery, Contemporary Fiction
Release date: September 5, 2024
Length: 290 pages
A Little Bird Told Me by Rachael Grayl Cover

About the Book:

A fresh start leads to murder and mystery…

Laurel Nightingale wants to start again. However, after discovering a dead body shortly after arriving in the tight-knit community, she wonders if village life is as wholesome as she first thought.

Local police are convinced the death was accidental, but Laurel suspects murder, and enlists new friend Maggie to join her quest in uncovering the truth.

When a second body is found, Laurel ruffles feathers by pointing the finger at one of the locals. But, when her accusation backfires, she’s left alienated and afraid.

With her fear at an all-time high, her sleuthing partner missing and village gossip spreading like wildfire, Laurel wonders who she can truly trust.

Is it time to move on, yet again? And will her newly-formed friendships be enough to save her from this mysterious murderer?

A Little Bird Told Me is a clever cosy crime murder mystery that will put your sleuthing skills to the test.

Book Links:

Amazon Canada ~ Amazon US ~ Amazon UK ~ Goodreads ~ The Story Graph

About the Author:

Rachael Gray is the author of the Elderwick Mysteries series: A Little Bird Told Me, A Turn-up for the Books, and A Storm in a Teacup.

Though she’ll always be a Yorkshire girl at heart, Rachael now lives and writes from the home she shares with her husband in Normandy, France.

Author Links:

Website ~ Bluesky ~ Facebook


My thanks to The Book Bloggers’ Novel of the Year Award for the invitation to participate in this tour and the materials they provided.

The Book Bloggers’ Novel of the Year Award 2025 Finalist badge

Picard Day Dag

Capt Picard smiling in front of a banner saying Capt Picard Day

June 16 is the day here on Earth in the 21st Century that is the equivalent of Stardate 47457.1. Jean-Luc Picard’s birthday, celebrated by the children of Enterprise-D as Capt. Picard Day. I noted it was coming up last week and then realized that I’e never talked about a single Star Trek related novel or book here. Well, I guess Brent Spiner’s book comes close–but not close enough. Still, I wanted to do something. Inspired by Jodie’s recent Firefly Book Tag, I decided to throw one together for Star Trek: TNG.

This might have been a mistake. Once I got started on the prompts, I had a hard time stopping myself from getting too carried away–but I could’ve tried harder. That came back to bite me when it came time to come up with responses. So, yeah, this is up late. Oh, well. It’s Picard Day somewhere.

A Generic Looking Tag with the words 'Picard Day Book Tag'

Capt. Jean-Luc Picard

Capt. Jean-Luc Picard

A Character of Honor, Conviction, and Heroism (or just one of those…I mean, how often do you get the whole package?)

I spent too much time thinking about this, but I ended up having to go with Walt Longmire, Sherriff of Absaroka Country in Wyoming. Walt’s commitment to doing the right thing–despite what it costs him physically, politically, emotionally, or financially–is almost second to none. Unlike many similar characters, he doesn’t spend a lot of time talking about it, either. (Sorry, Spenser). He just does it, and waits for his friends, colleagues, and family to figure out his motives. I like Walt as a character, but I forget how much there is to admire about him. I frequently think that about Picard, too.

Commander William T. Riker

Commander William T. Riker

A Character Featuring a Character Who’s Always Up for Action (I mean that in the adventure sense, but, then again they might be just as ready for a more metaphorical “action” (wink, wink))

Cover of The Aeronaut's Windlass by Jim Butcher
Francis Grimm, a privateer, and captain/owner of the AMS Predator. Grimm is ready for a fight–and will do all sorts of things to get a win. He’s not wreckless enough to take unneccessary risks–although his definition of unnecessary might differ from yours. Hand-to-hand, with a saber, or airship-to-airship, Grimm’ll rise to the occasion. I doubt he’d stand for the trombone playing, but Grimm and Riker are cut from the same cloth.

Counselor Deanna Troi

Counselor Deanna Troi

A book that makes you feel all the feelings

Cover of All Together Now by Matthew Norman
Boy howdy. This was funny, heartwarming, I was annoyed by some characters, I was surprised, and I came so close to crying in my car before work as I finished it. Seriously, I can’t think of an emotion that didn’t feel for a page or two. You don’t need to be from Betazed to see that.

Lieutenant Natasha ‘Tasha’ Yar

Lieutenant Natasha 'Tasha' Yar

A book featuring a Character Death that Still Bugs You (no need to name the character)

Cover of Dragons of Spring Dawning by Margaret Weis & Tracy Hickman
I wondered if I bit off more than I could chew with this prompt. So, I just thought back as far as I could to deaths I’m still not over. This one has been bothering me since the Reagan administration. I should probably accept it, but…I can’t. Not unlike the way the bumped off Tasha.

Lieutenant Commander Data

Lieutenant Commander Data

A great AI/Android Character

Okay, there are dozens and dozens to choose from here. But Marvin, the poor depressed android who was drug along on an adventure he wanted nothing to do with when Zaphod stole The Heart of Gold, has to be my pick, right? He’s Douglas Adams’ answer to Eeyore–something is always wrong, whether he’s parking spaceships at Milliways, stuck doing menial tasks like escorting hitchhiker’s around a spaceship, or anything else that he stumbles into–he’s miserable. He’s depressed. He’s fed up with everything. And since I was a teen, a robot like that has endeared himself to me like none other. Clearly Dr. Noonien Soong learned a thing or two from robots like Marvin (and, sure, Lore) so he kept Data from having those emotions.

Lieutenant Worf

Lieutenant Worf

A Great Warrior Character (hopefully one with a degree of honor)

Cover of The Last Sheild by Cameron Johnston
Briar, the commander of the Shields (the royal guard) in Cameron Johnston’s The Last Shield is one of my favorite warrior characters lately. She’s not afraid to seek out–or rely on help–but she’s willing to be the only one in the castle to stand against a group of invaders as well. She’s got heart, grit, and won’t stop battling until the fight is over (or fights are over, to be correct). There’s not a Klingon worth their salt that wouldn’t welcome her among their ranks.

Lieutenant Geordi La Forge

Lieutenant Geordi La Forge

A character with who can solve any problem you throw at them

Archie Goodwin, Nero Wolfe’s assistant (among other things) leaps to mind here. When Mr. Wolfe says something needs to get done–a clue needs to be found, a witness needs to be brought to him for questioning, a particular button needs to be traced to its maker–Archie will get the job done through determination and panache–not to mention intelligence guided by experience. Sure, he doesn’t have the education to handle a warp core breach or anything like that. But I wouldn’t put it past him to save the NCC-1701-D or anything else Starfleet has in its fleet.

Acting Ensign Wesley Crusher

Acting Ensign Wesley Crusher

A Precocious Child Character

Cover of Down Don't Bother Me by Jason Miller
Anci, the daughter of the protagonist in the Slim in Little Egypt series (too short by a mile), is my pick for this. Anci’s smart, she’s insightful, she’s sweet, she’s got an attitude that just won’t quit. She also has a way of getting herself into (and out of) trouble and more than once has helped her dad out of a jam. She’s a kid, through and through, but she’s probably the one that keeps her detective dad going. If Miller had given us a few more books, I can see her doing more of an “acting apprentice” kind of role–but she didn’t get the chance.

Dr. Beverly Crusher

Dr. Beverly Crusher

A Skilled Medical Professional

Cover of Strange Practice by Vivian Shaw
Dr. Greta Helsing treats more strange beings than any Starfleet doctor has–despite their search for new life and new civilizations. London has enough old lives and civilizations that are ignored. Okay, for her it’s varities of vampires, banshees, ghouls, and so on. But she pulls out all the stops and puts her life on the line to find ways to treat her patients when she has to–but isn’t above treating a little common cold, either.

Dr. Katherine Pulaski

Dr. Katherine Pulaski

A Grating/Contrarian Character

Cover for A Man Called Ove by Fredrik Backman
Backman’s Ove seems too predictable a choice for this, but once I got him stuck in my mind, I couldn’t get him out. Yes, he’s crappy, a bit intolerant (okay, more than a bit), and too set in his ways, but it’s what lies beneath–and getting to see it–that makes him stand out and be memorable. Not unlike Dr. Pulaski, who I was starting to warm to before she left the Enterprise.

Q

q

An (almost?) Impossibly Powerful Character

This was a tougher prompt than I realized at first, and I kept bouncing around between various Wizard/Sorcerer characters, but didn’t really feel right about any of them. So, I’m going to go another way–Jack Reacher. The amount of physical punishment he takes and dishes out, while figuring out wild plots, and handling any weapon he comes across capably. Really, that’s a kind of magic that Raistlin, Dresden, Dumbledore, or Merlin would boggle at. He’s not quite as mercurial as our favorite representative of the Q Collective–but he’s just as judgemental.

Lieutenant Reginald Barclay

Lieutenant Reginald Barclay

A character with a great amount of growth over the series

Cover of Kill the Farm Boy by Kevin Hearne and Deliah Dawson
When we meet Gustave (a goat) as The Chronicles of Pell, he’s amusing, but I got tired of him quickly. But by the end of The Princess Beard…not only do I like the character, but think he’s grown into someone that I’d enjoy on the page and off the page (were such a thing possible). Barclay’s arc is very much the same.

Ten-Forward

The Bar in Ten-Forward

A book featuring a bar/tavern/lounge

Cover of Mrs. Covington's by K.R.R. Lockhaven
Mrs. Covington’s pub (from the novel of the same name) is just as homey, just as friendly, and full of music and joy as Guinan’s lounge. It might be a bit more raucus, but it’s got the same kind of heart. And it’s no stranger to dealing with non-human patrons or their appetites, either.

Kamin

Kamin

A Book Featuring an Alternate History

Cover of The Devils by Joe Abercrombie
I just read The Devils a couple of weeks ago, so of course it’s going to jumpt to mind. But even in a year or two, it’s going to stand out as one of my favorite alternate histories–the details–especially the throwaway details–that Abercrombie works into this are just phenomenal. You can see that version of our world coming to pass–the light within it, is very close to our own. While not being our own at all.

Darmok and Jalad at Tanagra

Darmok

A Novel in Translation

Cover of Godzilla and Godzilla Raids Again by Shigeru Kayama, Jeffrey Angles
I’ve read a few good books in translation lately, but Godzilla and Godzilla Raids Again by Shigeru Kayama, Jeffrey Angles (Translator) is my pick for this. Not only does it tell a mythic tale from another culture, but the translator works to bring it to English-speaking audiences in a way they understand not just the words, but the symbols and themes from the original.

Irresponsible Reader Pilcrow Icon

MUSIC MONDAY: “Whoever You Are” by Geggy Tah

The Irresponsible Reader's Music Monday logo

Music Monday's originated at The Tattooed Book Geek's fantastic blog and has shown up hither, thither, and yon since then.

Don't Panic

Opening Lines: All Systems Red by Martha Wells

We all know we’re not supposed to judge a book by its cover (yet, publishing companies spend big bucks on cover design/art and we all do judge them that way). But, the opening sentence(s)/paragraph(s) are fair game. So, when I stumble on a good opening (or remember one and pull it off the shelves), I like to throw it up here (especially if I’m out of time to come up with a post that involves writing on my part).

from All Systems Red by Martha Wells:

I could have become a mass murderer after i hacked my governor module, but then realized access the combined feed of entertainment channels carried on company satellites. it had been well over 35,000 hours or so since then, with still not much murdering, probably, don’t know, little under movies, serials, books, plays, and music consumed. as heartless killing machine, was terrible failure. .

Opening Lines Logo

Saturday Miscellany—6/13/26

Odds ‘n ends about books and reading that caught my eye this week. You’ve probably seen some/most/all of them, but just in case:
bullet The End of Books: What happened when a dumpster arrived behind my university’s library
bullet Authors Guild Looks at Why Author Incomes Are in Decline
bullet AI Has Come for Serif Fonts: AI companies are using serifs to project humanity. Critics are calling it “tasteslop.”—huh.
bullet “The Myth of Neutral Books”
bullet Calvin and Hobbes and the Price of Integrity: How Bill Watterson Stuck to His Guns — and Vanished—much of this is a re-hash of well-established facts, with a little commentary thrown in. I’m not sure how much I agree with the commentary, but I liked reading it anyway. Also, I’m a sucker for anything about Watterson, so bring on the rehashes (as long as there’s something new to it, too, like this one)
bullet Speculating, Ambiguously—I’m not going to comment on this, go read the first paragraph, and you’ll know if you want to read more (hint: you do). Hat Tip: Runalong the Shelves
bullet Reviewers on Reviewing: Positivity, Negativity or the Secret Third Thing (Criticism)
bullet Was There a Recent Past Where “Everyone” Read and Loved the Classics?—Of course there was…like a generation before me. Or a generation before you–whoever you happen to be. Briana sheds some common sense on this notion.

My favorite sentence/passage/phrase (or two) that I read this week:
“It wasn’t so much of a surprise that Pepper McKay was dead as much as it was an amazement to everyone in the county that it had taken so long for him to die, or for somebody to kill him.”—The Brothers McKay by Craig Johnson

To help talk about backlist titles (and just for fun), What Was I Talking About 10 Years Ago This Week?
bullet Guilty Minds by Joseph Finder
bullet The Ghost Rebellion by Pip Ballantine and Tee Morris
bullet The Highwayman by Craig Johnson
bullet Cheap Shot (Audiobook) by Ace Atkins, Joe Mantegna
bullet And I mentioned the releases of: Infomocracy by Malka Older and The Bookman by Lavie Tidhar

Last Week’s New Release that I Can’t Believe I Forgot About (and nothing grabbed my attention this week, tell me where I went wrong):
bullet Asteroid Savage by Thomas Trang—I’ve been eager to get my hands on this for months, so of course I forgot to mention this last week. Trang’s LA-noir last year blew me away–and now he takes that sensibility to an (police/police-ish) investigator on Mars dealing with a corrupt system while she tracks down terrorists responsible for a bomb attack.

A Tweet from Maliha @CaffeinatedLiha reading: My TBR pile is less ‘to be read’ and more ‘to be inherited by my grandchildren.’

Saturday Miscellany—6/13/26

Image Source: Tweet from @CaffeinatedLiha

Book Blogger Hop: Most Unusual Places to Read

Book Blogger Hop

 

This prompt was submitted by Billy @ Coffee Addicted Writer:

What’s the quirkiest or most unexpected place you’ve ever read a book, and why?

I’m going to appropriate things I wrote in Book Blogger Hop: Favorite Reading Nook back in 2022 for this one (which, in turn, appropriated something I’d written even earlier). But there is some non-recycled material here, too.

I can—and do—read anywhere: in a house, with a mouse, in a (or on a) box, with a fox, in a car, in a (or under a) tree, on a train (theoretically, never been), in the dark, in the rain (assuming I have some sort of cover—can’t let the pages get wet), with a goat, but definitely not in a boat (I get seasick quicker than Toby Daye gets new clothes blood-stained.

I’ve read in hotel rooms, Airbnbs, a beach, tire shop waiting rooms, hospital waiting rooms, hospital rooms, DMV waiting rooms, restaurants, waiting for a Metal concert to start, during a High School (or lower) orchestra/band concert, during intermission or before a High School play, between bouts at FIRST Robotics competitions, at family gatherings…really anywhere where I have a couple of minutes without much to pay attention to. Thanks to eBook apps on my phone I can do it anywhere. I’ve forgotten them all. I don’t know about unusual or quirky. I’m sure there’s something there.

This question, like the one I mentioned above, made me think of a post from a few years ago, and I figured I’d copy and paste it here. It seems sort of appropriate. I’m not sure it’s the most unusual or quirkiest, but it’s as close as I can remember.


Where the Magic Happens…or something

Three years ago when I switched to a day job, my reading habits had to change—among other things. It took almost no time at all to realize that reading in the break room just wasn’t going to work—it was too loud, there were too many things going on, you couldn’t sit by yourself, really. And then there were all these nice people wanting to talk.

Actually, people, in general, being around was something to get used to, but that’s another story.

Then I realized that there were perfectly good stairs a lot closer to my workspace than the break room was. So I started hanging out there and reading—sometimes, sitting on the stairs, other times leaning against the railing—it’s at a decent height for that. Nowadays, that’s where 40-60% of my weekday reading happens while on break.

It’s not perfectly quiet, but it’s close enough. Except when the flautist practices every couple of months. There are people who pass through—and some of them talk to me, but the conversations are short—because they’re on their way to somewhere else. Sometimes it’s just a “hi,” and occasionally I workshop ideas for posts here when someone asks about what I’m reading. I’ve even been given a couple of good recommendations.

Now, the keen-eyed among you might have noticed a couple of post-its on the wall (circled below).

So, for a couple of years, people would joke about putting up a sign where I read with my name on it or something (more than one person has suggested getting me a chair). But last December, I moved to a different floor, and within a month, someone had put up the larger post-it reading “[H. C.]’s Reading Spot.” This would be in the larger circle.

A couple of weeks later, that person asked if I liked my sign. I had to confess that I had no clue what she was talking about and apologized profusely. Who pays attention to the walls along the stairs? Especially when you’re not climbing the stairs, but are focused on the book/eReader in your hand. So when I went out for my next break, I went looking for it—and she’d added another post-it (the smaller one), “<– This is the sign.”

Very helpful.

So, yeah, that’s where I read and recharge from all the interaction with people so I have enough energy to get back to work and interact with more people.

Sure, it’s not as snazzy as some of the reading nooks you see on Instagram, Bookstr, etc. It could be more comfortable, that’s for sure. But I’ve gotta say, when the book is halfway decent, I don’t notice. That’s where the magic happens.

What’s your quirkiest place?

WWW Wednesday—June 10, 2026

The last week and a half has found me fighting sleep almost every minute I’ve been awake–which hasn’t made for a lot of reading or writing. But the reading I’ve managed to do more than makes the struggle worth it. I’m on a great streak of winners right now–and hope it continues for a while.

WWW Wednesdays Logo

This meme was formerly hosted by MizB at A Daily Rhythm and revived on Taking on a World of Words—and shown to me by Aurore-Anne-Chehoke at Diary-of-a-black-city-girl.

The Three Ws are:
What are you currently reading?
What did you recently finish reading?
What do you think you’ll read next?

Seems easy enough, right? Let’s take a peek at this week’s answers:

What are you currently reading?

Cover of Dungeon Crawler Carl by Matt Dinniman Cover of What’s Next by Melissa Fitzgerald and Mary McCormack Cover of Double Whammy by Carl Hiaasen
Dungeon Crawler Carl
by Matt Dinniman
What’s Next: A Backstage Pass to The West Wing, Its Cast and Crew, and Its Enduring Legacy of Service
by Melissa Fitzgerald and Mary McCormack
Double Whammy
by Carl Hiaasen, read by George K. Wilson

The famed DCC starts off slow, not un-entertainingly. It needs to set up ground rules (literally) for the book/series. I think I’m close to finishing that part–and I’m eager to get to whatever comes next. I’m beginning to see the appeal of it all.

I feel like I could easily sit and tear through What’s Next in one sitting–despite the 600-ish page length. I’m glad I’m limiting myself to a chapter or two a day so I can relish it.

Hiassan has a lot of style and quirky characters. I’m really digging this.

What did you recently finish reading?

Cover of The Brothers McKay by Craig Johnson Cover of Some Sort of Justice by Peter Grainger
The Brothers McKay
by Craig Johnson
Some Sort of Justice
by Peter Grainger, read by Gildart Jackson

Johnson gave us one of the best Longmire novels this year. I was grinning throughout.

Grainger’s latest was more than satisfying. The only problem is that I’m going to have to wait another 12+ months for the next one.

What do you think you’ll read next?

Cover of Squeaky Clean by Callum McSorley Cover of The Enchanted Greenhouse by Sarah Beth Durst
Squeaky Clean
by Callum McSorley
The Enchanted Greenhouse
by Sarah Beth Durst, ready by Caitlin Davies

It’s been a while since I read about a morally grey Scottish police officer. I’m hoping McSorley’s DI Alison McCoist fixes that for me.

I’m dipping another toe into the world of The Spellshop. Time to find out if I’m a fan of Durst in general or just that book.

How’s your summer reading going? You have any winners?

The Best Dog in the World edited by Alice Hoffman: All the Best Dogs (except yours or mine)

Cover of The Best Dog in the World edited by Alice HoffmanThe Best Dog in the World: Essays on Love

edited by Alice Hoffman

DETAILS:
Publisher: Scribner
Publication Date: March 10, 2026
Format: Hardcover
Length: 208 pg.
Read Date: May 11-29, 2026
Buy from Bookshop.org Support Indie Bookstores

All these years, I never had a dog and I didn’t know what I was missing exactly. I had opinions on the matter, It seemed that dog people were the kind of folks you saw in beer commercials tossing Frisbees on the beach. The kind of people who have season tickets to the Mets. The kind of people who never miss a Giants game. The same people who never miss the Rolling Stones when they’re touring through. The kind of people who probably would have voted for Teddy Roosevelt and then for his cousin Franklin. Easygoing. Unflappable. Cool. A dog person is someone who first and always loves dogs. A dog person treasures connection and brings humans together. A dog person is open to the possibilities that come from loving an animal that needs you and loves you back. And now, after a lifetime of not being one, I was a dog person.

from Adriana Trigiani’s “Lola”

Warning

You know how each National Dog Day in August, I post something called “These Dog Days Aren’t Over” about books where dogs live? This book will not be appearing in that post.

Of the 16 dogs written about in this book, three were alive when the essay was written—that’s 19%. And one of the essays about a dog who was living talks about the dog’s aging, and the essayist thinks about life after the dog. So the percentage is almost lower.

If you’re one of those readers who (understandably) want every dog in a book to live, this is not one for you.

But for those who can appreciate something well-written where a dog doesn’t have to keep running and barking, read on.

What’s The Best Dog in the World?

This is a collection of essays by Isabel Allende, Chris Bohjalian, Bonnie Garmus, Roxane Gay, Emily Henry, Ann Leary, Tova Mirvis, Jodi Picoult, Elizabeth Strout, Amy Tan, Adriana Trigiani, Nick Trout, Paul Yoon, and Laura Zigman. The title pretty much tells you what to expect, but Alice Hoffman’s afterword sums it up pretty well:

In reading these essays I realize they are all about loyalty and love. How lucky we are to have a dog in our lives. How treasured our time with them is. I have come to realize there is not necessarily one best dog in the world, but, if we’re fortunate, many best dogs, who each enrich our lives in different ways.

In the essays contained here there are stories about loss and family, about new relationships and hardships, but each and every one is about love.

So, what did I think about The Best Dog in the World?

Like most dog owners, I view her with absolute objectivity as a canine genius with the sweetest soul on the planet.

The only dog owners that would likely disagree with Chris Bohjalian are people like me, who are convinced their dog missed out on the day intelligence was passed out with the sweetest soul on the planet.

But he hits on the main point of the book. I seem to be on a theme this year, a few months back, I read a novel called All the Best Dogs—and the theme was all the dogs are the best dogs. Then we get this compilation—which basically says the same. Every dog-person basically knows this already—it’s just affirming to see in print.

This collection was like talking with a bunch of new friends about our dogs—much like a lot of conversations at a dog park, just without the interruptions to point out something ridiculous or cute (or both) happening in the park itself. Oh, and more erudite and eloquent.

There were two essays that didn’t work for me—but the rest did. Some were just satisfying, some were, “I want to spend hours with this author and/or their dog.” One of the ones that didn’t work for me was actually really well written, and I was impressed by the way they worked in life events with the discussion of their dog. I just thought it was too dog-light to fit the theme. The other was about a show dog. Sorry, Amy Tan, I just had a super-hard time caring. I’m sure it’s reverse-snobbery on my part (although Frankie seems like a well-loved dog, with a great life—especially in retirement). Also, there was some really good writing in Tan’s essay (not a shock to anyone).

Emily Henry almost made me weep; Bonnie Garmus convinced me to read Lessons in Chemistry in the hope that the same voice shines through; I’m going to have to check out Paul Yoon (and probably a couple of the others); the Jodi Picoult in these pages is not the one that my wife describes to me when she talks about her books (this is likely true of most of these writers. Different topics, etc.) And the list goes on.

This was sweet, touching, uncommonly relatable, heartstring-tugging, and smile-inducing. I don’t know if you’ll walk away with a fresh understanding of the love of a human for a canine—or a canine for a human—but it’ll be refreshed.

This post contains an affiliate link. If you purchase from it, I will get a small commission at no additional cost to you. As always, the opinions expressed are my own.
Irresponsible Reader Pilcrow Icon

MUSIC MONDAY: “Better Together” by Jack Johnson

The Irresponsible Reader's Music Monday logo

Music Monday's originated at The Tattooed Book Geek's fantastic blog and has shown up hither, thither, and yon since then.

Don't Panic

Fantasy with Friends: Series or Standalones? How Much Is Too Much?

I didn’t get this up yesterday–you might have noticed things were busy around here. A day late and at least a quarter short, here’s my


Fantasy with Friends A Discussion Meme Hosted by Pages Unbound

Fantasy with Friends is a weekly meme hosted by the good people over at Pages Unbound. Fantasy with Friends poses questions each Monday about fantasy, either as a genre as a whole or individual works.

This week’s prompt is:

Do you currently prefer standalone fantasies or series? Is there a certain number of books that seems like “too much,” whether that means the series feels intimidating to start or just that the author might need to move on to something else? Is there a point at which you worry that a series is just a “cash grab?”

Ahhh, yet another This or that, Coke or Pepsi, kind of question that I shrug at. It depends?

There is something so satisfying about opening a book and spending 150-600 pages immersed in a complete idea. Beginning-middle-end and then you’re done.

t the same time–the pleasure of spending years with a story, watching characters grow, develop, storylines going deeper and more intricate than they could in a standalone…there’s something so fantastic about that.

Really it depends on the story that the author wants to tell. If a story needs multiple volumes–and the author has the chops to develop it over them–then bring it on. If the story wavers too much, gets too thin, or runs out of steam somewhere in the second or third volume–than editors and authors have made a mistake.

Similarly, I don’t think there’s a magic number. And that again goes back to the story the author is trying to tell, and the skill of the author.

I’m not saying there are no “cash grabs” in Fantasy fiction, but there have to be easier (and more profitable) ways to grab some. But I’ll let others who know more than I do weigh in on that.

I thought I had more to say on this, but I’m just coming up with variations on one idea: it just depends on the author, the themes, the characters, and the story. Oh, well, sales and a publisher’s willingness to keep buying the books (unless it’s a self-published series, then it’s just sales). Can I think of books that I wish had a sequel but didn’t? Yes. Can I think of series that were cut short because of sales/publishers? Sure. Can I think of series that went on too long, and should’ve been walked away from while they were still good? Yup. Series that needed one more book to really say everything? Yeah.

I’m really looking forward to some of the other posts in response to this prompt, I’m expecting better answers than mind.

Irresponsible Reader Pilcrow Icon

Page 1 of 614

Powered by WordPress & Theme by Anders Norén