šŸŽ§ Listened in audio šŸ“¢ Narrated by Mia Hutchinson Shaw ā± Duration: 10 hours šŸ·ļø Publisher: Hachette Audio & Forever šŸ“… Release Date: January 20, 2026 šŸŽ Audio ARC provided by NetGalley

Immediately after finishing book one, I jumped straight into the ARC for Gabby Green Knows Whodunit, and honestly? Zero regrets. Gabby is now almost trained (which mostly means she can complete a mission without accidentally harming her coworkers) and she and Markus are sent undercover to investigate a cult. A cult. On a beach. With unlimited mocktails, perfect weather, a luxury suite, and a fake engagement. I mean… what more could a woman ask for? (Aside from the whole dangerous undercover operation part.)

This sequel is just as hilarious, fast-paced, and ridiculously entertaining as the first book. I couldn’t put it down and finished the entire audiobook in one day, which is both a compliment and a complaint, because when it ended, I was genuinely upset. What am I supposed to do without Gabby Greene in my life now?

Sam Tschida has this rare knack for balancing humor and heart without tipping too far in either direction. Gabby’s voice feels so real with equal parts frazzled mom, reluctant spy, and woman who secretly deserves a vacation. The flirtation with Markus is swoon-worthy (the slow burn is real), but the family threads make the story glow: her kids growing more suspicious by the day, and her grandmother... oh my, can we all aspire to be that woman someday? She’s wise, fearless, and the chaos anchor Gabby desperately needs. Sure, there are a few family members I could happily never encounter again—but alas, we don’t get to choose our relatives, and Gabby’s chaos wouldn’t be half as entertaining without them.

Mia Hutchinson Shaw’s narration brings every hilarious inner monologue and awkward romantic moment to life. If you liked the first book, you’ll fall head over heels for this one. And Sam Tschida, please, I beg you, don’t make us wait too long for book three. Gabby Greene missions should be an annual event.

Would I Recommend It? Absolutely. If you loved Finlay Donovan Is Killing It, enjoy cozy mysteries with romantic tension, or want a fast, funny audiobook that delivers both laughs and heart, this needs to be on your TBR. This one’s the perfect blend of cozy mystery, romantic comedy, and spy shenanigans. It’s warm, witty, and as binge-worthy as your favorite TV romcom. Sam Tschida has created something genuinely special with Gabby Greene, and this sequel proves it’s not a one-book wonder. Add this to your TBR, mark your calendar, and please, someone gently remind Sam Tschida that we need book three soon.

Originally posted at www.viewsshewrites.com.

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Edition: šŸ“š Read as a book šŸ“ƒ No. of pages: 320 (approx.) šŸ·ļø Publisher: Harper Collins UK / One More Chapter ARC provided by NetGalley šŸ“… Published: January 23, 2026 Genre: Cozy Mystery

Murder by the Book is an intriguing concept: four amateur sleuths, one bookshop murder, and a puzzle laid out for them by the deceased manager. In theory, it’s a perfect setup for a cozy, page-turning mystery. And the actual unraveling of the murder? Solid. The clues are clever, and the resolution itself is satisfying.

Where the book falters for me is in the execution. Told from four different perspectives, each member narrating their side of the investigation, the story loses some of the intimacy and suspense that comes from following a single sleuth. Instead of building a connection with one character, I was bouncing between four different viewpoints, and it got confusing. By the end, I also struggled with the motive behind the murder; it didn’t resonate, and left me feeling slightly disconnected from the emotional stakes.

Overall, it was a decent read. If you love puzzles and classic cozy tropes, you might enjoy the ride. For me, though, it wasn’t compelling enough to return for the rest of the series.

Would I recommend it? The mystery itself is fun and clever, but the multiple perspectives diluted the connection I crave in cozy mysteries. A good one-off read, but I won’t be following this series.

Originally posted at www.viewsshewrites.com.

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šŸŽ§ Listened in audio šŸ“¢ Narrated by Caroline Lennon ā± Duration: 10 hours šŸ·ļø Publisher: Kensington šŸ“… Published: February 28, 2017 🧩 Genre: Cozy Mystery

I usually fall headfirst into Irish cozy mysteries. The accents, the local color, the warmth of small-town gossip are usually go much engaging to me. Caroline Lennon’s narration certainly nails the atmosphere; her voice carries that lovely lilt that makes Irish cozies a joy to listen to. On paper, Murder at an Irish Wedding had all the right ingredients. In execution? Not so much.

SiobhĆ”n, the protagonist, should’ve been my kind of character. She is smart, loyal, and emotionally grounded, but she never clicked. It felt like the characters were moving through motions without real spark or wit. By the 30% mark, the story still hadn’t found its rhythm, and I realized I just wasn’t invested enough to see it through.

There’s no doubt the setting and concept have potential. A lavish wedding turned murder scene is usually my jam, but the pacing dragged, and the emotional stakes felt flat. Irish charm can usually carry a story a long way, but here, it couldn’t carry me to the finish line.

Would I recommend it? Not for me, sadly. I wanted to love this series more than I did, but sometimes the chemistry just isn’t there. Maybe it’s one of those ā€œwrong mood, wrong timeā€ reads. But for now, it’s a quiet DNF at 30%.

Originally posted at www.goodreads.com.

šŸ“˜ Edition šŸŽ§ Listened in audio šŸ“¢ Narrated by: Carley Fortune, AJ Bridel ā± Duration: 12 hours šŸ·ļø Publisher: Berkley šŸ“… Published: May 6, 2025 šŸ’¬ How I found it: Friend recommendation

Here’s the thing: I don’t like romance. And yet, somehow, it keeps following me like a golden retriever with excellent emotional instincts. One Golden Summer is exactly that kind of book: soft, reflective, quietly swoony, and far more thoughtful than it initially lets on.

Carley Fortune might just own the cottagecore romance space at this point. There’s something about her storytelling, about the way sun, still water, and nostalgia weave together, that makes you want to quit your life and find a dock somewhere. One Golden Summer takes that signature Fortune formula and adds a reflective layer through Alice, a photographer caught between clarity and blur in her own life.

The dual narration by Fortune herself and AJ Bridel gives the story extra warmth. It feels intimate, like Alice and Charlie are whispering memories directly into your ear. The pacing is slow in that languid, lakeside way, never rushed, always humming with tension beneath the calm. Is it a familiar love story? Yes. But it’s a well-written, emotionally resonant one that knows exactly what it wants to be.

Would I recommend it? Absolutely, especially for summer readers craving more than just a love story. It’s part nostalgia, part healing, part romance and 100% Carley Fortune charm. Add this to your TBR when you want a story that feels like sunlight on skin long after it’s gone.

What Happens When Summer Sees You Back? Are you a sucker for lake romances, or do they sneak up on you the way they do on me? Tell me, does summer reading mean emotional introspection, escapist romance, or both?

Originally posted at www.goodreads.com.

šŸŽ§ Listened in audio šŸ“¢ Narrated by Steven Rowley ā± Duration: 11 hours šŸ·ļø Publisher: Penguin Audio / G.P. Putnam’s Sons (Recommended by my book club!)

I laughed, I cried, and I paused the audiobook just to sit in my feelings more times than I can count. The Guncle is that rare novel that sneaks up on you. It’s outrageously funny, soaked in heartache, and ultimately healing in all the best ways. Steven Rowley writes Patrick with such sharp wit and palpable vulnerability that you can’t help wanting to be his friend.

Patrick is an absolute triumph of a character. He is the quintessential gay uncle (sharp-tongued, theatrical, and deeply loving) but he’s also painfully human. His relationship with Maisie and Grant’s mother is the emotional backbone of this story, a bond that feels more sibling than in-law, more soulmate than friend. When she dies after a long illness, Patrick’s grief doesn’t explode. It settles, heavy and unresolved. Caring for her children becomes both an act of love and a new way to grieve, and watching Patrick fumble, fail, and grow is profoundly moving.

Listening to this on audio, narrated by Steven Rowley himself, adds an entirely new layer of intimacy. He knows Patrick. Every pause, every joke, every crack in the voice feels intentional and earned. The story never becomes saccharine or manipulative. It allows space for sorrow, laughter, and healing to coexist. This is a book about redefining family, about choosing to show up even when you feel wildly unqualified, and about how love often finds us when we least expect it.]

Would I recommend it? Absolutely. This is one of the best books I’ve read (or rather, listened to) this year. The Guncle is heartfelt, hilarious, and packed with emotional truth. Add it to your TBR if you love character-driven stories that leave you feeling both cracked open and comforted.

Let’s talk GUPs! Have you ever had a ā€œGuncleā€ or ā€œfun auntā€ in your life who changed how you saw family? Drop your stories and favorite found-family reads in the comments

Originally posted at www.goodreads.com.

šŸŽ§ Listened in audio šŸ“¢ Narrated by: Mia Hutchinson Shaw ā± Duration: 10 hours šŸ·ļø Publisher: Forever šŸ—“ļø Published: August 6, 2024 šŸŽ§ Genre: Cozy Mystery / Spy Comedy

Here’s the thing: I accidentally started this series with Gabby Greene Knows Whodunit before realizing it was book two. I was already hooked, but something told me this series deserved to be done right. So I hit pause, went back to Errands and Espionage, and honestly? Best reading decision I’ve made in a while.

Going in, I expected this to feel similar to the Finlay Donovan series—and that made me skeptical. Those books and I… didn’t vibe. But Sam Tschida does humor better. Sharper. Warmer. Less try-hard, more laugh-out-loud because it’s painfully relatable. Gabby Greene is gloriously chaotic: a mom stretched too thin, underestimated by everyone (including herself), suddenly being asked to save the world between school drop-offs and extracurricular schedules. She is a hot mess in the most endearing way, trying to keep her life together while simultaneously learning to tail suspects and dodge bullets. The espionage bits are campy in the best possible sense, and the domestic details keep it all refreshingly real.

What really worked for me was Gabby herself. She’s not magically competent overnight. Her courage feels earned. Her training is messy. Her reactions are realistic. And yet, she steps up. Watching her juggle espionage with motherhood while slowly reclaiming her sense of self was wildly engaging. By the time the audiobook ended, I was genuinely devastated… for about sixty seconds. Because yes, book two was already queued up and waiting.

Would I recommend it? Absolutely. Errands and Espionage is funny, empowering, fast-paced, and surprisingly heartfelt. It’s the kind of cozy mystery that sneaks in emotional depth while you’re busy laughing at the chaos. If you love competent-but-overwhelmed heroines, spy hijinks with a domestic twist, and stories about rediscovering your worth mid-life, this one’s for you.

Operation: Your Turn Would you join a top-secret mission if it meant a week away from laundry duty? Or would you let the pros handle the espionage while you bake the brownies?

Originally posted at www.goodreads.com.

šŸŽ§ Listened in Audio šŸ“¢ Narrated by Erin Bennett ā± Duration: 9 hours šŸ·ļø Publisher: Tantor Media

Thirteen books in, and somehow Laurie Cass still hasn’t missed. Not once. Book ’em Eddie is everything I’ve come to love about the Bookmobile Cat Mystery series: gentle humor, solid sleuthing, and a cast of characters that feels like coming home. Minnie and her ever-curious cat Eddie remain the heartbeat of Chilson as a team that balances genuine sleuthing with perfectly timed wit. And really, who can resist a smart feline detective who always seems ten steps ahead of the humans? And Eddie? Honestly, at this point, he’s doing most of the heavy investigative lifting, and I wouldn’t have it any other way.

The mystery itself hits that perfect cozy balance. Eddie discovers the body (iconic behavior), the police lean toward ā€œtragic accident,ā€ and Minnie’s instincts immediately start screaming murder. What follows is a satisfyingly layered whodunit filled with small-town dynamics, believable suspects, and just enough emotional weight to keep things grounded without ever losing the comfort-read vibe. The supporting cast of Ash, Kristen, Rafe, Julia, Aunt Frances, and the library crew, feel like old friends stopping by for coffee and gossip.

And then there’s the audio experience! Erin Bennett, absolute legend. She is Minnie’s inner voice, and Eddie’s little ā€œmurrpā€ is pure serotonin. Her narration doesn’t just tell the story; it brings emotional texture to every scene, making it impossible not to get invested. Laurie Cass may be the reason I keep coming back, but Erin Bennett is the reason I sink fully into this world every single time.

Would I recommend it? Without hesitation. If you love cozy mysteries, cat sleuths, or long-running series that actually stay good, this is a must-read (or must-listen). Thirteen books deep and still delivering laughs, heart, and clever mysteries is no small feat. This series is comfort food in audiobook form. Book ’em Eddie is a standout plate.

Purr-sonal Verdict Cozy Cat Approved 🐾 Are you Team Eddie (obviously), or do you read this series for the found-family vibes as much as the mysteries? Let’s talk favorite moments and beloved side characters in the comments!

Originally posted at www.goodreads.com.

šŸŽ§ Listened in audio šŸ“¢ Narrated by: Joseph Tweedale ā± Duration: 9 hours šŸ·ļø Publisher: Findaway Voices šŸ“… Release Date: January 1, 2022

This one came recommended by my book club with promises of ā€œedge‑of‑your‑seat twistsā€ and a brooding atmosphere. A retired detective dragged back into one last case? Book club friends swearing it was ā€œgrippingā€? On paper, this should have been a slam dunk for me.

But honestly? It just didn’t hook me. The start felt lackluster, dragging through setup without enough pull to keep momentum going. Then there was the narration, Joseph Tweedale’s delivery came across monotonous, flattening what could have been tense moments into a flatline. In a world overflowing with incredible audiobooks and not nearly enough time, I bailed around 15% in. Nothing in the plot or characters sparked that ā€œjust one more chapterā€ urge.

And honestly? In a reading life already overflowing with tempting TBR picks, this one didn’t earn its place. Nothing about the characters, pacing, or unfolding plot compelled me to push through. Sometimes a book just doesn’t click... and that was very much the case here.

Would I recommend it? This was a DNF for me at around 15%, and while I can see how The Engine House might appeal to readers who enjoy slower, methodical British police procedurals, it wasn’t for me. If you’re someone who needs a strong hook or dynamic narration to stay engaged, this might be a tough listen.

Cozy Expectations, Zero Spark: DNF Thoughts Drop your DNF stories below! Ever quit a hyped mystery audiobook early? What saved (or sank) it for you?

Originally posted at www.goodreads.com.

šŸŽ§ Listened in audio šŸ“¢ Narrated by Frankie Corzo & Barton Caplan ā± Duration: 12 hours šŸ·ļø Publisher: Random House Audio šŸ“† Published: March 4, 2025 šŸ Read as: Goodreads Challenge – Star Selection šŸ“š Genre: Science Fiction

Here’s the thing: The Dream Hotel is not bad. In fact, it’s frighteningly good. And that is exactly why I had to stop. I DNF’d this audiobook at around 10%, not because the writing faltered or the premise failed, but because it hit far too close to home. What’s framed as speculative science fiction reads less like a warning and more like a mirror.

Families separated. People detained based on algorithms, assumptions, or perceived future risks. The constant fear of saying the wrong thing, liking the wrong post, or simply existing in the wrong space at the wrong time. This book dives into the fear of being criminalized for existing: for having the wrong accent, the wrong family name, the wrong online footprint. And while I admire how precisely Lalami maps that fear into fiction, I personally couldn’t sit with it right now. It’s the kind of story you pause for emotional safety, not out of boredom. I stepped away because every page felt possible, and that’s what makes it powerful.

But here's where it hit different. This isn't distant future stuff anymore. With recent ICE crackdowns, family separations at borders, social media posts leading to real-world consequences, and constant fears of being "disappeared" for the wrong like or share. It stopped feeling like fiction. The core terror of arbitrary detention, endless extensions on freedom, the dread of never seeing loved ones again because an algorithm said so? Too close to home. Too much like today's headlines. I made it to about 10% before the emotional weight became overwhelming. The book's strength is exactly why I couldn't keep going: it's so eerily plausible that it crossed from entertaining read into painful reality mirror.

Would I recommend it? This one is powerful, thought-provoking speculative fiction that nails the dangers of unchecked surveillance and predictive policing, especially for marginalized voices. It's urgent and well-crafted, but right now it feels too raw amid current immigration fears and tech overreach. If you're up for a gut-check dystopia that blurs the line between sci-fi and now, it's worth it. Just brace yourself.

Does this feel like science fiction or today’s headline? Have you DNF'd a book because it hit too close to current events? Or powered through because the message mattered?

Originally posted at www.goodreads.com.

šŸŽ§ Listened in audio ā± Duration: 7 hours šŸ“š Genre: Paranormal Cozy Mystery

It’s very rare for me to DNF a cozy mystery. I am famously forgiving when it comes to quirky setups, slow starts, and even slightly clunky writing—because cozies usually know the assignment. So when The Ghost and Mrs. McClure presented me with a haunted mystery bookstore and a hardboiled PI ghost, I was fully on board. That premise? Absolute catnip. Grit meets cozy. Fedora meets bookshop. A perfect union.

But here's where it went sideways for me. Around 20% in, the ghost's inner thoughts toward Pen turned uncomfortably indecent, leering, objectifying comments that felt way too sleazy for the tone I wanted in a cozy read. I was here for witty banter, clever mystery-solving, and maybe a touch of flirty tension, not creepy, unwanted vibes from a spectral guy who should know better. It killed the cozy immersion and made me nope out fast. Cozy mysteries are my safe space, small-town murders with heart, humor, and zero ick factor, and this one crossed a line that made continuing feel like a chore instead of a delight.

I made it about 20% in before I had to tap out. The mystery itself hadn’t even had time to fully unfold, but once my discomfort outweighed my curiosity, there was no coming back. This wasn’t a case of ā€œnot my vibeā€. It was a firm boundary. A cozy mystery, especially one built around a bookstore, should feel safe and inviting. This one just wouldn’t let me settle in.

Would I recommend it? Sadly, no. If you love your cozies purely whimsical and light, this one may miss the mark. The premise had potential, but the tone strayed too far from the cozy comfort zone for me to finish.

Ghostly or Ghastly... What’s Your Take? Paranormal cozies often walk a fine line between spooky and sweet. How much grit is too much when the supernatural shows up in a small-town mystery? I’d love to know your thoughts. Have you found a ghostly cozy that actually balances both sides well?

Originally posted at www.goodreads.com.

šŸ“±šŸ“– Read on Kindle šŸ“ƒ 332 pages ā± Duration: 4 hours šŸ·ļø Publisher: Brilliance Audio / Thomas & Mercer šŸ“… Publication Date: March 31, 2026 šŸ“š ARC courtesy of NetGalley

I went into A Novel Crime knowing two things: dark humor, and thriller. What I didn’t anticipate was how deeply unsettlingly funny this book would be. Not chuckle-funny. Not clever-smirk funny. But the kind of funny that leaves you staring at the page, unsure whether laughing makes you complicit. This was my first real encounter with this particular subgenre, and it hit me sideways.

This book made me wildly uncomfortable, laughed-out-loud uneasy, and vaguely horrified that I was laughing at all. Deborah Vadas Levison paints Marcy’s desperation so vividly that you both pity and cringe for her. There’s blackmail, kidnapping, emotional manipulation, and death, but all handled with an offbeat, unsettling humor that blurs the line between absurdity and atrocity. The pacing keeps you turning pages despite the unease, and that surprise ending? It lands perfectly, even if it leaves you questioning your own reactions.

And while I can admire Levison’s cleverness and control, I also discovered something about myself as a reader: this subgenre isn’t for me. It takes genuine skill to make readers feel conflicted about their own reactions, and Deborah does it well, too well, honestly. I closed the last page impressed and unsettled in equal measure.

Would I recommend it? This is a very specific recommendation. If you love dark humor thrillers that blur ethical lines, satirize the publishing industry, and make you laugh while wincing, this might be your thing. Deborah Vadas Levison absolutely commits to the premise, and her writing is sharp, confident, and fearless. For me, though, the discomfort outweighed the enjoyment. I finished the book unsure of what I felt—but very sure this subgenre isn’t for me.

Dark Humor or too dark? Hit the comments: What's the most disturbingly funny book that's ever made you squirm? Or are you all-in on dark humor thrillers. Tell me your faves!/b>

Originally posted at www.goodreads.com.

šŸŽ§ Listened in audio šŸ“¢ Narrated by Clare Corbett, Daphne Kouma, Julia Winwood, Sope Dirisu, Sofia Zervudachi, Charlie Anson ā± Duration: 12 hours šŸŽ Gifted by a friend @AmandaTroupe

This was one of those thrillers where I hit play and suddenly I was finding excuses to keep my headphones on. Lucy Foley knows how to hook a reader, and in audio form, this story absolutely thrives. Foley paints a portrait of a building so atmospheric you can practically hear the echo of footsteps in its marble hallways. The Paris setting isn’t romantic here; it’s eerie, like the city’s beauty is hiding something sharp underneath.

The audiobook cast deserves a standing ovation, multi-narrator thrillers can be hit or miss, but this one nails the tension. Each voice fits its character perfectly, adding layers of deceit and desperation. Jess’s determination to find Ben pulled me through the darkest moments (and yes, it does get dark in the middle). But the pacing stays taut, every reveal timed just right to keep your earbuds in long past bedtime.

What lingered for me wasn’t just the mystery, it was the unease. Foley’s characters aren’t just suspicious; they’re fully alive, flawed, and beautifully constructed. My only lingering question: who exactly sent that message to Jess at the start saying, ā€œYou can’t escapeā€? Maybe that’s part of the point, some secrets refuse neat endings.

Would I recommend it? Absolutely. If you love your thrillers tense, atmospheric, and layered with psychological depth, The Paris Apartment is your next listen. Foley once again proves why she’s at the top of her game.

Everyone’s a Suspect… What Do You Say? Did that opening message haunt you too, or did you interpret it differently? And tell me, did you listen to this one on audio or read it in print? Let’s talk theories in the comments.

Originally posted at www.goodreads.com.

šŸ“±šŸ“– Read on Kobo šŸ“ƒ 300 pages ā± Duration: 4 hours šŸ·ļø Publisher: Joffe Books šŸ“… Publishing Date: January 13, 2026 šŸ“© ARC provided by NetGalley

I’ll give it this: the hook had me. Three mystery books showing up uninvited, one predicting a local murder? That’s grade-A thriller bait. The early chapters promised a binge read; I was all in for a one-sitting kind of night. But somewhere around the halfway point, the pace decelerated. What began as taut and urgent morphed into a slow crawl through neighbors’ secrets and marital distrust.

The constant guesswork kept me on edge; every chapter flipped my suspect list. One minute it's the grieving husband, next the possibly cheating spouse, then whispers of affairs rippling through this tight-knit, almost gated community. The red herrings? Chef's kiss. The author nails that drip-feed doubt, layering paranoia like a pro. For a genre that thrives on pulse-pounding momentum, the pacing dragged hard after the strong start.

I kept waiting for the speed to pick up, for the tension to snap tighter, yet it lingered in low gear. But by the time I reached the final reveal, my interest had dulled enough that I just wanted resolution. It’s not a bad book, it’s competently written and atmospheric, but the pacing smothered its potential thrills. With a snappier tempo, this could’ve been a sharp, satisfying ride.

Would I recommend it? This one’s tricky. The Killer on My Doorstep is for readers who don’t mind a slow simmer where the unease outweighs the action. If you crave twisty suburban suspense with rich character politics, it might work for you. But if you like your thrillers fast and breathless, this may not scratch the itch.

Neighborly secrets or too slow a burn? Would you still stick with a thriller if the tension stretched thin midway, or would you DNF and move on to the next pulse-pounder? Let’s talk below. 3 likes

Originally posted at www.goodreads.com.

šŸŽ§ Listened in audio šŸ“¢ Narrated by Ellen Quay ā± Duration: 7 hours šŸ·ļø Publisher: Dreamscape Media šŸ“… Published: February 10, 2025 🧩 Genre: Cozy Mystery

There are few things cozier than an evening wrapped in a blanket, listening to Ellie Alexander describe chocolate truffles, bookish banter, and small-town secrets. A Victim at Valentine’s hits all the classic cozy notes, but what sets it apart is the clever ā€œblind date with a bookā€ twist. I recently went to an event like that myself, so reading Annie’s version of it felt like stepping right back into that literary matchmaking glow.

The Valentine’s Day atmosphere is layered beautifully throughout the story—romantic, festive, and just a little bit sinister once the dead body shows up. Ellie Alexander balances the tonal shift well, keeping things warm and engaging without dulling the stakes. This installment does something especially satisfying by sprinkling in tantalizing breadcrumbs about Scarlett’s long-running mystery. Those moments added depth and emotional weight, making the overarching series arc feel purposeful rather than background noise.

Ellen Quay's narration brought the small-town charm and emotional layers to life perfectly; her pacing nailed the suspense and the heartfelt moments. But let’s be honest, Fletcher finding someone completely stole the show for me. That subplot delivered the biggest emotional payoff and had me grinning like I’d just read the perfect romance novella tucked inside my murder mystery. Cozy readers, you’ll know exactly what I mean.

Would I recommend it? Absolutely, especially if you like your mysteries sweet with a slice of suspense. Alexander delivers comfort and curiosity in equal measure. This one’s a cozy Valentine’s treat.

What’s Your Match? If you were to go on a ā€œblind date with a book,ā€ what genre would your perfect match be: cozy mystery, dark thriller, or slow-burn romance? Tell me in the comments!

Originally posted at www.goodreads.com.

Review pending confirmation on if this is a non-AI generated book

šŸ“±šŸ“– Read on Kindle šŸ“ƒ 301 pages ā± 4 hours šŸ·ļø ARC provided by BookSiren

A disgraced chef, a dead pop star, and a bunch of gossip-hungry townsfolk!!! Selina Hill knows exactly how to blend humor, heart, and homicide. Jammed with Secrets checks every box I crave in a cozy mystery: it’s full of flavor (literally), features a stubborn but lovable sleuth, and wraps the tension in just enough warmth to keep the comfort high. The food descriptions had me craving bao buns and kimchi fries, and the set piece at the music festival food trucks? Perfect atmosphere.

Sadie Cruz is a classic cozy protagonist with a twist. She’s disgraced, defensive, and determined not to let one bad chapter define her entire life. I loved how her past as an Iron Chef added stakes beyond the murder itself. This isn’t just about solving a crime, it’s about reclaiming her identity. The romance angle with the sheriff ex adds just the right amount of tension. Stoic, clenched-jaw energy? Yes, please.

The mystery itself kept me hooked with solid suspects, clever red herrings, and that satisfying "aha" moment when pieces clicked. It's not groundbreakingly twisty, but it doesn't need to be. The real draw is the culinary cozy heart, the second-chance romance, and Sadie's determination to reclaim her life. The pacing zipped along nicely for a quick 4-hour read, with just enough humor and heart to balance the stakes. Fans of food truck mysteries or Carmela Dutra-style cozies will totally get why this one hits the spot.

Would I recommend it? If you're hunting for a fresh culinary cozy mystery with food truck flair, small-town drama, ex-romance tension, and a sassy sleuth who cooks up trouble, this culinary cozy delivers. It's satisfying, fun, and leaves you hungry for more. Fingers crossed Selina Hill turns this into a series.

Spill the Sauce: What's Your Favorite Foodie Cozy Mystery?

Originally posted at www.goodreads.com.

šŸŽ§ Listened in audio šŸ“¢ Narrated by Ellen Quay ā± Duration: 7 hours šŸ·ļø Publisher: Storm Publishing / Dreamscape Media šŸ“… Published: July 15, 2025 🧩 Genre: Cozy Mystery

This is the final book in The Secret Bookcase Mystery series, and on paper, it should have been deeply satisfying. We’ve spent five books circling Scarlet’s murder, watching Annie carry that grief and obsession like a bookmark she can’t remove. This installment promises closure, emotional payoff, and answers. Annie is ready to close the page. I was ready too.

But let’s start with the obvious: everywhere Annie goes, someone meets an untimely end. It’s practically her brand at this point, but even for a cozy mystery, the frequency stretched believability. What really tripped me up, though, was how conveniently local authorities always welcome her into investigations, helpful in Redwood Grove, sure, but in Santa Clara? Not so much. It made the sleuthing feel more like a plot shortcut than character-driven logic.

As a standalone, the ā€œbook fair murderā€ was decent background noise, light, serviceable, but without the spark that earlier entries carried. The side characters felt like stock roles rotated in for this finale, and the fair’s setting, which should’ve been bursting with bookish energy, came off a bit flat.

And then comes the end. After five books circling Scarlett’s murder, the big reveal lands in the final 20%, offering a wrap-up that’s rushed, emotionally thin, and frankly unearned. It wasn’t the satisfying mic-drop I’d been waiting for, it was more like the lights flickering off right before the concert’s encore.

Would I recommend it? If you’ve read the series from the start, you might want to finish it for closure, but prepare to be let down by how neatly (and quickly) things tie up. A disappointing finale for a series that once promised so much heart and intrigue.

The final chapter: what do you think? Were you satisfied with how Scarlett’s story ended, or did it feel too abrupt? I’d love to hear whether this finale worked better for you than it did for me. Let’s commiserate (or debate) in the comments below.

Originally posted at www.goodreads.com.

šŸŽ§ Listened in audio šŸ“¢ Narrated by Kamala Harris ā± Duration: 10 hours šŸ·ļø Genre: Non-Fiction

This one feels like being handed a backstage pass to the Harris–Trump showdown and then realizing the stage hands are quietly on fire in the wings. The day‑by‑day structure keeps things moving, and you can almost hear the clock ticking down on those 107 days, which makes the inevitability of how it all ends sting a little more. Listening to Harris narrate her own story adds an extra layer of intimacy; the calm, measured tone softens some of the sharper political edges, even when she’s clearly furious at how the machine failed her.

What really stands out is how clearly the book reflects on how things unraveled. With the benefit of hindsight, and given how things are unfolding now, the narrative lands differently. You start connecting dots, noticing missed moments, and quietly thinking, if only. That said, this is still a political memoir, and it reads like one. There’s transparency, yes, but also framing, positioning, and careful storytelling. I found myself appreciating the insight while also mentally bookmarking sections to take with a grain of salt.

The book doesn’t fix anything about where the U.S. is now; it just makes the whole mess feel both more understandable and more depressing, like watching the slow‑motion replay of a game you already know your team lost. Still, if you’ve ever wondered what it actually felt like inside that campaign, this gives you enough texture and detail to make you sit back and think, ā€œSo that’s how we got here.ā€

Would I recommend it? Solid listen if you're into political memoirs or still processing the 2024 election fallout, Kamala's narration adds that personal punch that makes the revelations land deeper. It's thought-provoking, a bit bittersweet, and definitely sparks those "what could have been" thoughts. Worth it for the unique vantage point on modern American democracy.

If Only We Knew Then: What Stands Out Most? Did any behind-the-scenes detail surprise you, or leave you with your own "if only" about the election?

Originally posted at www.goodreads.com.

šŸŽ§ Listened in audio šŸ“¢ Narrated by Carolyn Kang, Jodi Long, Sura Siu, Crystal Yu ā± Duration: 14 hours šŸ·ļø Publisher: HarperCollins / William Morrow šŸ“… Published: June 3, 2025 Read as a part of Goodreads monthly challenge - Star Selection

This novel sits in that quiet, powerful space where historical fiction and fantasy gently overlap. While the magical element (the ability to Reforge memories through pencils) sounds whimsical on paper, the emotional weight of the story is anything but light. The sections set in wartime Shanghai are raw and unflinching, especially in how they depict the limited choices and constant fear experienced by women during that era. The audiobook format amplifies this pain beautifully; you don’t just hear Yun’s story, you feel it settle into your chest.

The dual timeline works beautifully here, especially as the narrators breathe life into the women of the Tsai family. The transition from Yun’s 1937 Shanghai to Monica’s digital age feels almost cinematic in the audio rendition. The relationships between the four central women: Monica, her grandmother Yun, Meng, and Louise, are the heart of this book. Each woman is sharply defined, each voice distinct, and the multiple narrators bring an added richness to the listening experience. These aren’t just generational connections; they’re emotional echoes, shaped by secrets, sacrifice, and love passed down imperfectly. It’s tender, frustrating, and deeply human.

That said, the story does leave a few threads dangling. Meng’s character absolutely deserved more space, especially given how heavily her presence was teased. Same with the rifts between Monica's parents and grandparents; a bit more clarity could have tied everything into a satisfying full circle. Fourteen hours of listen time and still a couple of unanswered family rifts left me mildly unsatisfied. But those emotional beats between Yun, Monica, Weng, and Louise? Worth every minute.

Would I recommend it? This magical realism family saga with historical fiction roots and emotional depth is worth your time if you love character-driven stories about memory, inheritance, and women's resilience. The audiobook experience amplifies the multi-voiced beauty, though the unresolved bits kept it from perfection.

The Pencil That Writes History Did the open-ended threads work for you, or were you also hoping for more closure, especially when it came to Meng? Let’s talk unresolved endings and emotional payoff in the comments.

Originally posted at www.goodreads.com.

šŸ“±šŸ“– Read on Kindle šŸ“ƒ 217 pages ā± ~4 hours šŸ·ļø Publisher: Boldwood Books šŸ“… Release Date: January 20, 2026 ✨ ARC provided by NetGalley

Harriet White is back, and so, technically, is Sherlock Holmes. Still working in her modest Baker Street office, answering letters meant for the world’s most famous detective, Harry once again stumbles into a mystery she absolutely cannot ignore. This time, though, the stakes feel sharper. Moriarty is writing to her. Moriarty. And suddenly the lines between fiction, legacy, and very real danger begin to blur in the most delicious way.

Holly Hepburn nails the historical cozy mystery feel. 1930s London comes alive with foggy streets, clever disguises, and that ever-present sense of Baker Street magic. Harry's growth shines; she's sharper, more conflicted about her double life, and the Moriarty correspondence adds delicious psychological tension. The locked-room setup is clever (no easy answers), and the shift from theft to murder ramps up the drama without losing the cozy charm. Fans of Sherlock Holmes pastiches will love the respectful nods to canon while Hepburn carves her own path. It's twisty, atmospheric, and just twisty enough to feel fresh.

What I appreciated most is how confidently this book inhabits its literary inheritance. Hepburn doesn’t just reference Conan Doyle; she understands the appeal for the atmosphere, intellect, psychological sparring, and translates it for a modern historical mystery reader. This series just keeps deepening the emotional undercurrent of Harry’s loyalty to Holmes, her self-doubt, and her dogged intelligence make her feel like someone you’d happily follow through every cobbled street and hidden alley London has to offer.

Would I recommend it? Absolutely. Hepburn’s The Locked Room is a confident, clever, and deeply satisfying addition to the Baker Street Mysteries. It scratches that Sherlock itch while carving its own distinct mark.

What’s Your Favorite Sherlock Spin? Harry White keeps Holmes alive in her own way, but who’s your favorite modern take on the detective? Drop your picks (and theories about Moriarty!) in the comments. I love discovering new Holmes-inspired stories.

Originally posted at www.goodreads.com.

šŸŽ§ Listened in audio šŸ“¢ Narrated by Ellen Quay ā± Duration: 7 hours šŸ·ļø Publisher: Dreamscape Media

This series continues to be reliable comfort: small-town California, bookstore bustle, and a murder that somehow feels like part of the holiday dƩcor rather than a tonal clash. A Holiday Homicide leans hard into what Ellie Alexander does best: comfort reading with just enough menace to keep things interesting. This time, the victim is a celebrity baker, which means sugar, secrets, and surprisingly sharp elbows behind the scenes of a gingerbread competition.

The mystery itself is clean and approachable, not overly convoluted, and perfect for listeners who want to feel clever without needing a flowchart. Annie remains a steady, likable anchor, and the found-family vibes around the Secret Bookcase continue to be the emotional glue of the series. These characters feel lived-in now, like old friends you’re happy to spend the holidays with, even when someone turns up dead.

Ellen Quay’s narration keeps everything warm and accessible, making this a great audiobook to pair with decorating, baking, or pretending you’re not stress-wrapping gifts. Is it groundbreaking? No. Is it exactly what you want from a holiday cozy mystery? Absolutely.

Would I recommend it? If you’re looking for a low-stress, festive cozy mystery that delivers comfort first and crime second, this is an easy yes. A Holiday Homicide feels like a warm mug of cocoa with a dash of arsenic, seasonal, familiar, and oddly soothing. Perfect for longtime fans of the series or anyone wanting a Christmas-themed mystery without emotional devastation.

Cookie Crumbs or Red Herrings? Do you love your holiday mysteries extra cozy or a little darker under the tinsel? And be honest, would you enter a gingerbread competition where murder seems statistically likely?

Originally posted at www.goodreads.com.

šŸŽ§ Listened in audio šŸ“¢ Narrated by Ellen Quay ā± Duration: 7 hours

This third installment in A Secret Bookcase Mystery series ramps up the fun while deepening the bonds in Redwood Grove. Annie's events-organizing skills shine as she turns a fundraiser into a real crime scene, and I loved how the dinner party nods to classic whodunits like Clue without feeling gimmicky. The suspects each had believable motives, and uncovering the Wentworth history added layers that made the solution feel clever rather than convenient.

What elevates it beyond a standard cozy is the ongoing Scarlett thread with clues drop naturally, building tension across books without overshadowing the current case. Penny's arc, especially her partnership with Pri, brings extra warmth and growth that makes you root for everyone (except the victim, obviously). Ellen Quay's narration keeps the energy lively, with distinct voices that make the ensemble pop. Perfect for audiobook fans who want that immersive small-town feel.

Would I recommend it? Yes, especially if you love cozy mysteries with strong friendships, historic settings, and series arcs that reward sticking around. It's charming, suspenseful, and satisfying. Ideal for fall evenings or anytime you need a comforting yet twisty escape. Highly recommend for fans of the genre.

Your Turn: Poison or Pastry? Which cozy mystery trope gets you every time? Dinner party disasters, hidden fortunes, or loyal friend squads saving the day? Drop your thoughts below. I’m dying to hear!

Originally posted at www.goodreads.com.

šŸŽ§ Listened in audio šŸ“¢ Narrated by: Ellen Quay ā± Duration: 7 hours šŸ·ļø Publisher: Dreamscape Media šŸ“… Publication date: August 20, 2024

Going into A Murder at the Movies, I expected a familiar return to Redwood Grove, with books, community vibes, and Annie doing what she does best: stumbling politely into murder. What I got was a double dose of murder mystery magic. The main event is the dramatic plunge of that infamous critic, but there's another cozy crime layered in that keeps the stakes simmering and the pages turning. Annie's sleuthing feels natural, her instincts sharp, and the suspects are deliciously shady, think glamorous egos clashing with small-town realities.

The film festival setting is a total win. Ellie Alexander leans hard into classic Hollywood glamour, Hitchcock nods, and small-town excitement colliding with big egos. The suspects are delightfully messy, everyone has secrets, and the motives feel personal enough to stay grounded, even with the flashy backdrop. Annie continues to grow as a sleuth here, feeling more confident but still very much human (and occasionally overwhelmed).

Pacing stays snappy in audio form, though a couple of reveals felt telegraphed if you're a seasoned cozy reader. Still, the emotional threads (Annie's past peeking through) add depth without weighing it down.

Would I recommend it? This one's a total treat for cozy mystery fans craving small-town sleuthing with a cinematic twist. The charm, the heart, the clever plot, it's got everything to make you cozy up and keep listening.

Final Cut or Cozy Classic? Did the film festival setting work for you, or do you prefer your cozies rooted firmly in bookstores and bakeries? Let’s debate favorite cozy settings in the comments

Originally posted at www.goodreads.com.

šŸŽ§ Listened in audio šŸ“¢ Narrated by Amy Landon ā± Duration: 3 hours šŸ“Œ Read as part of Goodreads Challenge – Tale Spin šŸ·ļø Publisher: Macmillan Audio šŸ“… Published: October 5, 2021

Thank you, Goodreads, for leading me straight into this modern fairy-tale fever dream. A Spindle Splintered takes Sleeping Beauty and flips it right on its spiky crown. Alix E. Harrow takes the ā€œwhat if you fell into a fairy tale?ā€ concept and gives it teeth, heart, and a sharp awareness of how stories trap women into tidy, tragic endings.

What really worked for me was the way modern life is threaded into the fairy-tale framework. Zinnia Gray isn’t a passive princess; she’s painfully self-aware, funny, and carrying the quiet weight of knowing her future has an expiration date. Watching her navigate castles, curses, and inevitable destinies while holding onto her present-day sensibilities made the story feel grounded even as it hopped across timelines and realities.

Amy Landon's narration is spot-on for this short listen in its warm, wry way, and perfectly paced for bedtime vibes. I popped it on as my sleep-time story and it wrapped me up like a cozy blanket with just enough edge to keep me drifting happily instead of dozing off too soon. The multiverse Sleeping Beauties team-up delivers heart, humor, and a quiet punch of empowerment that lingers. It's subversive without being preachy, queer-inclusive in the best way, and surprisingly tender amid the spindle-shattering chaos. At under 3 hours, it's the ideal quick-hit fantasy escape that packs more emotional depth than its length suggests.

Would I recommend it? If you're craving a fast, feminist fairy-tale fix with Sleeping Beauty retellings, multiverse magic, and heartfelt found-family vibes, this one's a delight. Harrow delivers charm, wit, and real feels in a tiny package. It's perfect for cozy nights or challenge prompts. I finished smiling and a little misty-eyed. Add this to your TBR for a quick, enchanting escape.

Your Spindle-Shattering Thoughts? Did the multiverse Sleeping Beauties steal your heart, or are you still loyal to the classic curse? Drop your fave fairy-tale retelling below. I need recs!

Originally posted at www.goodreads.com.

šŸŽ§ Listened in audio šŸ“¢ Narrated by Emily Rankin ā± Duration: 14 hours šŸ“– Genre: Fantasy šŸ·ļø Publisher: Penguin Audio šŸ“… Read as: Book Club January Read

Oh boy. This one tested my patience. Fourteen hours of listening, and I still couldn’t quite figure out what story Augustus Rose was trying to tell. Each section felt like a completely different book, part YA dystopia, part art-history thriller, part sci-fi conspiracy, and part strange philosophical allegory. Duchamp art codes, urban exploration, dark net vibes, all wrapped in a runaway teen's gritty survival story. The premise screamed "addictive puzzle" with Philadelphia's abandoned corners as the playground. But after investing a full 14 hours in Emily Rankin's narration (which was solid, by the way), it just... unraveled into disappointment. There’s ambition here, I’ll give it that, but ambition without cohesion just makes for narrative whiplash.

The most frustrating part is that none of these ideas are bad on their own. A secret society obsessed with Duchamp? Homeless teens navigating hidden spaces in a city? A hacker sidekick? All solid concepts. But the execution is scattered. Just as one thread starts to feel interesting, the book pivots—resetting tone, stakes, and sometimes even genre, leaving everything before it feeling strangely irrelevant. Emily Rankin’s narration is the saving grace here, clear, emotive, and well-paced, but even her skill couldn’t tie together the story’s disjointed moods.

What hurts most is the time sink: 14 hours is a big commitment for something that never gels. Lee is a tough, compelling heroine, and the urban hideouts had cool potential, but the disjointed structure killed the momentum.

Would I recommend it? Not really. Unless you’re deeply into avant-garde storytelling with surrealist vibes and don’t mind wandering through confusion for hours, this one’s a tough sell. For me, it was all style and no soul.

Genre-Hopping or Genre-Flopping? What Do You Say? Have you ever stuck with a long audiobook hoping it would finally click, only to realize it never would? Or do you love genre-bending stories that refuse to stay in one lane? I’m curious where you land on this one. Let’s talk in the comments.

Originally posted at www.goodreads.com.

šŸ“±šŸ“– Read on Kobo šŸ“ƒ 352 pages ā± Approx. 4 hours šŸ·ļø Publisher: Avon šŸ—“ļø Published: October 1, 2024 šŸ§™ā€ā™€ļø Genre: Romantasy

I was expecting something like Practical Magic meets The Very Secret Society of Irregular Witches. hat I didn’t expect was writing that felt firmly stuck in a high school mindset.

The biggest issue for me was the character development. These are women in their thirties, yet their inner monologues, reactions, and romantic tension played out like teenage crushes passing notes in class. The dialogue leaned juvenile, the emotional responses felt exaggerated, and I struggled to believe in the relationships, romantic or familial, because none of them behaved like adults who’ve lived a little.

That mismatch made it hard to connect emotionally or care about the stakes of Oak Haven’s magical crisis. I can appreciate a bit of whimsy, but when every scene leaned on exaggerated reactions and juvenile crush energy, the spell broke for me. Halfway through, I realized I wasn’t invested enough to push through and that’s when this became a DNF.

Would I recommend it? Not my cup of potion. The premise is charming, but the execution skewed too young for me to enjoy. If you like light, low-stakes witchy rom-coms with plenty of sparkles and little substance, you might vibe with it, but I personally couldn’t finish.

Magic Missed or Just Miscast? What do you think, should cozy romantasy lean more whimsical or mature? Let me know in the comments if you finished Impractical Magic and felt differently about Scarlett and Oak Haven’s charm spell.

Originally posted at www.goodreads.com.