Tea, cozy blanket and a cuddle buddy. I'd be set.
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
The elven days of christmas, A.K. Caggiano
Summary:
Piper MacLean’s Christmas is a ho-ho-horror show, but she’s used to all that by now, five years into becoming the de facto matriarch of the family, if still single and childless much to everyone else’s chagrin. But she does have one indulgence every year: finding the perfect Christmas tree.
While searching the national forest, Piper is led to a beautiful spruce by way of magic. Well, not actual magic—magic, of course, doesn’t exist—but it sure feels magical when she hears the voice of her deceased mother floating on the wintery winds, telling her just which tree to chop.
Unfortunately, that very tree actually is quite magical, and accounting for it is the last task that half-elf Kol needs to complete before turning in his annual reports to the Elven Perennial Association. When he discovers the pilfered spruce, he simultaneously finds that the only way to return order to the forest is to endure a human holiday alongside a grumpy and overburdened woman who does not want him around.
Kol doesn’t belong in Piper’s world, but it’s her fault that he’s there, so he doesn’t intend to make things easy for her and announces to her family that he’s her boyfriend, come to visit for Christmas. Surely that’s the perfect cover for his presence and not at all the start to a ridiculous romance that will either tie up both of their hearts in pristine bows or rip them apart forever.
Review:
I know it's not possible for another human to read someone's mind, but I swear AK somehow reads mine and then writes the most perfect books for me.
This book was a complete joy, both of the main characters are complex and very likeable and they just work so well together, I found myself straight up giggling and laughing at some many scenes, and of course the smut was absolute perfection.
Even if AK was trying to tell a silly christmas story, she also managed to bring in serious topics, like how complicated grief and misplaced guilt can affect us for years, and she did a wonderful job navigating that while keeping things heartwhelming, and soft, and festive.
I always adore the dinamics she creates with all of her characters, how different, and natural they feel and this book nailed it completely, exploring the chaotic ways families can be and yet how much we still cherish and love them within that chaos.
And always worth menitoning, how does she always comes up with the best chapter titles? Truly one of the best parts of her books, always.
This books is already on my list of comfort reads, and I'm sure I'm gonna find myself coming back to it when I need some cheering up.
Hobbies include: reading books, buying books, talking about books, taking pictures of books, thinking about books, making tbr’s of books, following accounts about books…
Books listed:
A Swift and Sudden Exit by Nico Vincenty
It Ain't Over Til the Bisexual Speaks by Lois Shearing, Vaneet Mehta, etc
The 7-10 Split by Karmen Lee
The Z Word by Lindsay King-Miller
Bisexuality: The Basics by Lewis Oakley
Til Death Do Us Bard by Rose Black (Hardcover edition)
Road to Ruin (Magebike Courier, #1) by Hana Lee
Blood Remains by Cathy Pegau
The Only Light Left Burning by Erik J. Brown Garner for Gold (Lustrous Divinity, #2) by Catherine Labadie
The Last to Pie (Pies Before Guys Mystery #3) by Misha Popp
The Girl in Question by Tess Sharpe
Smoke and Steel (Scions and Shadows) by Dax Murray
Fake Dating a Witch (Bewitching Billionaires #1) by Brigid Hunt
A Girl Can Dream by Emily Barr
The Ride of Her Life by Jennifer Dugan
A Little Kissing Between Friends by Chencia C. Higgins
Meet Me in Berlin by Samantha L. Valentine
The Sins on Their Bones by Laura R. Samotin
We Were the Universe by Kimberly King Parsons
Evocation by S.T. Gibson
Adrift by Sam Ledel
Don't Be a Drag by Skye Quinlan
This is not an exhaustive list so please do let me know of the books I missed 💖
Date idea: your face buried in a book and my face buried in your thighs
Just got home from watching Sonic 3. Feeling absolutely giddy!
I feel like many people have a fundamental misconception of what unreliable narrator means. It's simply a narrative vehicle not a character flaw, a sign that the character is a bad person. There are also many different types of unreliable narrators in fiction. Being an unreliable narrator doesn't necessarily mean that the character is 'wrong', it definitely doesn't mean that they're wrong about everything even if some aspects in their story are inaccurate, and only some unreliable narrators actively and consciously lie. Stories that have unreliable narrators also tend to deal with perception and memory and they often don't even have one objective truth, just different versions. It reflects real life where we know human memory is highly unreliable and vague and people can interpret same events very differently
Just a 30 y/o from Caimito with a book blog. A place to share my opinion on books I've read and movies I have watched.
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