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Hanging out with people will make you remember you're the crazy woke friend for like. not wanting to shop at shien
Rest in Peace, Tony.
I'll always remember your smile.
Anthony Head (1954-2026)
So, I guess these books are popular right now *lol*
really good reading month!!!! the everlasting was amazing, and i adore villains are destined to die and cant wait to read more.
I read seven books in May, totaling 2,926 pages. I feel like this is pretty good given that one of them was Rhythm of War, which was 1,200 pages and took me most of two weeks to read. You might also notice that Dawnshard was an audiobook; I listened to it in the car while my partner and I went on some birthday adventures.
Because I knew Rhythm of War was going to be a major read this month, I tried to pepper the rest of the month with books that weren't necessarily epic fantasy. The Raven Scholar was a crossover from April, but otherwise, I tried to make the only fantasy of the month Cosmere books.
As a result, my feelings about the books were pretty mixed. I enjoyed Shark Heart a lot, as well as Yellowface; but was underwhelmed by This Thing Between Us and downright disliked Stonefish. (I also really liked The Raven Scholar.)
Next month, I am tackling the final book in Stormlight Archives*, Wind and Truth, which is even longer, so I expect it to take up much of the month. What I'll get up to otherwise is anybody's guess.
*For now, obviously. The fact that you make me say that makes me strongly dislike BrandoSando fans, even though I am one
Books of 2026: May Wrap-Up.
Ha!!! I finally read More Fiction!! It's only taken me *checks egg timer* three (3) months,
Anyway! This was the Month of Bot, and also the Month of Read As Many Of My AAPI Authors As Possible, and I finished three (3) tricky scenes of my revision project (with a jumpstart on a fourth!) and wrote some sanity-saving side quest material! Good birthday month, I think :)
Reviews linked!:
THE MURDERBOT DIARIES + PLATFORM DECAY ★★★★★ Best beloved series! I was delighted that PLATFORM DECAY narrowed the scope back down from A Planet to a micro-subset of #MyHumans. I cackled. A Lot. Liked this one more than SYSTEM COLLAPSE (not as much as NETWORK EFFECT)(NE is my Very Favorite).
THE LANGUAGE OF LIARS ★★★★ Loved Huang's first novella enough to preorder subsequent releases, started here because aliens and language and translation and spies. Very good. If you liked the idea of Kuang's BABEL but thought the treatment was lackluster, try this instead. (If you enjoyed BABEL, as I did, definitely try this!)
HAIR ON FIRE ★★★★ Afghan women poets for this month's Poetry Quest installment! Very much poetry in exile; appreciated the introduction for context (other volumes in this series haven't had intros lol). Favorites were Mahbouba Ibrahmi, Mariam Meetra, and Nadia Anjuman.
THE WATER OUTLAWS ★★★½ I was daisychaining my Huangs, yes. Genderbent queer-friendly wuxia retelling of an old Chinese novel. Started kind of slow, picked way the heck up.
THE CHOSEN AND THE BEAUTIFUL ★★★★ Daisy(ahaha)chaining my retellings, too, apparently. Gatsby! Jordan Baker style! Immigrant! Queer! Fantasy! Vo nails the atmosphere and the vibe--the source material absolutely could have benefited from literal magic, yeah.
THE KILLING SPELL ★★★★ One of my bonus side quests this year is Try To Read New Things As They Enter My House Ish, and I've had this one on preorder for a while! More language magic! Hawaiian this time! Vaguely post-apoc. Was pleased by the bonus Russian.
PITCH CRAFT ★★★★★ Impulse grab at the library, AKA the best place to impulse grab things. Goode is hilarious and All Writers Are Just Like That™, I Guess. Was not expecting to cry at the end of a writing/business book, but here we are. (Books that make me cry get 5 stars almost automatically.)
THE HAUNTED BOOKSTORE ★★★½ Cute! Fun! Just enough heart crimes to keep me engaged! I don't usually read manga (so please don't take this as a qualified stamp of approval lol, I don't go here), but I liked these a lot. Perfect for writing project vibes, too :)
ANNA AKHMATOVA - 117/942 pages read. Made it through Evening! Scribbled a bunch of fragments in my notebook (short example: "Getting drunk on the sound of a voice/That resembles yours" (96) like ma'am please--). I do appreciate how massive the text in this book is, that makes it much less daunting.
I'm...about a month behind where I hoped to be for Revisions (I can't decide if it is Helpful or Maladaptive that I have month benchmarks flagged on my scene card whiteboard; I definitely finished "April" earlier last week), and I'm back to a Big Stretch Where Everything Needs To Be Rewritten lol. Also! Turns out! I gotta have my submission for critique put together and sent by the end of July, which. Does somewhat accelerate pieces of my timeline, yes. (Oops.) I have knitted so little this year, you have no idea. However! We persevere!! If you hear a writer howling in the distance, don't worry about it, they're just time-crunched and resenting the time-suck of the dayjob.
Under the Cut: How I Conceptualize ~*★Stars★*~
🌷 May Reading Wrap Up 🌷
Wave farewell to Spring and contemplate all you read in the last month. And within this you may welcome in the first month of summer. In May I read 11 books, and my Top 3 had to be “Trans Liberation” by Leslie Feinberg; “Dinotopia: Journey to Chandara” by James Gurney; and “49 Days” by Agnes Lee.
🌷 “Dragons of Light” edited by Orson Scott Card
🌷 “49 Days” by Agnes Lee
🌷 “Dinotopia: Journey to Chandara” by James Gurney
🌷”Tales of Pan” by Mordicai Gerstein
🌷 “Trans Liberation: Beyond Pink or Blue” by Leslie Feinberg
🌷 “Frog in the House” by David Mather & Stephanie Mirocha
🌷 “Evidence: Poems” by Mary Oliver
🌷 “The Faeries Pop-Up Book” by Brian Froud and Alan Lee
🌷 “Dog Show: Poems” by Billy Collins & Pamela Sztybel
🌷”Dove Isabeau” by Jane Yolen & Dennis Nolan
🌷 “Stupid Emilien” by S.T. Mendelson
What did you enjoy reading?
Books Read in May 2026
JOMP BPC || May 31 || Read In May:
Read this month: May 2026
I read a total of seven books in May (this can't continue, normally by May the number of books I read starts to drop drastically and does not increase):
T. Kingfisher - The Wonder Engine
J. Rundberg - Der Ruf des Nachtraben (ebook, ARC)
M. Wells - Fugitive Telemetry (ebook, library)
A. Herring Blake - Delilah Green doesn't care (ebook, library)
F. Remus - Olver and out (ebook, ARC)
K. Hörnlein - Eine wie sie fehlt in dieser Zeit (ebook, library)
D. Wynne Jones - Howl's Moving Castle (reread)
There was only one book I did not enjoy at all, while I had several surprises. Johan Rundberg's The Night Raven is a great, although rather dark, middle grade mystery set around 1880. Fugitive Telemetry was a really enjoyable Muderbot book, though I will very likely not continue the series (the books have been very hit-or-miss for me and the next ones all seem to be closely tied together). The Wonder Engine was solid - I love the world though I could do without the romance in all the books set in that universe (which somewhat goes against what they are supposed to be focused on).
I read two great German books: the non-fiction "Eine wie sie fehlt in dieser Zeit). The author looks at the legacy of Astrid Lindgren, 20 years after her deatth. And Olver and out is a very good midlife-crisis/coming out story.
Howl's Moving Castle was my take on this month's prompt for the 2026 Re-Reading Challenge by @franticvampirereads: a sports romance or something sports-adjacent (it has rugby!). As hoped, it was delightful though I did not remember the ending being so abrupt.
For my yearly goals, I am ahead in number of books and pages, but I have some catching up to do for audiobooks.
If you read in German you really should try Eleanor Bardilac`s books. They are all rather slow and atmospheric but I have loved each and every one and they are really good queer books.
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Read this month: May 2026
I read a total of seven books in May (this can't continue, normally by May the number of books I read starts to drop drastically and does not increase):
T. Kingfisher - The Wonder Engine
J. Rundberg - Der Ruf des Nachtraben (ebook, ARC)
M. Wells - Fugitive Telemetry (ebook, library)
A. Herring Blake - Delilah Green doesn't care (ebook, library)
F. Remus - Olver and out (ebook, ARC)
K. Hörnlein - Eine wie sie fehlt in dieser Zeit (ebook, library)
D. Wynne Jones - Howl's Moving Castle (reread)
There was only one book I did not enjoy at all, while I had several surprises. Johan Rundberg's The Night Raven is a great, although rather dark, middle grade mystery set around 1880. Fugitive Telemetry was a really enjoyable Muderbot book, though I will very likely not continue the series (the books have been very hit-or-miss for me and the next ones all seem to be closely tied together). The Wonder Engine was solid - I love the world though I could do without the romance in all the books set in that universe (which somewhat goes against what they are supposed to be focused on).
I read two great German books: the non-fiction "Eine wie sie fehlt in dieser Zeit). The author looks at the legacy of Astrid Lindgren, 20 years after her deatth. And Olver and out is a very good midlife-crisis/coming out story.
Howl's Moving Castle was my take on this month's prompt for the 2026 Re-Reading Challenge by @franticvampirereads: a sports romance or something sports-adjacent (it has rugby!). As hoped, it was delightful though I did not remember the ending being so abrupt.
For my yearly goals, I am ahead in number of books and pages, but I have some catching up to do for audiobooks.
In a flurry of thread and felt, I have finished my project and *checks notes* sixteen novels and five volumes of manga. Book club happened at some point. My birthday? Was that this month? It's been BUSY! Honestly, I felt very productive overall, and I look forward to finally being able to KNIT. Bummed because my energy levels are tanking again, but the month was full of good books and good food.
Everybody Wants to Rule the World Except for Me by Django Wexler ⭐️⭐️⭐️ – Hm. Okay. Well. I think I can say for sure the problem is Me. Because everything I wanted from book one was here, the consequences, the character growth, the answers, and I thought this was less fun and more boring. Until the last quarter or so when it all came together, thus the extra star. This was also Less Horny, which definitely plays a role in my enjoyment. Maybe I'll reread the first one with these thoughts in mind, maybe I won't. They're still not Long Live Evil, and that's not really fair now is it.
The Three-Body Problem by Liu Cixin ⭐️ – I uh. Did not enjoy this. It's not even that I didn't understand it, I was just bored out of my mind. This was a bunch of numbers and math and physics on a page (in my ear?) and the audio made everything so dry and dull. Multiple times I wanted to drop it, but figured hey it must Get Good because everyone references this. It did not Get Good. The ending wasn't even satisfying.
The Two Lies of Faven Scythe by Megan E O'Keefe ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ – Oh did I enjoy this. From the crystal people to the floating space armada that makes up a pirate city, this book was fun. While not Leverage-esque, I do feel like it was Leverage inspired, and while I don't entirely buy the romantic relationship, it reminded me of The Luminous Dead in that it is weird/cute/fucked up/interesting enough that I don't mind it. Would love to read again.
Light From Uncommon Stars by Ryka Aoki ⭐️⭐️ – This was not what I expected and I'm trying so hard not to hold that against it. It's fine as a Trans Story™️, cool as a Demon Contract story, and it's shit at being scifi. My hot take is the Stargate Donut angle was unnecessary and dragged everything down. I loved the scene with Katrina's final concert. Was bored by just about everything else. On top of it all, the narrator was so hard to listen to I went to see what else she has done and cancelled a hold I had that she also narrates.
Lost Souls Meet Under A Full Moon by Mizuki Tsujimura ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ – Oh. Ouch. But, like, in a good way. Bittersweet is the best way I can describe this. It's not sad, exactly, but there is a melancholy air to it. But there is also hope. There is also love. I really liked the way this was told, with the different characters each chapter and then the final chapter pulling everything together. The translation never felt wooden either, enough so that I looked to see if the translator worked on anything else I may be interested in. Would read again.
Lonely Castle in the Mirror by Mizuki Tsujimura ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ – Cute! Heartbreaking! Twisty turny! Endearingly hopeful! I loved trying to figure things out, I loved every single character, especially because everyone seemed real and well rounded. Flawed in a real way. I loved how everything came together. The world is big and scary, but you're not alone.
Slow Gods by Claire North ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️* – Stars subject to change, because I genuinely don't know how to rate this. I almost dropped it. I had trouble keeping up. I'm not sure I fully understood what was going on. I restarted it. I enjoyed what I comprehended. I got major autistic vibes from the main character, who may be an alien may be a god. It felt like Imperial Radch and also Murderbot. Still it was its own thing. I'd like to read it again to get a better feel for it, since rereading Ancillary Justice made me have a better understanding of everything.
Walking Practice by Dolki Min ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ – I think? I mean I had fun, it was a good time, but also what the hell did I just read. I've been describing this as An Alien Sexual Predator, Where The Sex Is Consensual But The Predation Is Not. It's like if Someone You Can Build A Nest In had a Bad Ending. Weird. Fucked up. Mind the warnings.
Kill the Beast by Serra Swift ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ – Groundbreaking? No. Fun? YES. Third act plot twist was obvious and guess what! It still stuck the landing! It still hurt! Kind of reminded me of a Kingfisher novel, the way it wove tales and humor and self loathing. Sure there were some things we could've delved deeper into, especially among the Hound Wardens, but it's still a good book! Didn't think about that while reading, only upon reflection, and I'm okay with that.
The Queen of Blood by Sarah Beth Durst ⭐️⭐️⭐️½ – Not my favorite SBD novel, but stil worth a read. I think the problem is I no longer care for Magical School plots when it revolves around the student learning. I don't find learning about the world through the lense of a student very interesting or engaging. HOWEVER! The world is in fact Very Neat, and the plot went where I had guessed but got there in ways that surprised me. The title alone. I don't want to spoil it, but it's doing some dual wielding. I'm interested in the sequels now that we (hopefully?) won't be following school life. I also love how the Mean Girl was treated.
The Reluctant Queen by Sarah Beth Durst ⭐️⭐️⭐️ – Made me reevaluate the first book, but in a good way. Yes, actually, that was done pretty well. This was too, but I still felt like we got the "here's your lesson plan" plot again. Sad that my fave was a traitor and died for it. Interesting to see the politics of this tree world. Wish we had characters interacting more with each other. I cheered every time Naelin did not choose Rennet. Still wish we had Merecot's story, she sounds SO interesting.
The Elsewhere Express by Samantha Sotto Yambao ⭐️⭐️ – I was so excited for this but left severely disappointed. Many scenes felt like they were written around single lines for the sole purpose of having nice Quotable Lines for tiktok and instagram, regardless of whether or not the lines actually fit. None of the characters got to sit with their emotions, often moving on from one thing to the next almost immediately. That could work within the context of the book, be a choice to make a point, but the execution did not hit. The choppy scene breaks were annoying to read and made worse with the introduction of not only time jumps (forward and back) but time travel. Which I still don't fully understand how it works. I like the idea of it, almost like Alice In Wonderland, but it ultimately didn't work for me.
Eat the Ones You Love by Sarah Maria Griffin ⭐️⭐️ – Another disappointment. I wanted killer plants. I wanted to look at the orchids in my house and feel Fear. I did not want relationship drama. There was a bit at the end with a car accident that was very neat and probably the only scene I truly enjoyed and felt engaged with. The audio did some neat things with the POV and overlapping narrators which was very cool, but otherwise completely Meh.
Vicious by VE Schwab ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ – Reread for book club! Keeping my old rating, because while I have more in depth opinions this time around, I did still have a fun time. The time jumping got to me in a way it didn't before. I don't know what to make of that. After reading ADSOM, I can now pinpoint authorisms of Schwabs that I do not vibe with. Like introducing characters for a page only to kill them. Lack of alive woman with any depth. I should read some of her later works. But overall, yeah I still had fun! Still love Mitch! Still think the ideas are neat!
The Queen of Sorrow by Sarah Beth Durst ⭐⭐– A solid series, but this is definitely the weakest of the three. It set up this really neat conclusion of harmony among spirits and humans and then. Didn't commit. We're back where we started. This one introduced a new romance out of nowhere as well as had TWO weddings. In the middle of trying to save the world. You know how I feel about that. Felt like some character deaths for more for convenience than anything else. Still loved seeing the other kingdoms, even if most of them were brief.
Cinder House by Freya Marske ⭐⭐⭐ – Overall good! A fun twist on the Cinderella story! I was feeling four stars until the weird voyeurism at the very end. It didn't fit the rest of the vibe of the story at all. On one hand, I wish it were a little longer to flesh the relationships out. On the other hand, I don't think I could have sat through more of the fairy tale style narrative. That, at least, is a me problem. Glad I read it, would recommend, but nothing for me to go feral over.
The Lonely Castle In the Mirror 1-5 by Mizuki Tsujimura ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ – Yes I did go and read the manga because how could I not. It was a great adaptation, but obviously the novel was more in depth about some things. I don't know if it was unclear in the movel or if I just missed it or of the manga made artistic decisions, but some things were a lot clearer than in the novel which made all the connections hit even harder. I love this series a lot and very much want to watch the movie!
I don't want to make this post longer than it already is. Goals for June are Read Murderbot. That's it. After that, I'm not sure I want to read a book ever again. Happy Pride month 🏳️🌈
Happy Pride!
Every couple years I get the strong impulse to reread the Lord of the Rings, even though I did not have a good time doing that even once
I know that impulse. I also get it with Jane Austen books. For me, it is because I do see that JRRT and JA did amazing things and the discussions around their work is so interesting and gets me every time. It's just that I still do not enjoy actually reading the books (funnily enough, I do love The Hobbit).
You know what? Same. I should reread the Hobbit instead of making myself suffer but there's a pretty edition of lotr that came out a couple years ago
Pretty editions are the devil's work! I definitely have bought books by authors I did not enjoy in the past just because of the temptation of beauty 😅
IT'S MY BOOK MONTH
After having been in the works since roughly 2015, EDGE OF THE WOODS is now almost in the world.
It's, uh, not the most mainstream take on werewolves and vampires, so my queer, disabled ass would appreciate anyone who feels like giving this little indie "contemporary fantasy with strong romantic elements" some love.
Here's the parts of the book that I, the author, love the most and am most excited about:
-- Main and major characters who are bisexual, gay, trans, and asexual. (Although the ace part admittedly isn't on-page in this book, it will come up in later books.)
-- A young woman who is a werewolf alpha, who starts out afraid of her power and ends up going absolutely fucking feral on some assholes.
-- A ridiculously self-indulgent sexy-ass vampire lord that I didn't have a fancast for until I watched the "Montero" music video
-- I managed to pull off a book-long running joke tribute to a single damn line in What We Do in the Shadows (but now I'm committed to it for two more books, so...)
-- Two characters who are Not Skinny and Not Ripped but who are EXTREMELY into each other's bodies, and extremely into enthusiastic consent.
Anyway, if any of this sounds interesting to you, consider adding this to your GoodReads list, or pre-ordering on Amazon (or waiting until May 18 and buying it from https://cityowlpress.com), or at least reblogging this post.
GoodReads: https://t.co/S8GojjREt3?amp=1 Amazon: https://t.co/QfrzaIB8g8?amp=1
Find content advisories and other stories (including free short fiction) on my website: http://julesrobinkelley.com
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Oh trust me, I’ve already got my ARC of this and it is *chef kiss*
Congrats on finding a really old post! Website is now juleskelleybooks dot com., I got the rights back and self-published and now the cover is different, but please have fun!