Category: review

Across a Field of Starlight

Across a Field of Starlight

I received this at no cost from NetGalley! This book is a nonstop SPACE ADVENTURE featuring A REAL ACTUAL NONBINARY PERSON and it’s effortlessly queer. The art is fantastic, IT’S SET IN SPACE, it’s a concept that’s like, “what if Star Wars was actually good and featured regular people rather than Just Luke Skywalker And […]

Posted March 25, 2022 by geograph in review / 1 Comment

Bite-sized reviews: Late March edition

I am so stressed and so sick! Great! Let’s get into these reviews. Thanks to NetGalley who keeps approving me for books even though really I should chill out. THE CITY OF DUSK incredibly dense Really intense Not the best thing to read when you are stressed and sick (unless it becomes a comfort read […]

Posted March 20, 2022 by geograph in mini reviews / 1 Comment

The Best Liars in Riverview | Confession is a word that can mean a couple of different things

In the woods of a small Kentucky town, Aubrey sets off on a journey about growing up, self-discovery, and acceptance while searching for their missing best friend–perfect for fans of King and the Dragonflies and Three Times Lucky.  Aubrey and Joel are like two tomato vines that grew along the same crooked fence–weird, yet the same kind of […]

Posted March 13, 2022 by geograph in nonbinary, review / 1 Comment
A Quick and Easy Guide to Asexuality: the spectrum is complicated, and humans are more than a binary

A Quick and Easy Guide to Asexuality: the spectrum is complicated, and humans are more than a binary

“I always call the way I flirt ‘Jane Benneting’, after the oldest sister in Pride and Prejudice. She’s so nice to everyone that no one knows she’s partial to Mr. Bingley.” (What a mood!) This is truly a quick and easy guide to asexuality! It’s quick, it’s easy, it doesn’t have a plot but it’s […]

Posted March 7, 2022 by geograph in nonfiction, review / 1 Comment

Bite-sized reviews and the end of spring break!

I received all these books at no cost from NetGalley! The World Cannot Give This is like…. a sapphic, dark academia A Separate Peace? You ever been a teenager and growing up is hard and nobody understands? That’s basically the summary of Laura Stearns. And then she joins a weirdly intense school church choir and […]

Posted March 7, 2022 by geograph in mini reviews / 3 Comments

The Atlas Six: Knowledge is Carnage

The Alexandrian Society, caretakers of lost knowledge from the greatest civilizations of antiquity, are the foremost secret society of magical academicians in the world. Those who earn a place among the Alexandrians will secure a life of wealth, power, and prestige beyond their wildest dreams, and each decade, only the six most uniquely talented magicians […]

Posted March 1, 2022 by geograph in review, Uncategorized, YA / 1 Comment