Monthly Rewind: March 2026

Monthly Rewind: March 2026

L I F E

This March, I celebrated my 28th birthday! I don’t really celebrate birthdays anymore but this year, I decided to go see My Neighbour Totoro in theatre! I love how they brought to life the story and magic of Ghibli to stage! Bravo to the team bringing Totoro to life, I gasped so loudly when I first saw him on stage.

B O O K S

In March, I read 6 books!

For transparency, every book marked with * are titles I received for free as I currently work at PRH UK. Books marked **are PRH UK books but I purchased them with my own money.

Eternal Shadows

When the King of Darkness dies suddenly, a battle ensues among those next in line. One wielder of each element is selected by the land to compete in six deadly games. The winner takes the crown. Unaware of being one of the last Light wielders. Aurora has no idea what she’s up against and when the old King’s son, Sterling, takes an interest in her, she is in a fight for her life.

Everything I hate in a book, I found it in here. Overuse of clichรฉ tropes and an embarrassing main character that lacks any real character development. Like, girl, if you don’t stand up for yourself…..

I don’t even want to talk about Sterling or I will throw up.

Our Sunny Days, Volume 1

Sung Ho settles for life in the Korean countryside when he suddenly becomes a single father to a baby girl. With no support, he finds himself butting heads with Kwon Haebeom, the grumpy village head, who seems to have it out for him. Can the two move past their first impressions and find friendship in each other?

BEST MANWHA EVER. When I discovered this was coming to print in English, I almost cried. If you’re new to BLs, then let this be the first one you read. It is sweet, hilarious and so wholesome. A beautiful found family surrounding the small village of Nuldongmae. His bald ass baby is the cutest manhwa baby ever!!!!!! This is also the same author of Unromantic Romance which is another amazing webtoon!

You Weren’t Meant to Be Human

A body horror novel about parasitic hives that are found all around the US which offer struggling humans a new community in exchange for loyalty to the Hive. Crane is a young autistic trans man who has been following the hive for a few years now and finds himself going through an unwanted pregnancy where the hive is determined he goes through with the pregnancy.

This book genuinely left me so shocked. A lot of reviews describe this book as splatterpunk which I’ve not read before and while this book is incredible, it has made me aware that I don’t think this is a genre I’ll be reading that often. It is a gory page turning read. I will be definitely looking into more of Andrew Joseph White’s books.

I actually read this as part of the Trans Right Readathon, but I ended up getting sick just as the readathon started so this was the only book I managed to read. ๐Ÿ˜ฆ

The Water and the Wild*

A novel in verse about a young girl in grief moves to Ireland where her father is now buried and discovers a secret within the father’s hometown.

Fia and the Last Snow Deer is one of my favourite books and Eilish Fisher returns with an even more powerful sequel. Rowan and her mother move from the US to Ireland in hopes of finding peace in her father’s home town – the one he had left so many years ago. But something is odd about the town and The Wall that surrounds it. An open secret amongst the people that they must fix the wall or else. When Rowan sneaks beyond The Wall, she discovers a horse and for the first time in forever, she feels at peace. But will this peace come at a cost? I would’ve loved to have seen the same illustrator for Fia and the Last Snow Deer, but there’s something so haunting about David Rooney’s art that fits so perfectly for this story. I was immediately enthralled. I can see Eilish Fisher becoming a classic children’s author in the future.

The Anthropocene Reviewed** (Published by Ebury but I purchased the e-book)

A collection of personal essays from author John Green. Originally a podcast, he reviews different aspects of our human-centered history and rating them on a five-star scale.

I decided to read this on a whim as I noticed it was the only John Green book I haven’t read. (I had read most of his fictional books as a teen! Yes… I was a 2012 Tumblr girl…..) I was mainly put off from reading this as I had listened the podcast over lockdown so I was already familiar with a lot of the content. However, there are six new exclusive pieces to the published version! It was great, especially if you’re new to John’s non-fiction work but I would recommend listening to the podcast!

The Amberglow Candy Store** (Published by Michael Joseph but I purchased the book)

At the end of Gloaming Lane, there lies the Amberglow Candy Store, only open between the full moon and the new moon and manned by a half-fox man called Kogetsu who promises confection that changes the lives of his customers. Customers range from a teenage girl worrying about her strained relationship to a struggling first time mother. The stories are lovely and offer a great reflection on the complex nature of human relationships as Kogetsu watches the aftereffect of his creations, eager to understand how humans work.


Thatโ€™s it for this month! Tell me what went on in YOUR life this month! What sort of things was important for you this month? New obsessions? New TV shows? Or book? Any new song recs (Iโ€™m always open to new music!)? Best books you read this month?

Monthly Rewind: July 2025

Monthly Rewind: July 2025

L I F E

A bit late for this month, partially because I’ve been sick the last week or so! But I’m slowly feeling human again. ๐Ÿ˜…I had a fun month at work in July as Penguin Random House was celebrating its 90th anniversary! The entire year so far has been filled with numerous events for the occasion, but as July 30th was its official date, a lot was happening at work! I volunteered for the ‘Nothing Like A Book‘ event, which was held at the Truman Brewery on July 19th and 20th, 2025. I volunteered on the 19th at the Book Nook, giving out free books to anyone who stopped by. When I initially volunteered, I wasn’t expecting to be given such a front-facing role. The introvert in me was actually dying the entire time. ๐Ÿ˜… But it was so lovely meeting everyone who came by the stall!

I know there isn’t much of an overlap between my audience here and on Twitch but I do like giving updates here when I can. I now officially have a new model that will be used for streams from now onwards. I commissioned a lovely artist called artsy_vii who creates these adorable pixel png models! I’ve been waiting since early this year for their commission list to open up so I could have a new model of my OC, Nara. I will miss the models I created myself but I’ve been wanted a new model for consistency for a while now and I love what I got from Vii!!!

Continue reading “Monthly Rewind: July 2025”

Books That Defined My Decade

Books That Defined My Decade

This post was entirely inspired by Kate @ Your Tita Kate’s post, The Books That Defined My decade. I never thought to even reflect on my decade, but after reading Kate’s post, I immediately wanted to do the same.

I have a terrible memory, so I don’t remember much from my childhood, which makes me feel like I didn’t genuinely exist until 2010. At the start of this decade, I was eleven years old, turning twelve that March and, at the time of writing this post, I am twenty-one, about to turn twenty-two this March. I went from primary school, secondary school, college and university all in this decade alone. And just thinking about that blows my mind. In some sense, it shouldn’t because it’s just time passing but, at the same time, that is a lot of significant milestones in my life. I went from a child to a young adult, and reading Kate’s post made me realise that’s not a small thing. Reading is a big part of my identity, especially during this decade is where I had more choice over the books I read. While Kate’s post is more about books published in each specific year, my list is naming the books that I read in that year that made the most significant impact on me. So not all of them were great reads, but I feel like they deserve some acknowledge from impacting me in some way.

I’m going off what years I’ve put in my Goodreads profile but I feel like I might be off by a year or so hence I’ve added some books here that I actually read in 2009.

  • Thiefย – Despite Malorie Blackman being of the UK’s most beloved children’s author, I never read her acclaimed series Noughts & Crosses. Instead of the books, I knew her by wereย Thiefย andย Hacker. I think this part is due to the face we didn’t have her books in my primary school library. (Maybe we did, and it was always being borrowed?) But anyway, I found Thief by accident when someone had randomly left it lying around after Golden Time. (lol remember Golden Time?) Anyway, someone remind me actually to read Noughts & Crosses in this decade.
  • Theodore Boone – The early 2010s was before I joined proper social media, so my ability to find books were severely limited. I don’t even remember how I managed to find Theodore Boone because it wasn’t from my school library, nor did anyone buy it for me. But I loved this series a lot as a kid. I used to watch a lot of crime shows with my family, so reading a series set in a similar environment to all the shows I was watching, but with a protagonist my age blew my mind.
  • The Lighting Thief – Funnily enough, this was the last time I actually up a Rick Riordan book before picking up the second one in 2019. I really lovedย The Lightning Thief, but my school library didn’t have the rest of the series so sadly, and with my fish brain that forgets everything every five seconds, I never got around to finishing this series. I tried continuing the series, but life got in the way. I really hope to get back to this series soon.ย 
Continue reading “Books That Defined My Decade”

Monthly Rewind: July 2019

Monthly Rewind: July 2019

B O O K S

During the month of July, I read 7 books.

The Ressurrectionist of Caligo | Gods of Jade and Shadow | Aphrodite Made Me Do It | Mooncakes

SLAY | Verify | Turtles All The Way Down

M U S I C

So Am I | Room Shaker | Sunset | We All Lie | Beautiful People | Crown | BROWN SKIN GIRL| Another Place

P O S T S

A feature section to highlight my favourite posts from my fellow bloggers that were posted this month. 

  • Jade War Blog Tour! – I had the pleasure of being accepted into the blog tour for the amazing Jade War by Fonda Lee. I absolutely loved Jade City, and Jade War was a complete smash! Please check out everyone’s amazing contributions to this tour!

Thatโ€™s it for this month! Tell me what went on in YOUR life this month! What sort of things was important for you this month? New obsessions? New TV shows? Or book? Any new song recs (Iโ€™m always open to new music!)? Best books you read this month?

BOOK REVIEW: The Fault In Our Stars by John Green

you can find the book at:

GoodReads
Amazon
Barnes and Noble
Author Website

goodreads summary:

Despite the tumor-shrinking medical miracle that has bought her a few years, Hazel has never been anything but terminal, her final chapter inscribed upon diagnosis. But when a gorgeous plot twist named Augustus Waters suddenly appears at Cancer Kid Support Group, Hazel’s story is about to be completely rewritten.

my review:

Rating:
โ˜…โ˜…โ˜†โ˜†โ˜†

(This review is a reposted one from my old GoodReads Account but my opinion on this book has changed making it a 2 instead of a 5 )

My initial reactions to this book were pretty similar to the rest of Green’s fans. I enjoyed the story and characters, and it was an exciting read in the end. I liked how it was about coming to terms with the fact that your life will almost never rise above insignificance. However, three years have passed since I first read TFIOS and my view on the book has changed considerably. TFIOS isnโ€™t a bad book, but itโ€™s standard and very similar to the other works of Green.ย And I understand why so many readers would have had such an emotional response to the book. Books about death are often upsetting & thought to provoke- looking back on this, I didn’t find it either.

I don’t believe in Hazel and Augustus the same way anymore. Their dialogue is contrived and ridiculous. Augustus was just created to spew aย plethora of metaphors.And there’s the other problem I have with Augustus and Hazel: their romance feels like a plot construction far more than it feels like a real passion. In Green’s other books, although I didn’t enjoy them, I understood the romance. Augustus Waters just shows up in Hazel’s cancer support group and stares at her, and she just swoons at him. Thatโ€™s almost as bad as Bella Swan falling in love with Edward Cullen even though he apparently hates her. Green attempts to play it cool by having Hazel recognise that she’d be creeped out if it were an ugly guy staring at her, but that doesn’t make their love affair any less sudden, but the plot won’t work if they aren’t in love, so it happens.

Also, Hazel is not a believable character, we learn nothing about her. She just hates Support Group and loves Augustus for reasons that were never adequately announced throughout the book. The idea that he spends money just so he can act out a metaphor that doesn’t do anything but make him look like a pretentious idiot.

But the strength of The Fault in Our Stars is that it refuses to offer false comfort regarding a subject matter that we all know doesnโ€™t have a happy ending. We are all going to die, but we live our lives pretending that words like “forever” or “always” have meant something to us. Maybe that’s why it worked so well with so many readers, it did for me at first.

I guess this book would have been better for me to read if it had been about what happened to Peter Van Houten and his life in Amsterdam with Hazel and Gus coming to see him or Hazel with her actual terminal cancer. It would have been better to read Hazelโ€™s cancer to conflict with her ability to be with Gus, rather than give her a weird miracle drug.

And that’s why The Fault in Our Starsย no longer impacts me as much as it did the first time reading it.