Monthly Rewind: May 2026

Monthly Rewind: May 2026

B O O K S

In May, I read 5 books!

For transparency, every book marked with * are titles I received for free as I currently work at PRH UK.

First to Finish by Rebecca J. Caffery

Recovering from a breakup, driver Johannes Muller reaches an all time low. And its up to his race engineer, Caleb Hughes, to get his driver back in pole position.

I really hated Pole Position that I actually sworn off from reading the rest of this series. Until I found a copy of this in a charity shop for ยฃ2 so I thought to myself “why not?” That being said, this was 100% better than Pole Position, but Pole Position was like ten feet under in the ground for me. Like Pole Position, the book is mainly dragged by the tropes the author wanted to use instead of letting the story naturally grow into its own.

Johannes and Caleb are miles better than Kian and Harper. Even with the miscommunication, it felt more real and emotional. That being said, it was a decent read. Nothing to shout about but a silly fun quick read. Personally, this entire series just feels like low quality mush being published for the sake of following trends.

We Don’t Hear Crickets Anymore by Kel Bryon

A selection of Midwestern Gothic horrors that felt truly haunting and unsettling. Having loved The Lonely Broadcast series and now this, Kel Bryon has consolidated herself as an author I’ll always read.

A Gaze So Longing by River Flynn

In a palace ruled by a tyrant king, Favian has spent the last five years governed by fear. When the King’s only son and his first love, Leonardo, returns from the war, Favian must keep his distance or face the King’s wrath. But Leonardo is eager to return to their old ways unaware of how much his home has changed. Together, they must work together to topple the system or risk losing everything.

10000/10!!! I LOVE THIS SO MUCH!!! PLEASE IF YOU CAN, IT’S ONLY LIKE ยฃ4 ON SMASHWORDS. THE YEARNING, THE SADNESS, THE ANGER, EVERYTHING ABOUT THIS BOOK WAS SO GOOD.

Project Hail Mary by Andy Weir*

Ryland Grace has no memory of who he was and why he is currently aboard a tiny space ship alone. Only aware of an impending doom, he must fight to recall his memories or risk extinction-level threat to humanity.

Yes, I am five years late to the game. I’ve been recommended this book since its release and I only just got around to reading it, thinking I had enough time to see it in cinema. (I was in fact late to see it in cinemas, but I did buy it on YouTube and have already watched the film 4 times already….. )

I went into this not realising this was hard science fiction which did throw me off a bit but the book does a good job and still making it easy to understand. The audiobook is fantastic! I had to swap to audio during a car ride home and it was as Rocky would say: Amaze, amaze, amaze.

Tsubaki Stationary Store by Ito Ogawa*

A young woman returns to her hometown to inherit her late grandmother’s store and becomes a professional scribe to her community. As she takes on the request of her local community, she undercovers the secrets her grandmother had kept hidden from her. A charming story about the importance of community and the magic of the written word. It was adapted to a TV back in 2017 and I really wish it was available to watch here in the UK!


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: March 2025

Monthly Rewind: March 2025

A R T

Okay! So I’m giving you a little snippet of the art that I made for my team’s newsletter at work! Since it hasn’t been released yet, I don’t want to share the full art in case anyone from work is reading this post (if you are, hi ๐Ÿ‘‹๐Ÿผ) Since this one will be released around the same time of the company’s anniversary, this is a birthday artwork to celebrate Penguin’s 90th year as a company. I was super happy to work on this one especially as I grew up reading books from Penguin and Puffin (which is celebrating it’s 85th year!) so to be able to make a piece of art that will be shared internally was a super proud moment for me!

B O O K S

In March, I read 5 books, 2 short stories and 1 manga volume.

Pole Position by Rebecca J. Caffery

I know F1 romances have been a biiig thing for sports romance readers for a while and I’ll be honest, I have no interest in F1 at all. But something about sports fiction really intrigues me even when I have zero interest in sports. I was browsing the HarperCollins sale and those ladies on their TikTok livestreams do a great job at emptying your wallets because I did end up picking Pole Position. Sadly, I did not enjoy this one at all.

The more I read this book, the more I got annoyed at the characters. It’s a very easy to read book, but that’s the only nice thing I could say about it. It is a romance between two competitive race car drivers, Kian, an industry golden boy, and Harper, a cocky rookie, whose name is more known on the tabloids than it is on the roads. It was just SO bland. All these tropes shoved into one book and it still could not save Kian and Harper. How can you even call this enemies to lovers when the switch up happens in like a second and even then, WHY? Harper is annoying as hell, made even worse with his borderline constant sexual harassment of Kian. And Kian’s not that great either when he helps a drunk Harper and makes a move on him DESPITE his entire internal monologue being like let’s not mess with a drunk guy. *proceeds to mess around with a drunk guy* Why even bother making this an age gap romance when the both of them act much younger than their actual ages. Definitely not the one for me.

The Wizard’s Bakery by Gu Byeong-Mo

A young boy finds refuge in a magical bakery that is open all the time – which creates enchanted baked goods that can have devastating effect on its consumers. I really enjoyed this book but MY GOD, but I feel like I need to warn readers that this book touches about the subject of sexual assault and child abuse. The description and cover presents to you a story that appears to be whimsical and light-hearted. The main character is a young boy who runs away from home following abuse and is taken in by the bakery and in return helps the bakery owner run his online store. Here the boy discovers the devastating effects of magical enchanted goods. Different customers return after their goods fail to act out their wishes and the baker reminds them that magic has a cost and it will not bend to the will of the people who wish in bad faith. I thought the book was fantastic, but a lot darker and sinister than the marketing of this book would have you think.

The Age of Video Games by Jean Zeid & Rouge Emilie

What a lovely way to present and honour the history of video games that really manages to touch up all aspects of the industry! From Pong to even the current day mention of Genshin Impact and the impact of mobile free-to-play games! I wasn’t a fan of the art, but it is quite charming! The text is too much, I thought, some points in the book it just overwhelms the art on the page.

Continue reading “Monthly Rewind: March 2025”