packetcat reads 2022 Week 39 – Iron Widow by Xiran Jay Zhao

Pages: 386
Purchased from: Kobo

Sometimes the main themes of the book are not always readily available at the surface but with this particular book, the theme is present all the right from page 1. That theme is anger, anger at the misogynist/sexist society depicted in the book.

The protagonist is angry all the time and its written in a very YA way…i.e in a straightforward way most of the way through. The emotions don’t start to get complicated until 3/4ths of the way through the book.

I am not really a YA enjoyer but I had a reasonably good time with this one. Definitely one of the best YA books I’ve read this week. The other one would be week 20’s We Hunt the Flame by Hafsah Faizal.

packetcat reads 2022 Week 38 – Ninth House by Leigh Bardugo

Pages: 522
Purchased from: Kobo

A mystery thriller with a side of trauma. This book was a very intense read in certain areas and definitely needs some trigger warnings for sexual assault and physical violence. That said, I enjoyed reading this quite a bit. I love the main character and the magical world that the author has created here. I’ve put the second book in my wishlist for later.

packetcat reads 2022 Week 36 – The Long Way to a Small, Angry Planet by Becky Chambers

Pages: 482
Purchased from: Kobo

Okay so, I finished this book in one five hour sitting on Monday. I haven’t finished a book in one sitting in years. This book is really good. Excellent characters, both alien and human with each alien species having very unique points of view and experiences.

Interactions between the Wayfarer’s characters which are the majority of this book’s contents are very well written and by the end of it I felt really connected with the characters. I may have cried a bit at multiple points in the book.

If you are a sci-fi fan, put this one in your queue, trust me you won’t regret it.

packetcat reads 2022 Week 35 – The Witness for the Dead by Katherine Addison

Pages: 303
Purchased from: Kobo

Essentially a story of a honest guy making the best of the very complicated situations he gets put in. The world here is based on Addison’s other novel The Goblin Emperor and it is a very interesting fantasy world with intriguing characters, weird religious practices and apparently a huge culture of drinking tea which I personally appreciate.

This was a short and comfortable read, I am looking forward to reading The Goblin Emperor at some point in the future.