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becca's next chapter

book reviews

03.20.26 | leave a comment

Review: And Now, Back to You by B.K. Borison

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

Jackson and Delilah have to figure out how to work together. Having only run into each other a few times, they are now sharing an assignment to cover a huge snowstorm.
The two couldn’t be more different. After becoming a parent figure at a young age, Jackson is careful, diligent, and hates cameras. Delilah loves the spotlight and chaos, is bold, and spontaneous. Still, they have some deep things in common, and the chemistry heats up between them seemingly in no time. These (nearly but not quite enemy) colleagues become friends, and then much more.

“I can love you in the mountains and I can love you back home. Watch and see how good I’m going to be at it.”

🛏️ there’s only one bed
🧍‍♀️🧍‍♂️ forced proximity
☁️ ☀️ grumpy/sunshine
🧲 opposites attract

I really didn’t think I’d love this as much as the first in the series, but I was WRONG.
I love it just as much.

I love Jackson and I’d love for him to talk more about weather… and anything, really.

“Be too much with me.”

03.20.26 | leave a comment

Review: Wild Reverence by Rebecca Ross

“My home is your home. My arms are a haven for you to rest. My last name is yours if you desire it. I will love you to my grave, and even beyond it, when the mists welcome me, when I am hopefully very old and gray and grouchy and have spent the seasons beside you when you are here and dreaming of you when you are gone.
I love you dearly, Red.
Come home to me. Return to me, when you can. I will be watching the skies and the river until then.”

5/5 ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

Divine Rivals and Ruthless Vows have remained some of my favorite books since they were released, so I was incredibly excited when it was announced Ross was writing a book in the same world.

“She was the Skyward goddess of music, and in my father’s hall, her songs had often been jubilant, powerful, cascading melodies. They stirred our blood; they made us dance and remember the old stories, the mist-laden myths from which we had emerged. They were so moving we exchanged the songs as currency. But in the mortal, realm,. Enva’s music was much different. It was sorrowful, full of yearning. It chased human hearts and their pain; it also filled the cavities that Death inspired.”

Letters of Enchantment manages to tell its own story while still building onto that world. Enva and Dacre are not the main focus, but rather Matilda, the herald of the gods. Matilda was born not a full Underling nor Skyward, with something out of place in her stars. Matilda connects with Vincent in his dreams as a child, and eventually her journey brings her to him, with a letter from the goddess of death.

Everything keeps Vincent and Matilda apart, in the mortal realm and in the divine realms. But together they are a force, complex, and relentless.

“If you asked me, I would wait for you until only my bones remained on upon the altar.”

Ross’s prose is outstanding, emotional, and brings her characters to life. I beg for another story in this world.

“I thought of her, often. I thought of her when I sat in the hall with my father and brothers, and when I practiced sparring in the courtyard. When I stood on the parapets and watched the river flow, and when I passed my uncle in the corridors, wincing when he clapped me on the shoulder with a wink of his beady eye. When I was supposed to be listening to my lectures on geography, arithmetic, poetry, warfare, alchemy. Astronomy. I thought of her when I lay down at night. Matilda, however, had vanished. She no longer met me in dreams, despite my longing to see her again.”

Thank you netgalley and SMP for an advanced e-copy of this book.

03.20.26 | 1 Comment

Review: The Everlasting by Alix E. Harrow

“I loved you by then, or would soon, or always had. It was inevitable, foretold: When I look up, I will see the sky; when I fight, I will win; when I meet Owen Mallory, I will love him.”


5/5 ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

King Arthur x Groundhog Day vibes.

Owen Mallory is a worn-out scholar who becomes captivated by the legend of Sir Una Everlasting, the knight whose death helped shape an entire nation. When Owen is hurled back in time and into Una’s true story, the two find themselves repeating a cycle they have lived countless times, each one ending in tragedy. If they want a different ending, they need to reshape a history that their entire world depends on.

Harrow seamlessly blends epic fantasy with genuinely emotional storytelling. Una and Owen’s connection feels raw and real, and watching their bond evolve across timelines is both heartbreaking and hopeful. Harrow’s writing is stunning, moving between humor, heartbreak, and commentary on storytelling and the forces that drive a nation. The time loop structure is brilliant, making every return to the past feel more devastating and more meaningful.

“Let us lie here forever. Let us be buried as wild things are, by tooth and claw and worm. Let the grasses grow up through the sockets of our eyes. Let them find us in seven years or seventy, and let their brows furrow, because they cannot tell my bones from yours.”

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