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Wednesday, 24 June 2026
Reread: The Enchanted Greenhouse by Sarah Beth Durst
Monday, 22 June 2026
Reread: The Spellshop by Sarah Beth Durst
Sunday, 21 June 2026
Weekly recap 21 Jun 26
Happy Sunday, all! Welcome to the weekly recap.
This week, I reviewed
The Little House that Needed a Witch - a gorgeous picture book
Cursed Ever After - Curses, magic and an awful lot of snark
The Princess Diaries Graphic Novel - A new version of the story we all know
Princess (Apparently) - Rags to riches in the Caribbean
This week, I read
It's for your own Good - teen thriller
If we Survive the Night - zombies and teens in care
Highlander - yes, the awesome movie
The Quickening - laws meant to protect babies go too far
Apparently I wanted All The Kinds Of Survival this week. Also, I deliberately put two of these together, and if you know which two and why you get an internet cookie. 🍪
Coming up
Sci fi? Teen games? There's a mix this time.
Saturday, 20 June 2026
Princess (Apparently) by Siren Knight
Friday, 19 June 2026
The Princess Diaries Graphic Novel by Meg Cabot and Bethany Crandail
Thursday, 18 June 2026
Happy #BookBirthday! 18 June 2026
Happy Thursday! This week there are THREE books on our lists publishing!
Wednesday, 17 June 2026
Cursed Ever After by Andy C Naranjo
Monday, 15 June 2026
The Little House that Needed a Witch by Sophie Pluim
When the witch who lived in a little house deep in the forest is gone, the house decides the obvious solution is to find itself a new witch.
📚 Pre-Reading Thoughts
There's something immediately appealing about a premise where a house is the one taking action. Houses in children's stories are often places of safety, but they're usually passive. This little house has other ideas.
Also, any story that begins with a lonely, mobile house wandering through the forest looking for a purpose already has my attention.
📖 Post-Reading
As I thought…
- This is a wonderfully gentle story. Even though it begins with loss, it never feels sad in a frightening or overwhelming way.
- The house itself is immediately lovable. Its determination to solve its own problem gives the story warmth and humour from the very first pages.
- The tone strikes a lovely balance between magical and matter-of-fact. A house deciding to stand up and go for a walk is treated as entirely reasonable, which somehow makes it feel even more magical.
It surprised me by...
- How comforting the story's view of change is. The old witch's departure is clearly significant, but the book focuses on what comes next rather than what has been lost.
- The reactions of the characters the house meets. Nobody seems especially alarmed that a house is wandering around the forest looking for a witch, which creates the delightful impression that this sort of thing happens all the time.
- The ending. I particularly loved that the new witch settles where the house originally stood rather than forcing the house to relocate permanently. It gives the story a lovely sense of continuity and belonging.
And perhaps my favourite detail of all is tucked into the artwork. The illustrations suggest that the old witch becomes a tree rather than simply dying and disappearing. As the seasons pass, the tree grows and flourishes, quietly remaining part of the landscape.
It's such a gentle, beautiful way of depicting the idea that someone can be gone and still remain part of the world around us.
🌈 Vibe Check
- Colour Palette: moss green, mushroom brown, warm wood, autumn gold
- Season: all four seasons turning quietly through the forest
- Mood: comforting, whimsical, hopeful
- Scent: damp earth, fallen leaves, woodsmoke drifting through trees
- Setting: the sort of forest where magical things happen so regularly that nobody bothers to mention it
👀 For fans of
- The House in the Cerulean Sea for its gentle kindness and found-family spirit
- stories where homes are just as important as the people who live in them
- cosy fantasy that feels like a warm blanket on a rainy afternoon
This is a story about endings, new beginnings, and finding where you belong—but wrapped in such warmth and gentleness that it never feels heavy. Just sweet, thoughtful, and quietly magical. The sort of picture book that lingers long after you've closed it.
The Little House that Needed a Witch publishes on the 15th of September, 2026. I am giving an honest review.
Sunday, 14 June 2026
Weekly recap 14th June 2026
Happy Sunday, all! Welcome to the weekly recap. The weather's getting a bit better here.
This week, I read
The Summer my Wishes came true - tween magic and friendships
The Inheritance - terrifying thriller
50 True Stories that will Scare you to Death - real life stories that will leave you gasping
If Books Could Kill - meta fun with genre conventions
This week, I read
It's a Spellshop reread because - drumroll please - I got an ARC of the fourth book! Look out for the reviews coming up soon.
Coming up
It's a mix of genres and a pun that makes me laugh every time.
Saturday, 13 June 2026
If Books Could Kill by Kate Eberle
Friday, 12 June 2026
50 True Stories that will Scare you to Death by Sebastian Krahl
Thursday, 11 June 2026
Happy #BookBirthday! 11 Jun 2026
Happy Thursday! This week there are THREE books on our lists publishing!
Wednesday, 10 June 2026
The Inheritance by Gemma Denham
Monday, 8 June 2026
The Summer my Wishes Came True by Radhika Sanghani
Sunday, 7 June 2026
Weekly recap 7th June 2026
Happy Sunday, all! Welcome to the weekly recap. It's been wet and miserable here, hope it's better where you are!
This week I read
The Reimagining of Thornwood House - patience, found family and a house that's gone walkabout
No one Leaves the Manor - terror and mystery in a decadent manor
All we Have Left - romance and paperwork after the apocalypse
Five Total Strangers - claustrophobic driving through a snowstorm with a killer
This week, I read
The Summer My Wishes came True - magic powers fix all tween problems, right?
If Books Could Kill - meta fun with genres
My brain absolutely refused to settle on a Thing this week, which is perfectly fine. Completely fine. Not frustrating at all.
Coming up
Oh, it's a fun reread! I'm so excited for this.
My Maybe List is currently sitting at 47 books. That's about average for me! My quest to read every cosy fantasy novel published continues, with 19 Fantasy books on the list. There's also 8 Contemporaries, 7 Horror — Halloween is coming, y'all! — 5 Mysteries, 4 Sci Fi, 2 Non-Fiction and 2 Romance.
So yes, we can clearly see where my reading heart lies. Ironically, it isn't in Romance.
Saturday, 6 June 2026
Five Total Strangers by Natalie D Richards
Friday, 5 June 2026
All we Have Left by Emily Paxman
Thursday, 4 June 2026
Happy #BookBirthday! 4th Jun 26
Happy Thursday! This week there are TEN books on our lists publishing!