Berkelouw Balgowlah - Book Reviews
Voyage of the Damned by Frances White
Reviewed by Kiah
Campy, carnivalesque, and intriguing, 'Voyage of the Damned' is a magical murder mystery from debut British author Frances White. Blending comedy, romance, and suspense, 'Voyage of the Damned' is a fun novel to add to your 'To Be Read' list. For... (continued)Dreadful by Caitlin Rozakis
Reviewed by Kiah
‘Legends and Lattes’ meets the unfathomable power of garlic in this splendid new addition to the cosy fantasy genre. Written by American author Caitlin Rozakis,‘Dreadful’ follows an amnesia-struck Dark Wizard grappling with an identity crisis, moral crisis, and world-en... (continued)The Ministry Of Time, Kaliane Bradley
Reviewed by Kiah
The Ministry of Time A few months from now, an unnamed British civil servant is offered a lucrative job in a mysterious new government ministry. She learns the government has discovered time travel, and that a number of 'expats' have been brought from different points in... (continued)"Oryx and Crake" (The Maddaddam Trilogy) by Margaret Atwood
Reviewed by Ro Roberts
At the end of the world, a young man watches the glow-in-the-dark rabbits frolic on a lonely beach, and he wonders where humanity went wrong. As he travels in search of supplies, memories of his former life waft back to him, dreamlike. He remembers his unforgiving existence, his ambitious best... (continued)"She Who Became The Sun" by Shelley Parker-Chan
Reviewed by Ro Roberts
In a poverty-stricken village, a young boy’s future is revealed by a fortune-teller: a path of unfathomable greatness and endless honour, a far-cry from his harsh existence. By morning, the child is dead. All that remains is his younger sister, her wits, and an unimaginable plan; to take... (continued)Author Spotlight: Becky Chambers
Reviewed by Eleanor Roberts
With three prestigious Hugo Awards under her belt (Wayfarers - Best Series 2019, A Psalm for the Wild Built - Best Novella 2022, A Prayer for the Crown Shy - Best Novella 2023), Becky Chambers is well and truly on her way to becoming science-fiction royalty. Her Wayfarers series (2014-2022) ha... (continued)Author Spotlight: Sarah J. Maas
Reviewed by Abbey
Sarah J. Maas is the epitome and arguably the catalyst for the Romantasy and New Adult genre. Start off with either her Throne of Glass series or her A Court of Thorns and Roses series, but be sure to read both before reading her Crescent City series. Maas is known within the fandom for &l... (continued)Where the Dark Stands Still by A.B. Poranek
Reviewed by Kiah
Howl's Moving Castle meets Polish folklore in this stunning book from first-time author A. B. Poranek. Add in a cursed forest, a twisted bargain, and a dash of Beauty and the Beast, and 'Where the Dark Stands Still' will be your new favourite romantasy to look forward to in 2024. ... (continued)Prophet by Helen Macdonald & Sin Blanché
Reviewed by Kiah
In a remote field in England, random objects start appearing. A bouquet of flowers, board games, a toy dinosaur, a motorbike jacket, even a whole American diner. These items are bright and nostalgic - treasured mementos from people’s pasts. But looking closer, there’s something not... (continued)"Fire Rush" by Jacqueline Crooks
Reviewed by Bianca
Set in London in the 1980s, Crooks' striking debut novel offers a captivating portrait of Black womanhood within the dub reggae scene. A story of resilience, loss, and finding your inner voice, Fire Rush is a brilliant work of literary fiction that will break your heart and heal it all at ... (continued)"Wandering Souls" by Cecile Pin
Reviewed by Bianca
"There are the goodbyes and then the fishing out of the bodies - everything in between is speculation" Longlisted for the 2023 Women's Prize for fiction, Wandering Souls tells the story of three tenacious young people fleeing political unrest in Vietnam after the withdrawal o... (continued)"All's Well" by Mona Awad
Reviewed by Audrey
Awad's exploration of chronic pain captivates you from the get go. Her enticing examination of marginalization and isolation through the prism of women's pain is incisive and filled with biting humour. Set amongst our protagonist Miranda's dogged attempt to stage Shakespeare's ... (continued)"Trust" by Hernan Diaz
Reviewed by Audrey
In Trust, 4 stories frame and then reframe the life of elusive businessman Andrew Bevel and his wife Mildred. The reader is drawn deeper into these lives with new text, examines the couples financial prowess in the tumult of the era of the Great Depression and then the murky circumstances rega... (continued)How To Be Remembered by Michael Thompson
Reviewed by Kiah
Tommy Llewellyn can't be remembered. Every year, on his birthday, all evidence of his existence vanishes. Photographs, hospital records, his birth certificate, and every memory people have of him are wiped away, leaving Tommy as the only one who remembers. With no answers to be found as to... (continued)The Last Tale of the Flower Bride by Roshani Chokshi
Reviewed by Kiah
Once, a man who studied fairy tales met a mysterious woman called Indigo Maxwell-Casteñada. They fell in love and decided to marry, but Indigo had one condition: do not ask about her past. Do not look, do not pry. The man agreed, and they were wed. But whe... (continued)The Adventures of Amina al-Sirafi by Shannon Chakraborty
Reviewed by Kiah
"God as my witness, none of this ever would have happened if it were not for those two fools back in Salalah. Them and their map." Amina al-Sirafi was once an infamous pirate captain, with stories of her escapades, numerous husbands, and rumoured dealings with djinn and demons s... (continued)A Kind of Magic
Reviewed by Kat
A love letter to those of us who spend life trying to win a wrestling match against our minds – Spargo-Ryan writes mental illness as I have never read it before, walking us through the unreliability of memory and the unexplainable agony of anxiety to tell her story. A Kind of Magic is a ... (continued)All My Rage
Reviewed by Bianca
All My Rage is both a heart-warming and heart-breaking story about two Pakistani-American Muslim young people trying to survive the hardships of life in Juniper, California. Winner of the National Book Award for Young People’s Literature, this novel is another example of Tahir’s be... (continued)The House with the Golden Door
Reviewed by Bianca
The sequel to Elodie Harper’s outstanding historical fiction, The Wolf Den, The House with the Golden Door continues Amara’s story of struggle and love in the beautiful, dangerous, and tantalising world of Ancient Pompeii. Seamlessly blending fact and fiction, this narrative effort... (continued)Joan
Reviewed by Bianca
Katharine J. Chen brings Joan of Arc to life in this brilliant historical fiction. From her difficult childhood as an outcast in the small village of Domrémy to her position as the renowned leader of the French army, Chen recreates Joan as strong-willed, powerful warrior with a skill an... (continued)