Top Ten Tuesday is a meme hosted by That Artsy Reader Girl, featuring a different top 10 theme each week. I wasn’t particularly into this week’s topic (Secondary/Minor Characters Who Deserve Their Own Book), but since I missed TTT last week, I decided to go ahead and do that topic instead!
My list this week is is Books on My Fall 2023 To-read List. My list includes combination of upcoming new releases, books I already own but haven’t read yet, and one on my library hold list.
My top 10 for fall are:
Bookshops & Bonedust by Travis Baldree
Starter Villain by John Scalzi
The Wake-Up Call by Beth O’Leary
The Bell in the Fog by Lev AC Rosen
Fourth Wing by Rebecca Yarros
Black Sheep by Rachel Harrison
The Wild Silence by Raynor Winn
Heartsong by TJ Klune
The Beginning of Everything by Jackie Fraser
The Scandalous Confessions of Lydia Bennet, Witch by Melinda Taub
What books are you most excited for this fall? Do we have any in common?
Wishing a very happy book birthday to Ravensong by TJ Klune!
I’m loving the shiny new reissues of TJ Klune’s Green Creek books, and today it’s Ravensong‘s turn! Originally published in 2018, the new hardcover edition of Ravensong — #2 in the series — is now available, released today by Tor Publishing.
This new edition is gorgeous, but the amazingness doesn’t stop at the cover — I fell hard for this series, and loved reading Ravensong. My review from earlier in the summer is here.
The remaining two books in the series will be reissued in 2024… but since the Kindle editions are available now, chances are I’ll be reading Heartsong and Brothersong much sooner than that!
Top Ten Tuesday is a meme hosted by That Artsy Reader Girl, featuring a different top 10 theme each week. This week’s topic is Forgotten Backlist Titles (Spread love for books that people don’t talk about much anymore!).
I’m not sure that I’d consider these books “forgotten” — but I’ve put together a list of earlier books by authors with more recent books making a big splash. Here are my ten:
1) Green Creek series by TJ Klune: This may be a bit of a cheat, since this series is being reissued this year and next. TJ Klune broke into bestseller stardom with The House in the Cerulean Sea in 2020, but before that, his books included this outstanding werewolf series (of which, I’ve read books 1 & 2 — Wolfsong and Ravensong — and can’t wait to dive into 3 & 4!)
2) Lord John books by Diana Gabaldon: Sure, everyone knows about Outlander, but die-hard fans also read the Lord John books, which fill in critical pieces of LJ’s story and help a lot by the time you get to later books in the Outlander series as well.
3) Maybe in Another Life by Taylor Jenkins Reid: This was my TJR gateway book! Before Daisy Jones or Evelyn Hugo, I read this one, then all of her earlier books. These books deserve love too!
4) A Wizard’s Guide to Defensive Bakingby T Kingfisher: I loved this magical fantasy! My first introductions to T Kingfisher were horror novels, but going back and reading her fantasy stories is a total kick.
5) River of Teeth by Sarah Gailey: This author has had some big hits since, but I will never get tired of talking about the American Hippo books!
6) The Darkest Part of the Forest by Holly Black: I’ve since read many more Holly Black books, including the Folk of the Air series (my favorite) — but I remember loving this one, and have been thinking I should go back for a reread.
7) The Android’s Dream by John Scalzi: You really can’t go wrong with a Scalzi book. I don’t know many people who’ve read this one, but it’s hilarious (especially if you listen to the audiobook version).
8) The Pact by Jodi Picoult: This author is a huge bestseller, but of all her books, this is the one that’s really stayed with me across the years. It’s the first of her books that I ever read, and maybe because of the combination of subject matter and the particular time in my life that I read it, it’s haunted me ever since.
9) Rosie Hopkins series by Jenny Colgan: I love this author’s books, with their sunny outlook on life, quirky characters, and cakes, cookies, and candies to die for! I feel like this series is very under-the-radar, but I thought it was a stand-out.
10) Newsflesh series by Mira Grant: Mira Grant is one of Seanan McGuire’s pen names, under which she writes terrific horror. This series is outstanding, and I don’t know that I’d consider it forgotten in any way… but I just don’t see it getting mentioned very often. I love these books, and recommend them whenever I get a chance.
Have you read any of my backlist books? What backlist books do you wish more people would read?
If you did a TTT post this week, please share your link!
Title: Ravensong Series: Green Creek Author: TJ Klune Publisher: Tor Books Publication date: August 1, 2023 (originally published 2018) Length: 512 pages Genre: Fantasy Source: Review copy courtesy of the publisher via NetGalley Rating:
⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
Rating: 4.5 out of 5.
The beloved fantasy romance sensation by New York Times bestselling author TJ Klune, about love, loyalty, betrayal, and joy. The Bennett family has a secret. They’re not just a family, they’re a pack . Ravensong is Gordo Livingstone’s story.
Gordo Livingstone never forgot the lessons carved into his skin. Hardened by the betrayal of a pack who left him behind, he sought solace in the garage in his tiny mountain town, vowing never again to involve himself in the affairs of wolves. It should have been enough. And it was, until the wolves came back, and with them, Mark Bennett. In the end, they faced the beast together as a pack… and won.
Now, a year later, Gordo has found himself once again the witch of the Bennett pack. Green Creek has settled after the death of Richard Collins, and Gordo constantly struggles to ignore Mark and the song that howls between them. But time is running out. Something is coming. And this time, it’s crawling from within. Some bonds, no matter how strong, were made to be broken.
The Green Creek Series is for adult readers. Now available from Tor Books.
You many have seen my super-gushy lovefest review of Wolfsong, the first book in TJ Klune’s Green Creek series. You may be wondering — can she keep this up? Will she love the rest of the series, and write yet more super-gushy lovefest reviews?
Yes. Yes, I can. Yes, I will.
Ravensong picks up after the events of Wolfsong (read these books in order, my friends!), but also fills in backstory for this book’s main character, Gordo Livingstone.
We meet Gordo in Wolfsong when he befriends a young Ox Matheson, then twelve years old, abandoned by his father, and desperately lost. Gordo takes Ox in, becomes a friend and father-figure to him, and gives him connection, found family, and a place to belong.
Gordo — besides being the town mechanic — is also witch to the Bennett werewolf pack. Gordo’s magic is embedded in the elaborate tattoos that cover his arms. He’s powerful, but he also has secrets and hidden pain.
In Ravensong, we learn more about Gordo’s past and why he holds on to such bitterness toward the Bennetts. As a boy, Gordo watched his father Robert Livingstone serve as witch to the Bennett Alpha, Abel. At far too young an age, Robert and Abel tattooed the magic into Gordo, and introduced him to the world of witches and werewolves. Yet despite the pain involved, Gordo also found a home with the Bennetts, particularly with Abel’s son Thomas, next in line to be Alpha, and with Thomas’s brother Mark, a kind boy slightly older than Gordo who seemed determined to protect Gordo, even when he didn’t want protection.
After tragedy strikes, Gordo becomes the official witch to the pack — but when a fresh, devastating tragedy occurs, Gordo is left behind. He’s abandoned by the people who are supposed to be his family, and he’s left behind by Mark, who only recently declared Gordo his mate. Gordo stays in Green Creek, but he’s hurt and angry.
When the Bennetts return years later, Gordo has made a life for himself with his garage, the group of (ridiculous) guys who work there, and with Ox, his ward and son-figure. And even as he’s drawn back into the life and struggles of the pack, he never forgives them — or Mark — for the betrayal so many years earlier.
The first third or so of Ravensong gives us all of this history, which is touching and allows us to know Gordo in a different, more complicated way than in Wolfsong. For the remainder of the book, Gordo is deeply enmeshed in the pack’s looming battle against dangerous enemies who seek to destroy the Bennett pack once and for all. The danger strikes deeply at the foundations of the pack, and Gordo’s magic is one of the few defenses and remedies the pack has against a threat that’s seemingly impossible to overcome.
What can I say about Ravensong? I felt completely invested in the well-being of the Bennetts and their pack, to the point that I just wanted everyone to be happy and healthy and not be in danger (although that would rule out about 50% of the plot of the book). These characters are all so wonderfully written, and it’s easy to love them all. Can I help it that I’m an emotional wreck when I see character I love suffering? And they do suffer in Ravensong, unfortunately.
Despite its 500+-page length, Ravensong moves quickly. There’s barely time to catch your breath from one dramatic moment to another. And yet, despite how much action there is, there are also beautiful moments of romantic and familial love.
And lest you think everything is completely dire — there are also hilariously funny scenes, especially when the humans of the Bennett pack get involved.
Then Rico said, “Okay, like. No offense, papi. You know I love you. Bros for life, and all that. But did you go a little nuts in your head from the mystical moon magic? Because it seems like you went a little nuts in your head from the mystical moon magic.”
(Okay, that’s not even the best example, but I was so absorbed in reading that I didn’t stop to highlight all the passages that made me laugh or cry.)
While I loved Ravensong, I maybe loved it a teensy bit less that Wolfsong. Gordo is a hard character to know, and while Ravensong shows us so much more of his life and what happened to make him the man he is now, I still felt a little removed from his inner self at times, in a way that was never true in Wolfsong when it came to Ox.
And while I was aware ahead of time that each book in the Green Creek series would have a different main character as its focus, I couldn’t help wishing for more (much more!) time with Ox and Joe in Ravensong. I mean, they’re there, and they’re still vitally important — but their love story is in the background here, and their role is more focused on their importance to the pack… and I won’t say more, because spoilers, ya know.
As I mentioned in my review of Wolfsong, I love the pack dynamics, the mind to mind connection (PackWitchBrotherLove), and the deep love that runs between all of those who belong to the Bennetts — blood family, found family, humans, werewolves, and their witch. I still feel that I don’t know Mark Bennett very well, and that’s maybe why I wasn’t as deeply invested in Gordo and Mark’s love story as I expected to be — but it’s still lovely and affecting, and takes some twists I never would have seen coming.
Ravensong ends on somewhat of a cliffhanger, setting up what’s still to come in the next books. The main action set pieces are resolved, but it’s clear that the threat to the Bennett pack isn’t gone, just regrouping until it strikes again.
Tor Books is reissuing the entire Green Creek series in gorgeous hardcover editions. Ravensong was originally published in 2018, and while the Kindle/ebook edition is available now, the new hardcover will be released August 1, 2023. Hardcover editions of books 3 and 4, Heartsong and Brothersong, will be released in 2024.
I am all in when it comes to Green Creek, and although I’m trying to pace myself and not read them all at once, I’m not sure how long I can hold out before starting Heartsong!
Wishing a very happy book birthday to Wolfsong by TJ Klune!
Originally published in 2016, Wolfsong is being reissued TODAY (July 4, 2023) in a gorgeous hardcover edition by Tor Publishing.
I admit to being a wee bit obsessed since reading this book last month (see my review, here). Definitely one of my favorite reads of 2023!
Wolfsong is the first in the four-book Green Creek series. Stay tuned later this week for my review of book #2, Ravensong (new edition to be released August 1st, 2023).
Top Ten Tuesday is a meme hosted by That Artsy Reader Girl, featuring a different top 10 theme each week. This week’s topic is Books on My Summer 2023 to-Read List.
I’m hoping to get to a LOT of books already on my shelves… but I also have a bunch of new releases coming up that I’m really looking forward to, so the key will be finding the right balance of old and new!
For this list, I’ll just focus on some upcoming (and recent) new releases that I’m excited for:
Hello Stranger by Katherine Center
The Summer Skies by Jenny Colgan
Thornhedge by T. Kingfisher
With Love From Cold Word by Alicia Thompson
Infinity Gate by M. R. Carey
Ravensong by TJ Klune
The Breakaway by Jennifer Weiner
Sleep No More (October Daye, #17) by Seanan McGuire
All the Dead Shall Weep (Gunnie Rose, #5) by Charlaine Harris
Thief Liar Lady by D. L. Soria
What are you planning to read this summer? Please share your links!
Title: Wolfsong Series: Green Creek Author: TJ Klune Publisher: Tor Books Publication date: July 4, 2023 (originally published 2016) Length: 528 pages Genre: Fantasy Source: Review copy courtesy of the publisher via NetGalley Rating:
⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
Rating: 5 out of 5.
The Bennett family has a secret. They’re not just a family, they’re a pack. Wolfsong is Ox Matheson’s story.
Oxnard Matheson was twelve when his father taught him very valuable lesson. He said that Ox wasn’t worth anything and people would never understand him. Then he left.
Ox was sixteen when the energetic Bennett family moved in next door, harboring a secret that would change him forever. The Bennetts are shapeshifters. They can transform into wolves at will. Drawn to their magic, loyalty, and enduring friendships, Ox feels a gulf between this extraordinary new world and the quiet life he’s known, but he finds an ally in Joe, the youngest Bennett boy.
Ox was twenty-three when murder came to town and tore a hole in his heart. Violence flared, tragedy split the pack, and Joe left town, leaving Ox behind. Three years later, the boy is back. Except now he’s a man – charming, handsome, but haunted – and Ox can no longer ignore the song that howls between them.
The beloved fantasy romance sensation by New York Times bestselling author TJ Klune, about love, loyalty, betrayal, and family.
The Green Creek Series is for adult readers.
Have you ever finished a book and not wanted to start anything else, because you wanted to stay in that fictional world just a while longer?
That’s me and Wolfsong.
While powering through this 500+ page book, dying to see what was next and what was still to come, part of me just didn’t want to finish… because then what? This world, these characters… I think they’ve ruined me for other fiction. At least for now.
First, some basics about the book: We meet the main character, Ox Matheson, at age twelve, and spend quite a bit of time with him as he struggles through his adolescent and teen years, so for the first 30% or so of this book, you might assume this is a coming-of-age YA fantasy. It’s not. Helpfully, the synopsis states that this series is for adult readers. Later in the book, there are two very explicit adult sex scenes, and there are several graphic, gory scenes of violence that are not for young readers. Neither of these aspects are gratuitous in the slightest, but readers should be aware that the statement about adult content is accurate.
Wolfsong was originally published in 2016, and is the first in a 4-book series, now being reissued by Tor Books with beautiful new hardcover editions. After TJ Klune’s bestselling breakthrough with The House in the Cerulean Sea, there’s renewed interest in his earlier works, and I’m so grateful that the Green Creek books will get wider attention now. Wolfsong releases in July and book 2, Ravensong, in August. Books 3 and 4, Heartsong and Brothersong, will be released in 2024.
Where to even begin to describe the beauty and wonder of Wolfsong?
Ox is twelve when his father leaves him and his mother, and the father’s parting shots — that Ox is stupid and will never amount to anything — leave their mark. Ox is a loner, living in a small house in the woods in the tiny town of Green Creek, Oregon. His mother is loving and works hard to create a home for Ox, and he finds connection at the auto shop where his father used to work, where the owner Gordo agrees that he can help out, and where Ox finds a home of sorts with Gordo and his crew.
When Ox is sixteen, his life is upended while walking home along the dirt road one day, when a small boy bursts from the woods and changes everything. Talking a mile a minute, the 10-year-old “tornado”, as Ox thinks of him, clambers up Ox’s large back and brings him home to his family in the old, formerly abandoned house down the lane.
As young Joe Bennett exclaims to his parents and brothers:
You gotta smell him and then tell me why it’s all candy canes and pinecones and epic and awesome
Ox is introduced to the magnificent Bennett family, who welcome him with open arms and with a love and affection that he doesn’t quite understand. It’s only later that Ox discovers that the Bennett family is also the Bennett pack — a deeply-rooted, powerful, respected family of werewolves whose territory is Green Creek. Father Thomas is the Alpha, and although Ox doesn’t know why, Thomas sees something in Ox. (I mean, we readers get that Ox is wonderful and loving and “epic and awesome”, but Ox has a hard time believing it about himself).
The entire family loves Ox, but for Joe, Ox is a guardian and friend and brother and place of safety. Over the years, Ox and Joe both grow up, and Ox comes to learn much more about the secrets of Joe’s past and and what his own role is in protecting and nurturing Joe.
There’s so much more to the story, and it just has to be experienced. TJ Klune’s writing is powerful, funny, emotional — often all within the same page or chapter. I noted in my Kindle highlights that at 30% I was laughing hysterically over a particularly awkward, cringey, funny courtship scene… only to be sobbing and feeling like my heart had been ripped out at the 40% mark.
Truly bad things happen, and the writing is so visceral that I could feel Ox’s anger, pain, helplessness, and grief. The storytelling makes the reader FEEL everything, and the highs and lows can be breathtaking and painful.
As is probably obvious, I loved this book so much. The dynamic between Ox and Joe changes over the years, and it’s fascinating to see how their relationship changes at the different phases of their lives.
There was never anyone else for me. Because even if you couldn’t hear me when I called for you, the howl in my heart was always meant for you.
Another element I loved is the pack as a whole, the love and bond between the pack members, the mind to mind connection (PackLoveBrotherSon), the casual physical connection (these wolves always touch and sleep in heaps together, even in human form), and the absolute trust and devotion they share. The bonds are complex and become tangled, but no matter what, they’re also quite beautiful.
Wolfsong is a long, complicated book with love at its core. There is deep pain but also moments of wonder and joy, and the writing is evocative and profoundly affecting. I will be thinking about Wolfsong for a long time to come, and have a feeling that this is a book I’ll continue to pull off my shelf and leaf through for the simple pleasure of revisiting favorite passages and scenes.
My intention had been to wait for the new editions of each book in the series to be released before reading them… but since the original editions are already out there and available, I’m really not sure that I can stand to hold off. I love the world of Green Creek so much, and feel the next book in the series calling (howling?) for me.
Title: In the Lives of Puppets Author: TJ Klune Publisher: Tor Books Publication date: April 25, 2023 Length: 432 pages Genre: Science fiction Source: Review copy courtesy of the publisher via NetGalley Rating:
⭐⭐⭐
Rating: 3 out of 5.
In a strange little home built into the branches of a grove of trees, live three robots–fatherly inventor android Giovanni Lawson, a pleasantly sadistic nurse machine, and a small vacuum desperate for love and attention. Victor Lawson, a human, lives there too. They’re a family, hidden and safe.
The day Vic salvages and repairs an unfamiliar android labelled “HAP,” he learns of a shared dark past between Hap and Gio-a past spent hunting humans.
When Hap unwittingly alerts robots from Gio’s former life to their whereabouts, the family is no longer hidden and safe. Gio is captured and taken back to his old laboratory in the City of Electric Dreams. So together, the rest of Vic’s assembled family must journey across an unforgiving and otherworldly country to rescue Gio from decommission, or worse, reprogramming.
Along the way to save Gio, amid conflicted feelings of betrayal and affection for Hap, Vic must decide for himself: Can he accept love with strings attached?
Author TJ Klune invites you deep into the heart of a peculiar forest and on the extraordinary journey of a family assembled from spare parts.
It absolutely pains me to give a TJ Klune book anything less than 5 stars… but alas, In the Lives of Puppets just didn’t hit the mark for me. This makes me sad! I’ve loved so many of the author’s books, but this tale of robots and found family — which is also a Pinocchio retelling — left me oddly uninvested.
In the Lives of Puppets is the story of a family of oddball robots and machines, living in an isolated forest grove, raising a human child named Victor. As the story gets underway, Victor is now 21, and spends his days in the company of his two best friends, a Roomba-type vacuum robot named Rambo and a medical care robot named Nurse Ratched, who seems to delight in heartless provision of medical treatments (except when she engages her Empathy Protocols and offers a soothing “there, there” to her potential patient).
The trio also live with Gio (Giovanni), an older android who loves inventing, creating, listening to jazz music, and enjoying peaceful family time. Everything changes when Victor discovers a broken down android in the Scrap Yards that seems to still have a little power left in it. Once Victor repairs Hap, hidden secrets come to life, and soon the family’s entire existence is in peril.
In the Lives of Puppets is part exploration of love, family, and what it means to be a “real” human, and part road trip/adventure/quest. By the midpoint of the book, Victor and friends are off on a journey to the City of Electric Dreams to rescue Gio and, hopefully, restore him to his true self.
The writing can be very funny, especially Rambo and Nurse Ratched’s lines. These are probably my favorite parts of the book.
“Are we lost?” Rambo asked nervously.
“Of course not,” Nurse Ratched said. “I know exactly where we are.”
“Oh. Where are we?”
“In the forest.”
“Whew,” Rambo said. “I was worried for a moment that we were lost. Since we’re not, I will instead focus on the fact that we’re in the middle of the woods at night by ourselves. Do big animals like to eat vacuums?”
“I am sure they do,” Nurse Ratched said.
“Oh no,” Rambo whispered. “But I’m a vacuum.”
As the for story threads about emotions and connection and humanity… I was left largely unmoved, and the quest elements mostly failed to hold my interest.
I have to admit, overall this book was a letdown. As I mentioned, I usually adore this author’s work, and can’t really understand why In the Lives of Puppets just did not click for me. In any case, I’ll still be tuning in for whatever he writes next, and meanwhile will look to read some of his backlist titles too.
Top Ten Tuesday is a meme hosted by That Artsy Reader Girl, featuring a different top 10 theme each week. This week’s topic is Books I Loved So Much I Had to Get a Copy for My Personal Library.
This does happen for me quite a bit! Sometimes it’ll be an audiobook I’ve listened to that I need to own in print, or maybe I’ll have read either an ARC or e-book or library book and fallen for it so hard that I needed my own copy!
Here are my top ten:
1 . The Emily Starr trilogy by L. M. Montgomery
2. The Good Neighbors (graphic novel trilogy) by Holly Black
3. If It Bleeds by Stephen King
4. Newsflesh trilogy (boxed set) by Mira Grant
5. The House in the Cerulean Sea by TJ Klune
6. The Beautiful Ones by Silvia Moreno-Garcia
7. Wonderstruck, The Marvels, and The Invention of Hugo Cabret by Brian Selznick
8. Watch Over Me by Nina LaCour
9. Plain Bad Heroines by emily m. danforth
10. Mythos by Stephen Fry
What books made your list this week?
If you wrote a TTT post this week, please share your link!
Top Ten Tuesday is a meme hosted by That Artsy Reader Girl, featuring a different top 10 theme each week. This week’s topic is Completed Series I Wish Had More Books.
So… last week, my topic was first books in favorite series that were published over 10 years ago, and I definitely did not look ahead to see what this week’s topic would be. As a result, there’s going to be a lot of books/series in common between last week’s and this week’s lists, but that’s okay!
These are all books and series that I love, and I never mind featuring them in a post.
Ten series that are already done, but which I wish had more books:
The Glamourist Histories by Mary Robinette Kowal
This five-book series has been described as “Jane Austen but magic”, which is okay at a basic level, but just doesn’t convey how absolutely wonderful the characters and world are.
The Expanse by James S. A. Corey
My heart hurt by the time I read the (amazing) conclusion to this 9-book series. Yes, the story is done… but really, I’d happily read more about any of the characters or the worlds of this series.
Newsflesh by Mira Grant
The Newsflesh trilogy blew me away! Who knew zombie books could make me cry? There’s a 4th book that retells certain events from other characters’ perspectives, plus a bunch of spin-off stories, but really and truly, I just want to read more novels about the main characters!
The Parasol Protectorate (and the Parasol-verse at large) by Gail Carriger
I don’t know if it’s really true to say that this series is complete, because the lovely author continues to publish related stories and novellas… but after the five books of the original series, the four books of the Finishing School series, and the four Custard Protocol books, I am highly attached to these characters and would LOVE to see more full-length novels (or another series??) set in this world.
Codex Alera by Jim Butcher
This was such a good series! Six books, great world-building, great story progression — I’d definitely read more!
The Kopp Sisters by Amy Stewart
The seven volumes of this terrific historical fiction series showcase the real-life Kopp sisters as they solve crimes and go off to war in the early 1900s. The author has said that she’s not writing any more Kopp Sisters books any time soon… which could mean never, but since she doesn’t actually say never, I’ll continue to hope for more!
The Mure series by Jenny Colgan
The 5th book in this charming series just came out in June, and comments by the author seem to suggest that the series is now done… but wait! I still have questions! Yes, most characters got a beautifully happy ending, but there are still some loose threads and (I’m sure) plenty more stories to tell. Please, Jenny Colgan????
The Rajes by Sonali Dev
This series of interconnected stories about a large Indian-American family consists of four books retelling Jane Austen classics… But – there are six Jane Austen novels! I’ve read that the Rajes series is now done, but I think I’ll feel incomplete until there are Mansfield Park and Northanger Abbey volumes too!
The Extraordinaries by TJ Klune
This sweet, huggable YA superheroes love story trilogy has everything, and it had a very definitive ending — but can I help it if I love these characters so much that I want to see the rest of their lives too?
Bridgertons by Julia Quinn
I mean, yes, the Netflix version will keep me busy for years to come (I hope), and there are always other Julia Quinn books to read — but I felt a bit misty when I finished the books in the series and had to say good-bye to this incredibly entertaining family!
What series do you wish had more books? Do we have any in common?
If you wrote a TTT post this week, please share your link!