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Buzz Books 2025 Spring/Summer by multiple.

Quick synopsis: Exactly what it says on the cover.

Brief opinion: I picked this up in hopes of finding new books to read. I'll be getting a few of them, so mission accomplished?

Plot: Too many to list. Nearly 100% of them were things I don't usually read, so I skimmed and skipped a lot.

Writing/editing: Both were excellent.

What I Liked/What I Didn’t Like: This book made me feel like my interests are really niche! But also, there was no sci-fi and almost no fantasy in it, so it wasn't the right one for me to be looking through for new things to read.

Rating: 1-Hated / 2-Disliked / 3-Okay / 4-Liked / 5-Loved: ⭐️⭐️⭐️ - Okay

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DNF #5: Hunter by Eric Walters. A talking animals story. The writing and story felt very immature, which I couldn't blame it for since it's meant for young readers, but also oddly also mentioned political stuff:

Humans liked democracy. Dogs favored dictators. They liked someone to tell them what to do. And rats were fascists, brutal and uncaring about each other. Cats were anarchists

I could have stuck with the simple story, cats knowing too much, and the weird political stuff, until I got to this line:

Spare the paw, spoil the kitten.

That line is just lazy, so I DNFed there (about 25% into the book).
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Hand and Talon by Melonie Purcell. This book was such an odd experience. I LOVED the first 85%. I couldn't put it down, I read for so many hours each day. But the last 15% just didn't work at all for me.

Set in a magical fantasy world, by chance a "Caller" (Sorin) happens to save what seems like an orphan girl (Krea) by chance. In this world there are creatures called Kyrni -- beings made up of two sides, one human and the other a supernatural animal (dragon, unicorn, griffon, etc). They can change from human to their other side, but they forget they're human, so each one is bonded to a Caller who will help them turn back to human.

Surprise surprise, turns out Krea is a Kyrni. The two start the long, long journey to the city where Krea can be trained, picking up a little orphan boy (Dane) on the way. Dane turns out to be an untrained mage, but he can get training in the same city they're headed for, so they bring him along.

The first 85% of the story was the three of them traveling through the world and getting to know each other (and the reader getting to know the world). I loved it so much.

About the 85% point, the story completely changed both pace and tone. It felt thrust into fast forward. It went from being a wonderful stroll through this magical land to being a story about a nation being invaded by the bad guys and the battle to stop them going on RIGHT NOW. The change was so fast it felt like a whiplash risk.

In addition to that, at the same 85% point, there were way too many unbelievable coincidences happening (like a random street orphan being able to not just tell Krea how to break into the nation's dungeons, but giving her exact directions to on how to get to where she wanted to go in them). Plus, oddly, the editing got worse. Not awful, but in the first 85% of the book there were only a couple small issues, but the last 15% had quite a number of significant ones.

The second book in this series is out, but I'm pretty sure I'm not going to get it. There aren't enough reviews around for me to tell if I'd enjoy it or not, and the last 15% of this one left a bad taste in my mouth. The first 85% of the story was wonderful though!

DNF #17 - Hunter (The Dragonrider Heritage Book 1) by Nicole Conway. This was one annoying book, and yet I made it to the 65% mark before DNFing it.

Set in a generic medieval world, dragons exist, but they are just very intelligent animals and can't talk. They bond with one human as their rider, but they can't communicate any more than a horse could.

One dragon lost his rider (and is blinded in the same attack). He's too crazed with anger and fear for anyone else to handle, until a young stable boy finds a way to connect with him.

This could have been such a good book. The parts about taming and bonding with the dragon were great. It's just that the main character was so awful. He's 16 years old (and in a medieval world, that's basically an adult), but he came off as not even 6. I lost count of all the times the author descried him as a "newborn fawn". He trembled like a newborn fawn, fell to the ground like a newborn fawn, was as weak as a newborn fawn... The other description the author liked was "scared baby squirrel". He clung to the other boy like a scared baby squirrel, etc. And the number of times he vomited out of fear... It was really just ridiculous.

In addition to all that, the author was very much not a believer in "show, don't tell". It's really too bad, this could have been a really good book.

DNF #18 - Dinoverse by Mike Fredericks. This one was a case of me just not being the target audience. Set in the current world, a young boy (12-ish years old) invents a machine for a science fair (but really it's just broken computer monitors he put lights into). Somehow this machine actually "works", but not in the way the boy intended: He and some other junior high school students end up in the age of dinosaurs... as dinosaurs.

Too much of the first part of the book was just the kid in school (yawn), but even once they became dinosaurs, the writing was just too young for me. Plus in the Amazon description is the line "Theirs is an amazing, wildly comical, and very human journey". A "wildly comical" book aimed at pre-teens just is really not for me.
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Continuing with "all dragon in the title or dragon-like things on the cover" books on my Kindle...

DNF #15: Dragonsbane (Winterlands Book 1) by Barbara Hambly. This book should have worked for me. Apparently it was about a middle aged no-longer-couple: A knight (who is a farmer when he's not needed, which is most of the time) and woman who is an untrained witch with "disappointingly puny powers".

Even though it was published in 1985, for some reason I had a really hard time with the writing. As if it were dated, but 1985 isn't that long ago (I was reading scifi books then, it's possible I read this one at the time).

DNF #16: Servant Mage by Kate Elliott. I got 27% through this book before giving up. Another book with writing style(?) issues. Even though it was traditionally published through a big publishing house (Macmillan), it was missing so many commas. The writing was really purple, too. I got to the point where I was mentally editing it more than reading it for enjoyment, so I just DNFed it.

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