Two Left Feet was one of my most anticipated 2026 releases. I was so excited about this soccer romance. But I’m throwing in the towel at 43%.
I tried, Two Left Feet was one of my most anticipated 2026 releases. I was so excited about this soccer romance. But I’m throwing in the towel at 43%.
I tried, really, I did. Basically, this is a fine story. I liked seeing a Dutch coach. But one thing started to irritate me, and eventually it turned into anger.
Oliver is injured but desperate to return. Leo is the new player, trying to earn a regular spot on the team. All the players have nutrition plans. But they also drink. Alcohol, I mean. They get tipsy and drunk. During the season. Not just once but several times. The injured players go to a pub during a match. And drink pints like they’re spectators. After a match, they get drunk. At Oliver’s birthday party, they drink vodka straight from the bottle.
Come on. Maybe hockey players get drunk regularly during the season, but most footballers (the soccer kind) don’t. Some European clubs even have strict rules about alcohol.
And to finish my rant (I know this is nitpicking): why call it “Eindhoven” when it’s PSV? There are two professional clubs in Eindhoven.
So, my first 2026 read could’ve been a great one. Sadly, I got too mad to finish it. If you’re interested in this book, definitely check out other reviews.
Thank you, Random House Publishing Group, for this ARC. I’m sorry that I had to DNF....more
Witchlore is a pleasant surprise. This story about Lando, a shapeshifter who shifts between genders, has the lightheartedness of F. T. Lukens’ books aWitchlore is a pleasant surprise. This story about Lando, a shapeshifter who shifts between genders, has the lightheartedness of F. T. Lukens’ books and the grief found in Michelle Kulwicki’s At the End of the River Styx.
TW: Be aware that the first pages include suicidal ideation.
Lando lost their girlfriend Elizabeth and feels like everyone blames them. When their new classmate Bastian says he knows a spell to bring Elizabeth back, the two of them begin working together and… start liking each other more and more.
I’m not a huge fantasy fan, I say it time and again, but this one is just for me. It’s contemporary and character-driven enough to let me feel all the feels, and the worldbuilding is easy to follow. Lando’s grief is palpable throughout the first half of the story, and I rooted for them and Bastian so much.
I'm a huge Alison Cochrun fan, and while this isn’t my favorite of her books (Here I Go Again and The Charm Offensive still hold that title), I reallyI'm a huge Alison Cochrun fan, and while this isn’t my favorite of her books (Here I Go Again and The Charm Offensive still hold that title), I really enjoyed it!
I remember when Alison walked the Camino herself and shared her journey on Instagram; it definitely shows in this story. I always get a little nervous when American authors write about Europe, and I’m not always a fan. But Alison did a great job capturing the atmosphere (though I did find Stefano a bit of an Italian stereotype).
The Camino is such a great setting for a love story—two weeks of walking with the same group of people, bonding over blisters, laughter, and long conversations. The writing was so vivid, I felt like I was right there in Portugal (and later Spain) with them. I especially loved Sadie’s journey of self-discovery, and Mal quickly became my favorite: strong, extroverted, and guarded when it came to feelings. She was such a compelling character!
Oh, and one thing Alison, I’m sorry, but I do think stroopwafels are better than nata!
Now, I can’t wait for what Alison has in store for us next!
Thank you, Atria Books and NetGalley for this amazing ARC.
An eternal life. That’s what some of us sometimes wish for, right? I’m afraid to die. I want to stay in this world and see with my own eyes what happeAn eternal life. That’s what some of us sometimes wish for, right? I’m afraid to die. I want to stay in this world and see with my own eyes what happens. I want to make a difference. I want to be with my loved ones. But what if they’re all gone and I’d be the only one still living? Hmmm, the world might be incredibly lonely by then.
Shahriar has huge dreams. Believes in a world that gets better over time. He’s desperate for eternal love. He’s also selfish. According to Lily, one of the side characters (but the most important one!) he’s: ”An unloved child who thinks he can remake the world in his image.”
Oliver is used to hiding. He thrives in groups where he can be himself. Needs love from other people. He’s also depressed at times. ”I always told you I was afraid. That it was the worst of my qualities.
Exquisite Things is a story about two seventeen-year-olds who find eternal life. And always stay seventeen. The concept is marvelous and only an author like Abdi Azemian can pull this off. Two POVs in three different timelines. He did it in Only This Beautiful Moment and is doing it again, a story so small and so grand at the same time.
I don’t want to say too much about it. Just know the two boys live their lives on their own—sometimes decades apart—but always find their way back to each other. The eighties timeline stood out for me the most. The harshness of that time, but also filled with so much love and music: Spandau Ballet, the Human League, David Bowie, and so many others.
Some people always look back. Nostalgic because in the past everything seemed to be better. Others live in the future, with big dreams. But maybe we should try to live more in the now, even with all the terrible stuff happening at the moment. Hold on to the ones we love. And to ourselves. Give ourselves breathing room.
Actual rating: 4.5 stars, rounded down to 4 because I could’ve done with a few less adverbs in the dialogue tags.
Thank you HarperCollins Children’s Books and NetGalley for this amazing ARC!
I feel kind of silly for not having read Lesbiana’s Guide to Catholic School yet. But after loving The Luis Ortega Survival Club and now completely faI feel kind of silly for not having read Lesbiana’s Guide to Catholic School yet. But after loving The Luis Ortega Survival Club and now completely falling for The Golden Boy’s Guide to Bipolar, it’s definitely shooting to the top of my TBR.
I choose to live.
I started my last review with “oh Sam,” and I could honestly start this one with “oh Cesar.” Sometimes I read a book that makes me hold my breath the entire time, wanting to scream “NO, NO, NO,” while a stone lodges itself behind my ribs. This was one of those books. It felt so personal and real—and all those chapter names with their subtitles gave me even more chills.
I’m hurting them to hurt myself.
I was on the edge of my seat the whole time, and the deeper I got, the more the tears started to gather behind my eyes. But the book is also hopeful, and I think it’s so important to end a story about mental illness on a hopeful note.
My closet isn’t as loving toward me as Jamal’s. Mine is dark and stuffy, and I feel like I’m locked in.
Cesar’s story is raw and messy and beautiful, and my heart ached so much for him. But also for Jamal—that boy! I love him so, so much. All the side characters felt incredibly real too, and I really hope Sonora Reyes writes a third book in this universe. I’m already rooting for a new couple, with a complicated, messy story of their own.
Thank you, Harper Collins Children’s Books and NetGalley, for this beautiful and so important ARC!
I just unapologetically pushed that five-star button. This ‘The Charm Offensive but make it a mystery’ with fanfic writing like E.L. Massey’s and TaylI just unapologetically pushed that five-star button. This ‘The Charm Offensive but make it a mystery’ with fanfic writing like E.L. Massey’s and Taylor Fitzpatrick’s (without the hockey, though) just hit the right notes with me.
Sometimes, I know from the first page that I’ll like, correct, love a story, and He’s to Die For is one of those books. I hadn’t seen the book before; I just found it on NetGalley, read the blurb, and decided to request it. I’m so happy that I did because this is just the kind of story I fall head over heels with.
For those who don’t like thrillers or mysteries but do like romances, I believe this one's for you, too. He’s to Die For is just a warm bath, with some twists and turns that might give you a shiver once in a while, and a few rougher scenes, but overall, this story makes you glow on the inside and grow that smile on your face so many times. I call it fluff with heavier themes underneath. I rooted for Rav and Jack so much and fell in love with them both. Rav, the (half-Indian) Brit, so posh and driven and still so caring. And Jack, anxious, protective, sweet Jack, full of grief but also full of love.
He’s to Die For might end up being one of my favorite 2025 reads. Even though it’s only January. Even though it’s a bit insta love. And even though Rav is Indian without hardly any heritage mentioned (another thing in common with The Charm Offensive). I really want you all to read this one, everyone!
Thank you so, so much, St. Martin’s Press and NetGalley, for this awesome ARC!
Sometimes, time feels like it’s moving faster than I can catch up to it. Like everyone’s left on the train while I’m still standing at the platform, Sometimes, time feels like it’s moving faster than I can catch up to it. Like everyone’s left on the train while I’m still standing at the platform, waiting.
You’ve Found Oliver isn’t just a sequel. It’s easily readable as a standalone and is literally You’ve Reached Sam meets When Haru was Here AND a glimpse of What Happens in Amsterdam. Plus, it’s the least heartbreaking of the three.
This cover is gorgeous and shows so well what this story is about. I feel I’m writing an extension on the review I wrote before this one about Abdi Nazemian’s Exquisite Things. Both stories are about love and how we perceive time, hold on to the nostalgia for what’s been, instead of living in the now, or even having dreams and move forward.
Oliver’s mind is constantly in the past, still with Sam, his best friend who he lost almost a year before. Time is moving on, and Oliver has to follow, but he somehow gets stuck while still texting Sam’s number, not having friends other than Sam’s girlfriend, Julie, and not knowing what to do in the future. Then he accidentally calls Sam’s number and Ben picks up.
Only when we stop trying to pin it down, does time begin to move in another direction.
I love Dustin Thao’s writing. It’s vivid and palpable, and I gobbled up the words and sentences. To be honest, though, for a while I felt this was a nice story, but nothing more. It’s not a full-on tearjerker. It even felt pretty light. But the more I read, the more I realized there was so much happening between the lines. And maybe that fits Oliver’s story so well. This story forces you to think deeper, to peel off the layers. When you just lose someone, you’re allowed to cry. But when time moves on, the people around you expect that you move on, too. You probably cry less, but that feeling in your chest when you see that person again, talk to them, hold them, doesn’t disappear that fast. But burying yourself in the past might also mean missing so much you’d love. Which means we need to let go. Oliver needs to let go even though it’s hard to do so. And, d*mn, that last part made me cry.
I’m learning a home is more than the house you live in. It’s something you make yourself. With the people you meet, the places you go.
If you’ve read this story, I want to talk to you about two things. I thought there were some mistakes related to traveling from one place to another. But now I think Dustin Thao did it on purpose.
And I really want to talk about that ending, especially to people from … I loved it so much! If you’ve read it, you know what I mean.
Thank you, Rafa from Penguin Random House International, for one of my most anticipated 2025 releases!
”I won’t leave you … I’ll be there after to pick you up …I’ll make you smile every day. Because that’s what you deserve.”
Thank you, Amanda Woody, for ”I won’t leave you … I’ll be there after to pick you up …I’ll make you smile every day. Because that’s what you deserve.”
Thank you, Amanda Woody, for making me sob so hard. Thank you for the love you incorporated into my heart. Thank you for this amazing story. Thank you from the bottom of my heart.
Take They Hate Each Other, add the coping mechanisms of Stars in Your Eyes so no one sees the real Cam and Mason, top off with the rawness AND sweetness of The Long Run, and Most Valuable Player is born. This fantastic book ended up on my favorite 2025 shelf. So, so good!
Do you know when you start reading a story, and from the first moment, you already know it will be a masterpiece even though the main character acts like a jerk? When the pacing is flawless, and grins erupt from your mouth, but after a while, your stomach contracts? Then, your eyes crinkle with a smile again until those same eyes betray you, and you need to blink and blink and blink again because otherwise, tears will run down your cheeks. But those tears slip from your eyes anyway because it f*ing hurts so much.
Sometimes, I wanted to slam my ereader into the wall. Out of anger. Out of frustration. Out of raging hate. At the same time, I wanted to hug those two boys so much and protect them with my life. Mason, beautiful, quiet Mason, I wanted to protect him the most. But Cameron, sweet, sweet Cameron, he needed hugs and protection too. Please, Mason and Cameron, never hide yourself behind that mask again—the person beneath it is so worth it.
Please, please, read this book, everyone. And please, please read the content warnings if you have specific triggers. It’s a beautiful YA novel but also a harrowing one at times.
Okay, the story might be a nice one, but I’m writing a story myself right now, and I learned that one of the rules to make your writing showDNF at 17%
Okay, the story might be a nice one, but I’m writing a story myself right now, and I learned that one of the rules to make your writing show instead of telling is to limit the number of adverbs.
But boy, oh boy, Chip Pons is Mr. Adverb himself. I jumped from probably to finally to quickly to instantly to nervously to coolly to visibly to skeptically to gently to abruptly to typically to intensely to quietly to many, many, many more, and I found out that I was only looking for adverbs instead of reading the story. So yeah, I quit.
Please check out other reviews if you want to read this one! ...more
When I first read the blurb of The Gentleman and his Vowsmith, I didn’t think much about it, only that it could be a nice read. It is, everyone, and wWhen I first read the blurb of The Gentleman and his Vowsmith, I didn’t think much about it, only that it could be a nice read. It is, everyone, and with the magic of Freya Marske’s The Last Binding series and the wit from K.J. Charles’ Will Darling, it’s even more than a nice read.
A Gentleman and His Vowsmith is light, sweet, and funny, even though it’s not only a romance but also a mystery (just like the above mentioned series). I always love it when a historical story (in this case, one with magical elements) has a strong and a bit brash female character in it. I really liked Nic and Dash, but Leaf was by far my favorite. Fearlessly, she wanted to investigate the deaths, stood up to her father, and was simply the star of the book.
This story is for all of you who just want to smile, don’t mind a few dead people (there’s a little tension, but it is often dismissed fast due to the snarkiness in the story), and love a few speculative/magical elements, but not too much.
Thank you, Saga Press Books and NetGalley, for this entertaining ARC!
Love, Simon might be Becky Albertalli’s most popular book, but in my opinion, Imogen, Obviously is her best so far. And now, I got to read Amelia, If Love, Simon might be Becky Albertalli’s most popular book, but in my opinion, Imogen, Obviously is her best so far. And now, I got to read Amelia, If Only. From the moment I started reading, my hands were shaking a bit, and my heart thudded in my throat. Would this one even be better than Imogen?
Amelia, If Only is by far Becky’s loudest novel. Amelia is just more than a little crazy (not meant negatively). Her mind! Amelia herself calls it the Amelia brain ecosystem. It just keeps going and going and going, and sometimes, I found it hard to follow her leaps of thought. But she’s also so hilarious. I laughed out loud about all these nicknames, and Markillean Freddie Markury was the funniest (even though my autocorrect disagrees since it tried to correct the name at least five times).
Have you ever been a fan of someone? And wanted to know everything about them? Even to the point where you count that artist, or influencer, or athlete, or whoever it may be among your personal friends while you've never met that someone in person? Or even secretly dreamt about a romantic relationship with that person? Yep. That’s what this story is about, and Becky did a fantastic job portraying what it means to be a fan or a stan of someone and how it influences lives. In between Amelia’s story, the reader gets an insight into an insane fandom through YouTube transcriptions, Twitter-, Reddit-, and Instagram threads. And I loved reading those snippets. It was so real! Just like Amelia, I wanted to meet Walter so badly. And I have to admit, it was a slow, slow, slow burn until that first meeting. All those transcripts and threads hyped me up so much and kept me flying through the pages.
And did you know that Imogen and Tessa appear in this story? Oh, and there's an Adib Khoram reference! I smiled so hard when I read those passages!
So, is this story even better than Imogen, Obviously? Well, I loved the friend group, laughed out loud about Amelia’s unhinged thoughts, and couldn’t tear my eyes from all those transcriptions and threads. I loved, loved the overall story, and yes, I think I liked this story even more than Imogen. Yes, dear readers, it’s true! This story is better than Imogen’s. So, preorder it now!
Oh, and Becky? Please let those two cinnamon buns be the couple in your next story!
Thank you, HarperCollins Children Books and NetGalley, for this crazy, witty, and sweet story!
Recipe: take 60% cuteness from Simon James Green, add 20% love that’s needed to survive from The Darkness Outside Us, and top off with 20% Death-Cast Recipe: take 60% cuteness from Simon James Green, add 20% love that’s needed to survive from The Darkness Outside Us, and top off with 20% Death-Cast from They Both Die at the End.
Don’t Let Go is pitched as Adam Silvera meets Eliot Schrefer, but I need to tell you that this story is far from angsty. It’s sweet, vivid, and witty. At least, most of the time …
The book starts with Pompeii and the eruption of Vesuvius, and I immediately sat on the edge of my seat. Just like I did when I met the boys in the now. Even though Riley was five seconds hostile towards Jackson, this changed fast, and a strong bond grew between those guys who dared to be incredibly vulnerable to each other. So many smiles danced on my face, even in those ancient times when they were so in love and always died at the end (it’s in the blurb).
I adored the first part of this story and still loved the second half. I only wanted a bit more tension until I sat on the edge of my seat again and gasped for air! My heart was full of love and I cried big, ugly tears. That ending was perfect! I’m not sure, though, if everyone will feel the same way …
Actual rating: first half 5 stars, second half 3.5-4 stars, ending 5 stars.
Thank you, HarperCollins Children’s Books and NetGalley, for this fantastic ARC!
The sweetness of E.L. Massey’s Like Real People Do meets Shaun David Hutchinson’s historical setting of Before We Disappear. Add beautiful prose and fThe sweetness of E.L. Massey’s Like Real People Do meets Shaun David Hutchinson’s historical setting of Before We Disappear. Add beautiful prose and fantastic illustrations, and Vanessa Vida Kelly presents you When the Tide Held the Moon.
Told from Benigno’s perspective (I refuse to call him Benny), interspersed with amazing illustrations and Rio’s voice, this book is a remarkable debut. Benigno and Rio both were such beautiful persons: Benigno, the young Puertorican blacksmith, so gentle and caring, and Rio, the merman who kept his distance from people at first because they killed his mother and held him captive in the glass container that Benigno had made until Benigno gained his trust and something beautiful grew between the two of them.
Oh, and I simply love Matthias!
I already loved Venessa Vida Kelly’s illustrations, and now I want to read more of her writing. I can’t wait to see what they have in store for us next! Because of those illustrations, I recommend buying a physical copy of this book!
Thank you so much, Erewhon Books and NetGalley, for this fantastic ARC!
Okay, this story feels like a real romcom, but if you’re expecting a swoony romance, I’m going to disappoint you: it isn’t. A.M. Woody, who blurbed thOkay, this story feels like a real romcom, but if you’re expecting a swoony romance, I’m going to disappoint you: it isn’t. A.M. Woody, who blurbed this book, calls their own stories romtraums, and maybe America’s Not-So Sweetheart isn’t a romcom, isn’t a romtraum, but a traumcom. Traum because Alec was painted as the villain on that reality show, and now everyone hates him. Everyone except Joaquín, his ex, the guy he’s still madly in love with.
Messy, witty, and at times chest-tightening, those are the words that come to mind when I think about this book.
The banter is just chef’s kiss. Not just between Alec and Joaquín or the other characters, but also in Alec’s own head. It’s actually a fantastic place to be—Alec, who wants to do good but is also a total disaster of a person, disheveled and morally gray in all the best ways, driven by a constant need for approval, and endlessly overlooking the red flags around him.
I fell hard for Alec’s longing and yearning in the first part of the story. From page one, I wanted him and Joaquín back together so badly. And yet, a little voice in the back of my head kept whispering warnings. I shoved them into a box and locked the lid tight. Just like Alec did.
The second half of the book gave me even more to think about. Again, just like Alec.
At its core, this story is about embracing who you are with all your flaws and building healthy relationships. And even though it’s not really a romcom, we need more books like these because this is what teens’ lives actually look like. Complicated. Messy. Full of love and fun, but also full of shi*tty things because sometimes, things just are tough.
Actual rating 4.5 stars, rounded up to five.
Thank you so much, Pagestreet and NetGalley, for this messy and delightful ARC!
Leo Martino Steals Back his Love is a pretty lighthearted written story with some Leo Martino Steals Back His Love is a lighthActual rating 3.5 stars.
Leo Martino Steals Back his Love is a pretty lighthearted written story with some Leo Martino Steals Back His Love is a lighthearted story with some heavier themes. It is recommended for readers of Simon James Green and Brian D. Kennedy.
I really liked the start of this book, and a smile danced on my face so many times. Leo has been in love a lot, but no one has loved him back. But maybe love is closer than he expects.
What I loved most in this story was the friendship between Leo, Varsha, and Dillon. The rest of the story fell a little flat to me, though. It was pretty obvious who Leo would end up with in the end, and sometimes, I wanted the lightheartedness to be a little darker.
But that is a personal preference, and I believe that fans of the authors mentioned above will love Leo and his crushes and the boy who finally loves him back.
Thank you, HarperCollins Children’s Books and NetGalley for this ARC!
Pitched as All the Lights We Cannot See meets In Memoriam, The Lilac People was a huge surprise for me. This story, told in aActual rating 4.5 stars.
Pitched as All the Lights We Cannot See meets In Memoriam, The Lilac People was a huge surprise for me. This story, told in a dual timeline, is about Bertie, a transexual man during the thirties and forties in Nazi Germany.
When people hurt bad enough, they’ll grab any idea to make their own lives better, no matter how illogical.
What surprised me the most was what I didn’t know yet about that time. Have you ever heard of The Institute of Sexual 카지노싸이트, where transexual people got surgery and a new passport in the twenties and thirties of the last century? I didn’t and found this part fascinating. Bertie works at the Institute and is confident in his life as a man. Okay, he sometimes needs to pretend (back then, they didn’t have hormones yet), but overall, he’s happy. Until Hitler comes to power and he has to flee.
If it helps, I believe everyone is acting in one way or another in this world. We’re all afraid to be ourselves. And the saddest part is that fear is unnecessarily genuine.
The Lilac People shows us the time before and after WWII. Before: a happy time full of parties and friends, eventually turning into something sinister. And afterward: tucked away on a farm where, after the war, the Americans suddenly pose a threat because they arrest queer people. Bertie, his girlfriend Sofie, his best friend Gert (oh Gert), and Karl, who fled Dachau as a trans man, came to live in this beautiful and informative story.
Anger is not bad. Anger is how we tell ourselves that we’ve been wronged, that we’ve been mistreated, and that it’s not okay. Anger is a beautiful emotion. We just need to express it properly.
Does the pitch of ATLWCS meets In Memoriam fit this book? Well, it’s written in a dual timeline and gives us an insight into German life during those years, like ATLWCS, and has poetical writing and queer characters surviving a war, like In Memorial. But that’s where the similarities end. I believe The Lilac People is a unique story on its own that provides insight into a mostly unknown part of history. I also highly recommend the author’s note in the back (also about the Institute because its owner, Hirschfeld, had a messy and tangled relationship with racism, misogyny, and eugenics).
History isn’t artifacts or pictures or things. History is the people who made them. The history is us. And we’ll keep passing it on.
I hesitated to start reading A Gentleman’s Gentleman because I’d seen a few low ratings and even people DNF’ing it. But when I finally dared to pick iI hesitated to start reading A Gentleman’s Gentleman because I’d seen a few low ratings and even people DNF’ing it. But when I finally dared to pick it up, I actually liked the stilted and, at the same time, witty story. I flew through the pages (it’s a pretty short one) and amused myself.
But …
Yep, there is a but. Even though I liked it, I also believe that this story is underdeveloped. Christopher’s grief never came fully to the surface, and Harding (for a long time, I forgot his first name!) was pretty one-dimensional. Therefore, the chemistry was zero and I couldn’t really connect to Harding/James. So, I wanted more, much more. More witty dialogues, more depth in Harding’s character, more inside in Christopher’s grief. I wanted to see Christopher’s past as flashbacks, not as a rushed story being told in one chapter. This could have been a gem, but now it felt like a nice in-between to read snuggled up on the couch or lying on the beach. But that’s all.
In the last couple of years, dark academia has become one of my favorite genres. I have a soft spot for those morally grey characters who I’d condemn In the last couple of years, dark academia has become one of my favorite genres. I have a soft spot for those morally grey characters who I’d condemn in contemporary or romance.
We Are Villains has the same blunt writing as Felix Ever After (Kacen Callender’s most popular book) but with darker vibes. From the blurb, Milo and Liam seem to be the main characters, while, in fact, Ari sets the pace of this story. I love books with multiple POVs, but if there are more than two, I always get a little wary. In this book, Kacen Callender used at least eight, but I didn’t mind and found it very interesting to be in all those other minds for a short time. Their chapters were just little snippets that gave an extra layer of depth to what happened to Ari and the atmosphere of Yates, the boarding school.
Just like so many other dark academia stories, this book is f*cked up. Yates is central where tyranny and patriarchy rule, everyone is pretending to be something or someone else than they really are, and the reader starts sympathizing with the ones, who are bad news. My favorite was Liam, even though I hated him too for what he did. But love and hate are never far from each other, right?
It’s always easier to look at someone else—to see how they’ve made mistakes. Always easier to see how someone else is the villain. It’s harder to admit when we’re the villains, too.
Don’t expect a romance because there isn’t any. Also, don’t expect lots of angst. Instead, We Are Villains focuses on all those messed-up teens, their f*cked-up relationships, and what they’re trying to hide. I flew through the pages because of Kacen’s vivid writing, even with so many POVs.
Stars in Your Eyes is one of my favorite adult romances, but I wasn’t a huge fan of Infinity Alchemist. I was a little afraid to see another genre, but I shouldn’t have feared because I really liked this one and will definitely read other dark academia stories by Kacen Callender.
Thank you, Abrams Books and Edelweiss, for this ARC!