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OVERVIEW/ANALYSIS: Fern needs a change. Running a bookstore doesn't bring her the same joy like it used to. The answer is clearly to move to a new town and start a new bookshop, just to shake things up. But when the dust has settled, Fern realizes she still feels completely unmotivated by her life. One drunken bender later, she finds herself in the back of a wagon with one of the most legendary warriors of the ages, days away from her home. Her only choice is to keep traveling with the elven warrior and their odd prisoner: a goblin with a rather large bounty on their head. Across a dangerous journey, full of other warriors hoping to claim the same bounty, Fern has to grapple with the big question: what DOES she want out of life?
Brigands and Breadknives is an adventure-filled quest with a scene-stealing chaos goblin. Let's be clear at the start here: if you're looking for a quiet, low-action tale similar to the original Legends and Lattes, you won't find that here. That doesn't make this story any less heartwarming, but it is a decidedly different kind of story than its predecessors. There will be danger and there will be deadly sword fights. But underneath it all is still the theme of finding yourself, especially when what used to bring you joy is no longer fulfilling.
The theme of reinvention is an old one, but I liked the different approaches the story took with it. Fern is burdened not just by a desire to find a new purpose, but also by the guilt that she is somehow letting all her friends down by going against their expectations for her. They put so much effort into helping her - will they hate her if she admits that she's realized being a bookseller isn't what she wants anymore? Meanwhile Astryx, the legendary elven warrior, is trapped in a monotony of her own making. She does the same thing over and over because she fears doing anything different will have her utterly lost.
Fern and Astryx help each other work through their respective conundrums, but it is Zyll the goblin who steals the show. Zyll is a goblin of few words, but their actions manage to captivate regardless. Ever mercurial, their antics had me chuckling at every turn and were definitely a highlight of the book.
Brigands and Breadknives is a story of reinvention that manages to be a rousing adventure from start to finish. I thoroughly enjoyed the various adventures of the party on their quest. Though this story is decidedly more action-packed than the others set in this world, it never loses sight of its heart-filled message, making it another worthy entry in the Legends and Lattes series.
King Sorrow by Joe Hill Review
ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Joe Hill's debut, Heart-Shaped Box, won the Bram Stoker Award for Best First Novel. His second, Horns, was made into a film freakfest starring Daniel Radcliffe. His other novels include NOS4A2, and his #1 New York Times Best-Seller, The Fireman... which was also the winner of a 2016 Goodreads Choice Award for Best Horror Novel.
He writes short stories too. Some of them were gathered together in his prize-winning collection, 20th Century Ghosts.
He won the Eisner Award for Best Writer for his long running comic book series, Locke & Key, co-created with illustrator and art wizard Gabriel Rodriguez.
He lives in New Hampshire with a corgi named McMurtry after a certain beloved writer of cowboy tales. His next book, Strange Weather, a collection of novellas, storms into bookstores in October of 2017
Publisher: William Morrow (October 21, 2025) Length: 896 pages Formats: all
Book review: Greedy by Callie Kazumi
Book links: Publisher website, Goodreads
Publisher: Bantam (February 2026) Formats: Hardcover and kindle
Synopsis: Ed is in trouble with the yakuza. He's gambled away all his money and his family is at risk.
But just as he’s about to lose everything, he receives an offer he can’t refuse.
A reclusive billionaire is looking for a private chef. The only she has some. . . unusual tastes.
As he prepares delicious dishes – fresh crab salad with a panko crumb, lamb shank dripping in red wine juice, sweet, fluffy soufflé pancakes – he realizes that each meal is a test, a challenge to satisfy an insatiable appetite.
Caught up in a world more sinister than he could ever have imagined, Ed finds himself entangled in another debt.
As the stakes grow, he must make a choice.
Will he stay hungry? Or will he be greedy?
Dinner is served.
Eat Up.
Book links: Amazon, Goodreads
ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Anthony Ryan is the New York Times best selling author of the Raven's Shadow epic fantasy novels as well as the Slab City Blues science fiction series. He was born in Scotland in 1970 but spent much of his adult life living and working in London. After a long career in the British Civil Service he took up writing full time after the success of his first novel Blood Song, Book One of the Raven's Shadow trilogy. He has a degree in history, and his interests include art, science and the unending quest for the perfect pint of real ale. For news and general wittering about stuff he likes, check out Anthony's blog at: anthonyryan.net.
Publisher: Blackstone Publishing, Inc (August 12, 2025) Page count: 288 pages, Paperback
COVER REVEAL: The Book Of Spores Anthology (edited by Frasier Armitage, Eleni Argyró, Adrian M. Gibson & Ed Crocker)
ABOUT THE AUTHOR: Originally from Calgary, Alberta, Mark grew up on the cold, windswept Prairies of western Canada. Fleeing southward, he earned a Ph.D. in the history of science, medicine, and technology from the Johns Hopkins University and then enjoyed fifteen years of non-stop excitement as a humanities professor. Finally yearning for greener pastures, he persuaded his amazing husband to move to Vancouver Island, where they now live.
When not writing stories about murderous Canadians, he plays the viola in a local orchestra, walks his dogs along the seashore, and thinks up interesting ways to kill people.
Publisher: Ace (October 7, 2025) Page count: 384 Formats: audiobook, ebook, paperback
Buy The Entanglement of Rival Wizards
The Entanglement of Rival Wizards is a rivals-to-lovers fantasy romcom that completely melted my heart. Take some STEM academia, add a splash of D&D flavor, and mix in two men who bicker incessantly but who slowly become closer as they let their barriers down, and you have this book. The setting essentially takes our world and mashes it with D&D elements. So while our two lovers attend university on the East Coast of the U.S., their commute might be diverted because an adventuring party is fighting a troll on the bridge, football has been replaced with a competitive magic based game, and elves and orcs are a normal part of society. Overall I really enjoyed the setting, though occasionally references to things like ZOOTOPIA jarred against the sense of this story taking place in a vague Anywhere urban city.
But the real stars here are our two rival grad students/wizards: Sebastian, a constant prankster human who hides a traumatic past and Elethior, the taciturn half-elf who wants to escape the machinations of his elven family. Over the course of the story, circumstances cause both Sebastian and Elethior to reveal hidden parts of their lives. As they each become vulnerable and help each other work through their traumas, they grow closer to each other. It's a true falling in love story that I thoroughly enjoyed.
And a note about these darker elements: there is a subplot about one character's past that references abuse, and both characters are dealing with complicated relationships with their parents. This is, however, a queernorm world and absolutely zero conflict comes from homophobia or disapproval of Sebastian and Elethior's sexuality.
The Entanglement of Rival Wizards hit all the right notes for me and left me grinning like an idiot. I was so happy to watch these two bloom into a full on romantic couple, with a pitch-perfect happily ever after. I am thrilled that there will be more books set in this world and will absolutely be back for more.
The Lost Reliquary is a sprawling story of a quest to end divinity that had me captivated from start to finish. Lys and Nolan's journey takes twists and turns, as revelations are made, secrets uncovered. It is a bit of a slower paced travel story, as Lys and Nolan track clues to figure out where the heretics hide but I was impressed at how much the tale kept me constantly wanting to find out more. Whether it was the small reveal of how Lys came to work for the goddess or the bigger mysteries behind the lore I had a constant itch to read just one more chapter, just to learn a little bit more.
I also very much enjoyed the dynamic between Lys and Nolan. They are reluctant coworkers at best, cutthroat enemies at worst. Lys is as irreverent a paladin as she can get away with, whereas Nolan is utterly devout in all things. Lys has a dry humor, Nolan is serious. Best of all, this relationship is not on the usual predictable plot railroad. Even as walls come down between Lys and Nolan and their bond grows, I truly never knew which way Nolan would fall in any given situation. Would he stick to the letter of divine law or bend in the name of expediency for the mission? Would he follow Lys over another potentiate? Lys and Nolan have a complex relationship made even more complex by their mission and their goddess, and figuring out where that relationship stood always kept me on my toes.
And oh, that ending. I am so excited to see where things go in the sequel because the cliffhanger was so juicy. Best of all, even though I had a guess as to where the story was going, things did not play out like I thought, the author always just oooone step ahead.
The Lost Reliquary is a compelling tale of an irreverent divine knight on a quest to find her freedom. The characters made me root for them, the mysteries kept me hooked. I highly recommend this, and will be eagerly awaiting the sequel.

















