My thoughts on books I read from april through june - mini book reviews on Tender Curiosity

My Thoughts on Books I Read April – June | Mini Reviews

Blood Over Bright Haven by M.L. Wang

I’ve been meaning to read this one for a while now as it gets a lot of love on Bookstagram. I was even more excited because the synopsis included “For fans of Leigh Bardugo, V. E. Schwab, and Fullmetal Alchemist” – all of my favorites! Fullmetal Alchemist: Brotherhood especially is one of my favorite anime of all time and I couldn’t wait to see the inspo. It’s safe to say this book does indeed live up to the hype.

BOBH introduces the most unique magic system I’ve ever read – coding magic. Mages use a spellograph which is essentially a magical typewriter, and must code spells in order to perform magic. This is where Fullmetal Alchemist comes in – if you’re familiar – the law of equivalent exchange: to gain something, one must lose something of equal value. In order to perform these spells, the mages must siphon an equal amount of energy required for it…from somewhere. That’s where it gets crazy.

Sciona becomes the first woman to become a highmage in a terribly sexist high magistry of elite mages. There, she begins to uncover the darkest secrets among the most powerful. Dark academia vibes, an intricate magic system, and a deeper dive into themes of sexism, racism, and colonialism. M.L. Wang is a phenomenal storyteller.


Great Big Beautiful Life by Emily Henry

Great Big Beautiful Life leans more on women’s fiction than Henry’s usual romances and I thoroughly enjoyed it! I loved the premise of two writers competing to write a tragic heiress’; Margaret Ives, life story. The chapters alternate between present and Margaret’s past, unfolding a bigger mystery as to why they were all on that island. I ADORED the grumpy x sunshine dynamic between our two writers, and because of the nature of the story alternating between past and present, there’s a slow burn romance. At some point Margaret’s family tree got a little confusing as we went through her great grandfather, grandfather, parents etc, but I rather like the Taylor Jenkins Reid vibes it gave me. By the end, my heart was full. It was just the book I needed after going into book depression from Blood Over Bright Haven. Thank you so much to libro.fm for the audiobook! The narrator, Julia Whelan, was perfect!


If You Could See the Sun by Ann Liang

An unexpected favorite from Q2! I knew I’d enjoy the story but I didn’t expect to love it so much. It was fun, lighthearted (for the most part), and even relatable in many ways. Right off the bat the academic rivals tension between Alice and Henry was palpable. At an elite Beijing international boarding school where Alice, the only student there on a scholarship, can no longer afford to attend, she comes up with a creative plan to make money – an illegal business proposition, if you will, to use her invisibility to spy and get information/evidence for the rich students — all in partnership with her rival, Henry. It’s giving academic espionage. Of course, things never go as planned, and that’s where it gets fun!


Water Moon by Samantha Sotto Yambao

I had high hopes for this one but it didn’t quite live up to what I was expecting. Is it whimsical, dreamlike, and Studio Ghibli-esque? Absolutely. You travel to alternate worlds and timelines by jumping through puddles, conjure daydreams and trade your regrets which becomes birds. Everything about this book feels magical. But that’s kind of all there was. Atmosphere, vibes, and a vibrant world of magical realism. The substance was…lacking? The romance also felt off for me. I wanted to love this, but I needed more from the story.


Gifted & Talented by Olivie Blake

This book was…something LOL. It is very much an Olivie Blake book. Succession with magic – three siblings vying for their father’s Wrenfare Magitech company worth billions. This inheritance game gets MESSY. Their family is almost as dysfunctional as my family, and that’s saying a lot. There’s drama, greed, ambition, and some incredibly unlikable main characters. The first half of the book was absorbing in the most WTF way, but things kind of fall off after that. I think it would make a great HBO show to watch, but the story itself reads pretty slow. It’s entirely a character-motivated story. I think I went through every emotion in this family saga – disgust, shock, excitement…get ready for a slow simmering chaos.


Villains are Destined to Die by Suol and Gwon Gyeoeul

When I started grad school I basically stopped reading everything I loved, including manhwa/webcomics. What better way to get back into it by rereading one of my favorite villainess isekais? Penelope gets transported into a game she was playing…except she isn’t the heroine of the game, she’s the villain. I hated everyone for treating her terribly, but Penelope really transforms the character in the best way. The art is stunning, the story makes it impossible to just stop after 1 volume – I ended up staying up until 3am continuing (goodbye sleep schedule). This will forever be one of my favorites!


All Systems Red by Martha Wells

This was another one that I wanted to love but it just didn’t work out for me. It definitely felt like a me problem not a book problem. I think it was because it was last in my string of science fiction reads and I was getting burnt out on the genre, so I had a hard time focusing on the story. It’s a somewhat comical novella about a murderbot that hacked its own system so it could be self-aware. It couldn’t really care less about it’s job to protect a team of scientist on some distant planet, preferring to spend time in isolation watching a TV show. But of course, there’s danger afoot on this planet – what will this murderbot do now with free will? I’m definitely going to give book 2 a try when I’m back in a sci-fi mood! I love the premise of this world, it was just the wrong time to read it.


That makes 7 books! I’m incredibly happy to be reading consistently again and picking up all the things I once loved now that I’m done with grad school. Thank you for reading and see you in the next blog! Expect to see more reads from me soon 🙂

Most Anticipated Books of 2025

One of my favorite things about the start of a new year is looking ahead at all the exciting books on the horizon. My TBR continues to grow by the year with endless stories to get lost in. Here are my top 12 books that I’m looking forward to reading in 2025. There’s a Studio Ghibli-inspired magical journey with a pawnshop where you can sell your regrets, a dark academia fantasy where two rival students travel to hell to save their adviser, a fantastical story about two souls that love each other in every lifetime…but also kill each other in each one, and so much more! Cheers to a year full of bookish adventures~

Immortal by Sue Lynn Tan | January 7th

  • Romantic fantasy
  • Chinese mythology
  • Forbidden magic
  • Enemies to lovers
  • Ambitious ruler x God of War
  • Set in the world of Daughter of the Moon Goddess (which I adored)
  • Standalone

What the gods did not give us, I would take.

As the heir to Tianxia, Liyen knows she must ascend the throne and renew her kingdom’s pledge to serve the immortals who once protected them from a vicious enemy. But when she is poisoned, Liyen’s grandfather steals an enchanted lotus to save her life. Enraged at his betrayal, the immortal queen commands the powerful God of War to attack Tianxia.

Upon her grandfather’s death, Liyen ascends a precarious throne, vowing to end her kingdom’s obligation to the immortals. When she is summoned to the Immortal Realm, she seizes the opportunity to learn their secrets and to form a tenuous alliance to safeguard her people, all with the one she should fear and mistrust the most: the ruthless God of War. As they are drawn together, a treacherous attraction ignites between them—one she has to resist, to not endanger all she is fighting for.

But with darker forces closing in around them, and her kingdom plunged into peril, Liyen must risk everything to save her people from an unspeakable fate, even if it means forging a dangerous bond with the immortal… even if it means losing her heart.


Gifted & Talented by Olivie Blake | April 1st

  • Contemporary fantasy with sci-fi elements
  • Think Succession with magic
  • Cast of morally gray characters
  • Long-festering sibling rivalry and ambition
  • Who will inherit the Wrenfare Magitech throne?
  • The pipeline of gifted kid to clinically depressed adult

Where there’s a will, there’s a war.

Thayer Wren, the brilliant CEO of Wrenfare Magitech and so-called father of modern technology, is dead. Any one of his three telepathically and electrokinetically gifted children would be a plausible inheritor to the Wrenfare throne.

Or at least, so they like to think.

Meredith, textbook accomplished eldest daughter and the head of her own groundbreaking biotech company, has recently cured mental illness. You’re welcome! If only her father’s fortune wasn’t her last hope for keeping her journalist ex-boyfriend from exposing what she really is: a total fraud.

Arthur, second-youngest congressman in history, fights the good fight every day of his life. And yet, his wife might be leaving him, and he’s losing his re-election campaign. But his dead father’s approval in the form of a seat on the Wrenfare throne might just turn his sinking ship around.

Eilidh, once the world’s most famous ballerina, has spent the last five years as a run-of-the-mill marketing executive at her father’s company after a life-altering injury put an end to her prodigious career. She might be lacking in accolades compared to her siblings, but if her father left her everything, it would finally validate her worth—by confirming she’d been his favorite all along.

On the pipeline of gifted kid to clinically depressed adult, nobody wins—but which Wren will come out on top?


Katabasis R.F. Kuang | August 28th

  • Dark academia fantasy
  • Dante’s Inferno meets Susanna Clarke’s Piranesi
  • Academic rivals to lovers
  • Two graduate students travel to hell to rescue the soul of their dead adviser (it’s giving Orpheus and Eurydice)
  • They’re magicians?!

Katabasis, noun, Ancient Greek:

The story of a hero’s descent to the underworld

Alice Law has only ever had one goal: to become one of the brightest minds in the field of Magick. She has sacrificed everything to make that a reality: her pride, her health, her love life, and most definitely her sanity. All to work with Professor Jacob Grimes at Cambridge, the greatest magician in the world.

That is, until he dies in a magical accident that could possibly be her fault.

Grimes is now in Hell, and she’s going in after him. Because his recommendation could hold her very future in his now incorporeal hands and even death is not going to stop the pursuit of her dreams….

Nor will the fact that her rival, Peter Murdoch, has come to the very same conclusion.

With nothing but the tales of Orpheus and Dante to guide them, enough chalk to draw the Pentagrams necessary for their spells, and the burning desire to make all the academic trauma mean anything, they set off across Hell to save a man they don’t even like.

But Hell is not like the storybooks say, Magick isn’t always the answer, and there’s something in Alice and Peter’s past that could forge them into the perfect allies…or lead to their doom.


Great Big Beautiful Life Emily Henry | April 22nd

  • Contemporary romance
  • Two competing writers
  • Sunshine heroine x grumpy hero??
  • Yearning!!!

Alice Scott is an eternal optimist still dreaming of her big writing break. Hayden Anderson is a Pulitzer-prize winning human thundercloud. And they’re both on balmy Little Crescent Island for the same reason: To write the biography of a woman no one has seen in years–or at least to meet with the octogenarian who claims to be the Margaret Ives. Tragic heiress, former tabloid princess, and daughter of one of the most storied (and scandalous) families of the 20th Century.

When Margaret invites them both for a one-month trial period, after which she’ll choose the person who’ll tell her story, there are three things keeping Alice’s head in the game.

One: Alice genuinely likes people, which means people usually like Alice—and she has a whole month to win the legendary woman over.

Two: She’s ready for this job and the chance to impress her perennially unimpressed family with a Serious Publication

Three: Hayden Anderson, who should have no reason to be concerned about losing this book, is glowering at her in a shaken-to-the core way that suggests he sees her as competition.

But the problem is, Margaret is only giving each of them pieces of her story. Pieces they can’t swap to put together because of an ironclad NDA and an inconvenient yearning pulsing between them every time they’re in the same room.

And it’s becoming abundantly clear that their story—just like the tale Margaret’s spinning—could be a mystery, tragedy, or love ballad…depending on who’s telling it.


Water Moon by Samantha Sotto Yambao | January 14th

  • Fantasy/magical realism
  • A pawnshop where you can sell your regrets (that looks like a cozy ramen shop to the regular eye)
  • Studio Ghibli and Makoto Shinkai vibes
  • Jump through rain puddles on a magical journey

On a backstreet in Tokyo lies a pawnshop, but not everyone can find it. Most will see a cozy ramen restaurant. And only the chosen ones—those who are lost—will find a place to pawn their life choices and deepest regrets.

Hana Ishikawa wakes on her first morning as the pawnshop’s new owner to find it ransacked, the shop’s most precious acquisition stolen, and her father missing. And then into the shop stumbles a charming stranger, quite unlike its other customers, for he offers help instead of seeking it.

Together, they must journey through a mystical world to find Hana’s father and the stolen choice—by way of rain puddles, rides on paper cranes, the bridge between midnight and morning, and a night market in the clouds.

But as they get closer to the truth, Hana must reveal a secret of her own—and risk making a choice that she will never be able to take back.


Our Infinite Fates by Laura Steven | March 4th

  • The Invisible Life of Addie La Rue meets This is How You Lose The Time War
  • Fantastical love story
  • Two souls reincarnate through the centuries
  • They love each other in every lifetime
  • But they also kill each other in each one?!

They’ve loved each other in a thousand lifetimes. They’ve killed each other in every one.

Evelyn remembers all her past lives. She also remembers that in every single one, she’s been murdered before her eighteenth birthday by Arden, a supernatural being whose soul―and survival―is tethered to hers.

The problem is that she’s quite fond of the life she’s in now, and her little sister needs her for bone marrow transplants in order to stay alive. If Evelyn wants to save her sister, she’ll have to:

1. Find the centuries-old devil who hunts her through each life―before they find her first.
2. Figure out why she’s being hunted and finally break their curse.
3. Try not to fall in love.


A Forgery of Fate by Elizabeth Lim | June 3rd

  • Romantic fantasy
  • Beauty and the Beast meets Six of Crows
  • A girl who paints the future and a cursed dragon lord
  • Love & deception
  • LOOK AT THAT COVER

Truyan Saigas didn’t choose to become a con artist, but after her father is lost at sea, it’s up to her to support her mother and two younger sisters. A gifted art forger, Tru has the unique ability to paint the future, but even such magic is not enough to put her family back together again, or stave off the gangsters demanding payment in blood for her mother’s gambling debts.

Left with few options, Tru agrees to a marriage contract with a mysterious dragon lord. He offers a fresh start for her mother and sisters and elusive answers about her father’s disappearance, but in exchange, she must join him in his desolate undersea palace. And she must assist him in a plot to infiltrate the tyrannical Dragon King’s inner circle, painting a future so treasonous, it could upend both the mortal and immortal realms. . . .


The Floating World by Axie Oh | April 29th

  • Romantic fantasy
  • Final Fantasy (SCREAMING) meets Shadow and Bone
  • Reimagining the Korean legend of Celestial Maidens
  • Castle in the Sky vibes
  • “An amnesiac sword-for-hire and a theater troupe performer with mysterious powers”
  • Look…this had me at Final Fantasy

Sunho lives in the Under World, a land of perpetual darkness. An ex-soldier, he can remember little of his life from before two years ago, when he woke up alone with only his name and his sword. Now he does odd-jobs to scrape by, until he comes across the score of a lifetime—a chest of coins for any mercenary who can hunt down a girl who wields silver light.

Meanwhile, far to the east, Ren is a cheerful and spirited acrobat traveling with her adoptive family and performing at villages. But everything changes during one of their festival performances when the village is attacked by a horrific humanlike demon. In a moment of fear and rage, Ren releases a blast of silver light—a power she has kept hidden since childhood—and kills the monster. But her efforts are not in time to prevent her adoptive family from suffering a devastating loss, or to save her beloved uncle from being grievously wounded.

Determined to save him from succumbing to the poisoned wound, Ren sets off over the mountains, where the creature came from—and from where Ren herself fled ten years ago. Her path sets her on a collision course with Sunho, but he doesn’t realize she’s the girl that he—and a hundred other swords-for-hire—is looking for. As the two grow closer through their travels, they come to realize that their pasts—and destinies—are far more entwined than either of them could have imagined…


Arcana Academy by Elise Kova | July 22nd

  • Romantasy
  • Heroine wields magical tarot cards
  • False engagement with the headmaster of a mysterious academy
  • Dark academia
  • Morally grey characters
  • Arcane magic and royal intrigue

Clara Graysword has survived the underworld of Eclipse City through thievery, luck, and a whole lot of illegal magic. After a job gone awry, Clara is sentenced to a lifetime in prison for inking tarot cards-a rare power reserved for practitioners at the elite Arcana Academy.

Just when it seems her luck has run dry, the academy’s enigmatic headmaster, Prince Kaelis, offers her an escape-for a price. Kaelis believes that Clara is the perfect tool to help him steal a tarot card from the king and use it to re-create an all-powerful card long lost to time.

In order to conceal her identity and keep her close, Kaelis brings Clara to Arcana Academy, introducing her as the newest first-year student and his bride-to-be.

Thrust into a world of arcane magic and royal intrigue, where one misstep will send her back to prison or worse, Clara finds that the prince she swore to hate may not be what he seems. But can she risk giving him power over the world-and her heart? Or will she take it for herself?


I Am Not Jessica Chen by Ann Liang

  • YA contemporary
  • Wake up in another body?!
  • Identity, self-discovery, and family dynamics
  • Childhood friends to lovers
  • Second gen immigrant experience

After getting rejected by every single Ivy League she applied to and falling short of all her Asian immigrant parents’ expectations, seventeen-year-old Jenna Chen makes a wish to become her smarter, infinitely more successful Harvard-bound cousin, Jessica Chen—only for her wish to come true. Literally.

Now trapped inside Jessica’s body, with access to Jessica’s most private journals and secrets, Jenna soon discovers that being the top student at the elite, highly competitive Havenwood Private Academy isn’t quite what she imagined. Worse, as everyone—including her own parents—start having trouble remembering who Jenna Chen is, or if she ever even existed, Jenna must decide if playing the role of the perfect daughter and student is worth losing her true self forever.


The Nightblood Prince by Molly X. Chang | July 1st

  • Romantasy
  • Mulan meets Helen of Troy
  • Can an empress unite two kingdoms at war?
  • Villainous love interest(s)
  • Love triangle alert!!
  • C-drama core
  • Vampires

Two princes. One prophecy. A fate she cannot outrun.

The night Fei was born, a prophecy was made: she would one day become the Empress of All Empresses.

Torn from her family as a child and raised in the palace to one day marry the Crown Prince of the most powerful empire in the land, Fei has only ever known loneliness. When the opportunity arises to seize her own destiny for the first time in her life, Fei sets out to hunt a legendary tiger, knowing it might cost her everything. What she doesn’t expect is to fall under the mercy of Yexue, the beautiful runaway prince from a rival kingdom. Blessed by the night, harboring a dangerous magic, and capable of commanding an army of deadly vampires, Yexue could be the key to Fei gaining more than just her freedom.

But to outrun destiny, Fei must spark a wave of events that will change the world as she knows it. Torn between two princes and plagued by nightmares of bloodshed, she finds that the stars might be more inescapable—and more irresistible—than she ever considered before. . . .


Alchemised by SenLinYu | Fall 2024

We don’t have a lot of information about this one yet but I have a feeling it’s going to be amazing!!

A standalone dark fantasy set in a war-torn world of necromancy and alchemy, with an enemies-to-lovers romance that is by turn tender, toxic, and all-consuming.


What are your most anticipated reads this year?

Thank you for reading!