Monday, April 13, 2026

#Review - The Faraway Inn by Sarah Beth Durst #YA #Contemporary #Fantasy

Series:
 Standalone
Format: 
372 pages, Paperback
Release Date: March 31, 2026
Publisher: Delacorte
Source: Publisher
Genre: YA, Contemporary, Fantasy

After a devastating heartbreak, a teen girl decides to spend her summer helping her eccentric great aunt manage her quaint Vermont inn--but this fixer-upper is hiding a magical secret--in this cozy and irresistible new fantasy from the New York Times bestselling author of The Spellshop.

Sixteen-year-old Calisa is desperate for a change of scenery after her lying ex ruins her perfect Brooklyn summer. When her parents suggest she head to rural Vermont to help her great-aunt run her cozy bed-and-breakfast for a few months, she jumps at the chance.

But when Calisa arrives at the B&B, she's shocked to find a rundown inn with only a handful of guests. And to make matters worse, upon meeting with her great-aunt it quickly becomes clear that Calisa was not invited. Auntie Zee is determined to keep anyone from messing with her beloved inn…even if it is clear she needs the help.

To earn her keep, Calisa sets to work fixing up the inn, enlisting extra help from the groundskeeper's (handsome) son. But the longer she stays, the more it becomes evident that there is something strange about the B&B—and its residents. Something almost…otherworldly.

The inn is keeping a magical secret—but to protect the place she's come to love, Calisa must unravel the truth of it, and her aunt, before it's too late.



The Faraway Inn by Sarah Beth Durst is a delightful, cozy YA fantasy that perfectly captures the healing power of a summer spent fixing up a quirky inn while uncovering family secrets and a touch of magic. Sixteen-year-old Calisa flees her Brooklyn life after a devastating breakup with her cheating ex-boyfriend, who shatters her plans for the perfect summer before senior year. Eager for escape, she heads to rural Vermont to help her eccentric great-aunt Zee run the Faraway Inn, a bed-and-breakfast she vaguely remembers from childhood as cozy and welcoming. 

Upon arrival, reality hits hard: the inn is a rundown fixer-upper with a sagging porch, overgrown gardens, a dusty library, and very few guests. Grumpy Auntie Zee seems less than thrilled to have her there and actively resists any changes or help. Undeterred, Calisa rolls up her sleeves, enlists the aid of the charming groundskeeper’s son, Jack (who brings a sweet romantic spark), and sets about restoring the place with determination and Brooklyn grit. As renovations progress, strange occurrences pile up—quirky guests with odd behaviors, inexplicable events, and hints that the inn holds deeper, magical secrets

Calisa must unravel the truth to protect the place she’s grown to love, all while learning to open her heart again and discovering her own connections to the inn’s hidden world. The story blends heartfelt coming-of-age elements with light fantasy, where doors might lead to more than just rooms, and family legacies come with whimsical surprises. The Vermont setting feels alive and inviting despite its initial shabbiness—think tangled vines, creaky floors, and a library begging for attention. 

The atmosphere is frosted with joy, making readers want to check in and never leave. Calisa is a relatable, resilient protagonist whose heartbreak feels authentic without overwhelming the tone. Her growth from jaded teen to someone embracing change and magic is satisfying and gentle. Auntie Zee starts as a wonderfully grumpy, antagonistic figure but reveals layers of eccentricity and protectiveness that make her endearing. 

Supporting cast members, including the handsome groundskeeper’s son and the inn’s eclectic guests, add charm, humor, and emotional depth without cluttering the narrative. The romance is a light, endearing dash of sweetness—kisses and budding connection rather than anything intense—pairing perfectly with the cozy vibe. Themes of healing from betrayal, found (or rediscovered) family, and the joy of restoration resonate strongly.


Chapter One

There were a lot of trees.

Calisa stood by the mailbox with her backpack and her suitcase and told herself very firmly that this was exactly what she needed.

Ahead of her was a forest, hemming in a one-­lane road. Pine trees clustered together, the expanse of evergreens only broken by the occasional white-­barked tree that stood out like a candle against the dark green. Overhead, the sky was a matte white, clouds blotting out the sun, which matched her mood—­cloudy with a chance of rain.

“This is going to be an amazing summer,” she said, as if saying the words out loud would act as some kind of spell to make them come true.

She just hadn’t pictured what it would feel like to actually be here, by herself, in the middle of a truly excessive number of trees, away from everyone she knew and everything familiar. She’d been too focused on not being there.

A few weeks ago, she’d never have considered coming to Vermont by herself for two entire months, but after her world fell apart, she’d pounced on the invitation. She’d wanted to spend her summer anywhere but Brooklyn—­anywhere but where Ethan, the boy who’d yanked her heart out of her chest and then stomped on it with the enthusiasm of a four-­year-­old in tap shoes, was going to be. It was essential self-­care.

In retrospect, Calisa supposed she should have had the Uber driver take her all the way to her great-­aunt’s doorstep instead of just the mailbox, but after the hours on the train and then in the car, she’d wanted to walk.

Also, the driver wouldn’t stop talking about fly-­fishing. So, here she was.

It will be fine. She could tell from the clouds it wasn’t going to rain until later. And if it did, she’d packed an umbrella, though she wasn’t sure exactly where.

Everything is going to be fine.

Shouldering her backpack, Calisa hauled her suitcase down the road. On either side, the trees loomed over her. It smelled like pine and wet earth and not at all like the mix of hot gyro meat, bus fumes, coffee, and overripe trash that she associated with the street outside her family’s apartment in Park Slope. Above, birds cawed to one another with sharp, biting cries that made her feel like an intruder. Listening, she thought she heard one softer trill, a cascading chirp that was more friendly. Squirrels leaped from branch to branch, causing the forest to rustle. She wondered if Vermont had wolves. Or bears. Probably not. Or maybe yes? This wasn’t the city or even suburbia. Bears weren’t impossible. On the plus side, being attacked by a bear would make a unique party story. Or an excellent college application essay. She hadn’t started writing hers yet. On the minus side, it would not be great to be mauled.

Close beside her, the trees rustled again, and Calisa jumped. She spotted a squirrel racing up the trunk of a pine tree. Just a squirrel. Not a bear. Only my overactive imagination.

In Google Maps, it hadn’t looked that far from the main road to the bed-­and-­breakfast. She pulled out her phone. No signal. She shoved it back into her pocket and kept walking. Ahead, the sky was darkening as gray clouds seeped into the white.

The road twisted, and in front of her, on the left side, was a wooden sign, half devoured by ivy, with letters gouged into it that read:

THE FARAWAY INN

She exhaled and smiled.

“See,” she said to the trees. “Almost there.” She’d thought it was a melodramatic name—Vermont wasn’t that far from Brooklyn—­but now that she was here in a random, possibly bear—infested forest, she decided it fit. She felt extremely far away from everything, which was exactly what she wanted.

Cheered, Calisa walked faster—­and it began to rain.

At first it was just a few drops, one on her cheek, one on her head, and a few spattering on the road around her, and then it increased to a drizzle. She shivered as she walked, wishing she had worn something warmer than her favorite Brooklyn Beans T-shirt (teal with a picture of a coffee cup and the words “Brew can do it!”) and a pair of jean shorts. Mom-­Kate had insisted she pack a jacket, even though it was summer, but it was shoved deep somewhere, probably with the umbrella. She didn’t want to stop to dig either of them out and risk drenching everything else in her suitcase in the process. Better to just keep walking.

A few minutes and many raindrops later, the road rose up a hill and then, as it crested, widened to reveal a hollow between slopes thick with pine trees. Behind it was a panorama of the mountains, crowned in gray clouds.

And in the center of the hollow was her great-­aunt’s inn.

“Huh,” she said out loud.

Calisa hadn’t been here in years, not since she was five or six, and it did not match her memory. She thought she’d remembered a storybook inn, framed in roses and lilacs, with a burbling brook next to or behind it. Had she imagined all of that? She’d been young enough that it was one of those fuzzy kinds of memories that felt jumbled. But she’d still been expecting cute.

This . . .

It was not cute.

Well, she supposed it could have been charming once, but if so, it had been many, many years ago. Blinking through the droplets on her eyelashes, Calisa looked at the run-­down inn and wondered what had happened. Auntie Zee’s B&B was gray, drab, and . . . the kindest description she could think of was “vintage distressed.” It reminded her of a squashed wedding cake. Three stories tall, it had faded and peeling paint that could have been white with ivory trim at one time but was now gray with dirtier gray. The roof was tilted, lopsided, and the shutters hung crooked on either side of the windows. One window on the second floor was boarded up with plywood. And the wraparound porch was so overrun with vines that half of it was buried beneath greenery.

It was all tremendously overgrown. The flower gardens, which Mom-­Kate and Mom-­Elise had gushed about while Calisa was packing—­“Daffodils and lilacs and roses and lilies everywhere!” they’d said—­were a mess. Okay, that was putting it mildly. Brambles and ivy from the forest sprawled across the flower beds as if they were trying to devour them. She couldn’t even see the supposed burbling brook, if there still was one.

It looked as if the forest was on the verge of swallowing the inn whole.

To be fair, her moms had said Auntie Zee was having trouble keeping up the place. It was, in fact, the reason that Mom-­Kate had the idea to send Calisa here. She could help Auntie Zee and recover from her heartbreak at the same time. “Two birds with one stone,” Mom-­Kate had chirped cheerfully. But Calisa didn’t think her mother had any idea how run-­down it really was. If it wasn’t for a few lights inside, she’d have thought it was abandoned.

Calisa stood, staring into the hollow at the shabby bed-­and-­breakfast while rain slithered down her shirt and seeped into her sneakers. Her socks were already soaked, and her hair dripped on her shoulders. It wasn’t the arrival moment she’d pictured.

At least Auntie Zee will be happy I’m here. There was clearly a lot of work to do. She wasn’t afraid of hard work. Just afraid of being pathetic. Far better to be the unpaid, overworked help than the heartbroken girl everyone felt sorry for. She’d cheerfully be Cinderella so long as it meant she didn’t have to dance with any kind of prince.

Her original plan for the summer hadn’t involved any of this. Before Ethan upended everything, she’d had it all nicely mapped out: she’d secured a job at a vintage boutique called Buttons and Bell-­Bottoms, which would have been fantastic. She’d work there for a few hours every afternoon, primarily playing on her phone and trying on the most random outfits she could assemble. After work, she’d meet up with her friends. She, Maddy, and Crystal had set themselves a challenge to visit every single coffee shop in Brooklyn before the end of August. Every evening, she was going to meet Ethan at the bodega where he’d be working, downstairs from her apartment. They’d have dinner (sometimes with his family, sometimes with hers, sometimes just the two of them), watch movies, and cuddle, or go out and drop in on one of Ethan’s friends’ parties. It would have been a very, very different summer than this.

Now . . . even if she spent the entire summer on nonstop yardwork and housework and whatever else until she had blisters and calluses on both hands, it was still a better option than having to see Ethan every day when she walked past the bodega and feeling as if she were being ripped to shreds from the inside out all over again.




Friday, April 10, 2026

#Review - The Crimson Throne by Sara Raasch & Beth Revis #YA #Historical #Fantasy

Series:
 
Spy and Guardian
Format: 368 pages, Hardcover
Release Date: October 7, 2025
Publisher: Sourcebooks Fire
Source: Publisher
Genre: Young Adult, Historical, Fantasy

Outlander meets Holly Black in this enemies-to-lovers romantasy set in the dazzling and dangerous Scottish court where a fae guardian of the realm falls in love with a charming Elizabethan spy who could also be the key to her world’s undoing. From the New York Times bestselling authors of the Witch and Hunter duology, Sara Raasch and Beth Revis, comes an incredible historical romantasy duology. 

Nineteen-year-old Samson Calthorpe's father is a court favorite—but that alone won’t take him far without money and so many people depending on him. So when the opportunity arises to become a royal spy, he has to take it, using every bit of the skills and resolve he’s picked up on the streets of London to prove his worth in Queen Elizabeth’s court. 

Eighteen-year-old Alyth Graham has kept her eyes on Queen Mary's husband, Lord Darnley, for years—her eyes and her magic. She may be a member of the Scottish court, but she’s no lady. A bastard child of a fae prince and a human mother, Alyth is among the most powerful protectors in Scotland: guardians sworn to support the barrier keeping the Red Caps, a bloodthirtsy clan of fairies, away from the Fae Land portals. 

As Alyth and Samson circle each other in the volatile and glamorous Scottish court, both seek to uncover threats to their own countries. They have only one unifying link: their shared hatred and suspicion of Lord Darnley. Using secret codes, hidden messages, and a little bit of magic, Alyth and Samson unravel a plot centuries in the making. Lord Darnley is only a pawn, and in this game, the queen takes all. 


The Crimson Throne is the first installment in co-authors Sarah Raasch and Beth Revis' Spy and Guardian series. Eighteen-year-old Alyth Graham and Nineteen-year-old Samson Calthorpe are the main characters in this book, with appearances from Mary, Queen of Scotland, and Elizabeth, Queen of England. The story takes place mostly in Scotland. This novel has the appeal of romantic fantasy, a lush historical setting that is reminiscent of Outlander, and the evergreen topic of fairies. These authors previously came together to write Night of the Witch.

The story unfolds against the volatile backdrop of 16th-century Scotland and England, amid the rivalry between Mary, Queen of Scots, and Queen Elizabeth I. Samson Calthorpe, a street-smart Londoner burdened by a mysterious curse that isolates him from loved ones, seizes an opportunity to serve as a royal spy for Elizabeth. His mission: infiltrate the Scottish court, uncover plots (including potential assassination threats against Elizabeth), and perhaps break his curse in the process. 
On the other side stands Alyth Graham, a powerful fae guardian and bastard daughter of a fae prince and a human mother. Sworn to protect Mary Queen of Scots from both human and supernatural threats—including her own husband, Lord Darnley—Alyth maintains a magical barrier against bloodthirsty Red Caps and other fae dangers threatening the realm. When Samson and Alyth cross paths in the glittering yet treacherous Scottish court, mutual distrust sparks an enemies-to-lovers romance amid political scheming, magical threats, and questions of loyalty, duty, and destiny. 
The narrative weaves real historical tensions (the power struggle between the two queens, court favorites, and figures like Lord Darnley) with fae elements, portals, guardians, and folklore-inspired magic rooted in Scottish mythology. The intrigue and political scheming shine brightly. Court machinations, betrayals, and layered plots keep the pace engaging, with a solid mix of action, mystery, and emotional stakes. The fae magic adds whimsy and tension without overwhelming the historical foundation—many readers note it feels like a refreshing, liberally interpreted take on Mary vs. Elizabeth, enhanced by strong world-building and folklore details. 
The romance develops naturally from enemies to something more, fueled by distrust, shared dangers, and personal vulnerabilities. Character growth, particularly around duty vs. desire and the confrontation of insecurities, lands well. The pain, anger, and overconfidence of young adulthood feel authentically portrayed. If you enjoy historical fantasy with romantic tension, political scheming, and folklore-inspired magic—especially anything Scottish or Tudor-era—this is worth picking up. It may not reinvent the wheel, but it executes its premise with charm and enough heart to leave readers eager for the sequel, which will be the finale of the series since this is a duology.   





Wednesday, April 8, 2026

#Review - Devious Prey by Scott Reintgen #YA #FANTASY

Series:
 Standalone
Format: 
304 pages, Hardcover
Release Date: March 31, 2026
Publisher: Margaret K. McElderry Books
Source: Publisher
Genre: Young Adult, Fantasy

A young woman must survive the deadly mythical creature she smuggled aboard an airship after a crash landing on a deserted island frees it, setting it on a hunt for the survivors in this thrilling fantasy adventure from New York Times bestselling author Scott Reintgen.

When an airship’s windmaster dies mid-flight, the crew and its passengers are swept out to sea by a violent storm. They crash on a desolate island, but they’re not alone. A dragoness had been stashed in the hold. After escaping a damaged cage, it begins preying on the surviving travelers in the hopes of remaining free.

The stranded group’s best chance of making it home alive is the young woman who smuggled the dragoness on board in the first place—and the mysterious teen boy who was led onto the ship in chains before takeoff. Both have secrets that could help them survive on the island…but those same secrets could deliver a death sentence if they ever make it home.


Scott Reintgen's Devious Prey is a mashup of fantasy and thriller aimed at a Young Adult audience. There are two key players: Pearl Trask and Marken Burke. Pearl, along with her aunt, is a smuggler, while Marken is being sent to face judgment for a crime that will be explained deeper towards the end of the story. The story begins aboard an airship before transitioning to a deadly, magical-wilderness survival story on a mysterious, deserted island, bringing the fantasy genre we know and love to a fresh setting reminiscent of thrillers like Lost and Yellowjackets.

Pearl Trask, a resourceful young smuggler, boards the airship Grand Gesture with her aunt, carrying highly illegal and dangerous cargo: a caged dragoness. Their plan goes sideways when armed soldiers join the voyage, escorting a powerful teen wizard named Marken Burke—known as the “Butcher of West Lily”—who is being transported in chains for trial on mass murder charges. Mid-flight, disaster strikes: the windmaster dies, a violent storm takes over, and the ship crashes on a mysterious, uncharted (and possibly mobile) desert island.
Survivors from the crew, passengers, soldiers, and prisoners must band together amid dwindling supplies and rising threats. But the real danger emerges when the dragoness escapes her damaged enchanted crate and begins hunting the stranded group, using her unique ability to assume the properties of substances she touches. Pearl and the chained wizard become unlikely keys to survival as secrets unravel, old alliances fracture, power struggles erupt, and the line between hunter and prey blurs. 
Pearl is a capable, intelligent protagonist with raw backstory that draws readers in, while Marken and other survivors bring complex motivations—trauma, secrets, and shifting alliances keep everyone guessing. The story mixes Lord of the Flies-style social breakdown with Predator-esque monster tension, all set against Reintgen’s inventive magic system in the world of Ten Tides. Devious Prey delivers fast pacing, high tension, and a scene-stealing dragoness.

The magic system feels fresh and integral—layered, controllable as a resource, and tied to the dragon’s shapeshifting abilities. The question later becomes who is more dangerous? Pearl, Marken, or the Dragon? If you enjoy stories like The Hunger Games meets Jurassic Park (with dragons), or appreciate Reintgen’s signature blend of survival, magic, and flawed heroes, this story is definitely for you.





Monday, April 6, 2026

#Review - A Deadly Inheritance by Kelley Armstrong #YA #Thriller #Suspense

Series:
 Standalone
Format: 
424 pages, Paperback
Release Date: March 24, 2026
Publisher: Tundra Books
Source: Publisher
Genre: Young Adult, Thriller, Suspense

After discovering she's an heiress to a billion-dollar corporation, seventeen-year-old Liliana finds herself at a new boarding school where she must navigate secret societies and a deadly competition. Not to mention two handsome boys.

The Reappearance of Rachel Price meets The Inheritance Games series in this new YA thriller from bestselling author Kelley Armstrong.


In the wake of her mother's death, Liliana Chamberlain's estranged (and very wealthy) grandparents swoop in. Or their lawyer does. Her grandparents aren't ready to meet her, but they want her to have the life her mother walked away from, starting with Westdale Academy, the elite boarding school her mother attended. It should be a Cinderella dream come true, but Lili has serious misgivings. Yet she doesn't have a choice, being under eighteen and dead broke.

Westdale Academy is a school of secrets as well as intriguing classmates, including Hollywood golden boy Theo Dubois and the mysterious Maddox Moreno. As she gets to know them all, Lili realizes there's more to the school than elite-level networking. Something deadly.

For the new girl at school, investigating the deaths of past students — including Maddox's own sister — is a very dangerous game. Do those deaths have something to do with why her mother fled Westdale at the cost of her inheritance?

When a fun night out turns bloody, Theo is the prime suspect, and Liliana must race against time to connect the past with the present and discover the truth behind her inheritance.

Kelley Armstrong's A Deadly Inheritance centers on a discovery after Lilliana Green's mother dies: a boarding school for the extremely rich, secret societies, dark academia, and a twisted "why bother" choosing a complicated romance among 3 key characters: Lili, Theo, and Maddox. Seventeen-year-old Liliana (Lili) Green is barely scraping by after her mother's sudden death. She's been living alone in their apartment, dodging authorities, and trying to finish high school until she turns 18, when she can attend college. 

Then a lawyer named Cecilia Robbins appears, revealing that Lili is the heiress to a massive family fortune from her estranged billionaire grandparents, Chamberlain. (She also went to school with Lili's mom and knew her father). They aren't ready to meet her personally but want her to claim the life her mother rejected—starting with enrollment at Westdale Academy, the elite boarding school her mother once attended. Lili is thrust into a world of privilege, where wealth, status, and hidden power structures rule. 

At the academy, she encounters secret societies, intense social dynamics, mysterious deaths, and a "deadly competition" tied to her newfound inheritance. She must navigate suspicion from peers, unravel family secrets linking past and present, and figure out who she can trust—especially amid two intriguing love interests and rising danger that puts her own life at risk. The story mixes Cinderella-like upheaval with high-stakes mystery, grief processing, and teen found-family vibes. 

The dark academia atmosphere is moody and immersive, with elite boarding-school tensions, secret societies, and an undercurrent of menace that keeps pages turning. Armstrong lost me a bit with the "why choose" poly relationship storyline. That's not typically a trope I read, and certainly not one I was expecting in a YA novel, and likely won't read it again. Another failure for me was the numerous plot holes, a rushed ending, and a main mystery that didn't quite deliver the punch the author thought she'd created.