Author Archives: Angela

About Angela

My name is Angela, but I answer to Ang, Andrea, and Mommy. I am 42 years old, but somehow feel both 26 and 149. Sometimes at the same time. I love Jesus, but hate at least 2/3rds of the humans He created. I consider myself a good wife but a lousy housekeeper. I love being a mother but don’t particularly like children. Quality time and sarcasm are my Love Languages. Yes! You absolutely can drop by, provided you give me 15 minutes to panic-clean and put on pants. I know that 1 in every 33 births result in multiples. I know that gap narrows to 1 in 12 for subsequent pregnancies. I know this is why my tubes are cut, burned, and tied. Not today, Satan. I can recite the entire script of The Princess Bride, (including accents) and believe that the meaning of life is contained within. Birth stories, theDodo.com, and Soldiers-returning-home videos make me happy-ugly-cry. Being interrupted, a poorly made bed, and that Christmas Shoes song make me want to punch somebody. I’m an extrovert with crushing social anxiety. To deal with stress, I crack jokes. They will be awkward and make the situation 10x worse. I can whistle and hum at the same time, but I cannot touch my toes. I look grand in orange, red, and pink, but rubbish in yellow and blue. I am a writer. I have a dog named Henri. I have a brother named Adam. They are not related. I am slightly neurotic. No I’m not. Yes I am.

Service Model

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A humorous tale of robotic murder.”

Everytime I congratulate myself on being well-read, I come across a fantastic author with an extensive back-catalogue that everyone’s read but me.

Bookish FOMO.

If all his stuff is this good, I’ll be busy until 2047.

Like all good scifi, there were fantastic characters (The Wonk, Uncharles, God) a unique, yet eerily familiar setting, and enough social commentary to give philosophers front-bottom shivers until the fall of capitalism.

The only thing I didn’t love were the Great Librarians. Librarians should be the hero of every story.

Thanks to NetGalley, Tor Publishing, and Macmillan Audio for this comically dark ARC.

Just for the Summer

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I love Abby Jimenez’ books.

The characters are always so relatable, and funny, and getting themselves into the best shenanigans.

This one’s no different.

I loved the Minnesotan setting (why aren’t more romances set in the midwest?), I thought the dating curse plot was so inventive, and the MFC’s background and struggles with mental health were written in such a believeable, caring way.

My only complaint is with my own brain. There are cameos of characters from previous books, and it took me way too long to make those connections.

Thanks to NetGalley and Forever Grand Central Publishing for this delightful ARC.

Listen for the Lie

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What if you thought you murdered your best friend? And if everyone else thought so too? And what if the truth doesn’t matter?

Gah! This book was so good.

I don’t generally like being scared (I’m already in a daily state of generalized anxiety) but I’d heard such good things.

IT WAS ALL TRUE.

The characters were fleshed out and believable. The pacing and setting were perfect, and the structure (MFC narration, interspersed by bits of the podcast) was novel and wonderful.

I’m new to this author, and she’s got a quite a back-catalogue (with FANTASTY!) so I’m looking forward to searching out more.

Thanks to NetGalley and Celadon Books for this fantastic ARC.

Riley Thorn and the Blast from the Past

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It’s amazing how important it is to read the right book at the right time.

I read this book, the third in the Riley Thorn series, several years ago, and was less than impressed.

Where was I and what was my mental health like in 2022?

I remember being irritated by the immaturity of the primary characters. I became annoyed by the cartoonishness of the secondary characters, and rolled my eyes at the mental gymnastics the reader to perform in order to buy into the plot.

2024? A totally different experience. The characters loveable and quirky. The plot was entertaining.

I like 2024 me better.

Thanks to NetGalley and Sourcebooks for this ARC.

The Black Girl Survives in This One.

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This short story collection, written by BIPOC authors, is exactly how I like my horror reads served up.

In bite-sized pieces.

I can’t handle a whole book. My bladder can’t take it.

This assembly was fantastic. Tight, and creepy, and mostly open-ended, leaving a tonne to the imagination. The narration was also spot-on.

My only quibble is that THEY DON’T ALL SURVIVE IN THIS ONE.

Thanks to NetGalley and Macmillan audio for this creeptastic ARC.

Shakespeare: The Man who Pays the Rent

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Just when I think I couldn’t love someone more, Dame Judi Dench comes out with a stunning memoir about one of my favourite playwrights.

The book chronicles all Dench’s Shakespearian roles (Cleopatra, Ophelia, Lady Macbeth, etc.), discussing the specific productions and her thought process when crafting the characters.

The audiobook was especially wonderful as Dench recited parts of these roles. It gave me goosebumps.

I’d encourage anyone who thinks they can’t understand Shakespeare to listen to Dame Judi’s narration. Her phrasing and intonation will fill in any gaps of comprehension.

Thanks to NetGalley, St Martin’s Press, and Macmillan Audio for this dramatic ARC.

Doppelganger

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Naomi Klein is a voice that needs to be heard.

Where the world labels This or That, she points out nuance.
Where the world spouts rhetoric, she preaches community.

The book takes some pretty weighty, polarized topics (climate change, Israel/Palestine, Covid mandates) and, with the utmost clarity and kindness, and calls for understanding

Does the book pinball from topic to topic? Sure. Is the term Mirror World slightly off-putting? Yes. But anyone who can hold tension between the miracle of medicine and science, whilst still side-eying Big Pharma, can lead me just about anywhere.

Thanks to NetGalley and Penguin Press UK for this oblique ARC.

Grief is for People

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Following the death of her closest friend, Sloane Crosley explores multiple kinds of loss in this disarmingly witty and poignant memoir.

Years ago I had a friend who lost a child. She and her husband took their daughter home from the hospital, spending time alone with her one last time. I might not make the same choices as my friend, but as someone whose children are all still living, I refuse to judge a mom who doesn’t.

I feel similar after reading this book. What with its honest vulnerability and tender subject matter, I will not be assigning a star-value to her words. I vibe with some. Some, not-so-much. What I can, fully, attest to, is the author’s powerful command of language. Her writing is raw, lyrical, surgical.

If you’ve lost someone to suicide, be gentle with yourself.
If you haven’t, be gentle with the author.

Thanks to NetGalley and Farrar, Strous and Giroux for this weighty ARC.

The Corpse in the Closet

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“Summer is heating up for reluctant psychic Riley Thorn and her handsome private investigator boyfriend, Nick Santiago.”

It’s amazing how important it is to read the right book at the right time.

I read this book, the second in the Riley Thorn series, several years ago, and was less than impressed.

Where was I and what was my mental health like in 2022?

I remember being irritated by the immaturity of the primary characters. I became annoyed by the cartoonishness of the secondary characters, and rolled my eyes at the mental gymnastics the reader to perform in order to buy into the plot.

2024? A totally different experience. The characters loveable and quirky. The plot was entertaining.

I like 2024 me better.

Thanks to NetGalley and Sourcebooks for this ARC.

The Dead Guy Next Door

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“A nice, normal life. Is that too much to ask?”

It’s amazing how important it is to read the right book at the right time.

I read this book several years ago, and was less than impressed.

Where was I and what was my mental health like in 2022?

I remember being irritated by the immaturity of the primary characters. I became annoyed by the cartoonishness of the secondary characters, and rolled my eyes at the mental gymnastics the reader to perform in order to buy into the plot.

2024? A totally different experience. The characters loveable and quirky. The plot was entertaining.

I like 2024 me better.

Thanks to NetGalley and Sourcebooks for this ARC.