Random (but not really)

Friday, December 27, 2024

The Covers of 2024: Fantasy

Mortal Follies series by Alexis Hall

Mortal Follies Confounding Oaths
Cover design by Regina Flath & cover illustration by Radiante Mozzerell. Published by Del Rey (Penguin).

These covers are so pretty!

I like the font face a little better on Confounding Oaths, as well as the white text on the black background, but I prefer how much cleaner the author name is on Mortal Follies, and the addition of the tag line.

But those are truly nits, since overall these are stunning covers.

Mortal Follies (2023),  Confounding Oaths (2024)


Shady Hollow Mysteries by Juneau Black

Shady Hollow Cold Clay Mirror Lake Evergreen Chase Twilight Falls Phantom Pond Summers End

Cover design & illustrations by Perry De La Vega. Published by Vintage (Penguin).

Yes, I did discover and then tear through this entire series this year, and there is not a single thing I don’t adore about these covers. They’re cute, they’re consistent, and they show the characters without giving anything away.

LOVE!

Shady Hollow (2015), Cold Clay (2017), Mirror Lake (2020), Evergreen Chase (2021), Phantom Pond (2023), Twilight Falls (2023), Summers End (2024)


Uncanny Romance series by Lish McBride

A Little Too Familiar Rough Around the Hedges

Cover design & illustration by Jenny Zemanek. Self-published.

Another set of covers I love. I might not be a fan of faceless characters, but they work for me here, especially since the figures are smaller, and allow the other design elements to stand out.

Like the above two series, these are clearly related books, yet also clearly about two different sets of characters.

A Little Too Familiar (2022) 8/10, Rough Around the Hedges (2023)


Socially Orcward (2021) by Lisa Henry and Sarah Honey

Socially Orcward

Cover by Steph Westerik. Self-published.

The pictures and design are seemingly simple, yet they give you an accurate feel of Dave the Orc, and that this book definitely does not take itself seriously.

I love it when self-published books nail the cover.

(Adventures in Aguillon)


Breeze Spells and Bridegrooms (2024) by Sarah Wallace, S.O. Callahan

Breeze Spells and BridegroomsCover art by Caras Alexandra. Self-published.

Another excellent self-published cover.

It’s an accurate portrayal of the two characters and their dynamic. Although the title is a little twisty, it’s not illegible, and the background elements give a finished look to the whole thing rather working as a distraction.

I was actually surprised to discover this was self-published and not professionally published.

(Fae & Human Relations)


Murder on Hunter’s Eve (2024) by Morgan Stang

Murder on Hunter's EveCover design by Etheric Designs. Self-published.

Although the color changed from blue and gold to red and black, the design matches the second book and ties all three books together. It’s not a complicated cover but it’s still elegant and very well executed very eye-catching.

Lamplight Murder Mysteries: Murder at Spindle Manor (2022), Murder on the Lamplight Express (2023)


Somewhere Beyond the Sea (2024) by T.J. Klune

Somewhere Beyond the SeaCover by Chris Sickles. Published by Tor (Macmillan)

This is clearly related to the cover of the first book, with the same house seemingly teetering on the edge of a cliff, which reflects the insecure nature of the lives of the characters.

Cerulean Chronicles: The House in the Cerulean Sea (2020)


The Masquerades of Spring (2024) by Ben Aaronovitch

The Masquerades of SpringCover map image by Stephen Walter, title lettering by Patrick Knowles & interior art by Giles Meakin. Published by Subterranean Press

I think I love every cover of every book in this series, and how you immediately know you’re looking at a Rivers of London story.

Rivers of London: Midnight Riot (2011), Moon Over Soho (2011), Whispers Under Ground (2012), Broken Homes (2014), Foxglove Summer (2014), The Hanging Tree (2017), The Furthest Station (2017), Lies Sleeping (2018), The October Man (2019),  False Value (2020), Tales from the Folly: A Rivers of London Short Story Collection (2020), What Abigail Did That Summer (2021), Amongst Our Weapons (2022), Winter’s Gifts (2023)


If I hadn’t discovered and read the entire Shady Hollow series, self-published books would have dominated the fantasy category.

Vintage: 5
Self-published: 5
Del Rey: 2
Tor: 1
Subterranean Press: 1

The Books of 2024

Written by Michelle at 6:34 pm    

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Categories: Books & Reading,Covers,Yearly Round-Up  

Wednesday, December 25, 2024

The Books of 2024

It’s been another rough year, and a lot of things have fallen by the wayside, but as I enjoy looking back at what I read through the year, I’m going to make sure I get this round-up done.

The crappy year does mean, however, that I have done a LOT of rereading. Additionally, I’ve been unable to focus, so I’ve listened to a lot of audiobooks, which makes the number of rereads even higher (since I almost never listen to a book I’ve not read before).

As of right now, I’ve read 23 books published this year and 15 books published in 2023.  67% of the books this year were rereads, which is a record for me (last year was 65%).

But I was reading, so I shan’t berate myself for my obscenely large TBR pile.

As a reminder, my ratings are based on my personal feelings about a book. It could be this was the wrong time for me to read a book, or it could be a book that is subjectively good but is really NOT for me (hello dystopias).

The round-up will start (of course) with book covers, and end with my love of statistics.


Book Covers

The Books

  • Audio
  • Romance
  • Mystery
  • Fantasy
  • Final Roundup

The links on this post will be updated as the posts are published.

Previous Years

Written by Michelle at 1:56 pm    

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Categories: Books & Reading,Yearly Round-Up  

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