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Queer Novellas for Halloween!

Happy Halloween folks!

I love goth Christmas. Here are three queer novellas for you to round off your Halloween TBRs:

Shadows Over Ravenkirk by Vivian Moria Valentine

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A trans woman is invited to a creepy seaside town to receive a mystery inheritance, dealing with weird bickering families and supernatural scares. So fun. Think Knives Out x The Addams Family! By a trans author.

A Doctor’s Touch by A.A. Fairview

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A vampire doctor is shocked when a werewolf comes to him when injured. As he patches him up, sparks fly between the two.

This is a super sweet (and spicy!) MM monster romance, loved it.

How to Get a Girlfriend When You’re a Terrifying Monster by Marie Cardno

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A human witch walks through a dimensional rift and encounters a shy shape-shifting eldritch horror. As the two try to figure out how to communicate, a strange attraction builds. This is hilarious, I loved it. The monster POVs are so awkward and funny.

Have a great Samhain folks!

Disco x

Disco (he/they)
Samhain Ritual Preparations | 2025

Samhain is a Celtic bonfire festival that marks the end of the harvest season and the beginning of winter and the dark part of the year. It is a liminal time, when the veil between our world and the spirit world is thin, and so it is associated with spirits and ancestor work. Our modern Halloween is influenced by this ancient holiday.

I'm writing this the night before Samhain, as I just spent the evening preparing the home spiritually for the holiday. I am hosting a dinner for a few close friends, called a Dumb Supper (which comes from the Old English for dumb meaning mute - it's a name that has stuck to refer to these kinds of dinners for ancestor work specifically). I've done Samhain rituals like this for the last few years but this is the first time I'm hosting it in my home, as before I was a part of a ritual space that hosted.

This year involves a large ancestor altar, where I will be moving my existing ancestor altar to for the night as well as adding anything that friends bring - which can include photos of deceased loved ones, mementos, offerings, etc. Each ancestor represented will have a small tea light candle anointed with an ancestor oil I have as well as a large ancestor candle to include the entire ancestral lines.

The supper will be only by candlelight and include no talking. A plate will be prepared for the ancestors first and left on the altar as an offering to them. So far, the menu includes apple and maple pork chops, a pomegranate rice salad, traditional Irish champ (which is a mashed potato dish), and pies. I wanted to make soul cakes, as that is a well loved Samhain dish, but my oven is so unpredictable that it makes baking challenging.

Following the dinner, we will be doing ancestor divination with both the fire from the candles and an oracle deck that I have specifically for spirit communication.

Tonight in preparation, I have both physically and energetically cleaned my space and recharged wards I have around the house. It was an exhausting process, as I haven't done a deep clean of either variety in a minute, so there was definitely some energy to clear out. But once I had wards recharged and even some new things added, I am feeling much better. Drained in a good way!

I also sat in front of my ancestor altar and had a chat with them, which included some tears, possibly because I was playing "Remember Me" from the movie Coco which is an instant tear jerker. But as this year I intend to do a lot more ancestor work throughout the next month and through winter, this felt like a nice private chat with my ancestors before the big celebration tomorrow.

I will write a post about how the celebration it goes. I'd love to hear what you are doing for Samhain if you are celebrating as well!

xo Sam

Mood: Chaos Curated, One Loan at a Time. Eight moods, one week, and a library card with commitment issues.

My Libby queue this week feels like a carefully balanced storm - eight books, eight moods, all orbiting different corners of curiosity, dread, and delight.

Crime & Suspense

  • The Lincoln Lawyer - legal intrigue and moral ambiguity; the tension of justice that doesn't always feel just.

  • Killer on the Road - a psychological descent told from the mind of a killer - relentless, haunting, and disturbingly human.

Horror & Speculative

  • You Weren't Meant to Be Human - existential horror and identity unspooling at the edges; a story about transformation and the terror of becoming.

  • Of Monsters and Mainframes - tech meets terror; code, consciousness, and the uncanny in our machines.

  • The Bewitching - witchcraft, power, and superstition woven through gothic atmosphere; history's hauntings in the hands of women who won't stay silent.

Nonfiction & Thought-Provoking

  • The Cure for Woman - nonfiction that reclaims women's place in science; a story of medicine, defiance, and the fight to be believed.

Whimsy & Adventure

  • Automatic Noodle - absurdist and sharp-edged; humor that slips into something uncanny and oddly true.

  • A Pirate's Life for Tea - cozy escapism with a wink; mischief, magic, and maritime tea parties for when you want your chaos charming.

I've dipped into a few already, and each on carries its own current - some dark and unsettling, some sharp and clever, some quietly strange. The rest are waiting, humming at the edges of my week, promising new moods when I'm ready to sink in.

Mood reading isn't about discipline or genre loyalty. It's about surrender. About knowing when you need courtroom tension over gothic curses, or when absurdism will soothe you better than a love story ever could. It's about giving your reading life permission to be a reflection of your inner weather.

This is mood reading: trusting instinct, following curiosity, and letting your unread shelf become its own aesthetic.

Curated chaos for the discerning reader.

Curated chaos for the discerning reader.

75 booked, a week 1 progress update

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okay it’s been one week since i started 75 booked—a reading challenge designed to help you get reading back into your daily routine—and i’ve noticed a few things that i thought i’d share.

if you missed my original post about the challenge, go check it out below.

75 BOOKED. A challenge to reincorporate reading into your daily routine

Oct 23

ok so after 7 days of doing this challenge (of which there will be 75 days so we are still VERY early on in things), i’ve noticed four major things. if you want to see the specifics on how the challenge is going—check out this playlist on my tiktok @thisstoryaintover.

  1. reading for 1.5 hours each day is easier than i thought and it’s started to replace a lot of my scrolling time. i do this content creation thing full time, so take this with a grain of salt, but most of my reading is still happening in the 5-9pm hours rather than the 9-5 hours. audiobooks have helped with this of course but i also feel that i’m being more intentional in allowing myself to relax with a book for at least 1.5 hours a day. as a chronic overworker, this is huge for me

  2. some crafty hobbies are made better for audiobook listening. i find that the hobbies that involve repetitive movements tend to work better for me or ones that involve cleaning lol. i cleaned up an old typewriter i bought off facebook marketplace a year ago and had such a good time listening to my audiobooks while doing it. it’s not necessarily a crafty hobby but it’s something that has been on my to-do list for so long and i’m so glad that i finally got around to it

  3. i’m finally getting to my physical tbr i think this one is definitely motivated by the video i made at the beginning of this year where i said i would unhaul the list of books in the video if i didn’t read them by the end of the year. if you’re curious about the list, you can watch the video below.

  4. writing reviews of the books i finish in a physical journal is my new FAVOURITE thing — i truly wish i had started doing this earlier. beyond being obsessed with using my louise carmen-inspired traveler’s notebook, i feel like writing my reviews on paper is making me sit with my thoughts on each book so much more. because i’m also only writing in my journal for myself and for my eyes only, i feel like i can be super honest about my thoughts and really interrogate how i felt about the book.

OK those were the four things i’ve observed so far but it’s still early days. i wonder if my opinion on any of these observation will change as the challenge goes on but i would love to hear from all of you if you’re taking part in the challenge and what spin on the rules you’ve made for yourself!

with love,

jananie ♡

Chris dougherty

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Chris Reads Books📚

Chris dougherty

A community for readers who want to explore literature with an intentional and curious mind.

ash.reads.horror

ash

🎃 Reader beware, you may leave here with a love for horror and a full tbr 🦴

Jenn

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The Moody Edit

Jenn

Curated chaos for the eclectic reader.

The Brothers Gwynne

Welcome to The Brothers Gwynne! We're the sons of John Gwynne and we LOVE books. Truth and Courage.

The Skyy Life

Erika 💖

✨mood reader with a never-ending TBR✨ I love reading and trying out different genres — which means I tend to find some hidden GEMS. Let’s discuss book stuff, deep dive in the series, & genuine (unhinged?) reviews☺️

Boozhoo Books

Boozhoo Books

What Feeds Below
Naomi

Naomi


Tastemaker-curated publishing imprints


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