Saturday, 17 January 2026

Scribble #150

A Day in Her Life



My imaginary friend was an ordinary girl named Jane
    How disappointed I am in my younger self for being so unimaginative.
    I could have thought up a unicorn/sea hag hybrid and named her Opalescence, or a witch obsessed with dinosaurs from a magical realm called Tessaraptor, who uses her enchanted jewel to summon dragons as a stepping stone towards her dream of owning a triceratops.
    But no. I went with Jane. I settled for plain Jane.
    She wasn't even a proper imaginary friend. She was a half-arsed convenience and distraction at the school playground whose sole reason for being was to get me through my lonely days, by a) sitting next to me, and b) standing next to me. I was too much of an outcast to even imagine what a "real" friend would be like, and what we would talk about and do together.
    It was a harbinger of what was to become of my life, really.
    My name is Orchid Ness, for whatever it's worth. I mean, with a name like that, combined with a fertile imagination and writing ambitions, you'd think I'd be set: Famous author who sells millions of books, who makes a living out of the limitless ocean of creativity that is my mind; out of which I conjure fresh, exciting forms of storytelling, and put them to paper with my fountain pen, and then I spend weeks or months typing them up, followed by the arduous process of editing them to hell and back, documenting them, and finally selling them to publishers, begging them to recognise my genius and take the financial risk of getting my stories out into the world, for other people to read. A chance to move, inspire, and change lives.
    It did not turn out like that. At all.
    I am in my late twenties and I haven't published a thing, just on my barely existent blog. How fitting that that word sounds so much like blob and bog. I've hardly written anything, truth be told; my life, for all my inward, dreamworld excitement, hasn't offered much in the way of inspiration and motivation in the lucid, outer lake of reality. No, lucid is not the right word, nor is lake: dreary, cold, hard, bitter, bottomless pit of horror, stress, suffering, emptiness and nothingness that is reality should suffice my point.
    One of the lesser reasons for my lacking in the make-my-dreams-come-true department is that, with all the people I've dated - men, women, nonbinary, and other genders - I haven't had sex yet. I guess that, like with writing, I'm scared to. I get too anxious and self-conscious of what others think of me. The judgements, the criticisms, the potential diatribes on how awful - how fundamentally wrong I am. Exposing myself to anything new, challenging, and possibly life changing in the real world, in the here and now, scares me. I'm never as prepared and ready as I rush to believe I am. Every time, my inner fire is suddenly petrified out of me in a single snuff, leaving me alone, cold and compressed in the dark.
    I am a mess. Worse, a mess of nothing.
    No one, no publisher, has had a chance to see what is bursting inside of me, and no lover has had a chance to explore who I am, outside and in. Ecstasy is a myth and mystery to me. 
    Instead, I am numb with ennui behind a cashier at a shop where I don't care for the clothes and don't plan to buy and wear them myself. At this particular retail, everyday is stressful and frustrating - I swear I will die a happy woman if I never have to pick another item of clothing off the dirty tiled floor ever again, same goes for lost pens - my brain making space not for more fantasy and grand, epic stories and characters, but for the droning hum of Think of the money, think of the money, playing on loop.
    How I long to rediscover the passion; the sparkle; the flash; the light to my chronic tunnel vision; the breakthrough and bravery I need to be not only a dreamer and idealist, but an artist in a world that desperately needs them. To just break free.
    To have people who encourage me and believe in me.



Scribble #149

Haikus



Orchid Ness has phoned
She is never without mates
She is close with none.



Nisa No-nonsense
That is what she calls herself
In her noble voice.



Alice Oseman's books
And comics I so relate
They inspire hope.



Scribble #148

Any system that needs human suffering, discrimination, fear, abuse and corruption in order to function is not worth preserving. It is unnatural and inhuman. It should never, ever be normalised.

'Hatred/cruelty is the point' should never, ever be normalised.



Saturday, 10 January 2026

Scribble #147

Great Women



Dear Terri,

    Hey! How are you doing?
    I know what you must be thinking: Me?! Never mind me, how are you doing, Mountain Maiden?
    You may flatter me, but climbing Changzheng Ri (Mount Everest is too predicable, don't you think?) to reach zen, clear my mind, and improve my bodybuilding and kung fu skills - it pales like useless, fragile ice crystals in comparison to your firefighting and actually saving lives in LA.
    And I do mean firefighting in the literal sense, as you are a superhero. A superhero, imagine! You're finally there!
    Emberess! It is so, well, cool wouldn't be the right word, would it? How about hot? Scorching? Bright? Inspired? Enlightened!?
    Well, whatever, the point is you are far more impressive than me, though you must admit I am getting by splendidly without powers, and will hopefully come back stronger, faster, and smarter than ever after my trek through the freezing mountains.
    It is a godlike task just to keep warm and never run out of food up here. That reminds me, I never want to see another dry protein bar for a very long time after this.
    Oh, should I have started this letter calling you Emberess, instead of your real name? Who knows who might intercept and read these. Villains have mastered the art of being too predictable yet dangerously, scarily unpredictable at the same time these days. They are certainly growing more daring, ruthless, and sociopathic.
    Anyway, I'm cold, I can no longer feel my fingers and toes, I'm hungry, and I'm enlightened and all-knowing (except for what is going on outside of this isolation, hence the letters). And I'm missing my husband, my daughter, and you.
    I really hope this gets to you soon, and you can write back to me, permitting any of the monks will allow any personal correspondence from the outside world. I've written to Ken already, and I'm expecting a full five-page account of everything our little Sage is doing, pictures included - photos and her hand drawn masterpieces cleverly disguised as doodles. I want to see how she's taken to another kind of art, too. Oh Sage, following in her mommy's footsteps. Getting a kick out of martial arts.
    Mom jokes aside, I want the details of what has been going on in your life since I departed to China on my quest for enlightenment. Who you've saved, how you are with your powers, and how things are with Lydia. I hope Ella isn't pushing you too hard.
    Remember, your fire is your spark. It is a part of you. It is your gift. It is who you are. And you are more than Emberess, though she is you, and you are her. Together, you are whole.
    Be proud. And I am proud of you, no matter what.
    (Ooh, am I becoming enlightened already? Or maybe it's the cold and hunger delirium writing. Frostbite and famine are no joke.)
    Stay strong, stay safe, and stay super!
    Super you! With self-care! (Better than me right now!)

    Love, Lola

    P.S. I'm thinking of conquering the Tian Shan mountains, Mount Kailash, Kunlun Goddess Peak, the Jade Dragon Snow Mountain, Pumori, and Lhotse in the following years. I might even take Sage with me.



Dear Lola,

    It is great to hear from you!
    Yes, I got your letter (safely and securely), and I can write you back (safely, the monks guarantee it), as you're climbing those mountains and reaching pure zen.
    I really needed your words of encouragement, and I thank you. Truth be told, I still get anxious. I'm still a little afraid of my powers. It can never be overstated enough how big a responsibility being a superhero is, especially when you have pyrokinesis. You are always expected to save everyone, but when you can light a fire or fuse with just a wayward thought and sudden, confused emotion, you are more likely to kill than save anyone. I have to be extra cautious when rescuing people from burning buildings (which, to clarify, I am not the cause of any of them), and even getting a cat down from a tree is a fire hazard for me.
    Ella has been firm but fair with my training, and things have been going well with dear Lydia.
    Lydia. She's a genius, constantly inventing new tech to help me keep my powers in check whenever I have anxiety attacks. Her non-claustrophobic - and sleek and slick! - suits are improving all the time. Yet her presence alone burns me, but in a deep, feelgood, exhilarating way. She causes my heart to race, safely and smoothly. She calms me, and makes me happy.
    Pun coming up, apologies in advance: Lydia warms me. She warms me more than my powers do. Suits and tools in hand, she assists me in managing them, with no fear, no hesitation, and no complaints. She cares for me, maybe more than her inventions. She sees me. I am so lucky to have this bright, shining, beautiful star in my life, when I most need her.
    You are right, I am Emberess. She is me and I am her. She makes me whole (though of course Lydia makes me feel whole on a deeper, subterranean level).
    I wonder, what do you think your superhero name will be? Mountain Maiden sounds epic, but it's a bit of a mouthful, isn't it? You wouldn't have time to announce it dramatically before a villain kills you and nearby civilians.
    Oh, and I am keeping touch with Ken and Sage. They are receiving your wonderful letters, too. Little Sage is as shy and unsure of herself as I am, but she's strong, and she perseveres, just like her mom.
    Oh, could Mountain Mom be your super name? Or Mighty Mom, for simplicity? Or maybe no attention should be brought to you being a mom, secret identities and all.
    Thanks again for your amazing words. You're amazing.
    I know you will save the world some day, and make less of a mess of it than I could ever pull off.
    But you are already a hero. All mothers are heroes. All women are heroes. All women are magnificent goddesses.
    Good luck on your quest, and come home soon, Lady Rock.
    (Oh wait, that sounds like the distaff counterpart to a wrestler, doesn't it? How about Lady Ice? Too soon? Oh my godesses, what about Geode?! Just Geode! You can see the symbolism there, can't you?)

    Love, Terri, aka Emberess!



Scribble #146

You can never be *too* openminded. You can never have *too* much empathy. These are yet more tricks that right-wing tools/pundits/fearmongers use to limit us, trap us, and spread ignorance, intolerance and hatred for our fellow humans, who are all different. It is illogical and nonsensical to baselessly hate another person just because they are different from you. Hate has limits, and oppresses, whilst love, kindness, and caring for others have no limits, and they empower and free us. Empathy is as important to living a healthy life in a society and community-fuelled world as self-care is.

Another right-wing lie: Equal rights for others means less rights for me--I mean, you. *cough*

No, sharing privilege and expanding human rights does not work like that. It does not, it should not, lessen anyone else's right to exist. As someone else once said, it is not pie.

It is basic human decency. 

Eradicating all class, race, gender, sexuality, ethnic, religious, and disability discrimination, and abolishing all power imbalances, would not lead to chaos. It is a step closer to world peace and happiness. Capitalism is the problem, not the solution. It will always be a problem unless we actually analyse the harm it's doing to the world, and do something about it.

"Rich" and "poor" are not natural, normal, healthy, ethical and practical rules of life to live and survive by.

And what is "woke", anyway? As in, awake? Aware? Knowing? Only the desperate, brainwashed and hate-filled right-wing people would turn something as basic and essential to living as being conscious into an insult. The opposite of "woke" is literally, "Keep being ignorant, keep being in the dark, keep being boxed, keep sleeping, because you woke up, you lit up, and it bothers me for some reason.". It's the new "social justice warrior" - equally overused, tired and childish, and equally not an insult to decent people.

Open-mindedness and gullibility are not the same thing. Open-mindedness means breaking down societal and cultural barriers and limitations, and freeing ourselves and others from past prejudices and falsehoods, and loving each other for who we are; loving how different each of us are. It means listening to the truth. It is meant to empower all of us. Gullibility, from the perpetrator's end, means telling lies that do limit us. Lies that regress us. Silence us. Lies that gradually reduce progress, and therefore disempower us, disenfranchise us, as human beings that exist. Con artists rely on gullibility in order to take advantage of us and harm us, and it works, due to already existing biases, naivety, lack of education, and fear of what the general populace doesn't understand. The depressing reality is that conmen of every kind don't even have to be particularly skilled at what they do. They can be as ignorant, ruthless, cruel and unpleasant as they want other people to be, to again, take advantage of them. They are bullies, and we are their victims, whether we realise it or not. The purpose of lying to a gullible mob mentality is to disadvantage and disenfranchise us in order to enrich the life of the successful liar(s) at the expanse of others below them in the hierarchy. It is capitalism - and current politics - in its simplest art.



Scribble #145

I would always rather be knowledgeable and therefore active, helpful, and well prepared, than ignorant and therefore dangerous.

Education doesn't just open minds and enrich and fulfil people, and help them reach their potential; it literally saves lives.



Wednesday, 31 December 2025

Top 103 Best Books Read in 2025

Wow.

103 great books!

103!

2025 must have been a good year for reading for me, after all.

Fuck knows it needed at least one positive thing about it.

Well, here we go - starting from the best!

(No rereads included, excepting... several. If it was a positive experience.)





1. Good Different by Meg Eden Kuyatt - review link here.

2. Wonder Woman Historia: The Amazons by Kelly Sue DeConnick (Writer), Phil Jimenez (Artist), Gene Ha (Artist), Nicola Scott (Artist), Hi-Fi (Colourist), Arif Prianto (Colourist), Romulo Fajardo Jr. (Colourist), Wesley Wong (Colourist), Annette Kwok (Colourist), Clayton Cowles (Letterer) - review link here.

3. Absolute Wonder Woman Vol. 1: The Last Amazon by Kelly Thompson (Writer), Hayden Sherman (Artist), Mattia de Iulis (Artist), Dustin Nguyen (Artist), Jordie Bellaire (Colourist), Becca Carey (Letterer) - review link here.

4. Brazen: Rebel Ladies Who Rocked The World (Les Culottées, #1-2) by Pénélope Bagieu, Montana Kane (Translator) - review link here.

5. Rainbow! Volume 2 by Sunny and Gloomy - review link here.

6. Story Spinners: A Sisterly Tale of Danger, a Princess, and Her Crew of Lady Pirates by Cassandra Federman - review link here.

7. Eden of Witches Volume 1 by Yumeji - review link here.

8. Renegade Girls by Nora Neus (Writer), Julie Robine (Artist) - review link here.

9. Woman, Life, Freedom by Marjane Satrapi (Writer, Artist), Abbas Milani (Writer), Jean-Pierre Perrin (Writer), Farid Vahid (Writer), Various Artists - review link here.

10. Princess Battle Royale by Phaea Crede (Writer), Jen Hill (Illustrator) - review link here.

11. Project Nought by Chelsey Furedi - review link here.

12. Magnolia Wu Unfolds It All by Chanel Miller - review link here.

13. Beetle & the Chimera Carnival (The Beetle Books #2) by Aliza Layne - review link here.

14. Anne of Green Gables by L.M. Montgomery - review link here.

15. The Big Day by Rachel Plummer (Writer), Forrest Burdett (Illustrator) - review link here.

16. The Snow Dragon by Abi Elphinstone (Writer), Fiona Woodcock (Illustrator) - review link here.

17. Muted: Volume 1 and Muted: Volume 2 by Miranda Mundt - review links here and here.

18. Jem and the Holograms: The Misfits by Kelly Thompson (Writer), Jenn St-Onge (Artist). M. Victoria Robado (Colourist, Lyrics Letterer), Shawn Lee (Letterer) - review link here.

19. Warriors, Witches, Women: Mythology's Fiercest Females by Kate Hodges (Writer), Harriet Lee-Merrion (Illustrator) - review link here.

20. Rebel Folklore: Empowering Tales of Spirits, Witches, and Other Misfits from Anansi to Baba Yaga by Icy Sedgwick (Writer), Melissa Jarram (Illustrator) - review link here.

21. The Book of Forgotten Witches: Dark & Twisted Folklore & Stories from Around the World by Balázs Tátrai (Writer), Lilla Bölecz (Illustrator) - review link here.

22. I Shall Never Fall in Love by Hari Conner - review link here.

23. My Shadow is Pink by Scott Stuart - review link here.

24. We Are Big Time by Hena Khan (Writer), Safiya Zerrougui (Artist) - review link here.

25. Adventure Time with Fionna & Cake: Party Bash Blues by Kate Sheridan (Writer), Killian Ng (Artist), Valentina Pinti (Artist), C.R. Chua (Colourist), Mike Fiorentino (Letterer) - review link here.

26. Strange Bedfellows by Ariel Slament Ries - review link here.

27. The Girl in the Walls by Meg Eden Kuyatt - review link here.

28. The Answer (Steven Universe) by Rebecca Sugar (Writer), Elle Michalka (Artist), Tiffany Ford (Artist) - review link here.

29. Saint Catherine by Anna Meyer - review link here.

30. Dreams for our Daughters by Ruth Doyle (Writer), Ashling Lindsay (Illustrator) - review link here.

31. 'Twas the Night Before Pride by by Joanna McClintick (Writer), Juana Medina (Illustrator) - review link here.

32. The Ojja-Wojja by Magdalene Visaggio (Writer), Jenn St-Onge (Artist) - review link here.

33. Les Normaux: Volume One by Janine Janssen, S. Al Sabado - review link here.

34. Bite Me! A Vampire Farce by Dylan Meconis - review link here.

35. Adorable Empire by Laura Terry - review link here.

36. Carousel Summer by Kathleen Gros - review link here.

37. Red Sonja: The Falcon Throne by Marguerite Bennett (Writer), Aneke (Artist), Diego Galindo (Artist), Jorge Sutil (Colourist), Morgan Hickman (Colourist), Erica Schultz (Letterer) - review link here.

38. The Savior's Book Café Story in Another World, Vol. 1 by Kyouka Izumi (Original Creator), Oumiya (Writer), Reiko Sakurada (Artist), Alexa Frank (Translator) - review link here.

39. Shark Girl by Kate Beaton - review link here.

40. Crumble by Meredith McClaren (Writer), Andrea Bell (Artist) - review link here.

41. Nell of Gumbling: My Extremely Normal Fairy-Tale Life by Emma Steinkellner - review link here.

42. Angelica and the Bear Prince by Trung Le Nguyen - review link here.

43. Botticelli's Apprentice by Ursula Murray Husted - review link here.

44. Kick Flip Vol. One by L.D. Lapinski (Writer), Logan Hanning (Artist) - review link here.

45. Barbie: The World Tour by Margot Robbie, Andrew Mukamal, Craig McDean (Photographer), Margaret Zhang (Introduction), Edward Enninful (Foreword), Greta Gerwig (Afterword) - review link here.

46. The Magical Girl's Guide to Life: Find Your Inner Power, Fight Everyday Evil, and Save the Day with Self-Care by Jacque Aye - review link here.

47. Harley and Ivy Meet Betty and Veronica by Paul Dini (Writer), Marc Andreyko (Writer), Laura Braga (Artist), Adriana Melo (Artist), Arif Prianto (Colourist), Tony Aviña (Colourist), J. Nanjan (Colourist), Deron Bennett (Letterer) - review link here.

48. Marcy and the Riddle of the Sphinx by Joe Todd-Stanton - review link here.

49. Kai and the Monkey King by Joe Todd-Stanton - review link here.

50. The Legend of Auntie Po by Shing Yin Khor - review link here.

51. The Restaurant At the Edge of the World by Oliver Gerlach (Writer), Kelsi Jo Silva (Artist) - review link here.

52. Heartstopper - Official Fan Cards by Alice Oseman - review link here.

53. Magica Riot (Maidensong Magica #1) by Kara Buchanan - review link here.

54. A Guest in the House by E.M. Carroll - review link here.

55. Pizza Witch by Sarah Graley, Stef Purenins - review link here.

56. My Sister the Werebeast by Alina Tysoe - review link here.

57. The Little Trashmaid, Vol. 1 by s0s2 - review link here.

58. High-Class Homos: Volume 1 by Momozerii - review link here.

59. What's Up, Beanie?: Acutely Relatable Comics by Alina Tysoe - review link here.

60. The Secret History of Wonder Woman by Jill Lepore - review link here.

61. Jenny Sparks: Be Better by Tom King (Writer), Jeff Spokes (Artist), Clayton Cowles (Letterer) - review link here.

62. Harley Quinn Vol. 3: Clown About Town by Tini Howard (Writer), Natacha Bustos (Artist, Colourist), Sweeney Boo (Artist), Nick Filardi (Colourist), Steve Wands (Letterer), Various - review link here.

63. Catwoman, Vol. 1: Dangerous Liaisons by Tini Howard (Writer), Nico Leon (Artist), Bengal (Artist), Jordie Bellaire (Colourist), Veronica Gandini (Colourist), Tom Napolitano (Letterer) - review link here.

64. How It All Ends by Emma Hunsinger - review link here.

65. The Guy She Was Interested In Wasn't a Guy at All, Vol. 1 by Sumiko Arai - review link here.

66. Red Sonja, Vol. 2: The Art of Blood and Fire by Gail Simone (Writer), Walter Geovani (Artist), Noah Salonga (Artist), Adriano Lucas (Colourist), Elmer Santos (Colourist), Simon Bowland (Letterer) - review link here.

67. Red Sonja, Vol. 3: The Forgiving of Monsters by Gail Simone (Writer), Walter Geovani (Artist), Adriano Lucas (Colourist), Alex Guimarães (Colourist), Marco Lesko (Colourist), Vinicius Andrade (Colourist), Simon Bowland (Letterer) - review link here.

68. Red Sonja: Black, White, Red Volume 1 by Various - review link here.

69. Jessica Jones: Blind Spot by Kelly Thompson (Writer), Mattia De Iulis (Artist, Colourist), Marcio Takara (Artist), Rachelle Rosenberg (Colourist), Cory Petit (Letterer) - review link here.

70. Aria of the Beech Forest, Vol. 1 by Yugiri Aika - review link here.

71. Marilyn Monroe: By Eve Arnold - review link here.

72. Marilyn Monroe: Private and Undisclosed by Michelle Morgan - review link here.

73. Mixed-Up by Kami Garcia (Writer), Brittney Williams (Artist), Tyler Smith (Letterer) - review link here.

74. We Could Be Magic by Marissa Meyer (Writer), Joelle Murray (Artist) - review link here.

75. Frieren: Beyond Journey's End, Vol. 1 by Kanehito Yamada (Writer), Tsukasa Abe (Artist) - review link here.

76. Helen of Wyndhorn by Tom King (Writer), Bilquis Evely (Artist), Matheus Lopes (Artist, Colourist), Clayton Cowles (Letterer) - review link here.

77. The Courageous Princess by Rod Espinosa - review link here.

78. The Princess in Black by Shannon Hale (Writer), Dean Hale (Writer), LeUyen Pham (Illustrator) - review link here.

79. The Café at the Edge of the Woods by Mikey Please - review link here.

80. Watercress by Andrea Wang (Writer), Jason Chin (Illustrator) - review link here.

81. The Girl: Marilyn Monroe, The Seven Year Itch, and the Birth of an Unlikely Feminist by Michelle Morgan - review link here.

82. Hilda's World: A guide to Trolberg, the wilderness, and beyond by Emily Hibbs, Jason Chan (Illustrator) - review link here.

83. Jazzy the Witch in Broom Doom by Jessixa Bagley - review link here.

84. Agents of the Realm: Semester 1: Volume 1 by Mildred Louis - review link here.

85. The Many Misfortunes of Eugenia Wang by Stan Yan - review link here.

86. The Villainess is a Marionette, Vol. 1 by Manggle (Adaptor), Hanirim (Original Author), Kakao Entertainment (Translator), Elena Pizarro Lanzas (Letterer) - review link here.

87. Dear Bookstore by Emily Arrow (Writer), Geneviève Godbout (Illustrator) - review link here.

88. Luna and the Treasure of Tlaloc by Joe Todd-Stanton - review link here.

89. The Field Guide to Witches: An artist’s grimoire of 20 witches and their worlds by 3dtotal Publishing, Various - review link here.

90. Stacey Speaks Up by Stacey Abrams (Writer), Kitt Thomas (Illustrator) - review link here.

91. Unbreakable Red Sonja by Jim Zub (Writer), Giovanni Valletta (Artist), Adrian M. Garcia (Artist), Jonathan Lau (Artist), Various Colourists and Letterers - review link here.

92. Red Sonja: Worlds Away: Volume 1 by Amy Chu (Writer), Carlos Gomez (Artist), Marcio Fiorito (Artist), Mohan (Colourist), Simon Bowland (Letterer), Tom Napolitano (Letterer) - review link here.

93. Jem and the Holograms: Infinite by Kelly Thompson (Writer), Stacey Lee (Artist), Jen Hickman (Artist), Jenn St-Onge (Artist), M. Victoria Robado (Colourist, Lyrics Letterer), Various Colourists and Letterers - review link here.

94. Jem and the Holograms, Vol. 2: Viral by Kelly Thompson (Writer), Various Artists - review link here.

95. Jem and the Holograms, Vol. 3: Dark Jem by Kelly Thompson (Writer), Sophie Campbell (Artist), M. Victoria Robado (Colourist) - review link here.

96. Jessica Jones: Alias, Vol. 1 by Brian Michael Bendis (Writer), Michael Gaydos (Artist), Matt Hollingsworth (Colourist) - review link here.

97. The Variants (A Jessica Jones Mystery) by Gail Simone (Writer), Phil Noto (Artist), Cory Petit (Letterer) - review link here.

98. A Library by Nikki Giovanni (Writer), Erin K. Robinson (Illustrator) - review link here.

99. Jessica Jones: Purple Daughter by Kelly Thompson (Writer), Mattia De Iulis (Artist, Colourist), Filipe Andrade (Artist), Stephane Paitreau (Colourist), Cory Petit (Letterer) - review link here.

100. She Made a Monster: How Mary Shelley Created Frankenstein by Lynn Fulton (Writer), Felicita Sala (Illustrator) - review link here.

101. The Witching Hours by Hannah Myers (Contributor, Editor), Various - review link here.

102. The Witching Hour by Jennifer Harris (Writer), Adelina Lirius (Illustrator) - review link here.

103. The Witch-ionary: An A-Z of magickal terms and their meanings by Deb Robinson - review link here.





Have a Happy 2026 everyone. And I mean it.

Stay safe, kind, caring and compassionate. Always.

I won't be posting as much anymore, but I'll be back when I can. There are many life changes for me up ahead.