Wednesday, May 27, 2026

"Five Says at the Hotel Adams" by Hailey Alcaraz

About this book:

  “Ruth and Luisa live very different lives within the dusty desert town of Phoenix. Ruth is the only child of a political official. She spends her days stuffed into scratchy dresses and smiling prettily in the ballrooms of the Hotel Adams. Luisa is a young housekeeper. She looks at the Persian rug and thinks, I also know what it feels like to be walked over, barely noticed, and covered in other people's dirt. The girls stumble into a partnership when they overhear a plan to set fire to the hotel, a political hot spot for the growing western town. As they race to figure out who is behind the plot--and how to stop them--they must not only overcome what other people expect from them but what they've grown to expect from themselves.”


Series: Part of the “American Stories for Gutsy Girls” series, but does not seem connected to another other book.


Spiritual Content- Ruth thinks that the only place she gets to go beside the hotel is to church and has no enthusiasm to walk there on a day that is not a Sunday; Ruth comments that she is praying when trying to avoid telling her governess something (which was a lie), but realizes that prayer “isn’t a bad idea at all” with how she is feeling lately; Mentions of church & church going; A few mentions of praying; A mention of God resting someone’s soul; A mention of the Catholic Church; 
             *Note: Religious phrases like “saints preserve us”, “Heavens if I know”, and “for heaven’s sake” are all said once or twice; Each chapter starts with an illustration of a phoenix; Luisa often gets “corazonada” (Spanish for hunches or premonitions) with feeling that something going to happen (described as a “prickly feeling at the back of her neck, the tug in her gut, the sensation that something is just not right”) and Ruth also has hunches about something not being right; Later, Luisa calls these hunches as “gut instincts—or heart instincts”; Ruth feels like there is an “air of sanctity” when her father has time for her; Someone comments on everyone’s fates being “up to the bigwigs”; A couple mentions of luck & being lucky; A mention of a story about someone going mad from the ghosts at a haunted hotel.
 

Negative Content- Minor cussing including: a ‘blimey’, a ‘doggone it’, a ‘drat’, a ‘good grief’, two ‘golly’s, and five ‘blasted’s; A secret code includes the word “right aSS rain” (misspelled on purpose); Eye rolling; Eavesdropping (and feeling some guilt over it); Harsh words are said between the girls (mainly about one’s parents and implying suspicion on one); A fire, smoke, pain, an injury, & blood/bleeding (border-line barely-above-not-detailed // semi-detailed); Ruth grieves her mother and not knowing her (she passed when Ruth was little); Luisa steals the hotel’s ledger to find out an answer about the mystery by tricking a hotel employee (not said that she returns it, but she does feel guilt over doing it); Ruth lies to her governess (about a handful of times; once calling it “thinking…creatively”) and sneaks out without her (twice); Later, Ruth goes to tell another falsehood, but tells the truth to her governess instead after her governess was honest with her; Luisa also sneaks out (which requires her to cross town by herself at night); Luisa wants to keep the mystery a secret from her mom as she knows she would disapprove of being involved in it; Many mentions of fires, possible fires and an arsonist, arson, destroyed buildings, & possible deaths/murder; Mentions of deaths & grief (including Ruth for her mother & a wife for her husband); Mentions of alcohol, drinking, drunks, a drunk driver that killed someone, & saloons/bars; Mentions of cigars, pipes, tobacco, & smoking; Mentions of eavesdropping; A few mentions of a (white male) writer hoping to write about “gunfights with Indians”, “savage Indian skirmishes”, and“deceitful Mexicans”; A few mentions of gossip & rumors; A couple mentions of lies & lying; A mention of the Civil War; A mention of gunfights with Indians; A mention of gambling; 
             *Note: The racial differences between Luisa and Ruth are highlighted often throughout the book (such as: Ruth thinking about “the rules of society are ugly, but they are firm…in nearly all matters, [Ruth] comes out on top [compared to a Mexican maid like Luisa]”; Luisa being unable to tell if the “powerful white men” are loud because they are angry or celebratory; Luisa wonders if people will listen to her about something important if a “white girl [like Ruth] is on her side”; Luisa tells Ruth about loving going to school even if it wasn’t as fancy as the school where the “Anglo children went” and pauses because she’s not sure if she should have said that out loud (Ruth doesn’t think Luisa says this to make her feel bad though she still feels guilt and thinks that perhaps they are “both powerless” but “it is clear that Luisa’s life has additional challenges due to her race and class”); *Spoilers, but mentions an “entitled request” from Ruth to Luisa* When not getting far in the mystery, Ruth tells Luisa that they need to get into the rooms of the suspects, which makes Luisa irritated at this “bold and entitled request” and says that it would be breaking the law, could get her arrested, and her mother in trouble as well; The girls apologize to each other later; Towards the end, Ruth realizes that her comment was unfair and it was a mistake to say it *End of Spoilers*; Luisa feels hopeless at the thought of her life being only ever working at the hotel); *Major Spoilers* Halfway through, Ruth is told by her governess that Ruth’s mother was Mexican and they grew up together (which is a complete shock to Ruth); The governess comments about some people from Mexico are “more fair-skinned than you’d expect. It’s…a complicated privilege, as I’m sure you’ll come to see, passing as white while hiding our heritage.”; Ruth’s governess tells her that “mixed marriage is…complicated” and her parents constantly faced judgement and danger & were concerned about people’s prejudices holding Ruth back, so her father concealed her Mexican heritage; Ruth’s father had dreams of taking her to Mexico one day once it’s safe “from outside invaders and political corruption”; At the end, Ruth is learning about her newfound culture from Luisa’s mother and her governess and while she feels envious at Luisa knowing all the connections to her heritage that she won’t have, Ruth also knows about the “privileges” her light skin and mixed heritage affords her; Ruth calls that “ugly and illogical and infuriating” but knows that passing as white “does present her with opportunities” even if she feels split into two (adding that it’s a “luxury to contemplate theses facets” instead of having to face “the harsh, hateful rules of society” that are dictated by skin color that Luisa and her mother face daily *End of Spoilers*; Other comments about race and property are said and mentioned (such as: Luisa noting her mother’s often grumbling about when the Arizona land was a part of Mexico; Luisa being “constantly mystified” by politicians who believe they rule the land and are “all-powerful” because of what they own; Luisa not thinking that Arizona becoming a state will affect her or other workers’ lives; Luisa noticing a group of “powerful white men” at a gathering; Luisa talking to a Native American man who works at the hotel about “painful things” like when “white settlers who moved onto his tribe’s farmland and never left”, the children of his village going to boarding schools “to learn the customs of white people” and forget their own, and how he doesn’t allow “the Anglos” at the hotel to call him by his true tribal name because others ignored his tribe’s name; An Irish immigrant busboy at the hotel grumbles about the visitors to the hotel barely registering workers like him as people and feeling degraded by them; Luisa notices the contrast between a picture of construction workers being a mix of Apache, Mexican, and immigrant men (later called “brownskinned workers”) as those are the people that “usually end up in those sorts of grueling jobs” around her area & a group of “white men in clean suits” near them; Ruth overhears a guest at the hotel talk about being in Arizona first (compared to newcomers) and thinks that it’s “quite another kind of attitude to pretend that they are the original residents” and feels uneasy at the disregard for “the Mexicans who had claim to this land seventy years ago and the Indians tribes who have lived here for hundreds of years more”; Luisa’s mother comments on the world not being fair to people like them; A Native American man warns Luisa that it’s dangerous to poke around “powerful people, white people”; The man also says that the (white) settlers do not care about or see people like him and Luisa (adding about unfair business loans that would make his people have to sell their land and will have to start over on new lands); At the end, a boy comments about it being a fine balance between being aware of injustice and wrongdoing, but also believing in the good in people); Ruth and Luisa comment about it being awfully hard to get people to listen to girls, that “no one pays any attention to girls”, and that they are told to be quiet; Luisa and Ruth talk about never having the chance for their voice to matter & that girls like them are “practically invisible”; Ruth’s father is often busy with his work so she feels like she’s just in the background in his life and tries not to let it bother her, but it does and she feels pressured to make good impressions on him (at the end, he tries to pay more attention to her); Ruth’s father comments on her becoming a “fine lady or a wife” and she holds back her opinion that she has no interest in becoming either of those and hates wasting her time on “girlish, meaningless frivolities”; Ruth says that others only want girls to learn about “pretty things” like paintings and pianos, but she likes “real things” (Luisa argues that pretty things can be real too; At the end, Ruth has realized that indulging in things that some people would think are “girlish” or “silly” doesn’t detract from the important things she wants to do); Luisa thinks about how women aren’t often left with many options unless “they’ve got a man to lead the household”, but it seems like to her that marriage has its “own array of challenges”; Luisa and Ruth dream of a world where the words of girls are taken seriously; Partially shared poems by Edgar Allen Poe & José Martí are shared; Mentions of the dictatorship of Porfirio Díaz of Mexico; Mentions of the women suffrage, wanting the right to vote, having every right to be treated as equal to men, & group of suffragettes destroying buildings; Mentions of books, fictional characters, & authors (‘The Call of the Wild’, ‘The War of the Worlds’, ‘The Island of Doctor Moreau’, ‘An Odyssey into the Exotic Unknown’, ‘Up from Slavery’, Sherlock Holmes, Mark Twain, Robert Frost, Charlotte Brontë, H.G. Wells, Walton Orville, & Emily Dickinson); Mentions of doomsday prophecies about the end of the world; A few mentions of Ida Tarbell.
 
 
Sexual Content- A boy about the girls’ age acts smitten around Ruth (mentions of him looking starry-eyed and moony when seeing her, blushing when she speaks to him, & him looking swoony and attentive to every word she says); Luisa teases Ruth about the boy and him being “head over heels in love” with Ruth, but Ruth thinks that while they are too young for courting, she doesn’t mind his affections (first thinking that she hated the idea of being a “silly girl with a silly crush”, but now thinks she could be a girl with a crush in addition to being an aspiring journalist); Luisa’s mother makes sure that Luisa isn’t “holding a candle” for a waiter at the hotel as it isn’t appropriate and he is too old for her (concerned he is “laying on the charm” on her), but Luisa says it’s not like that and her mother is satisfied and warns her that while Luisa loves her romance stories, this isn’t one of them; A newly married couple show “pure displeasure” when talking to each other or sharing a kiss & the man snaps at her and leans in “menacingly” when she brings up her late husband; A few mentions of crushes.
 
-Luisa Bravo, age 12
-Ruth Fremont, around the same age
                                P.O.V. switches between them 
                                          Set in 1910
                                                        272 pages
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Pre Teens- 

New Teens- 

Early High School Teens- 

Older High School Teens- 

My personal Rating- 

While published by Thomas Nelson (a publisher that is known for being originally a Christian one), there was not any faith content in this book and reads more like a mainstream middle-grade book. Usually, I only review Christian books on BFCG, however with this one being published by Thomas Nelson, I decided to go ahead and review the first two books of the series on here. Based on research prior to reading this first book, I figured there wasn’t going to be faith elements in this story. Had I expected Christian content in this book, I would have been very disappointed. There could have been naturally added-in comments or discussions about God making us all different and unique with special talents—which I think could have lightened the heavier topics of races, racial divides, and discrimination. Because of the lack of faith content, I view this book more as a secular/middle-grade story and rated it similar to what I would have had I randomly picked it up at the library. 

 

The cover can’t help but reminded me of Samantha and Josephina from the American Girl books with this story and main characters. Set prior to Arizona becoming a state, I found different elements of this book and mystery interesting. I was curious who the potential arsonist was and trying to find clues with Lucia and Ruth (even if the mystery did end in a lackluster kind of way). I can’t say I loved either of our main characters, though I appreciated the scene of them apologizing to each other in a sincere way after sharing hurtful words previously. 

 

Due to not having an adult that has time to listen to their concerns, Lucia and Ruth investigate their mystery by themselves and no adult is involved—this includes Ruth lying to her governess and both girls sneaking out. There’s no said consequences for these actions, as a note for parents. 

 

I do have mixed feelings on some of the…comments and reveals that were in this book. There was a bit of a political message added in—mostly about white people/men taking over the land that belong to others. While it’s definitely true that this was a hard and awkward time in Arizona’s history with the class and race differences—and I’m sure there were greedy and powerful men aiming for statehood for their own benefits—it did feel like most all of the white male characters had an agenda that only benefited them; plus that most immigrants shown were being mistreated or treated as less-than often by these white men. If this book was written and published many years ago, I don’t think I would have picked up on it as much as that was probably true to a degree for the time period, but in today’s political climate, it feels a little heavy-handed and intended to share a message. Perhaps I read too much into it, but it was noticeable to me and makes me hesitate to recommend it as every race has their “bad apples” so to speak and I don’t think it’s right to paint a group of people as being all the same way. Maybe these comments were meant innocently and intentionally for the time period, but in the current world, it feels a little off. 

 

Overall, I found the historical time period interesting and did research after finishing this book, but I wish a few things had been a bit different—mainly the ending to the mystery as it felt like a very unsatisfying conclusion and how I struggled at times with keeping my attention on the book due to the third person, present tense writing style. My rating is based on these two elements, especially as I was disappointed about the ending to the mystery.

 

 

See y’all on Friday with a new review! 



*BFCG may (Read the review to see) recommend this book by this author. It does not mean I recommend all the books by this author.

*I received this book for free from the Publisher (Tommy Nelson) for this honest review.

Friday, May 22, 2026

"Grandma Ruth Doesn't Go to Funerals" by Sharon J. Mondragón

About this book:

  “In a small town where gossip flows like sweet tea, bedridden Mary Ruth McCready reigns supreme, doling out wisdom and meddling in everyone's business with a fervor that would make a matchmaker blush. When her best friend, Charlotte Harrington, has her world rocked by a scandalous revelation from her dying husband P. B., Mary Ruth kicks into high gear, commandeering the help of her favorite granddaughter, Sarah Elizabeth, in tracking down the truth. Finding clues in funeral condolence cards and decades-old gossip dredged up at the Blue Moon Beauty Emporium, the two stir up trouble faster than you can say "pecan pie."
    And just when things are starting to look up, in waltzes Camilla "Millie" Holtgrew, a blast from P. B.'s past, with a grown son and an outrageous claim to Charlotte's inheritance. But as Grandma Ruth always says when things get tough, "God is too big." With him, nothing is impossible--even bringing long-held secrets to light. Grandma Ruth and Sarah just might have to ruffle a whole mess of feathers to do it.”


Series: As of now, it seems to be a stand-alone novel.


Spiritual Content- Lamentations 3:22 at the beginning; A couple prayers; Going to church for a funeral and hearing prayers and a benediction; ‘H’s are not capital when referring to God; Sarah wonders why God let something heartbreaking happen to her and hasn’t prayed much since then (feeling like that all her life her prayers do not reach God); Sarah recalls thinking about the Scripture about “God doing exceedingly more than you could ask or think” when a boy asks her out (because he was super cute and older than her so she never thought he would look her way); When sad, Sarah wound think that God was “too big” to care about her and her suffering; Sarah just thinks with a snort that God isn’t going to help her or another lady with their heartbreaks and pain despite the fact they are good women; *Spoiler* The final line of the book is Sarah thinking that God “was indeed too big--too big for [her] to have imagined what he had in store for [her].” (this comes after the start of a possibly successful relationship) *End of Spoiler*; Mentions of God & Jesus; Mentions of prayers & praying; Mentions of churches, church going (including for funerals), services, priests and deacons, & denominations (Episcopal & Lutheran); A few mentions of Heaven (including referencing the “pearly gates”); A few mentions of hymns; A couple mentions of Scriptures; A mention of swearing on a Bible; A mention of confessions to a priest; A mention of pre-marriage counseling sessions with a priest; A mention of angels; A mention of incense; 
             *Note: Sarah exclaims “Hallelujah” when something is clean; Religious phrases: a ‘for heaven’s sake’ and two ‘speak of the devil’s; A comment about a man being a “handsome devil” (x3); Mentions of luck & being lucky; A mention of crossing fingers for luck; A mention of the “savior complex” when dating; A mention of the Masters Golf Tournament being a “sacred” week; A mention of it being a cold day in “you-know-where” before something happens; A mention of someone’s voice being a “siren song”.
 

Negative Content- Minor cussing including: a ‘da—‘ that Sarah cuts off and corrects to ‘darn good’, a ‘dumb’, a ‘shoot’, a ‘stupid’, a ‘sucker’, an unfinished ‘what the—‘, two ‘good grief’s, two forms of ‘heck’, and two ‘idiot’s; A bit of lying (to get answers); Eye rolling; Eavesdropping; Gossiping and listening to gossip (which Sarah’s grandmother says she gathers information, not gossip); Sarah is tempted to gossip about a deceased person, but does not for fear of her grandmother giving her a lecture about gossiping; Viewing a body at a funeral & seeing grief from a wife over her late husband (up to semi-detailed); A misunderstanding on why a woman’s brownies are “very…calming effect” on people (someone thinks that’s implying pot, but it’s not); Sarah orders wine at a restaurant; Many mentions of deaths, seeing loved ones pass away, bodies being viewed at funerals, & grief (up to semi-detailed); Many mentions of gossip, rumors & eavesdropping; Mentions of seeing a man throwing a plate at his wife (due to his toast being partially burnt); Mentions of car accidents; Mentions of betting/gambling, poker, & gambling addictions; Mentions of lies & lying; Mentions of divorces/separations; Mentions of alcohol, drinking, & getting drunk/tipsy (including a widow drinking many glasses of wine after a funeral for her husband); Mentions of frat parties (which high school senior Sarah wants to go to, but her parents didn’t let her); A few mentions of drugs/marijuana; A couple mentions of murders & murderers (in books); A couple mentions of smoking & a cigar; A mention of World War II; 
             *Note: Sarah’s grandmother is bedridden due to a prior broken hip; Sarah is impressed by her grandmother referring to a woman with the “modern title” of “Ms.” instead of fussing over whether the woman was married or not; A poem is partially quoted by Robert Frost; Mentions of car brands; Mention of TV shows, movies, actors, & actresses (Jeopardy!, Beauty and the Beast, Jerry Springer, Audrey Hepburn, Rhett Butler, & Miss America); Mention of brand names (the Energizer Bunny, Crock-Pot, Tupperware, Wrigley’s gum, Kate Spade, Burberry, Maybelline, Rolex, & Scrabble); Mentions of businesses (Home Depot & Dairy Queen); Mentions of Boy Scouts; A few websites (Google & LinkedIn); A couple mentions of vaccinations & receiving one; A mention of global warming; A mention of the Super Bowl.
 
 
Sexual Content- a cheek kiss and a semi-detailed kiss; Remembering kisses & “steamy tussles” (barely-above-not-detailed); Touches, Hand holding, Shivers, & Nearness (including unwanted ones, up to semi-detailed); Blushes & Winks; Noticing (up to semi-detailed); Sarah’s heart is broken after a previous betrayal and does not dare to trust any man again (being very firm about this and not believing she is missing anything by being single unlike everyone else around her thinks; This is because of the guy who broke her heart and is trying to get her back; *Spoilers* He played her and was very slick, but ended up cheating on her with another girl; He calls her a few times and says he needs her, but she tries to avoid his calls; When Sarah sounds sad and wishful about him calling, her best friend blocks his number for her; The guy continues to hang around her workplace to get her to go on a date with him again; She goes on one last date with the ex to get him to leave her alone (she wears a dress with a hint of cleavage and he wants her to take him back, but she sticks him with an expensive bill instead; The book ends with her going on a date with another guy and thinks that there may be more for their relationship *End of Spoilers*); *Spoilers, but referring to intimacy before marriage* Sarah would deny her ex-fiancé “nothing…except…well…except that and because of it, he had an affair and blamed it on her wanting to wait for marriage; She mentions that “it’s the twenty-first century, and nobody waits until they get married anymore” and he made her feel like a “colossal nobody” for insisting on waiting; He said his affair was her fault because he wouldn’t have had an affair if she had “just given in” and that she was probably “frigid”, but while she reacted to him and his touch being “hot-blooded as the next coed”, her grandmother’s conversation about being worth waiting for and promising not to act on any desires until she was married would always keep her from “going over the brink”; Sarah wonders if it would have killed him to wait a few months until their wedding; Sarah recalls how “necking sessions” would turn into “steamy tussles” over her virtue with him *End of Spoilers*; Sarah says that’s just how “men are” when talking about one cheating on his wife (her grandmother firmly rejects this thought); Sarah’s grandmother says that “kissing sometimes leads to—“ and Sarah asks what she means with feigned innocence (her grandmother says there’s no need to spell it out); Sarah’s grandmother comments that a gentleman ought to marry a lady he got in the “family way” and when Sarah comments about the couple not behaving like ladies and gentlemen in the first place, her grandmother reminds her to remember that (which is no fear for Sarah as she isn’t going to date anyone again); Comments about men “fooling around” with women (including married men) & “sleeping around”; A man comments about not knowing that another man “had it in him” to have an affair with a tone of “wondering admiration” and makes a jab at Sarah when she says about failing to see how it is impressive to be unfaithful to a spouse; Many talks about cheating, cheaters, & possible affairs as Sarah is trying to figure out if a deceased man was unfaithful to his wife (*Major Spoilers* It’s revealed at the very end that the wife misheard her husband’s last words and thus he did not have an affair *End of Spoilers*); Three  ‘hussy’s and a cut-off insult towards a woman; All about & many mentions of exes, cheating, being cheated on, a broken engagement due to cheating, scandals, & a man possibly having affair, mistress, and/or illegitimate children; Many mentions of women throwing themselves at men (including married men), wondering if a man was tempted by them, & one wanting a man to leave his wife for her after she got pregnant; Many mentions of boyfriends, “making moves” on someone, dating, & dates; Many mentions of flirting, flirtatious men and women, & winks; Mentions of a couple rushing to get married due to an out-of-wedlock pregnancy & the groom previously making a hint about not being the only one to enjoy the woman’s “favors”; Mentions of flings, a possible fling, & men “playing the field” and “sowing the wild oats”; Mentions of a couple having “clandestine meetings” at the movies (involving kissing); Mentions of kisses, kissing, & “necking”; Mentions of bad-boys, guys who are very slick, break-ups, & broken hearts; Mentions of crushes & being out of someone’s league; Mentions of a woman making goo-goo eyes at men at her workplace and wearing short skirts to snag a rich husband; Mention of a gold-digger (who also went after married men); A few mentions of jealousy; A few mentions of men staring at another women (despite being taken); A few mentions of a man always leaving the door open when with a female client or having someone else in the room; A mention of an older man possibly having an affair with a much younger woman; A mention of a woman’s sugar daddies; A mention of a woman taking “a bite or two” out of a man and having a child with him; A mention of getting someone’s mind “out of the gutter”; A mention of a man’s seductive eyes; 
             *Note: Sarah recalls her appearance changing for the better in her senior year of high school, except for her “ta-tas” which her grandmother dismissed her concerns by saying that “large ones were a decided liability” (Sarah disagrees with her about this as she saw which girls were getting all the attention); Sarah wears a dress that shows a “hint of cleavage” thanks to a push-up bra; Sarah wears a sweater dress that her grandmother says clings “in all the wrong places”; Sarah has no intention of getting married (this is possibly due to a prior broken engagement); Sarah’s grandmother calls men the “weaker sex”; A few mentions of a woman’s “curvaceous figure” and wearing low-cut outfits to get a man’s appearance; A mention of a woman’s low-cut blouse; A mention of a woman’s ample bosom; A mention of a push-up bra; A couple mentions of a man pressuring his daughter-in-law to try for a son after having three daughters.
 
-Sarah Elizabeth McCready, age 24
                                    1st person P.O.V. of Sarah 
                                                        248 pages
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Pre Teens- 

New Teens- 

Early High School Teens- 

Older High School Teens- 

My personal Rating- 

This was just messy. Being from the south, I understand about small town gossip and the dramatics, but this was just insane. The way Christianity was portrayed by Sarah’s busybody grandmother left a bad taste in my mouth with her justifying gossiping (which she says isn’t gossip but “information” and yet always goes through town quickly—hmm, sounds like gossip to me). This book did not show Christian values at all.

 

Our main character is judgmental, listening to gossip left and right for the sake of “solving” a mystery about a possible affair, and mad at God for her own stupid actions. This did not feel like a Christian book at all with all the gossip and affairs—and ends with no resolution on Sarah’s anger at God besides a comment as the last line of the book. Sarah had more fear of her grandmother than God. Tons of euphemisms about affairs and sleeping around. I ended up finishing this book out of spite because it was so ridiculous. 

 

This was not a Christian Fiction book, it was a knock-off a bad ‘Murder, She Wrote’ episode.

 

 

See y’all on Friday with a new review! 



*BFCG may (Read the review to see) recommend this book by this author. It does not mean I recommend all the books by this author.

Wednesday, May 20, 2026

"Illusionary" by Desiree Williams

About this book:

  “Dorothy got sucked into a tornado.
    Alice fell down a hole.
    Wendy flew to Neverland.
    Kamryn? She tripped down the stairs.
    Now, Kamryn Kensington finds herself in a strange new world. Within minutes of her arrival, she dodges an archer’s arrow and avoids getting sliced up by a cosplay reject holding a dagger to her throat. And that’s before the storyteller’s breath brings stories to life.
    Home is the mission—to return to her family and pursue her life’s dream of art and travel. Yet the longer she’s in the Land of Ur, the harder it is not to feel for the people she meets. Even her artistic side can’t help but breathe in the beautiful wonder and magic of this new world. So when the Oracle hands her a different quest, she takes it on the condition he sends her home afterward.
    No one thought to warn her of a jealous queen and her dragon minions. Or that, by helping her, the cute storyteller would go crazy. Or that her heart would rip in two when she left. Those would’ve been great facts to know ahead of time.
    Considering that nothing in Ur is what it seems, the mission proves to be more than she ever imagined. But more than her own future will be in jeopardy if Kamryn doesn’t succeed.”


Series: No, a stand-alone novel.


Spiritual Content- Prayers & feeling peace; Mentions of prayers, praying, praising God, & blessings over food; Mentions of miracles; A few mentions of God; A few mentions of Heaven; A couple mentions of blessings & being blessed; 
             *Note: Kam says “oh dear Lord” once (could be taken seriously or flippant); Kam is given a special necklace (that can change her outfit and guide her to a decision) with a mysterious note and when she falls down the stairs, she wakes up in another world; She is bought to the world by the “Great Oracle” (*Spoilers* who is implied to be the Creator/God and a few things he says sound similar to Scriptures; He is described as an old man with a long beard and wearing a robe; He created the one who created the world that Kamryn fell into and says the creator is precious to him as all his children are *End of Spoilers*); One of the people she meets is Reese, who is called the “storyteller” of the world and is able to say something to make it happen (such as healing someone’s injuries, making a person sleep or shrink, making items appear when called, bringing a story to life, and going from one place to another like teleportation; all of these are seen on-page, up to semi-detailed); Kam refers to Reese’s abilities as “mystic powers”, “hocus-pocus”, and“mojo”, but another says they are “gifts” from the Great Oracle and leave a trail of “energy” when used; Reese is cursed and unable to eat, sleep, or feel pain; Kam clutches the necklace to seek “help from a greater power” connected to it; *Major Spoilers* Reese is the creator of the other world (an author in his story) and in a coma in the real world after a car accident; The Great Oracle isn’t a character Reese created and implied to be God *End of Spoilers*; Kam crosses her fingers and prays for something; When being lectured by her older sister, Kam draws her with horns, a serpent tongue, and fangs; Mentions of curses & being cursed; Mentions of dragons, mermaids, faeries, & sprites; Mentions of luck & being lucky; A few mentions of spells (from the “dark queen”); A few mentions of evil consuming someone and darkness winning; A mention of Reese facing demons in his mind (bad memories); A mention of demon-sucking demons; A mention of a supernatural event (regarding Kam going into another world); A mention of the stars being in Kam’s favor.
 

Negative Content- Minor cussing including: a ‘bugger’, a ‘duh’, a ‘flippin’’, a ‘jack-squat’, a ‘kissing up’, a ‘stinking’, a ‘sucks’, two forms of ‘dumb’s, two ‘shoot’s, three ‘geez’s, four ‘blasted’, five ‘shut up’s, five ‘stupid’s, and seven ‘crap’s; Eye rolling & Sarcasm; A couple lies; Nearly dying, Being attacked and nearly killed (including by creepy fantasy creatures, multiple times), Almost drowning, Being held at knife-point, Being shot (with arrows), Being grabbed, Falling down the stairs, Pain and Extreme pain, Injuries (including major), Blood/Bleeding, & Earthquakes (up to semi-detailed); Seeing fantasy creatures killed (border-line barely-above-not-detailed // semi-detailed); Remembering a car accident (up to semi-detailed); Hearing lies about one’s self; Reese has the thought to kill someone who has harmed him and the world, but Kam stops him (barely-above-not-detailed); Mentions of deaths from cancer & grief (including a grandmother and young children, barely-above-not-detailed); Mentions of deaths from a car accident & drunk driver; Mentions of another car accident & major injuries; Mentions of being shot, being attacked, weapons, injuries, blood/bleeding (up to semi-detailed); Mentions of stealing, thieves, & criminals; Mentions of lies, lying, & deceit; Mentions of alcohol, drinking, drunks, & taverns; Mentions of awful smells & animal carcasses; Mentions of poop; A few mentions of possible torture; A couple mentions of dead bodies; A couple mentions of gunshots; A couple mentions of hatred; A couple mentions of gossip & rumors; A mention of throwing up; 
             *Note: Kam’s parents died when she was little (car accident) and lived with her grandmother until her passing six years prior (cancer), when her older sister and her husband were awarded guardianship of her; Kam feels smothered by her older sister & it leads to them arguing with each other (including about her sister not allowing her to go on a trip); A woman sneers and calls a man in a wheelchair a cripple; A handful of butt jokes (because of someone’s name being close to derrière); A comment about a woman having an “unhealthy fetish with knives”; A couple mentions of horror movies; A mention of Halloween.
 
 
Sexual Content- Two hand kisses, three forehead kisses, a neck kiss, an almost kiss (semi-detailed), a not-detailed kiss, two barely-above-not-detailed kisses, and two semi-detailed kisses; Wanting to kiss and touch (barely-above-not-detailed); Staring at lips; Touches, Embraces, Cuddling, Hand holding, Warmth, Butterflies/Flutters, Tingles/Shivers, Nearness (up to semi-detailed); Blushes, Winks, & Flirting; Noticing & Staring (up to semi-detailed); Kam and Reese share a bed when sleeping (cuddling happens and she wakes up first, up to semi-detailed); When a guy makes a suggestive comment to Kam (asking if another man has “tasted” her yet), she wishes to put her knee in his groin (he leers at her a couple times and nuzzles her neck); A comment about a woman “spreadin’ her legs” for another man in her boyfriend’s bed (cheating; *Spoiler* Reese found his girlfriend in his bed with another man and there are a few vague references to this *End of Spoiler*); a ‘hot’, a ’skank’ when referring to a woman, and four ‘babe’s; Mentions of kisses & kissing; Mentions of couples touching, embracing, cuddling, & kissing (barely-above-not-detailed); Mentions of cheating, catching someone cheating in a bedroom, exes, lovers, & heartbreak; Mentions of flirting, blushes, & winks; Mentions of young boys crushing on and being enthralled by Kam; A few mentions of other crushes; Love, falling in love, & the emotions;
             *Note: The “dark queen” wears a tight corset pushing up cleavage (more cleavage that Kam thinks is proper for a queen; mentioned again later); A comment about life being a “cruel and unfair mistress”; A couple mentions of half-clothes women in a shipping port-like area and men calling crude remarks (not written); A couple mentions of underwear; A mention of a busty woman; A mention of menopause; A mention of testosterone.
 
-Kamryn “Kam” Kensington, age 19
-Reese
                                P.O.V. switches between them & one other character
                                                        255 pages
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Pre Teens- 

New Teens- 

Early High School Teens- 

Older High School Teens- 

My personal Rating- 

That was…different. 

 

I went into this book with an open mind because I wasn’t sure what to expect, but it ended up not being my personal cup of tea. 

 

Maybe it’s because of the shorter length of this book, but I thought Kam took the knowledge of being thrown (quite literally) into another world really well, actually. I think I would have been a little more panicked and stressed than her. I was confused at times once she enters the fantasy world because things aren’t explained at first. Eventually we get some information, though, so I just had to hold my questions until then. 

 

It reminded me of a mix between The Wizard of Oz and Peter Pan—which is admittedly not my favorite two fairytales as they’re usually a little too out-there, sad, dark, or just plain nonsensical for me. I didn’t quite understand Reese and his powers because they seemed just for writing and telling stories, but then he would be able to heal Kam’s injuries or help her sleep (while adding to dream of him to the command, which was a little strange but also a little sweet?). 

 

Poor Kam can’t catch a break in this book: never mind just falling down the stairs into another world, she’s also attacked left and right by those and the creatures in said world and then bleeding often or near death because of it. 

 

It was sitting at a two star rating for me personally because it really wasn’t my thing of fantasy book and I was having trouble understanding what was going on, but I really didn’t like some reveals at the end and some cruder comments throughout the book. Kam didn’t have a filter for her comments which left some of them in poor taste. I liked the very end, but that was really the only part I can say that I enjoyed.

 

 

See y’all on Friday with a new review! 



*BFCG may (Read the review to see) recommend this book by this author. It does not mean I recommend all the books by this author.

Monday, May 18, 2026

"Season of My Enemy" by Naomi Musch

About this book:

  “Only last year, Fannie O’Brien was considered a beauty with a brain, and her future shone bright, despite the war pounding Europe. With her father’s sudden death and her brothers overseas, Fannie must now do the work of three men on their 200-acre farm—until eight German prisoners arrive and, just as Fannie feared, trouble comes too. Someone seems intent on causing “accidents,” and Fannie is certain the culprit is one of the two handsome older Germans—or possibly both. Can she manage the farm, keep the prisoners in line, and hold her family together through these turbulent times?”


Series: Part of the series “Heroines of WWII”, but is not connected to any other book.


Spiritual Content- A couple Scriptures are quoted; Prayers, Thanking God, & feeling peace afterwards; A few talks about God & praying; ’H’s are capital when referring to God; Fannie doesn’t want to go to church one Sunday because she thinks there’s other things that need to be done, but her mom insists; Mentions of God, Jesus, & receiving His peace; Mentions of prayers, praying, answered prayers, & blessings over food; Mentions of churches, church going, services, & pastors/chaplains (including one pastor giving a “hard and fiery” sermon because of German prisoners in the congregation); Mentions of Christians & faiths; Mentions of Jewish people; A few mentions of Christmas; A few mentions of hymns/songs; A mention of someone from the Bible; 
             *Note: Religious phrases: ‘thank heaven’ and ‘for heaven’s sake’ are both said once; A few mentions of luck & being lucky.
 

Negative Content- Minor cussing including: a ‘blah blah blah’, a ‘darn’, a ‘dumb’, and six forms of ‘stupid’; A mention of a curse (said, not written); Some eye rolling & sarcasm; Being held at gun-point and threatened, Being attacked and grabbed, Throwing up, & Seeing blood/bleeding and fighting (up to semi-detailed); Staring a fire, sabotaging, & thinking of killing others (up to semi-detailed); Watching a film reel about malnourished and mistreated people and prisoners & dead bodies (up to semi-detailed); Two of Fannie’s brothers are fighting overseas and her family has not heard from them in a while which worries them (she wonders if they are still alive or are being mistreated by the Germans; *Spoilers* One brother comes home due to becoming deaf and is very upset about the German PWs on their farm; The other brother comes home later in the book after being a prisoner of war in Germany and very mistreated, but wants to get past the war and tries to accept the PWs on the farm *End of Spoilers*); Some of the German soldiers do not believe that Jews are being executed and that their American counterparts are being mistreated in German prisoner camps; Set during, all about, & many mentions of World War II, battles/fights, prisoners of war, captures and possible missing soldiers, prison camps, guns/weapons, injuries (including amputations and burnings), & killing and deaths (up to semi-detailed); Many mentions of deaths, seeing deaths, possible deaths, & grief (including Fannie and her family for her father, all up to semi-detailed); Mentions of mass graves & prisoners being malnourished and mistreated; Mentions of rumors about Hitler’s hatred of Jews, him deeming them subhuman, & concentration camps; Mentions of gunfire, explosions, & bombs; Mentions of sabotage & fires; Mentions of prisoners escaping or trying to escape; Mentions of hatred & prejudice (including shown by spiting at others and threatening to shoot others); Mentions of gossip & rumors; Mentions of alcohol & drinking; Mentions of cigarettes & smoking; Mentions of hunting; Mentions of using the bathroom outside; A few mentions of firing squads & executions; A few mentions of nightmares; A few mentions of lies & lying; A mention of manure; 
             *Note: A prisoner reacts badly to be called a ‘Mischlinge’ (someone with mixed blood), mentions of him abandoning his family due to it, & mentions of Hitler declaring he can null that those with mixed Jewish blood are not Jewish if they met certain requirements and would fight for him; Fannie is strongly against having German Prisoners of War on her family’s farm because of her brothers overseas fighting the Germans (this is a major part of the book with her concern over them being Nazis and being the enemy), but as the book continues, she tries to remember that they are human and want to go back home to their families (though she still struggles at times with hatred and blame);  Fannie’s younger sister makes comments against the German Prisoners of War, viewing them as Nazis, spies, and “not quite human”; Fannie ignores her mother’s orders a couple of times (which later causes trouble); Mentions of books (‘Rebecca’, Rabbit Hill’, ‘Gone with the Wind’, & ‘The Sword in the Stone’); Mentions of movies, actors, & actresses (‘Since You Went Away’, ‘The Seventh Cross’, ‘The Adventures of Mark Twain’, ‘Hollywood Canteen’, Claudette Colbert, Jennifer Jones, Joseph Cotten, Shirley Temple, Spencer Tracy, & Roy Rodgers); Mentions of singers & songs (Bing Crosby, Frank Sinatra, & the Andrew Sisters); A few mentions of car brands.
 
 
Sexual Content- A (unwanted) kiss (on the neck, up to semi-detailed) and a semi-detailed kiss; Some touches, hand holding, shivers, & nearness (including a character on purpose trying to fluster Fannie and get close to her); Wanting to touch & embrace (up to semi-detailed); Blushes; Noticing, Staring, & Remembering another’s body (including at curves and muscles, up to semi-detailed); Some of the German Prisoners stare, ogle at, and lick their lips when seeing Fannie and her little sister (which makes Fannie uncomfortable and flush; This is mentioned often at the beginning of the book; Wolfgang thinks the men “deserved a bit of sport…even if it was only in admiring a woman they could never approach”and calls the men “harmless” which is later showed to not be true of all of them); Leo’s mind wanders to “feral thoughts”when staring at Fannie’s body; Fannie warns her little sister (age thirteen) that some of the prisoners are barely older than her and haven’t been around any girls in a long time (and warns her from giving them any “notions”); One of the prisoners teases another about Fannie’s little sister being too young for his “lovemaking”; *Spoilers, but about an assault* Leo grabs Fannie, pulls her into a small room, threatens her with a gun, touches her hair, and kisses her neck; She is rescued by Wolf and others before he does anything else; After being arrested, Leo taunts Fannie with kissing the air towards her and is later given a twenty-five year sentence for his actions *End of Spoilers*; Mentions of men ogling at Fannie (including when she has wet clothing); Mentions of shirtless men (including Fannie staring at a one); Mentions of prisoners of war trying to escape to meet women; Mentions of girlfriends/boyfriends & break-ups; Mentions of blushes, crushes, & flirting; A couple mentions of kisses; A couple mentions of cute men; A mention of a man dancing with “bar floozies” to make his girl jealousy or mad; Love, falling in love, & the emotions.
 
-Fannie O’Brien, age 22
-Wolfgang “Wolf” Kloninger
-Leo Friedrickson
                                P.O.V. switches between them 
                                           Set in 1944-1945 (Final chapter in 1947)
                                                        256 pages
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Pre Teens- 

New Teens- 

Early High School Teens- 

Older High School Teens- 

My personal Rating- 

My dad was born and raised in Wisconsin, so because of that and having extended family there, I was curious in this book and the history. I’ve read other books that mention about German Prisoners of War working in American factories and on farms, but this was my first book that actually showed it. As a gardener, I also found the farming and agricultural interesting, if not a little repetitive at times. 

 

However, I didn’t care for the comments and suggestions towards and about Fannie and her younger sister from the German soldiers. I kind of expected it to a degree, but there was more about their shapes/curves/figures and it bought a crass undertone to the story. Because of that and an attempted sexual assault, it honestly reminded me more of a secular historical fiction book about this time period than a Christian Fiction one. This was the major reason for my low rating and why I won’t be recommending it. Their comments and suggestions were brushed off and felt like a ‘boys will be boys’ kind of mentality, down to a comment from Wolfgang that the men in his team were “harmless”, but that’s later shown to be not the case when one attacks, corners, and kisses Fannie.

 

This book had it’s interesting moments and gave me a lot of bunny trails of history to research, but ultimately I didn’t care for some of the content—not necessarily the war content, but the sexual suggestions and hints. It was lustful at times, particularly the couple chapters in one of the prisoner’s POVs which was very uncomfortable to read and border-lined on creepy. 

 

A major part of the story is working through prejudice, which I honestly think was very understandable for Fannie. Her two brothers are fighting overseas against the Germans and here she is, having to accept help on her family’s farm from German PWs. It had an interesting moral dilemma because of that part of the story, but I find it a bit hard to believe about her falling for a German Prisoner of War—and him falling for her—during everything going on. It almost had the forbidden love trope because of it, but because he isn’t a true Nazi (noted in the book as he didn’t join the war for his own beliefs, but to protect his students that had enlisted), that can gave their potential romance a little more of a likely possibility of happening. Overall, I would say I have mixed feelings on it and just the book in general because of the sexual parts. It was good to learn more about this family in history, but I wish the sexual comments and parts would have been left out.

 

 

See y’all on Friday with a new review! 




*BFCG may (Read the review to see) recommend this book by this author. It does not mean I recommend all the books by this author.