July Wrap up and August Hopefuls 2021

Happy August ✨ It was a slow month of reading for me, with one paper back and one audio book finished. However, I enjoyed them both so I still count it as a good reading month!


I gave both books a ★★★★☆.5

I gave both books a ★★★★☆.5

July Wrap Up

The first book I read this month was A Game of Fate by Scarlett St. Clair which I read via audiobook. It took me a while to get used to the narrator for this one, and I wouldn’t say he’s my favourite narrator but I got used to him. A Game of Fate is essentially the same story as A Touch of Darkness but from Hades point of view. If you’re worried that you’re going to find it too similar to Persephone’s point of view, don’t! Listening to this book, although you obviously recognise the course of the events and the interactions between the two gods, but you get so much more insight into the world of the gods through Hades point of view. Hades gets up to a lot in his spare time away from Persephone, he interacts with a number of different mortals and gods, and it really opens up the politics and the wider world of the novels. It also gives the reader an invaluable opportunity to know what Hades is thinking in every interaction he has with Persephone, and how she affects him which I absolutely adored. So, if you loved A Touch of Darkness, definitely read this one!

The second and final book I finished this month was Venus & Aphrodite: History of a Goddess by Bettany Hughes. This surprising light and easy to read non-fiction takes you from the beginning of the goddess Aphrodite with her early influences in Mesopotamia, to the modern-day reception of the goddess. The book reads as if Bettany is just chatting to you, which made it easy to read and accessible for anyone wanting to learn about the goddess. The connections to the early war goddesses of Mesopotamia (Inanna, Ishtar and Astarte) were fascinating, and Bettany supported her claims with archaeological evidence and images in the book. I absolutely loved reading the changes in the goddess both through time and region, and how the depictions of her, and the connotations towards her morphed. I definitely feel like the goddess Aphrodite/Venus has been simplified into the goddess of sex and desire with little substance, and this book is out here to remind the world that she is so much more.

August Hopefuls

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This month I continued to read The Real Valkyrie: The Hidden History of Viking Warrior Women by Nancy Marie Brown. I’ve been really enjoying the intertwining of fact and fiction, and hopefully, I’ll get it finished this month! I am also half way through Red Rising by Pierce Brown which I started on a whim for a buddy read and I am ABSOLUTELY loving it! I’ve also just found out that it isn’t a trilogy anymore, and that is very exciting! I also started Assassins Apprentice by Robin Hobb which I have been really enjoying, but I’ve been neglecting it since I started Red Rising so hopefully I can pick it back up again this month. But of course, I am a true mood reader at heart, and it is truly impossible to plan my reading. I definitely need to finish The Real Valkyrie and I will HAVE to finish Red Rising because it’s so addicting. The final book on my radar for August it Egyptian Mythology by Garry Shaw, which I am so stocked to have an early release copy of because I’m going to have the opportunity to interview Garry about it and I’m SO EXCITED! But, other than that, we’ll just have to see what I feel like picking up. Maybe I’ll join another spontaneous buddy read, who knows. What are you most looking forward to reading this month? Lemme know down in the comments or find me over on Instagram @kell_read!

May Wrap up and June Hopefuls 2021

I hope May has treated you all well. Here in Melbourne, the leaves are changing, and the frost is encroaching as the mornings get colder and colder. Alas, the end of autumn is here and it’s time for three months of cold, rain and wind. I feel like May was a long month and I’m not quite as shocked as I usually am that we have reached the end of it. But, enough about me, let’s get into my wrap up for May 2021 and the books I hope to get to in June!


My May 2021 hopefuls (not pictured, The Wolf Den by Elodie Harper because it hadn’t been published yet)

My May 2021 hopefuls (not pictured, The Wolf Den by Elodie Harper because it hadn’t been published yet)

Some things to note about me: I am a slow reader, I love to annotate, I love to read multiple books at once and I cannot stick to a tbr to save my life. At the beginning of May, I posted my ‘hopefuls’ list, which is pretty much just a tbr that has absolutely no expectations of actually being read (which is my favourite type). I like to try and add books from different genres onto my hopefuls list to at least give me a chance to get some of them read, depending on my mood. In May, I read 3 of my 6 hopefuls and I feel really proud of that.

May wrap up

★★★★★

★★★★★

The first book I read in May was one that I started in April and that was the Odyssey by Homer and translated by E.V. Rieu. Reading the Odyssey was such a long time coming, I think I was just super intimidated by it. In saying that, now that I have read it, I wish that I read it sooner 😂 I loved the translation done by E.V. Rieu, although it was in prose rather than verse, it still had such a poetic feel to it which I really loved, and it has made me want to read a verse translation next to really be able to compare the different interpretations of the text. Overall, I found it to be easier to read than the Iliad (which may honestly be because the Iliad is like, 80% names and genealogy), and it wasn’t written in a way I expected. Many of the adventures that Odysseus had embarked on were recounted to Alcinous of the Phaeacians, rather than experienced first hand, which I actually think I preferred. Odysseus’ long-winded journey home was full of adventures, and overall, I really enjoyed the story and the translation. Check out my full review.

★★★★★

★★★★★

My second read of the month was Jennifer Saint’s debut novel Ariadne, which follows the lives of Ariadne and Phaedra, the daughters of King Minos and Crete and Pasiphaë from their childhoods to their deaths. Not only has Saint put together the stories of the two sisters, which are stories that are often told separately, you also get points of view from both Ariadne and Phaedra, which (if you know me at all), you’ll know that I loved! I wasn’t too familiar with the myth of Ariadne past the Theseus and the Minotaur events, and I really loved watching her character evolve, and her relationship with Dionysus change and develop throughout the tale. I thought the contrast of the two sisters, with Ariadne, secluded on Naxos surrounded by women and Phaedra living the life Ariadne wanted for herself with Theseus in Athens surrounded by people hostile to her home city of Crete was so striking. It allowed the reader to draw some fascinating parallels between the sisters that would have otherwise been difficult to do, since their stories are almost exclusively, told separately. I thought the ending was so poignant and bittersweet, and even if you are familiar with the myths of Ariadne, Theseus, the Minotaur, Phaedra and Hippolytus, you will definitely love this new retelling of their stories. Check out my full review! If you’re interested in hearing a bit more about Ariadne, I was lucky enough to have been able to interview Jennifer Saint, and ask her all sorts of questions about her novel which you can find here! (non-spoiler of course!)

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★★★★★

The final book I finished for the month was The Wolf Den by Elodie Harper, which was my favourite read for the month, and potentially for the year (it’s neck and neck with The Porpoise by Mark Haddon). The Wolf Den is set in the lupanar, or brothel of Pompeii in the first century CE, and follows the point of view of Amara, a Greek woman who was sold when she was younger after the death of her father. I thought The Wolf Den did such a wonderful job at bringing the ancient world to the modern-day through the intertwining of graffiti found at the site of Pompeii. This graffiti is written by the everyday people of Pompeii, and gives us an incredibly rare insight into the daily lives of the everyday people of Pompeii, rather than the rest of the literature which survives which is almost exclusively written by the powerful men of the Roman Empire. The story emphasises the unbreakable bonds of friendship between the five prostitutes who work at the wolf den, and the contrasting ways in which they deal with their loves and their lack of autonomy. Elodie also does such a phenomenal job of bringing the lives of these women to the forefront, and highlighting the often overlooked fact that prostitutes in the ancient world would not have chosen this life, nor would they have necessarily always been prostitutes. Amara’s main focus in this novel is to change her fate, and do it by any means necessary, which provides her many opportunities for her character to develop, and she often has to make hard decisions which highlight the fact that all of these characters are morally grey, which adds another layer to the relationships and the character development in general. I loved this book, and I would highly recommend it to anyone! if you’re worried you don’t know enough about Pompeii or the ancient world, don’t fret! You can absolutely still enjoy this book, but if you want a bit of context to ancient Pompeii before jumping into this novel, check out my full review where I give a rundown of the context and graffiti in Pompeii! I was so lucky to get a chance to interview Elodie harper, and I had such a wonderful chat about the book, her experiences writing it and the development of her characters! You can either watch it, or read it! The interview, just like my review, is spoiler-free!

June hopefuls

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It’s getting cold, which means inside our house is going to get cosy and warm which is the perfect setting for reading! This month, I have 5 physical books on my hopefuls list, and one audiobook. The audiobook is The Crown of Gilded Bones by Jennifer L. Armentrout which I have been listening to throughout the entirety of May. I cannot believe I am still reading this book, it is SO long and I swear only like, three things have happened. This book needed some serious editing. I only have a couple of hours left of this book, so I truly hope I get it finished this month. Along with finally finishing TCOGB, I am hoping to read Piranesi by Susanna Clarke, The House in the Cerulean Sea by T.J. Klune, The Library of Greek Mythology by Apollodorus, The Poems of Catullus and The Bacchae by Euripides which I am going to read with the lovely Erica over at MoanInc!

So! I guess we will see how I do this month, but honestly, as long as I take some time to read something, I consider it a successful reading month! I hope you all enjoyed this post, and let me know down below or over on my Instagram Kell_Read what book you are most looking forward to reading this month!