Welcome to Offbeat Offline, where I bring you up-to-date with what went on in my life during the month just gone, give you a sneak peek of my next shenanigans, and share my favourite posts of late!
What happened last month to yours truly? I made a tiny dent in the chaos at home, went for my routine LLC-related bloodwork (the results are practically the same as the last time - too bad they were worse than the time before that to begin with) and...read. Seriously, a totally uneventful month, which I'll take any day now, because when something happens is always bad (see March recap). In other news, I'm already contemplating another hiatus in June, but this time I'm going to actually schedule my daily activities in advance or I'll accomplish nothing (or next to nothing) as usual (...I mean, June is usually too hot for me already, but a girl can hope). OK, anyhow, let's see what shenanigans I was up to last month...

📚 SAME OLD, SAME OLD. You all know I can tear through a book in two days, and this month was no different - but reviewing continues to throw a wrench in my works. So, basically, I ended up reading less than I could have, and I struggled with reviews (even the minis). Which is a problem because I'm starting to have reading anxiety...I have far less books in my TBR pile than the average reader, but I can't seem to make progress with it anyway. Anyhow, I had a great reading month, quality wise. Here goes...
Approvals (2):
It's the hottest summer on record and the city is suffering. Prices are high, pay is low. And on one fateful morning five travelers find themselves trapped in a tube car deep in the London Underground.
It will change their lives forever.
By the time they leave the train they will be bound together as witnesses to a single horrific event. Something terrible, irreversible, and monstrous. Something hungry.
But they can't remember what it is.
On their own, they each begin to experience strange dissociative events. Time gets lost. Friends disappear. Something stalks them in the shadows. They make an unlikely team, but to remember what they encountered that day on the train, they will have to work together. Because now it's up to them to understand what horror they saw – and stop it in its tracks before it drags everyone else down below.
Months after entering a portal, becoming a powerful mage, and saving a distant realm, disgruntled Asian American high schooler Andy Lao returns home to find that absolutely no one believes what happened to him. In fact, things are worse than ever before as his subpar science and math grades make him a target of his parents' disappointment. But how do you think about tests and college applications when you’re The Chosen One of a magical land?
One day, at the portal's location, Andy sees a glowing bit of mana on the ground. And with that, magic is possible again. But when a mysterious, surly teen girl comes through the portal, she claims to be the Chosen One...and that Andy’s the one who doomed the realm. Together, they’ll save magic—because the answer lies in modern science.
The author put a refreshing spin or two on a common enough YA trope - a group of teen stranded on an (often impossible) island that does its best to break their bodies and their sanity - and made excellent use of an Inside-Out-adjacent premise.
This one was great! I haven't written a review yet, so I can't quote from that like I usually would, but basically, it's a mind-fuckery of a horror tale (both of the psychological and real variety) about multiple universes, full of twists and turns, and set in the '90s - and even if the characters, for the most part, aren't what you would call "likeable", the story more than makes up for that. The writing is awesome, too.
- The Hazel Wood (The Hazel Wood #1) by Melissa Albert (YA, fantasy/multiverse)
For a while I thought there wasn't much novelty in this story, and I wondered where the rave reviews were coming from...until the twist came and changed EVERYTHING. Very much like Albert's The Children - though in a different fashion - The Hazel Wood is an ode to the power of creation (in all its beauty and cruelty), very meta yet heartbreakingly human...and yay, I found a rare popular book that I loved! 😂
- The Night Country (The Hazel Wood #2) by Melissa Albert (YA, fantasy/multiverse)
Darker and more violent than The Hazel Wood, but at the same time poetical and whimsical, TNC is yet another ode to the (equally double-edged) power of storytelling, and to those characters who jump from the narrative a tad more literally than one would expect. Except, even if you've read Book 1, you're not ready for the spin it puts on it...Also: multiverse galore 😍.
- Tales from the Hinterland (The Hazel Wood #2.5) by Melissa Albert (YA, fantasy/multiverse - anthology)
Albert has a way with words, and the gift of making you care for her characters even in so short a page count. It doesn't hurt that these stories have the typical flavour of classic fairy tales (minus the happy ending), yet at the same time their mythology is fresh and creative. All the main characters are female, often wronged or abused in some way, always trying to regain their agency whatever the cost, sometimes becoming villains in the process - but you can't help sympathising with them all the same (more so if you read the rest of the series and learned the even uglier truth about their world).
- The Book of Love by Kelly Link (NA, afterlife/supernatural/mystery - reread [pub. 2024])
This one is MUCH more than the story of three deceased teens who come back to life. For one, it encompasses a number of genres - building on its afterlife premise, it soon turns into a mystery, a supernatural fantasy with a magical-realism feel, and a strong coming-of-age narrative. It's both dreamy and brutal, tender and acerbic, with messy characters you can't help but love and who feel like flesh and blood even when they're...something else. I've never read anything like it and probably never will.
Here's my old ARC review.
Reviews (4):
- Unnamed Bones by Lora Senf (see above)
On the blog closer to pub date.
Mini review on GR for now - on the blog later.
Mini review on GR for now - on the blog later.
Mini review on GR for now - on the blog later.
Here are my scheduled reviews for this month:
Reviews aside, I'll participate in the Tell Me Something Tuesday meme on the 26th (question: Which books are you looking forward to reading this summer? (June-August)). In the meantime, here's the TMST prompt list for the month of May, in case you want to join in:
- May 5th: What toppings are on your ideal pizza?
- May 12th: What's a skill you'd like to master?
- May 19th: What is your favourite flower?
- May 26th: Which books are you looking forward to reading this summer? (June-August)

🧹ROOM SERVICE. As usual, my hiatus wasn't particularly fruitful, but I did make an attempt at housekeeping. I tackled the spare room, a small section at a time (mind you...it's still a work-in-progress), and pulled a Marie Kondō on it 😂. Just kidding, but I mean, in a way...because I trashed A LOT OF STUFF that once meant the world to me (like my ex-favourite singer's autograph + dedication that he wrote for me the first time we met...40 years ago 🤯). Mementos of my past (destined to be let down) self, or of a happier and still hopeful time, only serve the purpose to make me sad now - so why keep them? (I had already destroyed my weight's worth in diaries years ago - well, I'm exaggerating, but still). I also made a pile of all the books I didn't intent to reread/keep and put them in bags, then I disposed of them in the easiest way I knew. I didn't have the patience to bring them to a yard sale (especially considering than more than half of them were in English, so I didn't think the market people would have valued them much, if anything), so I took them with me to one of the local supermarkets that has a little book-sharing angle and dropped them all there before I proceeded to go shopping. I don't know if they'll find a new home, or someone will collect them and do what I couldn't bother to do (that is, sell them), and frankly, I don't care. It would have been neat to be able to do a series of giveaways and let some of you have them, but alas, I can't afford international postage.
Since I was on hiatus, I haven't blog-hopped at all in April, so I've got nothing 🙁. But I'm getting back in the game, so this section will be operative in my next monthly recap!
That's it for now. My next post will be up on May 7th, and it will be the mini-review round I mentioned above.
So, what were your highs/lows in the past month?
March was a really busy month filled with big events at work and some volunteering that I do each year. I was determined to make April chill. Of course, the first day in April that I had off, I got a wild idea to build a new flowerbed in my backyard and started digging away at it. It took me all month, but I now have a gorgeous start to a pretty substantial flowerbed. I'm finding peace in keeping myself busy, so I guess I'll keep doing that this month!
ReplyDeleteDoes it take so long to have the basis for a "pretty substantial" flowerbed? It sounds extenuating! I understand how it can be soothing in other ways, though. What flowers are you planning to grow?
DeleteI didn't get to read as much as I wanted in April, only 7 books. I had a work conference for a few days, an event I had to attend for Child Abuse/Neglect Flag Day Memorial on the 24th, and a friend came in for a few days around that so I was doing other things. I am pleased with what I read though and think they were all 4 and 5 star reads.
ReplyDeleteI don't like to keep my dogs on meds unless absolutely necessary but Apollo will be 7 soon and I believe he is getting arthritis a bit so Mr. Barb and I made the decision to keep him on a dose of Rimadyl a day. The normal dose for his size is 2 pills a day and we have him on a half twice a day. I am already seeing a difference in him. Of course it didn't help that I read two very dog-centric books in April which I loved loved loved but which absolutely devastated me.
I need to get a copy of Solace House. I have been unhauling some books too. There is a used bookstore in town I have been donating them to. I could try to get some store credit but at this time want more space, not necessarily more books. It does feel good to purge sometimes. And I have to ask - who is the ex-favorite musician?
That event sounds so gloomy, but one can only hope it's beneficial to keep a spotlight on such horrors. I'm glad you managed to have a friend visiting - it must have been fun! Also glad Apollo regained some mobility at the cost of a small pill - sometimes one can only weight the pros and cons and go with the better option among two not-great ones.
DeleteSolace House is wild!
"I could try to get some store credit but at this time want more space, not necessarily more books. It does feel good to purge sometimes"
Exactly! It's a bit sad too, but on the whole, you feel like you accomplished something, or at least unshouldered a burden, if you know what I mean.
I didn't name the musician because no one in the US would know him - he's a 75-y.o. Italian singer who's had a great career, but only within our national borders.
Sounds like you found some good books.
ReplyDeleteI used to keep diaries and I tore them all up and trashed them too. Now I blog. lol
It's good that you did some clearing out though.
I read a bit and found some good books but with helping my daughter since she can't get around very well, I haven't had time to read or do anything much.
Diaries can become painful after a while - whether because the good times are over or because you hope to exorcise the bad times by throwing them away...
DeleteI hope your daughter can find a measure of relief once she's finally found the right doctors. I'm really sad for both of you.
I'm also trying to offload some books, which i hope to do over Memorial Day weekend. Our town has a town wide garage sale and I'm putting the books outside my house for folks to take, sort of a lazy man's version of a Little Free Library, lol.
ReplyDeleteI adore Kelly Link, although I havent read The Book of Love. The Children is going to be a June read for me (US release date), and I cannot wait! I'll be stalking you until your review is posted😁
"sort of a lazy man's version of a Little Free Library"
Delete😂 You get so many ARCs! I hope no one's going to try and sell them after reading them...
I know Kelly Link started off as a short-story author...one of my goals is to read all of them too. TBOL has an intimidating page count, but it's totally worth a read! And if it helps, I devoured it despite its length.
Looking forward to compare notes on The Children! I'm still stunned I got that one.
I'm lucky that my local library will take book donations, so I offload most there. I do recycle paper ARCs because I don't think those should go into general circulation.
ReplyDeleteMy April was very busy. I went to a funeral in MI, a big book con in Washington DC, and visited my son at college. Both kids were home for Easter break. I read 10 books, with 7 being audiobooks. It was easier to listen to books than read them while I was on the airplanes.
May looks to be very busy with my son's college gradation, moving both kids home, and going to my niece's HS graduation. My folks will be visiting for a week, too.
That was some month (with a whole lot of air travelling)! but apparently, May is following in its footsteps. I remember you telling me your son would start working as soon as he finished his studies, so best of luck to him for his new (and demanding) job!
DeleteI do want to go Kondo on our office but SO cant throw away things
ReplyDeleteHa! That's a problem. I'm going through a trash-all phase instead LOL. If I could pulverise all my no-longer-wanted stuff into atoms, I would...I guess you're still attached to the stuff in your office, so that's not a bad thing. When one feels the urge to get rid of years' worth of memorabilia, it only means they hold a strong grudge against their former life or self...
DeleteEx favorite? You don't like them at all any longer? We moved a few times over the years and that always results in a clean out. Now, I don't buy many things. I am spending my money of experiences. Good luck with your review. You put too much pressure on yourself.
ReplyDeleteI was a rabid fan of his since I was 12, for around 12 years, then a little less every year for...3 more? until I had to admit that the magic was gone. The fact is, he was a lot more than his music to me - to everyone who loved him. I was a different person when I listened to him, went to his concerts. met him (yes! I did, a few times), etc. - and he was a different person too...and anyhow, the me I am now would have liked him a lot less if she'd met him back then. It's hard to explain in a few words what happened - suffice to say, I can't listen to him anymore (also, I hate the music he's put out in the latest couple of decades). I'll have to unhaul all those records, too.
Delete"Now, I don't buy many things. I am spending my money of experiences."
I love how you put it. You're lucky to be able to do that.
"Good luck with your review. You put too much pressure on yourself."
Believe me, I know. But I can't let go of everything, or I wouldn't be the person I am anymore...
I am so behind myself, so I very much feel you. I am apparently still requesting books like it's 2016, but forgetting that I have like, 1/3 of the time to read and review (and that is if I am being generous!) so... yeah. I hope that you are able to stay afloat too, and I am sorry that the mementos of your past don't bring you joy. I think I am the opposite, I cling to them so much because they DO, but that is sort of the definition of living in the past, eh?
ReplyDelete"I am apparently still requesting books like it's 2016"
Delete😂
It should make more sense for you to fall behind, because you read more widely than me AND get many more ARCs, in any form...but it takes so long for me to write a review. Good luck to us both!
Nothing wrong with clinging to the mementos of your past. Personally, I feel this huge disconnection between my past and my present, so in a way I resent the girl I used to be - the one who could, SHOULD have built a different life for herself - and the people who have betrayed me/the things that have changed for the worse. But there are still a handful of things that I can keep close, and if you have more than a few, it's probably a sign that (bar certain, um, situations you shared with us) the joy they brought you has been preserved. That's great!
Reading and a little housekeeping is still a lot of work. I've always found dusting a challenge because they keep coming back so quickly. I have been thinking the only way to keep a clean home is to throw everything but I guess I'm hoarder so it's a bit hard to throw things away or give them away. Especially books - I like my books to have a nice home but things are not like they used to be - people prefer new things.
ReplyDeleteI had a few ex-favorite musicians but mostly because they stopped making music or they changed their style and creating music that I don't like. I guess I can understand why they change because doing the same thing over and over can be frustrating.
Last month, I did the a-z challenge which is a challenge by itself so that kept me busy but I did read some books. It was a decent month.
I hope you have a good month.
Have a lovely day.
You can never keep dust away for long...in my case, it helps that I rarely open the window in the spare room, but still.
DeleteI think a lot of people still value old books...especially if they're free 😉.
I'm still a Billy Joel fan even if he stopped making music, but with someone who decided to change course, I don't think I could. Especially if they did that to fit into the current musical trends...
Next year I'll have to remember to NOT go on a hiatus in April (which I seem to do every year), because I always miss your challenge...
A totally uneventful month can be really nice! And it gave you time to really dig into Melissa Albert's catalog - lol.
ReplyDeleteHa! It did! I'm all caught up with her books now. Once I started, I couldn't stop 😂.
DeleteNo news is good news Roberta! <3
ReplyDeleteAlas...🙂
DeleteFor us, uneventful = good. I also tend to still get through books within a couple days, my problem is that I then go like 3 weeks between books lol. I'm glad you made even a tiny bit of progress around the house. I have some stuff that I keep thinking I *should* just throw away, but I can't bring myself to do it. You took those books to a place where potentially other book lovers can find them. It's too bad you didn't have the energy to make a bit of money or do giveaways, but I still think you found a good solution.
ReplyDelete"I also tend to still get through books within a couple days, my problem is that I then go like 3 weeks between books lol"
DeleteOops 😅.
I'm not sure those books will find a real home, at least the ones in English - Italians aren't famous for their foreign language literacy - but it is what it is. I just needed to make some space for the things (mainly books) I wanted to keep...