Reading Review (February-March)
- Christin Hunt
- Apr 6
- 4 min read
I love a good book! But finding goldilocks literature these days is hard. There are a few authors I’ll always trust, and a few readers whose recommendations I’ll always take. But even then the good and beautiful pickin’s tend to hide quietly behind an unending pile of unwholesome titles, and it takes patience and diligence to seek them out.
I’m always on the lookout for books with zero spice, zero woke agendas, beautiful words, poignant characters, well-crafted storylines, and memorable/applicable situations.
I am usually deep-diving into a theological/Christian application/discipleship book, but I also really love fiction. My preferred fiction genres are YA fiction (fantasy, sci-fi, reimagined fairy tales) historical fiction, and sometimes mystery. A bit of a love story is fine, but don’t like when the romance is more of a protagonist than the protagonist herself.
Do you have a title (or 17) you think I’d like? Please (oh, please!) drop a comment and let me know! Bonus points if it’s on audiobook! (These days my “reading” is accomplished while tackling laundry, dinner, or a sink full of dishes…!)

Below are my reads from February and March. (At some point I hope to update this post to include my January reads as well.) Each title has a very brief review. Here’s the key to my rating scale:
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⭐️Love it enough to have on my shelf, and have folks judge my character thereby.
😍 LOVE IT! Would recommend to nearly everyone.
😊 Enjoyable/worthwhile read. Would recommend with some reservations.
👍🏻 “Just fine” but not my vibe. Might recommend.
😐 So close. Good story line/engaging read, but enough woke or secular worldview sprinkles that I’d recommend only to discerning readers.
😬 No thanks. I finished it, but I wouldn’t recommend it (either for spice or worldview)
😭 Brought on a good cry. (Fully invested.)
🥲 Nearly made me cry. (All the feels.)
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🙂😢 Sunrise on the Reaping
This is Haymitch’s story from the Hunger Games, most likely only appreciated by those who have read the previous Hunger Games books. Dystopian and political (Orwellian and Poe themes), simply written, tactful/tasteful violence when necessary, clean, memorable characters, and it tugs at the emotions. Two passing mentions of a gay couple. I almost cried.
😍⭐️10,000 Doors of January
What if words were worlds and beautiful phrases could paint doors between realities? EXQUISITE writing, beautiful storyline. Read with discernment due to a secular worldview on marriage and bitterness, though the beauty and wholesome story far outweighs the brokenness for me.
Full review here: https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=10100200579011450&set=a.507298928320&type=3&mibextid=wwXIfr
😐The Women
An excellent retelling of a female nurse in Vietnam, her experiences, relationships, PTSD, and her attempt to live amidst the grief. A great story, historically informed, and I learned a lot, but there were three places I needed to fast forward through (hints of spice), and several choices I can’t condone.
😍⭐️😭Facing the Dawn
Adding to my collection of annotated Ruchti trophies is this beautiful gospel-propelled story on grief and hope. Bonus points for making me cry.
👍🏻A Flight of Arrows
I only made it through the first two chapters but was turned off by the immature love and sticky romance. This is the second Benton book I’ve tried and I don’t think it’s my vibe. I’ll try another of her titles next year.
😍⭐️🥲Embers in the London Sky
Everything from Sundin is gold. She’s a gem when it comes to WWII research and storytelling, and this is no exception. Hard topics written with grace. Super good.
My review here: https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=10100202421703680&set=a.581573481520&type=3&mibextid=wwXIfr
😍Spouse in the House
Another Ruchti title, and amazing as usual. This Christian Living book is funny and engaging and encouraging for anyone who has to live with sinners.
😍⭐️When the Day Comes & In This Moment
My first intro to a Meyer title and I loved it! Wonderful timeslip concept, great historical anchors (I was googling people and places through the whole story), and VERY well written. If you don’t like history this series may change your mind.
🙂Mistborn
My first foray into the Sanderson universe and it was… good. He’s not a great writer, but he is a phenomenal world builder and storyteller. There were only three or four phrases that I wanted to remember (either they were beautiful words or they made me chuckle), and I’ll probably not read the book again, but I will read the rest in the series. Recommended for age 16+ for tactfully written moral situations.
🙂🥲(⭐️)Remarkably Bright Creatures
A janitor, a mystery, a deadbeat, and an octopus who has a surplus of opinions regarding the amusing, yet dull-witted humans that care for him. Some language, but super purposefully written. Clever, cute, intelligent, and I’m thinking about buying it.
😍⭐️Cinder & Scarlet
The first two books in the Lunar Chronicles, a sci-fi retelling of a tangle of fairy tales. Clever, well written, and a nifty blend of cyborg meets magic with a political edge. (The audiobooks are VERY well done, too.)
😐Strange the Dreamer & Muse of Nightmares
Brilliant story, clever writing, great characters, and engaging plot, but too many “I-wouldn’t-let-my-13yo-read-this” situations.
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Your turn! What are you reading now? What’s on your TBR (to be read) pile? What would you recommend?
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