What I Read Last Week - March 2nd to 8th

 


5 Stars

Starting a series at book two is usually not my best life choice, but honestly? This worked.

I didn’t feel lost at all. The author weaves in just enough from book one that you have the backstory you need, but it never slows anything down. It keeps moving. No info-dump spiral. Just smooth, steady momentum.

I loved the characters right away. The dynamics feel layered, and the tension is constant in that low, charged way that makes everything feel important. The blood magic was such a strong element, and the dragons absolutely delivered. There’s a steady sense of danger running through the entire story that keeps the atmosphere tight.

The pacing was really well done too. It builds without dragging, and once it picks up, it does not let go.

If book two is this good, I’m officially invested.

5 Stars

I avoided this series because everyone wouldn’t stop talking about it. The hype was intense, and sometimes that makes me dig my heels in. But I had the chance to read it this week… and yeah. I get it now.

I’m hooked.

This felt like a strange mashup of The Hunger Games, an MMO, and chaotic reality TV. It shouldn’t work as well as it does, but it really does. The pacing is fast, the stakes are high, and somehow it’s also genuinely funny.

The humor surprised me the most. It’s ridiculous in the best way, but it never feels forced. I caught myself laughing out loud more than once.

Carl is such a solid main character. He’s overwhelmed, annoyed, and just trying to survive, which makes him easy to root for. And Princess Donut? Completely unhinged. I love her. Their dynamic is half the reason this works so well.

Anyway. I was wrong to wait this long. I’ll be continuing immediately. And yes, I will be yelling “God damnit, Donut” for the foreseeable future.

4 Stars

I really enjoyed this one. The characters felt real and easy to connect with, and the story pulled me in pretty quickly. Dustin Thao does a great job writing emotional moments without making them feel over the top.

That said, the ending felt a little abrupt to me and left me with a few questions. I wanted just a bit more time with the resolution. Overall though, it was still a really solid read and I’m glad I picked it up.









3 Stars

I really wanted to enjoy The Secret of Secrets by Dan Brown, but it just wasn’t the right fit for me.

I’ve enjoyed the fast-paced puzzle style of the Robert Langdon books before, but this one was a struggle to get through. The story felt slower than I expected and I had a hard time staying engaged with the plot. I found myself putting it down often and having to push to pick it back up again.

There were a few interesting ideas woven in, but overall it didn’t quite grab my attention the way earlier books in the series have.

Not a bad book, just not the one for me. 




3 Stars

This one started off strong for me. The opening had intrigue and enough tension to pull me in right away, and I was curious about where the story was headed.

But as the book went on, I struggled to really settle into the world. The biggest hurdle for me was the constant jumping between timelines. I’m not a big fan of that storytelling style to begin with, and here it made it harder for me to stay grounded in the narrative. Just when I felt like I was getting invested in one thread, the story would shift again.

There were definitely interesting ideas and moments that kept me reading, but the structure made it harder for me to fully connect with the story. Overall, it was an okay read for me, just not one that completely clicked.


3 Stars

I really want to love the world of Dune, but I’m having a hard time fully enjoying these stories. I think I finally figured out why while reading Mentats of Dune.

The pacing moves at a snail’s pace because the story keeps stopping for long stretches of info dumping. The information is important to the lore, but it completely halts the forward momentum.

For example, when Vorian Atreides returns to the planet where he once lived to look for his ancestors, the narrative pauses for what feels like a full family tree lesson before the story moves forward again. Moments like that kept pulling me out of the story.

I’m still going to keep reading this saga because I want to love it. The universe is fascinating and the ideas are huge. But so far, these books have been more of a slow march than something I can devour.

5 Stars

This series is getting crazy.

Carl’s Doomsday Scenario somehow cranks the chaos up even higher than the first book. The dungeon is bigger, the challenges are wilder, and the game mechanics keep getting more ridiculous. Every time I thought the story couldn’t possibly escalate further, it absolutely did.

The thing I love most about this series is the balance. It’s absurd, violent, and often laugh out loud funny, but it still manages to build real tension. The stakes keep climbing and I’m fully invested in what happens to Carl and Donut next.

Also, the creativity in this world is just wild. The traps, the monsters, the quests… it feels like anything can happen at any moment.

At this point I’m officially hooked on the Dungeon Crawler Carl series and I’m not even pretending otherwise.

Weekly Menu #650 And The Book Of The Week

 


WEEKLY MENU

Monday

Pork Loin Ramen

Kids - Beef Ramen

 

Tuesday

Middle Eastern Beef Kofta

Kids - Chicken Nuggets and Apple Sauces

 

Wednesday

Thai Peanut Chicken

Kids - Chicken and Rice

 

Thursday

Potato Soup

Kids - Fries and Cheese

 

Friday

Ground Turkey Taco Salad

Kids - Nahos

 

Saturday

Chicken Caesar Wraps

Kids - Cheese Quesadillas

 

Sunday

Leftovers Night

Sunday Confessions #347

 


Welcome back to Sunday Book Confessions, where I say the quiet reading thoughts out loud.

This is the space for the DNFs I don’t regret, the petty opinions I absolutely stand by, and the completely unnecessary stress I put on myself over my TBR. Consider this your weekly reminder that reading is supposed to be fun… even if I occasionally treat it like a competitive sport.


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Weekly Menu #650 And The Book Of The Week
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What I Read Last Week - March 2nd to 8th
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Sunday Confessions #348










63/250 2026 Reading Challenge
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25/102 2025 Goodreads Nominees Reading Challenge


And that’s it for this week’s confessions.

Some opinions may change. Some won’t. My TBR will continue to grow faster than I can manage, and I will continue pretending that’s fine. If you made it this far, you’re either nosy in the best way or avoiding your own reading slump. Either way, same. See you next Sunday.

What I Read Last Week - February 23rd to March 1st


4 Stars

I told myself after book one that I wouldn’t continue this series.

Reader, I continued.

Brimstone by Callie Hart is still addictive in that “just one more chapter” way. The characters have bite. The tension works. The stakes feel high.

But here’s my issue with this series: it keeps stacking ideas like it’s building a literary Jenga tower. New concepts, new twists, new chaos. Just when the storyline feels like it’s tightening into something sharp and inevitable, everything detonates and we’re off in a new direction.

It starts to feel like several short stories stitched together instead of one focused arc. Every time momentum builds, it resets. Not cool.

That said, I was still invested. Still turning pages. Still here, apparently. Four stars because I enjoyed the ride… I just wish it picked a lane and stayed in it.

4 Stars

This felt very honest.

Alyson Stoner talks about identity, trauma, growing up in the spotlight, and trying to untangle all of it as an adult. There’s a lot of self-reflection and research mixed in, but it never felt like they were talking down to the reader.

At times it leaned a little more analytical than emotional for me. I wanted a bit more raw feeling and a little less structure. But overall, I really appreciated how thoughtful it was.

It’s not a light, easy read. It’s more of a sit-with-your-thoughts kind of book.

Solid 4 stars.

5 Stars

This had a mystery I needed answers to. It’s a slow burn, but it kept me interested the whole time. Very much written in that typical Lockhart style.

I haven’t always been a fan of this author, but they’ve grown on me. Or maybe I’ve just started appreciating the writing more. Either way, this one worked for me.

Easy 5 stars.



3 Stars

The world building and the cultivation aspects were interesting. I liked seeing how everything worked and how the progression system was set up.

But the plot and magic system felt slow and heavy at times. It dragged the pacing down, and I don’t think it all came together in a very cohesive way. There were moments where I wanted things to just move already.

That said… I’d probably still pick up the next book. I’m curious enough about the MC and where his journey goes from here. Sometimes that curiosity is enough.

4 Stars

At first I was like, “Oh no. Is this about to be another The Selection situation?” But once I got into it, the only real similarity was the whole bride competition setup.

Everything else? Way darker. Way more enchanting. It had this lush, slightly dangerous vibe running through it that kept me locked in. The world felt rich, the stakes felt real, and I was way more invested than I expected to be.

It does end on a bit of a cliffhanger, which I’m never thrilled about. But honestly, that just means I’ll be grabbing book two immediately.

So yes. 4 stars. Dramatic, moody, and just addictive enough to trap me into the sequel.

5 Stars

This was one of those books where you think you’ve cracked the case… and you absolutely have not. I was so sure I knew who did it. I did not. Humbling.

I loved how this started. The podcast angle was such a fun hook, and honestly, I’m a little offended it’s not real because I would 100% subscribe and spiral with it. The format pulled me in fast, and then the story just kept inching deeper into the darkness.

By the second half, I wasn’t pacing myself. I was devouring it. One sitting. No breaks.

Easy 5 stars from me.

February 2026 Wrap Up

 


February said “short month,” and I said “watch me.”

I read 28 books in 28 days, which feels slightly unhinged but also deeply on brand for me. It was a mix of fantasy, feelings, chaos, and a few late nights where I absolutely should have gone to sleep but instead needed to know what happened next. Overall? A very solid reading month.













63/250 2026 Reading Challenge
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25/102 2025 Goodreads Nominees Reading Challenge


And that’s February.

28 books, a few new favorites, a couple surprises, and at least one “why did I stay up until midnight for this?” moment. Overall, I’m really happy with how this reading month turned out. Now we roll into March with an ambitious TBR, unrealistic expectations, and absolutely no intention of slowing down.