What I Read Last Week - March 16th to 22nd

 


3 Stars

I’m still having a hard time getting into this series, and I think I’ve finally figured out why. It’s the world building… or maybe I should call it space building.

There isn’t a lot of detail about the characters’ surroundings, so I never quite get a full picture of where we are. Instead of feeling immersed in the setting, it ends up reading more like a secondhand account of the story.

The dialogue is solid and the story flows well, but I keep wanting more texture from the world around the characters. There’s something interesting here, I just wish the setting felt a little more alive.


5 Stars

I’m fully obsessed with this series at this point. Every book somehow raises the stakes, and this one is no exception.

Let’s talk highlights. Samantha goes on an absolutely unhinged adventure (Shi Maria… if you know, you know), and the mantars are back, which was both chaotic and weirdly exciting. Also, slug boils? Disgusting. Truly. I will never recover.

The AI is getting creepier with every level, and it adds this constant layer of unease under all the humor and chaos. And then there’s Katya… her situation hit hard and brought some real emotional weight to the story.

And Carl. The way the game makers dig into his past to try to break him is straight up diabolical. It makes everything feel more personal, more intense, and honestly more brutal.

Also… Oozie Jesus. That’s it. That’s the comment.

This book is wild, emotional, ridiculous, and somehow still manages to deepen the characters and the story in the best way. I can’t get enough.


4 Stars

This one took a minute to get going for me. The beginning felt a bit slow, and I wasn’t fully pulled in right away. But once the story found its rhythm, it really picked up.

The tension builds nicely, and the emotional stakes hit harder as the plot unfolds. I especially appreciated how the characters were pushed and forced to grow, even when it hurt to watch.

Overall, a strong follow up that just needed a little patience at the start.


3 Stars

I read Star Wars: Children of the Jedi by Barbara Hambly and it was… just ok. I went in hoping for more action and more Jedi magic, but the story leaned heavily into slower plot threads and long stretches of setup.

There were some interesting ideas, especially around the lost Jedi and the mysterious dreadnought Luke encounters, but the pacing dragged enough that it never fully grabbed me. Luke Skywalker spends a lot of time reacting rather than doing, which didn’t help.

Overall it wasn’t bad, but it wasn’t the Star Wars adventure I was hoping for. A middle of the road read for me.

4 stars

This is the first book in the series that didn’t quite hit 5 stars for me. It has a noticeably different tone. Longer, heavier, and honestly pretty sad in places. The usual chaotic humor and weird little nuances are still there, but as the story evolves, they didn’t land the same way for me this time around.

That said, I still really enjoyed it. The stakes feel higher, the emotional weight is stronger, and I’m fully invested in where this is all going. Even at 4 stars, I’m already impatient for the next book.
4 Stars

What is this? How Callista Got Her Groove Back? Because that’s honestly what this felt like at first.

The beginning reads more like a quiet getaway than a full on Star Wars story, almost like we took a brief detour away from the chaos (and, let’s be real, the kids). It took a minute for me to settle into it.

But once the action kicked in, it snapped right back into that classic Star Wars rhythm and I found myself having a lot more fun.

And the Jedi Academy absolutely mind blasting the Empire? Yeah… that was epic.

Weekly Menu #652 And The Book Of The Week

 


WEEKLY MENU

Monday

Chicken Shawarma Bowls

Kids - Chicken and Rice Bowls

 

Tuesday

BBQ Chicken Legs and Coleslaw

Kids - Chicken and Mac and Cheese

 

Wednesday

Bangers and Mash

Kids - Hotdogs and Fries

 

Thursday

Sticky Honey Garlic Chicken Thighs

Kids - Chicken and Carrots

 

Friday

Chicken Street Tacos

Kids - Cheese Quesadillas

 

Saturday

Grilled Balsamic Melt

Kids - Grilled Cheese

 

Sunday

Family Dinner

Chinese Takeout

Sunday Confessions #349

 


Welcome to book confessions, where I admit the things readers aren’t always supposed to say out loud. The DNFs hiding on my shelves, the hyped books I secretly didn’t love, and the random novels I devoured at 2 a.m. like literary junk food. Reading is supposed to be magical, but sometimes it’s messy, chaotic, and full of questionable choices. So consider this my reader confession booth.


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Weekly Menu #651 And The Book Of The Week
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What I Read Last Week - March 9th to 15th
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Sunday Confessions #349










76/250 2026 Reading Challenge
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27/102 2025 Goodreads Nominees Reading Challenge


So those are a few of my book confessions. Some of them might be relatable, some might be a little controversial, and some might make other readers clutch their favorite hardcovers. Either way, reading is supposed to be fun, not perfect. I’d love to hear your book confessions too.

What I Read Last Week - March 9th to 15th

 


5 Stars

The Dungeon Anarchist's Cookbook by Matt Dinniman might be my favorite in the series so far. This book was absolutely packed with chaos, humor, and those moments of unexpected humanity that keep sneaking up on you in the middle of the madness.

We’ve got magical big boy underpants. Manatars… the best Tars… half man, half man. Screaming goats. And Katya accidentally turning into a murderous badass was a highlight I didn’t see coming but fully appreciated.

This series just keeps getting weirder in the best possible ways, and I’m clearly having a great time with it.

On to the next.

Glurp Glurp.

4 Stars

I really loved this story. The emotional depth in the characters was what stood out most to me. Lindsay Ellis managed to give real weight and feeling to the relationships, even when those relationships involved aliens that don’t think anything like humans.

Despite those differences, the connections felt genuine and surprisingly touching. The story balances big sci-fi ideas with quiet, emotional moments in a way that kept me invested the entire time. Thoughtful, a little strange, and ultimately very heartfelt.








3 Stars

I feel like this just wasn’t the book I was looking for right now. Cue Jedi hand motions. ✋✨

At nearly 800 pages, it’s a lot of brooding demons, brooding vampires, brooding everything. The vibe is very dark, very moody, and our main character spends most of the book extremely… motivated… but not actually getting anywhere with it until the very end. That’s a long slow burn.

It also raised an important urban fantasy question for me:
Why do vampires always own nightclubs?

Overall, it wasn’t bad. The world is interesting and fans of dark, romance heavy urban fantasy will probably enjoy it more than I did. It just didn’t quite hit the right mood for me this time.


5 Stars

Just devoured this one and it might be the most chaotic fun yet in the Dungeon Crawler Carl series.

Highlights? So many.
Clockwork Mongos. Seriously… where can I get one? I feel like the world would be objectively better with a tiny mechanical Mongo companion.

Then there’s the Sharktapus… or is it Octoshark? Either way, it’s exactly the kind of glorious nightmare fuel this series does so well.

Also, important life lesson from this book: don’t piss off Carl. He will absolutely rip your arm off.

And Samantha… SAMANTHA.

Then that epilogue drops in like a glitter bomb of impending chaos. I have a feeling the fallout from that is going to be wild, and I cannot wait to see where it goes next.

Another ridiculously fun, action packed entry that somehow keeps raising the stakes while making me laugh out loud.

5 Stars

This might be the most emotional and character driven book in the series so far. Beneath all the chaos, explosions, and ridiculous dungeon antics, the relationship between Carl and Princess Donut really takes center stage. Their quieter moments together, especially Carl’s promise that he’ll never leave her, hit surprisingly hard and add a lot of heart to the story.

The Big Tina storyline is also a total game changer. It expands the world in a way that makes everything feel bigger and more connected, and it adds another emotional layer I didn’t expect.

The book still has the chaotic, outrageous humor the series is known for, but there’s a lot more depth in this one. It’s funny, wild, and occasionally punches you right in the feelings.

If the earlier books were a circus of mayhem, this one is the circus with the lights dimmed just enough for the emotions to sneak in between the explosions.

Weekly Menu #651 And The Book Of The Week

 


WEEKLY MENU

Monday

Korean Style Beef Bowls

Kids - Ramen

 

Tuesday

Roasted Chicken Drumsticks & Potatoes

Kids - Chicken with fries

 

Wednesday

Beef & Black Bean Taco Bowls

Kids - Cheese Quesadillas

 

Thursday

Mediterranean Chicken Thighs

Kids - Pita Pizzas

 

Friday

Spaghetti with Meat Sauce

Kids - Buttered Noodles and Cheese

 

Saturday

Chicken Shawarma Bowls

Kids - Chicken and Rice

 

Sunday

Leftovers Night

Sunday Confessions #348

 


Sunday again. The coffee is hot, the to read pile is judging me from across the room, and it’s time for Sunday Book Confessions. This is the weekly corner of the internet where I admit what I actually read, what I meant to read but didn’t, and whatever strange reading rabbit holes I fell into along the way. Consider it equal parts reading recap and literary honesty booth. 


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Weekly Menu #651 And The Book Of The Week
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What I Read Last Week - March 9th to 15th
~
Sunday Confessions #349










69/250 2026 Reading Challenge
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27/102 2025 Goodreads Nominees Reading Challenge



And that’s the state of my reading life this week. Some wins, a few struggles, and at least one book that completely hijacked my plans. If you’ve read any of these, let me know your thoughts, and feel free to drop your own Sunday book confessions in the comments. I’m always curious to see what everyone else has been reading.