Skip to content
Linkedin YouTube goodreads
  • Home
  • About
  • Contact
Ive Read This Logo
  • Book Clubs
  • Book ReviewsExpand
    • Expand
      • All Reviews
      • Review Policy
      • Annual Lists of Books Ive Read
      • Video Book Reviews
    • Expand
      • Non-fiction
      • crime fiction
      • historical fiction
      • Literary Fiction
      • contemporary women’s fiction
      • Dystopian Fiction
    • Expand
      • Kids books
      • mystery
      • Horror
      • science fiction
      • Thriller
      • Translation
      • Anthology
      •        
    • Expand
      • Book Club
      • Book Events
      • Book News
      • Cookbook Reviews
      • Graphic Novels
      • Interviews
      • Poetry
      • Short Story Collections
  • Work With Me
  • Writing
Ive Read This Logo

Author: Anne Logan

A Sliver of Darkness by C.J. Tudor book pictured beside a mug with creepy eyes and a scary looking snake on it

Book Review: A Sliver of Darkness by C.J. Tudor

Some thriller readers may already be familiar with the author C.J. Tudor – she wrote the bestseller The Chalk Man a few years ago and continues to build her audience from that success. A Sliver of Darkness is the first book of hers that I’ve read, and it’s a collection of short stories, all works…

Read More Book Review: A Sliver of Darkness by C.J. TudorContinue

Ivereadthis Jr. Edition: 2 Halloween Books for the Over/Underachiever

Ivereadthis Jr. Edition: 2 Halloween Books for the Over/Underachiever

I was excited to see another Flavia Z. Drago picture book land on my doorstep in the lead up to Halloween, because my kids loved her first book Gustavo the Shy Ghost, and it’s still a go-to book for our reading all year round. The second ‘creepy’ picture book I’m reviewing for Halloween is part…

Read More Ivereadthis Jr. Edition: 2 Halloween Books for the Over/UnderachieverContinue

Book Review: The Ghost Woods by C.J. Cooke

Book Review: The Ghost Woods by C.J. Cooke

The atmosphere of The Ghost Woods by C.J. Cooke is a winning combination of ghosts, witches, creepy houses, and eerie secrets that you’re better not knowing. I read this book a few weeks ago and some of the images are still floating through my head, not because I was surprised by them but because the…

Read More Book Review: The Ghost Woods by C.J. CookeContinue

A Dowry of Blood by S.T. Gibson book pictured on top of a creepy white Halloween doll

Book Review: A Dowry of Blood by S.T. Gibson

I’ve been a bit hesitant to read vampire books since the whole genre was overtaken by YA authors hoping to recreate the success of the Twilight Series. But when I saw that A Dowry of Blood by S.T. Gibson was an alternative re-telling of Dracula meant for adults, my interest was definitely piqued. Like many…

Read More Book Review: A Dowry of Blood by S.T. GibsonContinue

Book Review: The Witches of Moonshyne Manor by Bianca Marais

Book Review: The Witches of Moonshyne Manor by Bianca Marais

The perfect read for Halloween enthusiasts and witch-lovers of all stripes, The Witches of Moonshyne Manor by Bianca Marais scratched an itch I didn’t realize I had. Its got all the ingredients of a perfect October read: a rambling haunted mansion, a coven of witches with a varied array of powers, a dark and mysterious…

Read More Book Review: The Witches of Moonshyne Manor by Bianca MaraisContinue

Book Review: Woman, Eating by Claire Kohda

Book Review: Woman, Eating by Claire Kohda

Woman Eating by Claire Kohda explores the life of a vampire through the lens of a millennial and the struggles unique to that generation: someone who is struggling with living on their own, providing for themselves, reconciling who they are, all while dealing with a parent in a care home. Although I wouldn’t call the…

Read More Book Review: Woman, Eating by Claire KohdaContinue

picture of The Winners book by Fredrik Backman, on a stone background with a dirty hockey stick

Book Review: The Winners by Fredrik Backman

Last year I read the bestseller Beartown by Fredrik Backman, the first in the Beartown series which had come out years ago. This Fall I was sent the third and last installment in that series called The Winners, which took me awhile to read due to its length (670 pages) but I enjoyed once I…

Read More Book Review: The Winners by Fredrik BackmanContinue

the book Fayne by Ann-Marie MacDonald on top of a few cut floors lying on a concrete floor

Book Review: Fayne by Ann-Marie MacDonald

Big books come out in the Fall – it’s book awards season and it’s when all the serious award contenders are released, especially those that should sell well for holiday shopping season a few months later. In the case of Fayne by Ann-Marie MacDonald, this book is not only a big deal for Canadian publishing (she’s the…

Read More Book Review: Fayne by Ann-Marie MacDonaldContinue

Ivereadthis Jr. Edition: Pushing Out of Comfort Zones

Ivereadthis Jr. Edition: Pushing Out of Comfort Zones

We all need a little push now and then, and these kids books offer opportunities for growth, in many different aspects of our lives. How to Apologize by David LaRochelle, illustrated by Mike Wohnoutka communicates a very clear message that children and adults alike will benefit from. In very clear illustrations and examples, it shows…

Read More Ivereadthis Jr. Edition: Pushing Out of Comfort ZonesContinue

picture of Carrie Soto is Back by Taylor Jenkins Reid, on a purple background with a yellow tennis ball beside the book

Book Review: Carrie Soto is Back by Taylor Jenkins Reid

Although I may not go out of my way to read a Taylor Jenkins Reid book, I will never turn one down. Her books fall under the ‘fluffy’ category – she typically writes about famous, talented and beautiful fictional women. But I can’t deny the fact that I’ll devour them – they are compulsively readable!…

Read More Book Review: Carrie Soto is Back by Taylor Jenkins ReidContinue

How to Be Eaten by Maria Adelmann book pictured on a dinner plate with a fork on the left hand side of it

Book Review: How to Be Eaten by Maria Adelmann

This book has one of the most unique storylines I’ve come across in years; How to be Eaten by Maria Adelmann is all about a support group of women who come together in the basement of a YMCA to tell their stories. The twist is that each woman is a famous character from a fairy…

Read More Book Review: How to Be Eaten by Maria AdelmannContinue

Book Review: The Reservoir by David Duchovny

Book Review: The Reservoir by David Duchovny

That David Duchovny? Yes, that David Duchovny. I read his latest release, a novella titled The Reservoir, but he has released three books before this, so I had high hopes that this wouldn’t be terrible. Books by celebrities tend to be held to a different standard; we don’t expect the same brilliance from them that’s…

Read More Book Review: The Reservoir by David DuchovnyContinue

Page navigation

Previous PagePrevious 1 … 14 15 16 17 18 … 88 Next PageNext

© Copyright 2025 I've Read This. All Rights Reserved.

Linkedin YouTube goodreads
  • Book Clubs
  • Book Reviews
    • All Reviews
    • Review Policy
    • Annual Lists of Books Ive Read
    • Video Book Reviews
    • Non-fiction
    • crime fiction
    • historical fiction
    • Literary Fiction
    • contemporary women’s fiction
    • Dystopian Fiction
    • Kids books
    • mystery
    • Horror
    • science fiction
    • Thriller
    • Translation
    • Anthology
    • Book Club
    • Book Events
    • Book News
    • Cookbook Reviews
    • Graphic Novels
    • Interviews
    • Poetry
    • Short Story Collections
  • Work With Me
  • Writing
  • Home
  • About
  • Contact
Search