Top Ten Tuesday: Book Covers Featuring Unique Typography


Hosted by That Artsy Reader Girl

I like the typography of all of these covers.

Book cover for Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close by Jonathan Safran Foer. Image on cover is a red handprint that has the title and author’s name written in white ink on all five fingers and on the palm of the hand. Very creative!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1. Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close by Jonathan Safran Foer

 

Book cover for In the Woods by Tana French. Image on cover shows the title and author’s name drawn to look like branches in a tree. There are dozens of tiny branches sprouting from every letter which makes a marvelous effect. It’s like visiting a bush or tree in winter and seeing just how many branches they have with their leaves shed.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

2. In the Woods by Tana French

 

Book cover for Ready Player One (Ready Player One, #1) by Ernest Cline. The font of the title and author looks like it was made in the 1970s or early 1980s due to how it straddles the line between orange, red, and yellow. In the letter O, there is a tiny white key hidden.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

3. Ready Player One (Ready Player One, #1) by Ernest Cline

 

Book cover for The Anatomical Shape of a Heart by Jenn Bennett. Image on cover shows the red words in the title stretched out a little and formed into the shape of a heart.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

4. The Anatomical Shape of a Heart by Jenn Bennett

 

Book cover for Dust (Dust, #1) by Joan Frances Turner. The word dust in the title has been typographically designed to look like dust that has temporarily clumped together. There are still little green and yellow particles of dust flowing away from the word Dust, though.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

5. Dust (Dust, #1) by Joan Frances Turner

 

Book cover for Oil: Anatomy of an industry by Matthew Yeomans. The word oil is written to look like drops of oil that have spilled onto an off-white surface on this book cover.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

6. Oil: Anatomy of an Industry (Bazaar Book) by matthew yeomans

 

Book cover for Tree of Codes by Jonathan Safran Foer . Image on cover shows the title and author’s name written on a white background that is filled with with what looks like dozens of either smudged human fingerprints or little black oblong objects that are roughly that size and shape.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

7. Tree of Codes by Jonathan Safran Foer

 

Book cover for Beloved (Beloved Trilogy, #1) by Toni Morrison. The word Beloved is written in an elegant gold font against a red background.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

8. Beloved (Beloved Trilogy, #1) by Toni Morrison

 

Book cover for Bult by Marieke De Maré. Image on cover shows the word Bult written in a large, plain font that’s so tall and straight it almost looks like the walls of a building. There is a scraggly black line waving up and down below this word.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

9. Bult by Marieke De Maré

 

Book cover for The Color Master: Stories by Aimee Bender. The title and author of this book are written in a beautiful cursive font that gradually shift colour from green to blue to purple to red to pink as one’s eye scrolls down the cover.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

10. The Color Master: Stories by Aimee Bender

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A Review of Gods Don’t Sleep

Book cover for Gods Don’t Sleep Author: TheRizzX  (Rishi Raagav). Image on cover his a possibly AI-generated scene of three people with glowing eyes standing in the middle of red light that looks like its pouring down onto them. Title: Gods Don’t Sleep

Author: TheRizzX  (Rishi Raagav)

Publisher: Self-Published

Publication Date: June 20, 2025

Genres: Fantasy

Length: 10 pages

Source: I received a free copy from the author

Rating: 3 stars

Blurb:

Mr.Or was an famous singer, sings like an angel, but suddenly he gets into a weird obsession that makes him to go insane and paranoia with the three friends called Fates.

Content Warning: Insomnia and threats of bodily harm.

Review:

Some challenges should never be taken.

The fantasy elements of the plot were interesting and made me want to keep reading. The blurb doesn’t really do this part of the storyline justice, so this is a word of encouragement to keep reading if the blurb or the beginning doesn’t necessarily speak to you. Things change later on in the plot in ways that I thought were good for nearly everyone involved, and they made me wish for a sequel.

I struggled to understand the main character’s motivation for purposefully not sleeping for several days in a row. Sleep deprivation is such a miserable experience, at least for me, that I didn’t think the explanation that was given for his decision was sufficient. If I had more information about his personality and backstory, it would have made it easier for me to understand why he was drawn to this experience and what he hoped to glean from it.

While I’ve never gone five days without sleep, the descriptions of what it feels like to go more than a day without sleep felt pretty accurate to me early on this tale. I especially liked how the author emphasized how dreamlike the world can eventually feel when one has gone that long without getting any rest. It really does feel like a lucid dream in some respects, and not in a fun way. Time can feel like it speeds up or slows down and even ordinary experiences like trying to have a conversation can feel monumentally challenging.

Gods Don’t Sleep was intriguing.

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Wednesday Weekly Blogging Challenge: Books I Wish I Could Read Again for the First Time

Hosted by Long and Short Reviews.

Click here to read everyone else’s replies to this week’s question and here to see the full list of topics for the year.

There are so many books I wish I could read again for the first time! I decided to narrow down the list to titles that were published sometime this century.

Book cover for The Deep by Rivers Solomon. Image on cover is a drawing of a black mermaid with long hair swimming up to the top of the ocean as a whale dives deeply into the water behind her.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1. The Deep by Rivers Solomon

There were a few amazing plot twists in this tale that were well done, including one that I originally thought of as a flaw in the plot. It would be a joy to discover them again.

 

Book cover for The Girl With All the Gifts by M.R. Carey. Image on cover is a drawing of a young girl, about 10 years old, who is wearing a dress and standing with her arms outstretched. Only the silhouette of her body can be seen due to how bright the setting is.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

2. The Girl With All the Gifts by M.R. Carey

Once again, there was a creative plot twist that kept me hooked. While I did figure it out in advance due to how often I’ve read stories in this sub-genre, it was still executed nicely and set up everything nicely for how this duology would pan out. It wasn’t until the final scene in the second instalment that a few last things gelled together which was incredibly satisfying for me as a reader.

 

Book cover for A Psalm for the Wild-Built (Monk & Robot, #1) by Becky Chamber. Image on cover shows a top-down drawing of a winding road through a rural landscape. You can see a metal robot at the top left hand corner and the eco-friendly camper the protagonist rode around in down in the lower left corner. It include a bicycle at the front for pedaling and a small compartment at back for sleeping, eating, and other necessary tasks.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

3. A Psalm for the Wild-Built (Monk & Robot, #1) by Becky Chamber

Yes, I know I’ve gushed about this duology before, but it really is the perfect world to step into if you’re dreaming of a peaceful solarpunk future.

 

Book cover for A Short History of the World According to Sheep by Sally Coulthard. Image on cover is a photo of a shepherd herding his sheep while they stand on a mountain. There are much larger, snowier mountains in the background.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

4. A Short History of the World According to Sheep by Sally Coulthard 

This is the sort of history I love to read! Sheep changed the destinies of the humans who cared for them in so many different ways.

 

Book cover for Remote Control by Nnedi Okorafor. Image on cover is a drawing that can be interpreted in two ways.First, it looks like a young black woman with short hair who is wearing hoop earrings and staring pensively off into the distance. Second, it looks like a grove of trees growing closely together. The hoop earring could also be interpreted to be a swing of some sort or a vine hanging down from the trees.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

5. Remote Control by Nnedi Okorafor

This novella had a mysterious and exciting ending that other readers should discover for themselves. I reread it a few times just to see how many different interpretations I could come up with about what happened next.

 

Book cover for Project Hail Mary by Andy Weir. Image on cover is a drawing of an astronaut falling through space with a large yellow planet in the background. The astronaut is stilll tethered to something just out of sight by a white cord attached to their space suit, but their limbs are flailing as they are unable to grasp onto anything in the vacuum of space.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

6. Project Hail Mary by Andy Weir

The film version of this story is finally coming out this spring! I can’t wait. Once again, the plot twists were exciting and the ending left so much scope for the imagination as Anne Shirley would say if she lived in our era.

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Top Ten Tuesday: Bookish Discoveries I Made in 2025


Hosted by That Artsy Reader Girl

Drawning of four hardback books stacked on top of each other neatly. There is a spigot attached to the top novel, and little lightbulbs glowing of light are gently falling out of it like large drops of water. This is going to be a hodgepodge of a post as I attempt to get as close as possible to the full ten answers over the next two months. (I started compiling this list back in November).

1. Hospitals Have Libraries.

Or at least the ones in my area do! I didn’t have a lot of time to browse through them while dealing with various medical stuff for myself and my family last year, but they seem like great places to not only find something interesting to read but also to enjoy some peace and quiet and maybe learn some more about the illnesses or other conditions that have lead you to spend time there.

While I hope that no one reading this post ends up needing this knowledge in 2026, please visit your hospital’s library if you do end up spending time there and need a restful place to unwind. I can’t recommend this resource highly enough.

 

2. Many People Still Die of Tuberculosis 

“Everything Is Tuberculosis: The History and Persistence of Our Deadliest Infection” by John Green dove into why this happens and what we can do to stop it. I knew this disease still killed some people, but I didn’t realize how large that number is or how cruelly unnecessary the vast majority of those deaths are.

It some ways it reminds of how people living with HIV in wealthy, developed countries now have life spans that are nearly as long as those of us who are HIV-negative while those who are HIV positive and living in developing nations generally have much shorter lifespans. 

Learning stuff like this is why I love reading nonfiction.

 

3. Sometimes I Like Literary Fiction

After many false starts, I now enjoy this genre on occasion. It simply takes the right plot twist for me to settle into the slower pace of these stories. This isn’t something that will ever be a regular part of my reading habits, but I’m proud of myself of continuing to try every so often until I found a few titles that work for my tastes.

 

4. BookTok Isn’t for Me 

I’m sorry to say that I’ve loathed every BookTok book I’ve tried and at this point I don’t know that I’ll try again because I don’t seem to fit into that demographic group at all. Kudos to those of you who do, of course!

 

5. I Love the Idea of Silent Book Clubs 

A Silent Book Club is a group of people who agree to meet up somewhere like a bookstore, library, or coffee shop and read silently with each other.

This is exactly the sort of reading environment that I crave more of because you can pick any genre you like and bounce among them as often as you’d prefer.  I just need to find one reasonably close to home and join in.

 

6. Bookstodon Is Essential 

If you have a Mastodon account, I strongly recommend getting to know the @bookstodon@fedigroups.social community. There are readers of every genre there, and I’ve read and participated in so many wonderfully nuanced conversations about books with various folks there.

(My account is @lydiaschoch@mastodon.social if anyone wants to be buddies there!)

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A Review of What Do We Afford

Book cover for What Do We Afford by Eyal Avissar. Image on cover is possibly AI-generated and shows a nondescript blue drawing of a male human body with various parts of it labelled. There is also a sketch of a cow behind the human. The text reads: “system diagram - Volume 1” and then has the following words and phrases written clockwise around figures: Afford data relay, Affords reverie, (deprecated), Affords calm gaze, Affords systematic rhymthm (which seems to be purposefully misspelled), Affords yield, Affords grounding, Affords noise detection, Affords extraction, Affords compliance, Affords gripping, Affords recognition, and Affords extraction. Title: What Do We Afford

Author: Eyal Avissar

Publisher: Self-Published

Publication Date: June 22, 2025

Genres: Science Fiction

Length: about 42 pages

Source: I receive a free copy from the author.

Rating: 4 Stars

Blurb:

What do we afford—and what affords us? A button invites a press. A screen beckons a swipe. A silence, a gaze, a gesture—they all offer something. But what happens when the tools begin to want? When systems record our rhythms, adapt to our emotions, and wait for our hands like patient familiars? What Do We Afford is a speculative field manual of human and nonhuman use—told through eerie reports, dreamlike system logs, and the quiet mutiny of the everyday. A subway drips with spores that remember longing. A phone glows warm with affection training. A dog learns to speak regret. A therapist becomes a corridor. Written in fragments, forums, and false diagnostics, this book asks not only what we do with objects—but what they do with us. For readers of speculative fiction, poetic systems theory, and those who have ever wondered if the smart device on their nightstand dreams of being needed.

Content Warning:

Review:

Everything can be catalogued and understood under the right circumstances.

Figuring out who or what the narrator was made it impossible for me to stop reading this piece. While it didn’t otherwise come across as a mystery, this element of the plot certainly wasn’t easy to puzzle out due to the limited number of clues that were provided and how uninterested that individual was in explaining anything that it didn’t already understand. Other readers should come to their own conclusions about what the answer is to this riddle, but I certainly had a wonderful time organizing my own thoughts about it and testing my theories as new information was revealed.

There were times when I struggled to understand what the narrator was saying due to the differences between them and humans and other living beings. Their thought processes rarely if ever overlapped with how a person would explain the same event even when they were attempting to put things into terms that our species would understand.  This was true even for something as simple as a cow deciding where to graze next or a small child trying to figure out how to get someone’s attention so she could have a snack, so the more complicated stuff sometimes made me frown and reread a passage.

With that being said, I must commend Mr. Avissar for writing a main character that was this unique. Had I encountered this tale under other circumstances and been told it was written by a sentient robot, alien, or other intelligent being that shared no human presuppositions about anything, I might have believed it to be the case. That speaks to how creative this piece was as well as how much effort the author put into imagining something that is all but completely outside of human understanding.

What Do We Afford would make an amazing film.

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Wednesday Weekly Blogging Challenge: Humorous Book Titles

Hosted by Long and Short Reviews.

Click here to read everyone else’s replies to this week’s question and here to see the full list of topics for the year.

I’ve blogged about humorous book titles several times before, so today I’m going to share some titles that are both humorous and a little quirky. While I haven’t read any of them yet, quirky can be a good thing!

 

Book cover for The Latke Who Couldn't Stop Screaming: A Christmas Story by Lemony Snicket. Image on cover is a drawing of latkes that have been hung on the branch of a Christmas tree and are screaming.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1. The Latke Who Couldn’t Stop Screaming: A Christmas Story by Lemony Snicket

 

Book cover for No Sex Please, I'm Menopausal!
by Stevie Turner. Image on cover shows a pink pair of panties against a black background.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

2. No Sex Please, I’m Menopausal!by Stevie Turner

 

Book cover for The Plant That Ate Dirty Socks Gets a Girlfriend by Nancy McArthur. Image on cover is a blurry painting of a lush green garden that’s overtaken everything.

 

 

 

 

 

3. The Plant That Ate Dirty Socks Gets a Girlfriend by Nancy McArthur

 

Book cover for How to Tell If Your Cat Is Plotting to Kill You by Matthew Inman. Image on cover shows a drawing of a grey cat walking around with a thought bubble filled with a skull and crossbones above his or her head.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

4. How to Tell If Your Cat Is Plotting to Kill You by Matthew Inman

 

(Yes, I know I’ve shared this one before, but it’s too good to only share once).

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Top Ten Tuesday: Goals for 2026


Hosted by That Artsy Reader Girl

Photoshopped silhouette of a person leaping over a mountain. I was planning to revisit my goals for 2025, but as I looked back at them I realized that I didn’t really accomplish any of them last year other than being excited that we’re getting a TV show made from Margaret Atwood’s The Testaments

. These past few years have included some hard times for me and my family that included death and a few family members who were diagnosed with serious or life-threatening illnesses among other stressors.

While things are steadily improving and I’m quite hopeful 2026 will be much better for us all, I honestly haven’t had a ton of extra time or emotional energy for doing things like joining a book club, visiting new bookstores, or making a ton of new friends.

Therefore, I’m recycling a whole bunch of my goals from last year and hoping to actually accomplish them this year.

1. Read more non-fiction

I’m especially interested in science, medicine, memoirs, and history.

 

2. Visit one new independent bookstore

Visiting one seems much more do-able than trying to check out multiple places.

 

3. Take myself on tea or donut dates 

Toronto has some incredible coffee shops that I need to visit more often.

 

4. Strike up conversations about books with strangers or acquaintances when appropriate 

Every so often I see someone at the coffee shop or on the subway who is reading a book I really loved. I’m going to try to be less shy and tell folks they’re reading fantastic stories.  This might be a way to make some new friends or even just have a nice conversation.

We still need a platonic version of OkCupid for bookish people, though! 😀

 

5. Practice handwriting five minutes a day 

I have always had sloppy handwriting, but I do want to make it slightly more legible this year if I can.

 

6. Read in the park more often (weather permitting, of course)

I love books and nature, so why not combine them more often than I currently do.

 

7. Read less young adult fiction

It rarely speaks to me anymore.

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A Review of Homeless

Book cover for Homeless by Neal Shooter. Image on cover shows a black and white sketch of someone walking through a forest on a cold winter day. The ground is covered in snow, the trees are bare, and the person is so bundled up you can’t tell what they look like. Title: Homeless

Author: Neil Shooter

Publisher: Self-Published

Publication Date: November 9, 2013

Genres: Science Fiction

Length: 15 pages

Source: I received a free copy from the author.

Rating: 3 Stars

Blurb:

Winter didn’t end, but his world has. Is he completely alone? In a world gone cold, what can keep the spark of life shining?

Content Warning: Animal attack. Murder. A character who eats a dead, raw rat. Possible mental health problems depending on how one interprets certain scenes.

Review:

Sometimes the world ends with a whisper, not a bang.

The first half of this tale was an excellent example of what the post-apocalyptic genre can be like. The unnamed protagonist has somehow survived a catastrophe that killed the vast majority of humans and should have killed him, too. His limited information about what happened only made his struggle to survive even more poignant as I had no idea what else might await him after the months of hardship he had already endured. I loved the fact that the reader was limited to what this character knew about the world and could only make rough guesses about the things he had yet to discover.

Unfortunately, I struggled with the second half of this tale due to how unbelievable I found certain scenes. Their themes were so exaggerated when compared to what happened earlier that I kept wondering if there was a piece of the puzzle I was missing. Was the narrator holding something back from the audience? Was he unaware of an important detail that would make later scenes feel more logical? There were answers to these questions that I thought made sense, but I kept wishing that Mr. Shooter would give us a few more hints about which direction he intended his audience to go.

With that being said, my ultimate conclusion about what happened was an interesting one and did help me to find some closure for this character. Whether or not it was what the author intended, it made sense given what I knew about the protagonist early on as well as some of the clues about his personality that were revealed later on. If my interpretation was correct, this was a more realistic assessment of what this catastrophe would actually be like for the surivors than many books in this genre tend to create.

Homeless was a wild ride.

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Wednesday Weekly Blogging Challenge: The First TV Show I Remember Watching

Hosted by Long and Short Reviews.

Click here to read everyone else’s replies to this week’s question and here to see the full list of topics for the year.

The Sesame Street logo. It looks like a street sign with the numbers 123 at the top and the phrase “Sesame Street” written in a plain white font against a green and gold background. Oh, this is an easy one: Sesame Street.

My grandparents’ live out in the countryside. They used an antenna on their old TV to get a few basic channel back in the day and probably still do.

Depending on what age I was and where we lived, my parents either didn’t have a TV at all or did the same thing as far as not paying for cable goes for most of my childhood. We generally didn’t get to see much current stuff unless they were on PBS or other public channels. It was a lot of news, Jeopardy, and reruns of older movies or shows instead.

Luckily, Sesame Street was available when I was in the right age groups to watch it.

(The Internet was not even something on our radars back then, and what did exist of it back in those days was nothing at all like what we have today).

I have fond memories of the songs and skits they included on that show. See also: “Sunny days, chasing the clouds away.”

My favourite scenes were the ones that showed other children running around and playing outside on playgrounds or other fun places. I also enjoyed how grumpy Oscar the Grouch was and wished I could climb into his trash can and find out why he liked it so much.

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Top Ten Tuesday: Most Anticipated Books Releasing in the First Half of 2026


Hosted by That Artsy Reader Girl

Drawing of the outside of a blue multi-story building. Snow is falling gently outside as the street lamp glows dimly.Inside a window on the second story of this building, a pale-skinned man and woman who both have black hair sit by the window wearing sweaters and reading books in companionable silence.

Image credit: ninikvaratskhelia_

We’ve reached what is often Southern Ontario’s snowiest and iciest portion of the year.

This is when I often get a disproportionate amount of reading done due to how cold, slippery and dark it is outside.

(We have about 9 hours of daylight per day now. It’s nothing at all like how things are way up north where they have months of darkness, but it’s quite cloudy most days and I do definitely miss the feeling of sun of my skin right about now).

I’m writing this post in advance beginning in November. As I only had three titles to add in when I began, I am hoping that by the time this is published that number will have grown a little.

Let’s see what future Lydia can do!

 

 

 

Book cover for Phases: a Memoir by Brandy Norwood. Image on cover is a close-up photo of her face as she wears a blue silk garment and gazes thoughtfully off into the distance.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

1. Phases: A Memoir by Brandy

Publication Date: March 31

Why I’m Interested: Yes, I have mentioned this book a few times lately, including the most recent Wednesday Weekly Blogging Challenge post. I’m too excited about it not to talk about it again today. I loved Brandy’s music growing up and am curious to learn more about her life.

 

Book cover for What We Are Seeking by Cameron Reed. Image on cover shows a white flower with yellow spines, or possible very thin yelllow petals, sticking out from it. The other half of the image shows a black moon slowly merging with the flower.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

2. What We Are Seeking by Cameron Reed

Publication Date: April 7

Why I’m Interested: The alien planet described in this novel sounds so creative albeit dangerous.

 

Book cover for Canon by Paige Lewis. Image on cover shows a collage of various scenes: a blue whale flying above a mountain range; a pink and blue lizard scuttling about at the bottom of the cover; and in the middle of the cover, a soldier with a long spear rushing towards someone wearing modern clothes who is sweeping the street. The city behind them looks a little overgrown and the sun is setting.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

3.  Canon by Paige Lewis

Publication Date: May 19

Why I’m Interested: Weird fiction is alluring to me, and this was so odd I’m struggling to condense the plot into one sentence.

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