What I read in June 2026

  1. Anne of Green Gables by L.M. Montgomery, 321p: I had fun reading this book. I've heard of it before. I knew it was a classic from Canadian literature. I had the chance to visit Prince Edward Island, so I decided that the trip was the perfect moment to read this book. The protagonist, Anne, is the joy of the book. She is always looking at the bright side of things, she inspires courage and joy. And she is such a relentless creative soul. I loved her vivid imagination and her curiosity. Overall, I was glad I spent some time with Anne and her friends, it was a comforting read that brought the landscapes of Prince Edward Island to life right before my eyes.

  2. Shady Hollow (A Shady Hollow Mystery #1 ) by Juneau Black, 208p: I enjoyed most of this book, I thought it was cozy and interesting at the beginning. I began to lose interest past halfway through because the resolution to the mystery seemed very obvious to me. It's cute, but at some moments I had difficulty suspending my disbelief with the anthropomorphic animals. It didn't grab me enough for me to continue the series.

  3. The Long Way to a Small, Angry Planet (Wayfarers #1) by Becky Chambers, 404p: I re-read this one for my local Book Club. I first read it back in 2017, and I remember I was far too harsh on this book. This time around I enjoyed it more because I am in a place right now where I can appreciate cozy, lower stakes stories. It is really low stakes, there are some tense moments, but conflicts are easily resolved, and you get back to just hanging out with this found family spaceship crew. It reminded me a lot of The Expanse series, but without the whole complex world building and political shenanigans. I could not stop visualizing the Wayfarer’s captain, Ashby, as James Holden. The book's positive points still hold up beautifully: diverse characters representing different sentient species with all types of biologies and cultures, interesting discussions on different types of relationships, and exploration of Artificial Intelligence rights and sentience. It actually works well as a comforting, character-driven space opera.

#readinglist #books #reading

Thoughts? Discuss... if you have a Write.as account or Reply by email


By Noisy Deadlines Minimalist in progress, nerdy, introvert, skeptic. I don't leave without my e-reader.