Mid-February reading roundup
Feb. 22nd, 2026 03:40 pmWhat Stalks the Deep (Sworn Soldier #3) by T. Kingfisher - Novella following our nonbinary hero from a fictional eastern European country with an abundance of pronouns to America, where they confront eldritch horrors in an abandoned West Virginia coal mine. I saw a lot of twists coming, but the vibes are great, and the worldbuilding was fun.
Through Gates of Garnet and Gold (Wayward Children #????) by Seanan McGuire - I've kind of lost count of where we are at this point, but I enjoyed learning more about the Halls, and how we appear to be building towards a larger plot re: the doors' agenda. Also, I love pomegranates and moths, and the statues' aesthetic is great, as is its origins in "playing freeze tag so the horrors can't get you".
Emily of New Moon by LM Montgomery - Similar formula to Anne of Green Gables but even more autobiographical. Emily is not charismatic as Anne, but she's a born writer, which is its own kind of appeal. I'm not thrilled by the "guy old enough to be her father who is heavily and unsubtly foreshadowed as a future love interest" who turns up in the last third or so, even though it's also pretty clear she's going to end up with an artist kid her own age. We'll see how the other two books play out.
Manga:
-Apparently, "cute cottagecore fantasy witch" is its own subgenre these days - what surprised me the most about Aria of the Beech Forest is that the second chapter takes an abrupt turn by revealing the story is actually set in modern-day Ireland, which I was not expecting, hahaha. 3 volumes, complete, I read this mostly because it was on the library shelves.
-The Failure at God School's story is by the same person who did The Apothecary Diaries (which I loved) but unfortunately the first volume of this doesn't rise above "spunky girl gets sent to magic boarding school and turns out to be the most powerful of all" formula - no surprises here.
-Smoking Behind the Supermarket with You volume 4 introduces a few new characters and fleshes out the supporting cast, which is good because the leads' relationship is stuck in stasis (which they acknowledge) because they're scared of change. Considering how many more volumes have already been published, it's going to be a long road.
