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Posts by angelreads

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So You Want To Become A Book Blogger | Discussion

So You Want To Become A Book Blogger | Discussion

Sep 14, 2020

Next year I will be going into my 9th year of book blogging. And when I think back to when I first started, I realise I had no idea what I was getting myself into. I just wanted a place where I can talk about books, in a judgement-free and safe environment.     And as I come close to the 10-year mark of being a blogger, I’ve learnt a lot of things. Sometimes through other bloggers, and sometimes I had to go through them myself.

So today I thought I would share five things that I think you should consider before you dive into the world of a book blogger. And while I’m talking about my experience as a book blogger here, I assume that a lot of this can be entwined with other forms like booktubers and bookstagramers. 

1. Don’t Put Yourself In A Corner 

One of the things that I regret when I first started blogging was sticking to one genre and not talking about anything else. Reading habits change; it happens when you when grown older. When you start to figure out what you like and don’t like. Therefore, if you are only blogging about one thing like a genre or readerships, it takes a while before you can start to change and it becomes natural to yourself and your readers. 

As I said, I’m about to go into my 9th year of blogging. And for most of it, I was blogging about YA. But as the years went on and I started reading more romance, I had to change what I was blogging about. It was quite a natural turn for me. I was reading romance slowly at that time, so it slowly became part of Angel Reads. And now, I blog about YA and romance as I read them.

And when I talk about putting yourself in a corner, I’m not just talking about the content that you are writing, but your blog itself. If the name that you pick for your blog includes a genre, it does become harder to change what you started blogging about. It’s not impossible; however, it does take a little bit more time to change how others see you and your blog.  

Photo by Sincerely Media on Unsplash

2. Start Things Simple and Don’t Pressure Yourself 

Don’t jump right into it. Blogger burnout is true and real. It’s rough and hard, and sometimes it can knock people out for months or even years. So don’t pressure yourself to be posting four times a week and everything having to be meaningful. Start slow, and when you feel more comfortable then you can start posting more and more

Even now, there are times where I need to step up and just slow things down. Blogging, for me, is a full-time job. For the past few months, I’ve been posting nearly every day. But this year is different for a lot of others. My shifts were cut down because of limited hours, and for the past six weeks, I haven’t been working at all. I have another month at least of this. And I know that when I got back to working what I usually do, my posts might drop off – and that is okay. 

Another component to this one is not pressuring yourself to post all the time. My health is up and down a lot, and sometimes there is no way that I can get a post up. At first, that was hard. Consistency is key most of the time. But I don’t want my health to suffer either. So finding that balance was important to me. The less pressure I had on myself, the easier blogging became. 

3. Find Your Voice 

I think this is the hardest challenge when it comes to anything. From blogging to writing to creating. Finding your voice in a sea of voices is hard. But the best way to do that is to try. You won’t find your voice right away. It’s not something that stays stagnant either – it changes. And you will have to be able to learn how to overcome that. 

I took me until maybe my 4/5th year of blogging to find my voice as a book blogger. There were a lot of ups and downs. But once I did, blogging and writing posts became second nature to me. Everything seemed to flow easier, and everything clicked. But it’s not just about finding your voice in writing. But also finding your voice in the blogging community. 

The book blogging community is big. And finding your voice and place in it is hard. But once you find your voice as a writer, finding your voice in the community is so much easier. Being able to find where you fit becomes easier. I blog about YA and Romance with a focus on diversity, especially disability.   That is where I want my voice to be heard the most. 

And as you become more equipped with blogging and the changes in your reading habits. Your voice may change. My writing from 9 years ago is nowhere near what it is now. I look at things differently. I might even look at some the same. But as I have grown older and my reading habits have changed – my voice has also changed. And that is not a bad thing. 

Photo by Anete Lūsiņa on Unsplash

4. Things Will Change

There is one thing that runs through all these steps, and that is change. Things don’t always stay the same. So, being able to recognise and be ready for a change in blogging is so important.  This will sound clique, but change is not a bad thing. And as the blogging community grows, books change and the way that you read changes – so will everything else. 

It’s a domino effect, and you will want to be ready for it. You have to let the change happen and then adapt to those changes. Ten years ago, I didn’t think I would be reading the number of romance books that I do now. But it happened, and I had to change the way that I blogged. I was 15/16 when I first started blogging. I’m 24 now. That is a massive age difference, and the way that I was writing, see the world and understand everything has changed. And this affects my voice. 

Change is not bad. It’s a great thing. It shows that you can grow, adapt, and understand the changes. And it’s not just the changes in yourself or the way that you read. Your audience changes, as well. They grow older or younger. It changes with what genre or readership that you read. You will lose some, and you will gain some. And being able to accept these changes makes being a blogger that much easier.

Blogging does not need to be a struggle. It doesn’t need to be something that challenges you in the wrong way. Being a blogger doesn’t need to be hard. 

5. Be True To Yourself 

One of the last tips that I want to include in this post is that the best way that you can become a good book blogger is to be true to yourself. It’s hard not letting others influence you; however, to achieve everything above you need to be yourself. And this may sound cheesy, but I think it’s something that needs to something that you remind yourself.

By sticking to who you are, it makes writing and creating so much easier. This is one of the things that I struggled with my first few years of blogging. Trying not to let others influence the way that I blog, the things that I read. Even let it influence the way that I thought about books. Once I started to let go of all that I made Angel Reads my own. And everything became so much easier. It all started to glue together. 

Photo by Jess Bailey on Unsplash

I know at first this all seems daunting, but there is one last thing that I want to tell you. Have fun. Book blogging is about sharing your love for books with other people that love books. It’s about sharing the books that you want everyone to read. Try not to think too hard about all this, because it will start to become natural as you start to blog. Being a book blogger is something I never really thought that I would be doing for 9+ years, but it’s one of the best things I have ever done. It has changed my life. Just let everything come to you, and you will be fine.

The community is always here for newcomers and oldies. It’s hard to break in. I’m not going to hide behind that. But I am always here to talk with anyone that needs too. I know that taking that step to blog is hard sometimes, and if anyone wants to chat about anything to do with book blogging and becoming a blogger. I’m here. 

***

How long have you been a book blogger? What are some of the hints that you have learnt over the years? If you would like another post like this, please let me know. Let’s Chat! 

Some Good and Some Bad | Mini YA Reviews

Some Good and Some Bad | Mini YA Reviews

Sep 13, 2020

I’ve been reading more young adult lately and I thought it would be fun to review some of my recent YA reads. I had some good and some bad times with my latest reads. There is one that I loved reading and had a good time with. And then the other was sort of DNF for me. Anyway, check out my thoughts now. 

Prince Charming (Royals #1) by Rachel Hawkins

Pages: 296
Publish date: May 1st 2018
Publisher: Penguin Books
ISBN: 9781524738259
Purchase: Book Depository – Amazon UK – Amazon US – Amazon AU – QBD

Meet Daisy Winters. She’s an offbeat sixteen-year-old Floridian with mermaid-red hair, a part-time job at a bootleg Walmart, and a perfect older sister who’s nearly engaged to the Crown Prince of Scotland. Daisy has no desire to live in the spotlight, but relentless tabloid attention forces her to join Ellie at the relative seclusion of the castle across the pond.

While the dashing young Miles has been appointed to teach Daisy the ropes of being regal, the prince’s roguish younger brother kicks up scandal wherever he goes and tries his best to take Daisy along for the ride. The crown–and the intriguing Miles–might be trying to make Daisy into a lady . . . but Daisy may just rewrite the royal rulebook to suit herself.

Prince Charming:

I’ve been wanting to read this one for a while now and I finally picked it up recently. Ely picked this book as one of the books on my best friend picks my tbr. I bought it when I was in the States last year. And I’m so glad that I did pick it up because it was such a nice read. 

Dasiy was a pretty easy protagonist to get along with. She was fun and entertaining and I liked her a lot. She tried to not let people tell her who she should be. Even though her sister and the royal family did try to change her. She tried to be herself the whole time, but she also knew that this is her sister’s life now. I liked that she challenged everyone. It wasn’t in a bad way, but she tried to challenge everything that the royal family wanted for her. 

Dasiy’s family was hard to get along with. She just wanted to be herself, but that is hard when her sister is marrying a prince. But that was hard to see Daisy forced to change herself. I felt that her sister was a pain in the ass most of the book and all I wanted was for Dasiy to be herself.  

Miles was such a fun character. He made me laugh quite a bit and that just made reading Prince Charming much more fun. He acts like a spoilt brat at times and while that frustrated me. I think it made great banter between him and Dasiy. But I also loved that he had a soft side and that was lovely. 

The romance in Prince Charming was pretty adorable. It had a little bit of a love to hate vibe, but nothing too intense. The best way to explain the romance is sweet. It’s fun and Daisy and Miles are adorable together. They have great chemistry and they made me laugh quite a bit. In saying that I wish that were was a little more focus on the romance. I felt like it was going there and then it fell flat. I just wanted that little bit more. 

Overall, I enjoyed reading Prince Charming a lot. It was fun, entertaining and made me smile a lot. Daisy and Miles were adorable together, but I like I said I wished I was able to see more of them. I felt there was room to add a lot more. In saying that I do want to pick up the next book in the series for sure. It sounds like it’s going to be as fun reading as this one. 

Dark Secret (Darkhaven Saga #1) by Danielle Rose

Pages: 184
Publish date: 9781642631654
Publisher: Waterhouse Press LLC
ISBN: February 18th 2020
Purchase: Book Depository – Amazon UK – Amazon US – Amazon AU – QBD

There’s no wrath like that of a witch scorned.

Seventeen-year-old spirit witch Ava López is the self-appointed guardian of the witches and humans of Darkhaven, an idyllic village nestled between the forest and the sea. Her watch: vicious and bloodthirsty vampires.

Ava is a novice in the eyes of her coven. If she expects to protect them and the secrecy of their powers, she must gain better control of her own. When a full moon ritual goes awry, control may be lost forever, and Ava is exiled from her coven. Forced to seek refuge among the beings she had always sworn herself to hunt, she vows revenge on those who have upended her life.

But the more time Ava spends away from her coven, the more she discovers a startling truth: the witches haven’t been honest with her. Ava’s quest to strip the truth from everything she’s ever known begins with the toughest realization of all—coming to terms with who she has become.

Dark Secret:

I was looking forward to picking this up. I didn’t know much about it, but it seemed right my alley. Sadly I was very disappointed with the outcome. It lacked on a lot of different levels for me. 

I call this a DNF because I just scanned through the second half of this one. I wanted to see if I was going to be able to get into it better, but it wasn’t for me. And I was just confused most of the book. The reader is thrown right into the action. Which I wouldn’t have minded, but it all felt rushed and nothing was explained. 

This is a tiny book and I felt that it tried to put way too much into one book and everything suffered for it. It was like one thing was happening after another, and then was no room for a break to explain everything that was happening. 

One of the things that I felt did suffer was the characterisation. I feel like I didn’t know her at all. She feels flat and didn’t feel real. I wanted to like Ava. And like the rest of the book, the reader is thrown into her character arc. And we don’t get to know her. I didn’t feel that she grew throughout the book and annoyed me a fair bit.  

The world of Dark Secret was also confusing. I wasn’t able to get an image of the world. Normally it takes me a little bit to get an idea of what a world looks like, but this book was moving too fast that I wasn’t able to fall into it and grasp it. 

Overall, Dark Secret isn’t the book for me. I wanted to like it. But nothing stuck and everything feel flat. The characters weren’t great and the plot just confused me. I have seen people that have enjoyed it, but it wasn’t for me. 

 

And that is it for these mini young adult reviews. As you can see I’ve had some bad and some good times lately. Have you read any of these? Are you planning to? Let’s Chat! 

Book Tag | Spring Cleaning Book Tag

Book Tag | Spring Cleaning Book Tag

Sep 12, 2020

It’s another book tag time. Today I’m doing the Spring Cleaning Book Tag. This tag was created by Book Syrup, however, the original video is no longer available.

You know me I love doing book tags and now that it’s officially spring here in Australia. I thought it would be a fun thing to do. Let’s get into it. 

1. The struggle of getting started: A book/book series that you have struggled to begin because of its size.

This is an easy one for me. It’s The Diviners by Libba Bray for me. This series has massive books and I’m not sure what I’m going to think of it. But I need to get to it soon. It’s one of the books that Ely picked for me to read this year. I’m intrigued but it and I want to read it. 

2. Cleaning out the closet: A book and/or book series you want to unhaul.

I’m most likely going to unhaul The Inheritance Cycle by Christopher Paolini. I have had this series for years now, but I have never picked it up. And I don’t think I will. I think my time for reading this series has passed. 

3. Opening windows and letting fresh air in: A book that was refreshing.

I know I’ve talked about this book a lot but it has to be The House in the Cerulean Sea by T.J. Klune. This book was refreshing in so many ways. From the characters to the romance and everything in between. It’s a magical and profound novel that truly takes the reader on an experience. It explores family and the notion that sometimes you find them in unlikely ways. Full Review 

4. Washing out sheet stains: A book you wish you could rewrite a certain scene in.

Ohh this is such a good one and hard to pick. There are a few scenes in The Dare by Elle Kennedy. There were just a few things that didn’t sit well with me. And I would love to fix that a little.

5. Throwing out unnecessary knick-knacks: A book in a series that you didn’t feel was necessary.

I have a lot of thoughts of City of Fallen Angels and City of Lost Souls by Cassandra Clare. They are my least favourite of all her books and I feel like they weren’t necessary. But then they are. I feel it the last three books could be another series on its own – maybe it would have felt different then. 

6. Polishing the doorknobs: A book that had a clean finish.

This would have to be Girl Against the Universe by Paula Stokes. I really enjoyed how this one wrapped everything up. And I normally love series. I love being with characters for ages and finding everything out. But this one finished nice and clean and just made me happy. Full Review. 

7. Reaching to dust the fan: A book that tried too hard to relay a certain message.

This one has to go to Fix Her Up (Hot & Hammered #1) by Tessa Bailey. I felt it tried too hard on a lot of things and it didn’t work out. I couldn’t really connect with the characters, the plot. It just didn’t work for me. I was really looking for to this and I finished it disappointed. 

8. The tiring yet satisfying finish of spring cleaning: A book/series that was tiring yet satisfying to get through.

This had to be The Letter Letter by Rebecca Yarros. This one was emotionally tiring. I cried too much, especially in the last 20%. It really hurt. It was an emotional rollercoaster. You can read my full review. 

 

And that is it for this post. I had a fun time doing the spring cleaning book tag. What would you pick for these questions? Let’s Chat! 

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book blogger 💻| romance books 💜| bookseller 📖
💌 angel@angelreads.com
📚26/150

March was a better reading month than February for March was a better reading month than February for me, and while I’m still stuck in my heated rivalry fanfiction era I managed to scrap out of it a little this month. 

I reread four books from the sweet omegaverse series and honestly had the best time. I also read two of my most anticipated reads of the year and had a blast. Sadly I did also have my first dnf of the year.

What did you read this March? Any standouts? What are you looking forward to reading in April? Let’s chat! 
🏷️ 
#romancebooks #bookstagram  #angelreads #spicybooks #marchwrapup
I have a love-hate relationship with this series. I have a love-hate relationship with this series. But I ended up really enjoying this one. It’s best friends to fake dating to-lovers. It’s always been you, bad-boy/good-girl, and I loved that. While Save Your Breath has quite a few tropes, it really leads itself to it, and it works. 

Aleks and Mia have known each other for years now. Since they were teenagers, that angst has been building up this whole time. And you can tell right from the get-go, it’s fantastic. I even wanted more of it, because I love pain. When Aleks went to live with Mia’s family as a teenager, sparks flew, but for many reasons, they both put their feelings aside. And well, now they are not only going to be fake-dating, but they might as well be engaged, too. 

I really enjoyed seeing how both Aleks and Mia both tried to hide how they were feeling throughout the whole ‘fake-dating’ situation, but anyone could see it. They know each other as no one else does. Aleks has a lot going on, and while I do think this was brushed over a little too much, Mia is his centre. Mia is a massive music star and is a female in the industry, so yeah, people don’t respect her. Obvsiouly because why couldn’t a female star be badass and write about the things that she has gone through? Aleks and Mia get each other, and that is very clear from the start; they are both just trying to squash everything. We get to see them slowly start to show how they feel, and well, one night it all explodes. 

Overall, I enjoyed this one a lot; it’s not my favourite of the series, but I had a great time reading it. I liked Aleks and Mia a lot as characeters and while I think the mental health aspect could have been explored a whole lot more, I can see why it wasn’t. The romance was slow and spicy, the angst was great, and the payoff for these two was what they needed. 

Tropes
🏒Sports/Hockey Romance
🎤Fake Dating/Engagement
🏒Childhood Friends to Lovers
🎤Forced Proximity
🏒Athlete x Pop Star 
🎤Angsty Slow Burn 

Content Warnings
Mental Health Struggles 
Suicide Intention 
Family Deaths 
Alcohol Consumption
Violence on Ice

🏷️ 
#romancebooks #bookstagram  #angelreads #spicybooks #bookreview
Well February wasn’t the best reading month. I onl Well February wasn’t the best reading month. I only ended up reading 3 books in. 3 pretty fun books but one of my slowest readings months in a while. 

And I’m going to be honest here it’s because I’ve been constantly reading Heated Rivalry fanfics. 🤷‍♀️ I’m having the best time though. 

How was your reading in February? Any 5  star reads? 

🏷️ 
#romancebooks #bookstagram  #angelreads #spicybooks #februarywrapup
January was a really solid reading month. I read s January was a really solid reading month. I read some books that had been on my tbr for some time, reread a few things that peaked my interest. I also started a few new series. And just had a good time!

I just had a really good start to the year. While February is a little slow so far I’m looking forward to what I can pick up.

What did you read in January? Any 5-star reads? Let’s chat! 

🏷️ 
#romancebooks #bookstagram  #angelreads #spicybooks #januarywrapup
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