• Home
  • Book Reviews
  • Books
    • Monthly Wrap Up
    • Giveaways
    • Book Hauls
    • Events
  • Discussions
  • New Releases
  • Features
    • Top Ten Tuesday
    • Romance Thursdays
    • Movie Reviews
    • TV Series Reviews
    • Waiting on Wednesday
  • #LoveOzYA
    • OZYA Interviews
    • OZYA Reviews
  • About
  • Contact
Angel ReadsAngel Reads
  • Home
  • Book Reviews
  • Books
    • Monthly Wrap Up
    • Giveaways
    • Book Hauls
    • Events
  • Discussions
  • New Releases
  • Features
    • Top Ten Tuesday
    • Romance Thursdays
    • Movie Reviews
    • TV Series Reviews
    • Waiting on Wednesday
  • #LoveOzYA
    • OZYA Interviews
    • OZYA Reviews
  • About
  • Contact

OZYA

Book Review: Breathing Under Water by Sophie Hardcastle

Book Review: Breathing Under Water by Sophie Hardcastle

Jul 14, 2016

Breathing Under WaterBreathing Under Water by Sophie Hardcastle

Pages: 320
Publish date: July 11 2016
Publisher: Hatchette Australia
ISBN: 9780733634857
Purchase: Book Depository – Amazon UK – Amazon AU – Dymocks 

Ben and Grace Walker are twins. Growing up in a sleepy coastal town it was inevitable they’d surf. Always close, they hung out more than most brothers and sisters, surfing together for hours as the sun melted into the sea. At seventeen, Ben is a rising surf star, the golden son and the boy all the girls fall in love with. Beside him, Grace feels like she is a mere reflection of his light. In their last year of school, the world beckons, full of possibility. For Grace, finishing exams and kissing Harley Matthews is just the beginning.

Then, one day, the unthinkable. The sun sets at noon and suddenly everything that was safe and predictable is lost. And everything unravels

Breathing Under Water:

I received an e-arc of Breathing Under Water by Sophie Hardcastle from Hatchette via Netgalley in exchange for an honest review, this has in no way influenced my thoughts and feelings about this book.

It’s been a couple of weeks since I read Breathing Under Water and I am still now sure how I feel about it. There were parts that I liked and intrigued by, but then there were parts that just got on my nerves. It’s that weird feeling that you get, what you have no idea what you are thinking.  The likes don’t override the dislikes, and the dislikes don’t override the likes, I am in the middle.

Breathing Under Water follows protagonist Grace, twin to Ben Walker. They are closer than most brothers and sisters, they would hang out with their friends, they would go surfing together and just being there for each other. But Grace is always a shadow to Ben, but then the unthinkable happens, Grace’s life falls apart.

I don’t know how I feel about Grace, I felt that she just moved along with the rest of the characters and until the unthinkable happens, we don’t really know her as a person and then again, the person that we do get to know is full of grief and doing things that she would never do.

Breathing Under Water Quote

However, I loved seeing Grace grow throughout the novel. We get to see her find out who she is without Ben, it’s a hard road and some people may find it hard to read, but I thought it was done exquisitely.

It’s hard to comment on Grace’s family simply because of the situation that they were put through. They go through a hell of a lot, but grief changes people and sometimes not for the better. In the moment that they should all be there for each other they drift away.

The friendships in Breathing Under Water are hard to explain as well and again it’s because of grief. Everyone deals with it in different ways and sometimes that divides friendships. In saying that, I liked how it all panned out.

A problem that I had with Breathing Under Water was that I didn’t know what age Grace was without reading the synopsis. I felt the writing a little too young to be seventeen and that kind of hinder thoughts I had about the book.

I also felt the writing was a little too flowery at times, and I just wanted to be told in a simpler way. Then at other times it was beautiful and left me heartbroken. The writing and storyline are powerful and I was left in tears quite a couple of times.

Overall, I enjoyed Breathing Under Water.  I was on a ride with Grace, I was pulled along with the grief of the family, of everyone in the book. I liked how everyone reacted differently and how it showed, just how hard it is when someone close does die, way before their time.

Breathing Under Water is an emotional rollercoster of a story. You are on a ride of grief and how it affects people differently, family and how at times you have to stick together, and friendship and how it can break when everything falls apart.

Rating

Have you read Breathing Under Water? Did you like it? Are you going to read it? Let’s chat!  

#LoveOzYA Interview: Lynette Noni

#LoveOzYA Interview: Lynette Noni

Jul 8, 2016

OZYA Author Interview- Lynette Noni

I love Aussie YA. I love reading books from authors that live in the same country as me, that know things that people out of Australia might be so confused about. I love how sometimes they can incorporate this into their book and it is fabulous. 

So I decided to created a feature where I interview Australian Young Adult authors about their craft, journey and some interesting facts. I thought it was a fun way of everyone around the world to get to know these authors and maybe make them want to pick up their books. And that is what I am aiming to do, spread the word about #LoveOZYA and get everyone reading it. 

So far on #LoveOzYA Interviews, I have had  Sarah Ayoub, Fleur Ferris, followed by Will Kostakis and Shivaun Plozza. Then I had Gabrielle Tozer, Jay Kristoff and Kylie Fornasier, followed by A.J Betts, Megan Jacobson then Christopher Currie, Steph Bowe, Tim Sinclair and last week Meg Caddy. 

This week I bring you Lynette Noni author of the Medorand Chronicles. Akarnae (2015, Pantera Press), Raelia (2016, Pantera Press) and Draekora (2017.) 

Lynette Noni author picHi Lynette, welcome to Angel Reads. First can you introduce yourself to everyone? Tell us a little bit about yourself.

Hi! I’m Lynette and I’m the author of Akarnae and Raelia—the first two books in The Medoran Chronicles. There are five books in total (four of which I’ve already written), and it’s kinda like Harry Potter mixed with Narnia and X-Men. All of my favourite things rolled into one epic series!

What has your writing journey been like? When did you start? Why?

I’ve always been an avid reader but I never had any real desire to write until just after I graduated from uni. In early 2010 I was saving up to go travelling overseas and I was in a bit of a reading slump, so I basically decided to try and write the book I wanted to read. Akarnae was a result of that.

I wrote the first draft of the manuscript in roughly three months but I never intended to let anyone read it. It was just meant to be for me. But the story stayed with me enough that I needed to know what was going to happen next, so I wrote the second book. It was only after finishing the final sentence of Raelia that I realised I wanted—maybe even needed—to share what I’d created with the rest of the world.

What was the process of getting your first book published?

It started out with researching—lots and lots of researching. Like most wannabe authors, I had to choose between traditional publishing and self-publishing, and once I made the decision to try the traditional path, I had to consider if I wanted to try getting an agent first as opposed to jumping straight in and sending unsolicited submissions directly to publishers.

From there, I started querying agents. Lots and lots of agents over the course of about three years—which also meant lots and lots of rejections in that time.

Lynette N Books 

But no matter how many rejections I received, I knew all it would take was one “Yes” for all the “No” emails to mean nothing. So I continued querying, and I also continued editing and improving the manuscript. During all that, I wrote another book for a separate YA fantasy series, and once that was finished, I put Akarnae aside and started focusing on querying the new book in the hope that it might have more market appeal.

It was just as I was swapping my focus over to the new series that I was browsing the book section of Big W and saw a YA book with a really shiny cover—Wanda Wiltshire’s Betrothed—and I picked it up only to see that it was published by a boutique Australian publisher that I’d never heard of before called Pantera Press. After stalking them online I discovered that they accepted unsolicited manuscripts, so in one final, last-ditch effort, I submitted Akarnae to them.

That was the last submission of any kind for Akarnae—as I said previously, my focus had turned to my new series. But a few months later I received an email from Pantera saying I was through to the next round of their submissions process.

Having received too many rejections from agents and publishers alike, even after cases where I was very nearly offered representation, I thought nothing of the email, presuming I would again be turned down soon enough. So I continued on with life, receiving much more interest from overseas agents for my new book and continuing to focus my energy on the possibilities there.

In January 2014—seven months after I submitted to Pantera—I received an email with an offer of publishing. Within a month they put me on a plane to meet them in Sydney where I signed my contract, and the rest, as they say, is history!

Was it different when getting your subsequent books published?

So far I only have two books released, both of them in the same series, and both published with Pantera Press, so my answer at this stage is ‘no’. Pantera has taken on another trilogy of mine—the one I was focused on submitting when Akarnae was picked up—and I’m also working with my New York literary agent on yet another (third) series as well. So perhaps ask me this question again in the future and I’ll likely have a different answer for you! 

Fun fact Lynette

You are an OZYA author, what are some of your favourite Aussie YA books?

Aussie authors are amazingly talented! One of my favourite books from last year was Illuminae by Amie Kaufman and Jay Kristoff, and I also absolutely adore the Starbound trilogy which is again by Amie Kaufman but with Meagan Spooner (Meagan is from the US, but Amie is Aussie so it still counts).

I’m also a huge fan of John Flanagan’s Ranger’s Apprentice series, Jessica Shirvington’s Violet Eden Chapters, Trudi Canavan’s Black Magician trilogy, and Juliet Marillier’s Sevenwaters series. Also, Isobelle Carmody’s Obernewtyn was the first fantasy book I ever read, so it automatically goes on any Aussie YA list of recommendations from me!

I have yet to read Lynette Noni’s books, however the seem like my sort of thing and I am really excited to get started. You can find Lynette on twitter at @LynetteNoni, her website and you can add her books to your goodreads. 

Akarane coverAkarane by Lynette Noni

Pages: 436
Publish date: February 1st 2016 
Publisher: Pantera Press
ISBN: 1921997508
Purchase: Book Depository – Amazon UK – Amazon US – Amazon AU – Dymocks 

Dreading her first day at a new school, Alex is stunned when she walks through a doorway and finds herself stranded in Medora, a fantasy world full of impossibilities. Desperate to return home, she learns that only a man named Professor Marselle can help her… but he’s missing.

While waiting for him to reappear, Alex attends Akarnae Academy, Medora’s boarding school for teenagers with extraordinary gifts. She soon starts to enjoy her bizarre new world and the friends who embrace her as one of their own, but strange things are happening at Akarnae, and Alex can’t ignore her fear that something unexpected… something sinister… is looming.

An unwilling pawn in a deadly game, Alex’s shoulders bear the crushing weight of an entire race’s survival. Only she can save the Medorans, but what if doing so prevents her from ever returning home?

Will Alex risk her entire world—and maybe even her life—to save Medora?

*** 

Thank you Lynette for joining me at Angel Reads and sharing your journey. Have you her books? Did you like them? Are you going to read them? 

Come back next week for some more Aussie fun. If you want to know more about the #LoveOZYA movement check out the website for all the details. Also if you have any Australian YA authors that you would like to see me interview, just let me know and I can see what I can do. 

Blog Tour – Book Review: When Michael Met Mina by Randa Abdel-Fattah

Blog Tour – Book Review: When Michael Met Mina by Randa Abdel-Fattah

Jul 6, 2016

when Michael Met MinaWhen Micheal Met Mina by Randa Abdel-Fattah

Pages: 360
Publish date: July 28th 2016
Publisher: Pan Macmillan
ISBN: 1743534973
Purchase: Book Depository –  Amazon AU –  Dymocks 

Before Mina, my life was like a completed jigsaw puzzle but Mina has pushed the puzzle onto the floor. I have to start all over again, figuring out where the pieces go.

When Michael meets Mina, they are at a rally for refugees – standing on opposite sides.

Mina fled Afghanistan with her mother via a refugee camp, a leaky boat and a detention centre.

Michael’s parents have founded a new political party called Aussie Values.

They want to stop the boats.
Mina wants to stop the hate.

When Mina wins a scholarship to Michael’s private school, their lives crash together blindingly.

A novel for anyone who wants to fight for love, and against injustice.

When Michael Met Mina:

I received When Michael Met Mina by Randa Abdel-Fattah from Pan Macmillan for the When Michael Met Mina Blog Tour, this has in no way influenced my thoughts and feelings about the  book.

Before I even started to read this book I knew that I was going to like it, I don’t know why, but I did and I wasn’t disappointed. I’m not going to lie When Michael Met Mina is a hard book to read, not because it was bad, but because it deals with such a hard subject.

When Michael Met Mina follows protagonists Michael and Mina as they go on a journey of friendship, love, hardships of being different from everyone else. They learn to stand up for themselves, each other and what they believe in.

Michael and Mina are from two different sides; Michael’s family are the founders of Aussie Values, a political party that wants to make Australia great again – by stopping the boats. Mina a refugee that fled Afghanistan with her mother. They are from two opposite sides and they believe in very different things, but then they meet.

Mina has just received a scholarship to join a private school that Michael just happens to go to. I really enjoyed Mina as a character, she was never afraid to let people know who she is, she’s proud, but because of this you can also see her insecurities. When people around her are contently pulling her down for who she is, what she believes in, it gets tough – and they fact is, they have no idea what she has been through.

When Micheal Met Mina Quote

I really enjoyed the relationship Mina had with her mother and step-father, it was really nice to see this family care so much about each other, they all tried to stay strong and when one was feeling down and hurt, they tried to pick each other up.

Michael was hard to like at first. His family are racist, his friends are racist and to an extent at times he can be a little racist too – but he is also a product of his environment. We can see from the start the resistance that he has against his family values and what they promote. I adore the character arc of Michael, the reader is able to see him grow and not let the people around him influence his thoughts and feelings.

Michael’s family on the other hand; well I hated them. His father and mother, they are racist bastards (sorry not sorry). I wanted to throw my book across the room with everything that they said, even after his father sees first hand what people go through – he doesn’t change the way that he thinks.

His father’s group of friends are no better, I just cannot comprehend how people can think like this, it’s just so small minded and frustrated.

The romance was adorable though Michael and Mina do not have the best start. It was nice to see them go from dislike to friendship and then into something more. It was slow and great to see that they both learnt things from each other.

I also liked the friendships that Mina finds at the new school, they didn’t care that she believed in different things, they liked her, for her.

Randa Abdel-Fattah writing throughout When Michael Met Mina is captivating, once I started to read I didn’t want to stop. Abdel-Fattah created a story that captures some thinking in Australia today, and showed that you have to think before you speak, because everything is not always what it seems. Michael and Mina’s voices were also very different from each other and both capture the life of teens in Australia.

When Michael Met Mina should be on every high school book list in the country. The younger generations need to know that sometimes the government and media lie and manipulate the sense of asylum seekers. They need to know that most of these people are not illegal or jumping the queue, they are just simply people looking for freedom, safety and peace. It’s an important story to write and share.

Rating

Have you read When Michael Met Mina yet? Did you like it? Are you going to? Have you read anything else from Randa Abdel-Fattah? Let’s Chat. Also check out the rest of the blog tour and join the conversations on social media with #Michael4Mina

When_Michael_Met_Mina_Blog_Tour_Dates-page-001

  • 1
  • 2
  • …
  • 10
  • 11
  • 12
  • …
  • 19
  • 20

Recent Posts

  • Books Covers With Typography That I Love | TTT
  • New To Me Authors I Loved in 2025
  • My Favourite Reads of 2025
  • Most Anticipated Books Releasing in the First Half of 2026
  • Slow but an Okay August | Monthly Wrap Up

Subscribe to Angel Reads

Enter your email address to subscribe to Angel Reads and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Bookstagram

angelreads

book blogger 💻| romance books 💜| bookseller 📖
💌 angel@angelreads.com
📚15/150

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
Can you believe that it’s already February? I know Can you believe that it’s already February? I know I can’t. But that means it’s a new month with more releases coming out! And that makes me excited. Some fantastic titles releasing this month and I cannot wait to read them. 📚

A couple of these are on my TBR already and some have just caught my eye and that makes me super excited to pick them up. 🖤

What are you looking forward to reading this month? Let’s chat! ✨

🏷️ 
#romancebooks #bookstagram  #angelreads #spicybooks #Februaryreleases2026
Follow on Instagram

GoodReads

2026 Reading Challenge

2026 Reading Challenge
Angel - Angel Reads has read 0 books toward her goal of 150 books.
hide
0 of 150 (0%)
view books

Contact Us

Send us an email and I'll get back to you, asap.

Send Message

© 2013 - 2026 · Angel Reads · Disclaimer