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The ‘I Spy With My Little Eye’ Book tag

It’s that time again.

The end of April creeps ever closer and I have fallen behind on my reviews.. (I really am more organized than this, I swear.)
Instead.. I’ll be presenting you with yet another tag by yours truly.

I’m one of those readers who finds comfort in simply existing in the same space as my books.
I love looking over and seeing all the different titles and cover art.. Each one a promise of adventure, a momentary escape from reality, friends.. old and new.

So curl up somewhere comfortable and let’s play a game of ‘I Spy’
Can you spot a book that completes these questions?

The Rules:

Link back to the creator, Sheri @ ReadBetwixtWords
These questions are intended to be answered with books you have in your possession or have read..
(but you’re welcome to use any from your TBR)
Tag a friend or two to keep it going!

Enjoy!


(Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. Any purchases made through my links may earn me a small commission at no additional cost to you.)

I spy with my little eye..

A book with no jacket:

The Wolf Gift by Anne Rice

When Reuben Golding, a young reporter on assignment, arrives at a secluded mansion on a bluff high above the Pacific, it’s at the behest of the home’s enigmatic female owner. She quickly seduces him, but their idyllic night is shattered by violence when the man is inexplicably attacked—bitten—by a beast he cannot see in the rural darkness. It will set in motion a terrifying yet seductive transformation that will propel Reuben into a mysterious new world and raise profound questions. Why has he been given the wolf gift? What is its true naturegood or evil? And are there others out there like him?


A title with the current month in it:

April’s Fools by Ivy Asher and Raven Kennedy

My father named me after a gun and taught me how to skin and cook a squirrel by the time I was ten. The only feminine influence I ever had growing up was when Dharla Cornburner told me I needed to get laid.

I was raised feral on a solid diet of crazy, so when three hot ex-military dudes show up on my doorstep, making claims about a plague and the end of the world as I know it, I don’t even bat a lash.

They insist I need to go with them, that they’ll keep poor little ol’ me safe. I’m perfectly fine right where I’m at, but I’ve always been an adventurous girl, and the three of them and their muscles look like an excellent place for a me sandwich.

These boys are strung tight almost to the point of snapping. Which happens to be just how I like ‘em. Looks like the end of the world just got a hell of a lot more fun. Let the games begin.


A cover with an animal on it:

A Dog’s Courage by W. Bruce Cameron
The Familiars by Adam Jay Epstein

A book with an ugly cover:


Dead Until Dark by Charlaine Harris

Sookie Stackhouse is just a small-time cocktail waitress in small-town Bon Temps, Louisiana. She’s quiet, doesn’t get out much, and tends to mind her own business—except when it comes to her “disability.” Sookie can read minds. And that doesn’t make her too dateable. Then along comes Bill Compton. He’s tall, dark, handsome—and Sookie can’t hear a word he’s thinking. He’s exactly the type of guy she’s been waiting for all her life…

But Bill has a disability of his own: he’s a vampire with a bad reputation. And when a string of murders hits Bon Temps—along with a gang of truly nasty bloodsuckers looking for Bill—Sookie starts to wonder if having a vampire for a boyfriend is such a bright idea.


A series with 10 or more books:

The Godhunter by Amy Sumida
Eve Duncan by Iris Johansen
Anita Blake by Laurell K. Hamilton


A cover you would hang on your wall:

The Future is Blue by Catherynne M. Valente

I’m borderline obsessed with this cover.
I want posters, t-shirts, stickers.. all of it.
(I also find it ridiculously fitting considering the pandemic and all.)

Subterranean Press is thrilled to present a major new collection from one of the most dazzling, distinctive voices in the literary world. Catherynne M. Valente, the New York Times bestselling and multiple-award-winning author of The Girl Who Circumnavigated Fairyland in a Ship of Her Own Making and other acclaimed novels, now brings readers fifteen stories unlike any others.

In the title story, Theodore Sturgeon Award-winning novelette “The Future Is Blue,” an outcast girl named Tetley lives on floating Garbagetown, in a world that dreams of the long lost land. Lovecraft’s Cthulhu mythos is explored and reinvented in style in “Down and Out in R’lyeh.” In the novelette “The Limitless Perspective of Master Peek, or, the Luminescence of Debauchery,” Perpetua masquerades as a man in order to continue her father’s business as a glassblower and must fashion a special eye for a queen. And in “The Beasts Who Fought for Fairyland Until the Very End and Further Still,” the wyvern A-Through-L, the warrior Green Wind and his giant cat the Leopard of Little Breezes cope with their broken-hearted disappointment over politicks as the evil Marquess ascends to rule. 


A title with numbers in it:

The 6th Extinction by James Rollins
(Book 10 of 16)
Ninth House by Leigh Bardugo

1st to Die by James Patterson


A series of standalones:

The Cocktail Series by Alice Clayton

This is a must-read or fans of romantic comedies.. Throw in an enemies-to-lovers bit and some hilarious cat shenanigans and you’ve got yourself one heck of an entertaining read.

Caroline Reynolds has a fantastic new apartment in San Francisco, a Kitchen Aid mixer to die for, and no O (and we’re not talking Oprah here, folks). She has a flourishing design career, an office overlooking the bay, a killer zucchini bread recipe, and no O. She has Clive (the best cat ever), great friends, a great rack, and no O.

Adding insult to O-less, she also has an oversexed neighbor with the loudest late-night wallbanging she’s ever heard. Every moan, spank, and—was that a meow?—punctuates the fact that not only is she losing sleep, she still has—yep, you guessed it—no O.

Enter Simon Parker. When the wallbanging threatens to literally bounce her out of bed, Caroline, clad in sexual frustration and a pink baby-doll nightie, confronts her heard-but-never-seen neighbor. Their late-night hallway encounter has…well…mixed results. Because with walls this thin, the tension’s gonna be thick.

A delicious mix of silly and steamy, this is an irresistible tale of exasperation at first sight.


A cover with layers/many things going on:

The Dollmaker of Krakow by R.M. Romero

In the land of dolls, there is magic.
In the land of humans, there is war.
Everywhere there is pain.
But together there is hope.
 
Karolina is a living doll whose king and queen have been overthrown. But when a strange wind spirits her away from the Land of the Dolls, she finds herself in Kraków, Poland, in the company of the Dollmaker, a man with an unusual power and a marked past.
 
The Dollmaker has learned to keep to himself, but Karolina’s courageous and compassionate manner lead him to smile and to even befriend a violin-playing father and his daughter—that is, once the Dollmaker gets over the shock of realizing a doll is speaking to him.
 
But their newfound happiness is dashed when Nazi soldiers descend upon Poland. Karolina and the Dollmaker quickly realize that their Jewish friends are in grave danger, and they are determined to help save them, no matter what the risks.


A series you own with mismatched covers:

The Dark Tower Series by Stephen King
Fever Series by Karen Marie Moning

House of Night Series by P.C. Cast and Kristin Cast


A title that made you laugh:

Man, Fuck This House by Brian Asman

Sabrina Haskins and her family have just moved into their dream home, a gorgeous Craftsman in the rapidly-growing Southwestern city of Jackson Hill. Sabrina’s a bored and disillusioned homemaker, Hal a reverse mortgage salesman with a penchant for ill-timed sports analogies. Their two children, Damien and Michaela, are bright and precocious.

At first glance, the house is perfect. But things aren’t what they seem.

Sabrina’s hearing odd noises, seeing strange visions. Their neighbors are odd or absent. And Sabrina’s already-fraught relationship with her son is about to be tested in a way no parent could ever imagine.

Because while the Haskins family might be the newest owners of 4596 James Circle, they’re far from its only residents…


And that’s that!

Can you spy the answer to these questions on your own shelves?
I would love to see what they are!

Thank you for stopping by today and checking out this tag, I hope you enjoyed it, and I look forward to seeing you next time.
Stay safe, Be well, and Happy reading!

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This Post Has 7 Comments

  1. Pooja G

    Ooh another fun tag! Such a fun read and I honestly can’t imagine how you come up with such fun answers. I usually know so many books but every time I do one of these tags my brain goes blank. Like I could never name a book with the word “April” even with a gun to my head lol!

    1. Sheri Dye

      Thank you! I have an elephants memory and an addiction for word games so that helps.. but if this were a test I’d be beyond screwed.

      And, yeesh, I think a gun to your head excuses some amount of memory loss! Let’s just hope this is never something you have to worry about.

      1. Pooja G

        Haha let’s hope it’s just a silly exaggeration and not a prediction 😂

        1. Sheri Dye

          I’ll just be sending good thoughts your way for like.. ever now. 😅🤣

          1. Pooja G

            I think I need them… 😳😂

          2. Sheri Dye

            I feel that so hard. 😂

          3. Pooja G

            😂😂😂

Comments are closed.