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minsuni commented on kimikat's review of A Snake Among Swans
I went into A Snake Among Swans completely blind, and this is also my first time reading anything by this author. I’m very glad I did.
This is a political fantasy that begins with the promise of vengeance but quickly expands into something much more layered, exploring identity, survival, and the cost of challenging systems that were never built for you.
Content warnings for this book include sexual assault, extreme violence (including graphic deaths of children), misogyny, homophobia, and parental and spousal abuse.
What stood out most to me was the dual POV structure and how it highlights two very different relationships to powerlessness and agency. One character is actively learning how to reclaim control over her life after loss, while the other begins to question the beliefs, conditioning, and expectations that have shaped her entire identity. Watching those arcs develop in parallel was one of the most compelling parts of the book.
The women in this story are its heart. They are ambitious, intelligent, angry, compassionate, and deeply complicated. The narrative never flattens them into archetypes, instead allowing them to exist in their contradictions, which makes their choices feel consistently impactful. This complexity feeds into one of the book’s strongest themes: the many forms of power—political, social, religious, and personal—and who is allowed to hold it, who is denied it, and what it costs to resist those systems.
The political intrigue is dense at times, and there were moments where I felt slightly weighed down by the detail, but it ultimately builds a world that feels intentional and layered, with consequences that accumulate meaningfully as the story progresses.
Despite that complexity, I became deeply emotionally invested in the characters and their journeys. I didn’t expect to finish this in one sitting, but once the momentum picked up, I couldn’t put it down. So, if you enjoy political fantasy with morally complex characters, intricate worldbuilding, and a strong focus on ambitious women navigating systems of power, this is an easy recommendation.
This was a strong introduction to the author for me, and I’m very curious to read more from them. Thank you to Netgalley and Harper Voyager for the ARC!
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caait completed their yearly reading goal of 35 books!







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Critically Acclaimed Memoirs
Sapphire: Finished 30 Main Quest books.
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minsuni commented on Literary_Masochist's review of You Did Nothing Wrong
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minsuni commented on bookwyvern_carli's review of You Did Nothing Wrong
I adore everything C. G. Drews writes. They truly understand how to write psychological horror that gets under your skin and preys on your emotions. You Did Nothing Wrong is full of deeply complicated, flawed characters, and Elodie is such an unreliable narrator, shaped by trauma and clearly struggling in ways that make the whole story feel even more unsettling. Everyone here is messy, damaged, and making terrible choices, but that is part of what makes the book work so well. The whole time I was reading, all I could think was that I needed to save sweet baby Jude, because these caregivers were very much lacking in the care. This book might make you think it is about a haunted house, but to me it felt much more like a story about haunted people. Very short, very impactful, and deeply emotional. I definitely enjoyed it and would absolutely recommend it.
minsuni commented on janet_ty's review of You Did Nothing Wrong
This book was a hell of a ride.
What's funny is that my opinion of it changed completely while I was reading. I seriously considered DNFing it more than once because I could not stand Elodie. Every decision she made frustrated me, and reading from her perspective was exhausting at times. But I was also completely unable to stop reading. The story was so immersive, eerie, and compelling that even when I was frustrated, I couldn't look away.
A lot of my frustration came from Elodie's relationship with Jude. I know some readers struggled with Jude, but I honestly never did. He's a child. Elodie never learned how to be the mother he needed, and watching that dynamic unfold was incredibly difficult at times. But that's also what made the book so effective.
The characters feel messy and flawed. Nobody handles things perfectly. Nobody always makes the right choice. I know Bren isn't everyone's favorite, but he ended up being a character I liked far more than I expected.
The ending completely caught me off guard. I finished it a month ago and thought wait what happened again? But within seconds, everything came rushing back to me. It was shocking, memorable, and exactly the kind of ending that sticks.
This wasn't always an enjoyable read in the traditional sense. Most of the time I was frustrated, angry, or uncomfortable. But I was also completely invested. And that's what made this incredibly special to me.
minsuni commented on RTReads's review of You Did Nothing Wrong
This psychological thriller invites reads to look for the cracks in domestic bliss and uncover the lies lurking in the shadows. When single mother Elodie begins a new life with her young son and new husband, domestic perfection gives way to something more sinister.
As my third CG Drews book, I had high expectations for the prose, and I was not disappointed. Drews delivers vivid descriptions and crafts an atmosphere that is both lush and disturbing. Drews's signature body horror is present throughout, heightening the tension and ensuring the reader feels just as uneasy as the characters.
The pacing is one of this book's strengths. It moves steadily, building suspense without rushing past details. Occasional flashbacks provide necessary context to the present story. Each new discovery adds another layer of unease, making it impossible to put this book down.
Elodie and Bren are compellingly flawed protagonists. Both feel fully realized, and both are unreliable in ways that kept me constantly questioning their perceptions, motivations, and decisions. Their relationship feels authentically strained, and their attempts to navigate family life often proved as frustrating as they were believable.
This story shines in its refusal to fit within a single genre. It experiments with conventions from both classic haunted house horrors and domestic thrillers. This is extremely effective at keeping readers uncertain about who and what can be trusted. Against the backdrop of a home renovation and a family trying to reinvent itself, Drews explores the ways people construct identities, bury truths, and cling to the versions of themselves they most want to believe.
I couldn't stop reading. I keep thinking about the characters, the choices they made, and the questions at the heart of the story. Drews asks how far people will go to protect the lives they've built—and whether they would make different choices if given the chance to start over.
minsuni commented on literary.gamer's review of You Did Nothing Wrong
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You Did Nothing Wrong
C.G. Drews
minsuni finished a book

You Did Nothing Wrong
C.G. Drews
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