petuniarhubarb commented on a post
I am still thinking about this book months later. I really wished there was a sequel, cause the setting and the characters were so absolutely amazing!
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Winter 2026 Readalong
Read at least 1 book in the Winter 2026 Readalong.
petuniarhubarb commented on a post
I feel like every book with Hastings is just Hastings thinking “he’s surely gone mad this time” and every. Single. Time. Poirot pulls through. Sometimes the evidence is so obvious. You’d think Hastings would stop doubting his long-time friend already, or at least be slow to deciding he’s lost his mind to old age
petuniarhubarb commented on a post
I feel like every book with Hastings is just Hastings thinking “he’s surely gone mad this time” and every. Single. Time. Poirot pulls through. Sometimes the evidence is so obvious. You’d think Hastings would stop doubting his long-time friend already, or at least be slow to deciding he’s lost his mind to old age
Post from the The Big Four (Hercule Poirot, #5) forum
I feel like every book with Hastings is just Hastings thinking “he’s surely gone mad this time” and every. Single. Time. Poirot pulls through. Sometimes the evidence is so obvious. You’d think Hastings would stop doubting his long-time friend already, or at least be slow to deciding he’s lost his mind to old age
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The Big Four (Hercule Poirot, #5)
Agatha Christie
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Red Rising (Red Rising Saga, #1)
Pierce Brown
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Circe
Madeline Miller
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Babel
R.F. Kuang
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The first 150 pages are a boring prequel to the last 130 pages. I would have dnf-ed Ickabog after the first couple chapters if I didn’t own the book.
The tone feels younger than middle grade. It’s very juvenile. But the difficulty of reading, and content is like adult fantasy. When I was a kid, I would have hated the sheer level of political wtf-ery in this story.
Daisy and Bert were background characters for most of the story. Literally so many people die. Thankfully, the last 130 or so pages picked up and left a slightly less awful taste in my mouth. I don’t recommend reading it, but if you try… if you aren’t enamored by the first few chapters, quit while you’re ahead. You’ll either love the writing style or hate it. No in-between.
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I hated the ending. That's all. The rest of my thoughts have so many spoilers and are mostly angry ranting xD
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petuniarhubarb finished reading and wrote a review...
Thornhedge is whimsical and meandering. It’s slow, but it’s not meant to be anything else. And it’s only 100 pages, so you don’t have to slog through too much whimsy.
I expected the story to be creepy or horror-esc, but thankfully, it’s not. I think it’s best to go in blind, so I won’t say much else, but if you like frogs, gritty beauty, fae, kindheartedness, and fairytales, you’d probably enjoy this story.
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3.75 stars overall
The major things The Spellshop got wrong, The Enchanted Greenhouse got right.
The characters were likable, and there was a solid plot/goal through the whole story. So the first half didn’t feel like trudging through molasses (aka sweet but slow).
The books reference each other, but they’re companion novels and work as stand-alones.
There were still a lot of small plot holes, and the story isn’t that deep. But if you’re looking for a warm read, a cute (secondary to the plot) romance, likeable characters, sharing magic, and community, I definitely recommend it! Plus if you liked the first one, you’ll definitely like this one.
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Hamlet
William Shakespeare