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Oct Books
The Truth According to Ember by Danica Nava

The job market is a difficult one. Just out of her accounting program and saddled with debts from paying her brother’s court fees, Ember Lee Cardinal knows she’s capable but no one is hiring her.
Until she fudges her qualifications and chooses Caucasian instead of Chicksaw when it comes to the ethnicity box.
Lo, and behold, it works and she gets her dream job. The problem will be keeping it as she wings through the rapid instructions and fights her attraction to the hot IT guy, Danuwoa Colson despite the no dating co-workers rule.
As one can imagine, the initial lie Ember sells leads to trouble and inevitably blackmail, but Nava never veers into cartoonishly evil cliches from the blackmailer or the aggravating miscommunication between Ember and Danuwoa.
Rather she uses the opportunity to explore issues regarding to classism and discrimination in the workplace. The microaggression and the larger systematic inequalities that indigenous people face today. Plus Ember’s lies don’t feel irritating in its scope because Neva is clear that the stakes and consequences are serious for Ember.
It helps that she isn’t pathological when it comes to lying. She’s rather direct by nature. Harsh even which is part of her growth in that she’s come to depend so much on herself and holding up her family, that she finds it hard to believe her little brother is trying to change his ways and that he won’t disappoint her again like their dead-beat dad did.
The love interest, Danuwoa or ‘Danny” as it’s hard for people to remember his real name, is an adorable cinnamon roll to counter Ember’s cynical hypocrisies. He is proud of his heritage yet realistic about what it takes to combat ignorant people surrounding them. Plus he’s such a good big brother to his little sister. Bonus, he’s a gentlemen in the streets and a beast in the sheets so yay.
A wonderful debut that finally brings indigenous characters to the fore in the romance section. I can’t wait for her next one.
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Twisted Tales: Princess of Thieves Review

What if Maid Marian was the real outlaw?
Three years after her beloved uncle, King Richard, and best friend, Robin of Locksley went to war, and Maid Marian went to Paris for schooling, Marian is back. The war is over and her uncle promised her a spot on his council. But she is greeted at the docks by the Sherriff of Nottingham who informs her that King Richard is dead, Robin is a wanted man and Richard’s weak-willed brother is on the throne.
The kingdom isn’t in better shape as the villagers are destitute from the high taxes while King John feasts, naps and is advised by the sneaky Sir Hiss. Not on Marian’s watch. She may be relegated to her room thanks to Sir Hiss but that’s not going to stop her from aiding her beloved England.
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Asgardians: Odin Review

Since I loved, loved, loved O’Connor’s Olympians series, I obviously had to check out his newest offering. The Asgardians! A quartet on the slightly less popular but just as well known Norse pantheon.
As one can guess, the first book focuses on the All-Father, Odin, leader of the Aesir Gods and covers the creation myth of the Norse world, and several different stories regarding Odin’s never-ending quest for knowledge to avoid his own mortality.
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