jojo started reading Friends in Need by Elliott Hay

Friends in Need by Elliott Hay
What will these grannies do when murder’s not an option?
Every day, Peggy, Carole, and Madge get together to knit, …
Former avid reader trying to get out of the habit of doomscrolling and back into books.
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32% complete! jojo has read 13 of 40 books.
What will these grannies do when murder’s not an option?
Every day, Peggy, Carole, and Madge get together to knit, …
Her city is under siege. The zombies are coming back. And all Nona wants is a birthday party. In many …
"The Emperor needs necromancers.
The Ninth Necromancer needs a swordswoman.
Gideon has a sword, some dirty magazines, and no more …
I met my husband on the same day I committed my very last murder. There's a joke in there somewhere, …
I met my husband on the same day I committed my very last murder. There's a joke in there somewhere, …
This is a well-written book, and entirely gripping. By turns funny, tender, and brutal, I literally could not put it down until I was done. The author nails the main and supporting characters (I recognise the people who populate the Dandenong Ranges) without veering into stereotype. I remember hooning around the Dandenongs on the pillion of a guy who grew up in The Basin, which leads a certain cinematic quality to my imagining of one of the book's key sequences. It's deftly done and not at all cringe. I do love the nod to a familiar handyman franchise which is renamed but recognisable.
Although she's definitely a morally questionable person, Olivia is smart, funny, tortured, and I like her. I understand how she feels about her family and her kids. The villains are not cartoonish, and I've hung out near some of them in the dodgier pubs in Melbourne. I'm …
This is a well-written book, and entirely gripping. By turns funny, tender, and brutal, I literally could not put it down until I was done. The author nails the main and supporting characters (I recognise the people who populate the Dandenong Ranges) without veering into stereotype. I remember hooning around the Dandenongs on the pillion of a guy who grew up in The Basin, which leads a certain cinematic quality to my imagining of one of the book's key sequences. It's deftly done and not at all cringe. I do love the nod to a familiar handyman franchise which is renamed but recognisable.
Although she's definitely a morally questionable person, Olivia is smart, funny, tortured, and I like her. I understand how she feels about her family and her kids. The villains are not cartoonish, and I've hung out near some of them in the dodgier pubs in Melbourne. I'm definitely familiar with the moral ambiguity of some of the supporting characters.
I didn't expect to gasp out loud or cry, but I did both. I'm looking forward to seeing what else Mark Mupotsa-Russell writes next.
I met my husband on the same day I committed my very last murder. There's a joke in there somewhere, …
A Manifesto for the Future of Everything
DIY is about doing what you want and doing it your way. It’s the antithesis of gatekeeper culture and the …
DIY is about doing what you want and doing it your way. It’s the antithesis of gatekeeper culture and the …
Someone is dead set to air the spy agency's dirty laundry in The Delirium Brief the next installment to Charles …
[Fiction / Fantasy / Contemporary] What would you change if you could go back in time?
In a small back …
[Fiction / Fantasy / Contemporary] What would you change if you could go back in time?
In a small back …