Monday, March 23, 2026

Hallowed Deadly Seeds (adult chiller)

     "How was she supposed to stop stressing? She was under house arrest in a murderous cult town with guards monitoring her residence around the clock. Leaving would have been challenging enough before the whipping, but now it seemed impossible. On top of that, the townsfolk had dragged Andy off to torture him, and who knew how badly he was injured?"
     Are you a true chiller affecianado? Can you deal with the hard core stuff like a murderous cult town? If you are and haven't yet read Amber Hathaway's Little White Flowers, this is a perfect time to do so. You see, the second book in the Little White Flowers trilogy, Hallowed Deadly Seeds, is about to drop in June. 
     Yes, Amber is inviting you back through the dark, tangled Maine forest whose nocturnal predatory beasts should be the least of your worries. Back to the town that sanity has forgotten where generations have lived (and died) by a cruel false theology that makes Cotton Mathers' Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God look tame in comparison, where every summer innocent children are slaughtered in a ceremony to appease their deity, where when misfortunes occur people attribute them to witchcraft, and where lovely flowers carry horrific messages. 
     In Little White Flowers siblings Alice and Andy, University of Maine undergraduates, have been sent by their parents to Evanston after their grandmother's death to prep an ancestral home for sale. Their concerns were physical labor, boredom, and spotty wifi--nothing major. 
     They quickly learned that they weren't in Penobscot County anymore. Forget wifi--the denizens didn't have land lines!
     With the exception of Riley, a young man who became quite smitten with Alice, the townsfolk didn't really take to the siblings. They saw too many red flags. Alice and Andy were strangers, didn't dress like Victorians, and were not fans of patriarchy. When they learned too many of the town's secrets Alice barely escaped death by claiming (falsely) to be pregnant with Riley's baby. 
     As Hallowed Deadly Seeds begins Alice and Andy are alive but far from out of the woods. To legitimize the pregnancy it has been decreed that Riley and Alice marry. The townsfolk are taking no chances. Armed guards stationed around their house to thwart any escape attempts. Talk about a shotgun wedding!
     There's a problem. Andy is running out of Suboxone, a medicine that the town doctor certainly won't have. 
     And when the wife of a prominent citizen becomes unexplainably deathly ill the wedding is put off another week with the guard duty extended. 
     In addition to illnesses the town is undergoing mysterious tribulations. Fires destroy two of the town's most important buildings. There are two theories. Either God is punishing the townsfolk for their sins or witches are working their evil. Some men have decided to take matters into their own alcohol fueled hands. To escape Alice, Andy, and Riley will have to avoid not only the official law enforcers, but the self appointed witch hunters...
     ...if it's at all possible. 
     Hallowed Deadly Seeds builds seamlessly on the foundation laid in Little White Flowers. The characters and settings become so familiar that you'll feel like you are with Alice, Andy, and Riley in their house with armed sentries stationed outside, in the church at the bizarre wedding rehearsal, and by their side in their frantic dash for freedom. 
     An insight I was struck with while writing this review was how believably Amber describes a cult mentality. I was never in a cult. But my sister was in and out of them. After surviving spinal meningitis Harriet was visibly different. Neurotypical people (adults as well as kids, were very cruel. The Fundamentalist/cultist congregations were the only ones that not only accepted but cherished and valued her, where she felt that she belonged and mattered. 
     In some getting slain in the spirit was so common nurses were at all services and speaking in tongues considered essential for salvation. Some were Rapture centered, focused on preparing to be worthy of being swooped up to heaven rather being left on a doomed Earth. 
     When Mom, her great aunt Bland, and Harriet moved to rural North Carolina I spent the summer there with them helping them settle in. In her new church women wore long sleeved floor length dresses in the summer heat, gender roles were ultra conservative, and parents were ultra vigilant in shielding their children from "herecies" like evolution. I'm pretty sure that they home schooled. 
     Just one more disturbing cult story. A woman was pregnant with a long awaited child when her fetus was diagnosed with a tragic genetic defect. It would die by eighteen months and in its time on earth never know a moment of consciousness. If she terminated the pregnancy the church (her family) would kick her out.
     And those were cults embedded in the larger world. Can you imagine those isolated from society for generations? Actually you don't have to. Let Amber take you there.
On a purrrsonal note, the view from my windows is dismal. After melting away the snow ❄️ has returned. Everything is coated in white. Eugene is out there plowing. 
A great big shout out goes out to my favorite chiller author (Amber of course), the libraries and book stores that carry her work, and her quickly growing reader community. 
Jules Hathaway 
     




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Sunday, March 22, 2026

The adorable Squishmallow elephant

Eugene bought me yesterday when he went grocery shopping 🛍. 



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My Friday Goodwill haul

Cat Halloween shirt, Squishmallow hoodie, sequined leggings, and Squishmallow 🦁. 



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Saturday, March 21, 2026

The Civil War of Amos Abernathy (juvenile fiction)

     Amos, protagonist of Michael Leali's The Civil War of Amos Abernathy, has for much of his young life has been a volunteer historical reenactor at the Chickaree County Living History Park. As you can probably guess, he's a real history buff. 
     Amos has a most unusual penpal. Much of his narrative is written in the form of letters to Albert D. J. Cashier, a Civil War Union soldier who probably in this century would have identified as trans. Amos is gay. He's beginning to think the park is telling only part of the story. There must have been LGBTQ+ people in the 19th century. He's seriously researching to learn more about them and gain representational inclusion in a space that's become very important to him. 
     Unfortunately there are people who don't want this to happen, including a wealthy, influential person who is threatening to cut off funding for the park if this "inappropriate" content is included. Amos's mom, as director of the park, is caught between her need to keep it solvent and her loyalty to her son.
     As if that's not confusing enough Amos has a crush on a boy, Ben, who is giving confusing and contradicting vibes. 
     Leali was nearly thirty when he finally took his mother's advice: write what you know. He's had the experiences of being afraid to come out (Ben) and being openly gay and proud (Amos). For years he was a young nineteenth century historical reenactor. 
     But to fill out the story he had to do massive amounts of research which also enabled to make up a list of resources for readers who want to learn more.
     Although Amos and the other twentieth century characters are fictional, Albert D. J. Cashier was very real.
On a purrrsonal note, yesterday was the first day of calendar spring. It was warm enough out for me to take a 4 bus Goodwill/Hannaford run. At Goodwill I was so excited to see the stuffed animals on shelves instead of in deep bins. I got a 🦁 Squishmallow, a Halloween 🐈 😻 🐈‍⬛️ 😺 🐱 😸 shirt, a Squishmallow hoodie, and sequin covered leggings that will be purrrfect for drag or cosplay. At Hannaford I got fruit and veggies. Last night we got a sprinkling of ❄️. It had melted by 10 this morning, but more is on the way. But I'm glad I'm in Maine, not Texas. According to the meteorologists they're having dangerously hot temps in March!?!
A great big shout out goes out to all the Goodwill and Hannaford workers who make shopping there such a good experience. 
Jules Hathaway 



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Friday, March 20, 2026

Veggie Cheerios

This is the box Eugene brought home. When I start eating it I'll give you my opinion. 



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What I'm reading

This is the cover of Hallowed Deadly Seeds, the second book in the Little White Flowers trilogy. It's scheduled to drop in June. Isn't the cover art chilling? Amber and I agree that it really captures the spirit of the narrative. If you're a chiller affecianado you won't want to miss out. If you haven't read the first book, Little White Flowers, read it first. It will really get you familiar with the characterd and their relationships. 



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Thursday, March 19, 2026

All the Way Around the Sun (YA fiction)

     Xixi Tian's All the Way Around the Sun is a poignant and engaging narrative about a girl, Stella, grieving the loss of her only brother and feeling alone in her grief. The pressures to keep up her grades and finish her college applications seem both meaningless and overwhelming. 
     Stella and her older brother, Sam, had lived in their native China, being raised by their grandmother, for the first eight years of her life while their parents established themselves in America. When they arrive in America their parents are strangers to them. Sam is the one who can best live up to their great expectations, especially when he is accepted to Harvard...
    ...Where he dies in his dorm his first year...
     ...Nobody is there to help Stella cope with her loss. Her parents don't talk about the family tragedy. They haven't told her grandmother about Sam's death. And just before her second semester of senior year the family moves across the country to California where she doesn't know anyone...
     ...except Alan who was her best friend back in the Midwest until he seemingly ditched her...
     ...Now Stella's parents are pushing her to get her college applications in on time. Unable to take her on a California colleges tour, guess who they enlist to be her escort.
     The truth is Stella is afraid to go to college. Sam did and look what happened. 
On a purrrsonal note, March break is drawing to an end. It's featured marginally to truly crappy weather. Of the excursions I've planned for the week, I should be able to pull off one tomorrow--a field trip to Hannaford with a side trip to Goodwill. I've mostly stayed to home with precious Tobago. I've made two trips to Orono Public Library and visited Amber to pick up my advance readers copy of the second book in her Little White Flowers trilogy which is scheduled to drop this June. Of course I'll review it way before. 
Amusing story: Eugene picked up some groceries after work yesterday. He had these veggie Cheerios. WTF? I expect cereal to be sweet or neutral, not tasting like beets or broccoli. It says it's fruit flavored, just contains veggie powder. I'm willing to try it. I'll let you know what it's like.
Yesterday was drivers' appreciation day on the community connector bus system. For me every day I get on a bus 🚌 is drivers' appreciation 💗 day and I show it with candy.
A great big shout out goes out to all our fabulous, hardworking bus drivers. 
Jules Hathaway 



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