Stacking the Shelves

Stacking The Shelves is all about sharing the books you are adding to your shelves, may it be physical or virtual. This means you can include books you buy in physical store or online, books you borrow from friends or the library, review books, gifts and of course ebooks! And audiobooks. Don’t forget audiobooks!

In other words, if you can read it or if it can be read to you – no matter how you got it – it belongs in Stacking the Shelves.

The Stacking the Shelves meme was originally hosted at Team Tynga’s Reviews. It is currently hosted by Reading Reality.  

Happy Saturday! I hope you had a good week and the reading gods were kind to you. Mine has been pretty good. I have added a few books to my stacks this week and I am looking forward to reading all of them.

Library books I have added to my bedside stack

The Shattering Peace by John Scalzi

Summary from Goodreads:

THE PEACE IS SHATTERING

For a decade, peace has reigned in interstellar space. A tripartate agreement between the Colonial Union, the Earth, and the alien Conclave has kept the forces of war at bay, even when some would have preferred to return to the fighting and struggle of former times. For now, more sensible heads have prevailed – and have even championed unity.

But now, there is a new force that threatens the hard-maintained peace: The Consu, the most advanced intelligent species humans have ever met, are on the cusp of a species-defining civil war. This war is between Consu factions… but nothing the Consu ever do is just about them. The Colonial Union, the Earth and the Conclave have been unwillingly dragged into the conflict, in the most surprising of ways.

Gretchen Trujillo is a mid-level diplomat, working in an unimportant part of the Colonial Union bureaucracy. But when she is called to take part in a secret mission involving representatives from every powerful faction in space, what she finds there has the chance to redefine the destinies of humans and aliens alike… or destroy them forever.

I have only read the first book in this series, and this is the seventh one, which just came out this year. But according to the author, this one can be read as a standalone. So I am holding him to that. I really enjoyed the first one and do intend to read the others eventually.

ARCs I’ve added to my Netgalley account

When the Rain Came by Matthew Eicheldinger

Summary from Netgalley:

Seventeen-year-old Aurora knows how to survive. Life in the foster system has taught her how to stay quiet, stay smart, and stay ready. But nothing could prepare her for this: a never-ending storm that swallows cities, drowns forests, and turns the world into a flooded wasteland.

Trapped in a collapsing house with her strict prepper foster parents, Aurora is forced to live by their rules just to stay alive. Until the day they disappear without a trace.

Alone. Abandoned. And running out of time.

All Aurora has is a waterlogged scrap of paper and a name: “The Hill.” 

With looters closing in and the floodwaters rising higher each day, she’s left with one impossible choice—stay and wait for the storm to take her, or risk everything on a journey through the drowned remains of the world, to a find a place that may or not exist.

I really enjoyed this author’s middle grade book, Matt Sprouts and the Curse of Ten Broken Toes. So when I saw he was doing a YA dystopian series, I just knew I had to read it. This one is feeling a little close to reality right now, so I will have to wait a few weeks to start it. It comes out in March 2026.


Platform Decay by Martha Wells

Summary from Goodreads:

Everyone’s favorite lethal SecUnit is back in the next installment in Martha Wells’ bestselling and award-winning Murderbot Diaries series.

Having someone else support your bad decision feels kind of good.

Having volunteered to run a rescue mission, Murderbot realises that it will have to spend significant time with a bunch of humans it doesn’t know.

Including human children. Ugh.

This may well call for… eye contact!

(Emotion check: Oh, for f—)

I am so excited for another Murderbot book! I think I am going to reread all of the others before reading this one. It has been a while and I also just love spending time with these characters. It doesn’t come out until May so plenty of time.

Audiobooks

The Court of the Dead by Rick Riordan and Mark Oshiro

Summary from Goodreads:

A few months after returning from the depths of Tartarus, demigods Nico di Angelo and Will Solace agree to join Nico’s half-sister Hazel Levesque at Camp Jupiter on the West Coast. She needs their help in managing a situation that the boys inadvertently brought about: the demigods showed the monsters of the Underworld that they have options; they don’t have to be evil.

Now some of those monsters have taken up residence at Camp Jupiter to seek refuge. Nico and Will are on site, assisting Hazel when one by one monsters start disappearing from camp. A mysterious dark force is at work, and its plan is to punish all monsters for their past crimes.

Things only get worse when Nico, Will, and Hazel learn that they’re all connected to it . . .

I read the first book in this series two years ago and really enjoyed it. I just love Nico and Will and look forward to seeing what they get up to in this book. It will be nice to see Hazel again as well.

That is it for this week’s addition of Stacking the Shelves. I hope you have a wonderful and restful weekend. Until next time…

Happy Reading!

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