Review: The Mind-Warper Special (Strange Totems #1) by Corey Mariani

5/5 Stars 278 pages
Published March 16th 2021 by Widow White Publishing

This book is a real doozy. It’s one that I wasn’t sure I was going to be into at first glance, but I loved the cover, and I thought the description was intriguing so I thought I would give it a chance. And man, I’m glad I did. Not just a pretty cover, this book is one that the beginning and the ending are a little confusing, but the middle and the overall plot are just so interesting that I couldn’t get enough. A journey of finding yourself, and trying to integrate yourself into a secret society at the same time, while also running for your life and trying your best to stay alive, I think that this book would be perfect for anyone looking for a secret magical life hidden in plain sight.

Following a man named Charlie, his life is honestly a little below average as he struggles to keep his touring business from closing, and the bank from taking his bus. Plus, there’s this guy Kayak Brad, who’s just the worst all around. Everyone likes him though for some reason, and he keeps convincing everyone that Charlie is actually the worst, and it’s really tanking things for him. But then when things are finally starting to look up, a man holds Charlie at gunpoint and forces him to eat his biggest fear food, a cheese danish, causing him to throw it back up immediately. Then he’s drugged and kidnapped, and wakes up in a hotel room with a woman he’s never met before. The worst part? He can’t go twelve feet away from her without feeling like he’s been dipped in lava. Turns out that they’re bonded for life, and if they can’t break the bond within two days, they’re stuck like that. This begins an insane adventure, and his strange new life.

This book was one of those where you think you know where things are headed, but then it takes things for an entirely different loop, and you’re just like, what just happened? Did I read that right? Also, there are a lot of terms that are a little difficult to remember, but they get easier as time goes on and you get further into the book. Basically Charlie finds out that he and the woman, and everyone after them, are magic users, but not in the usual sense. There are many kinds of magic users, different species but they still look human. The magic they use, they have to use as a bonded pair, travelling through totem objects that hold memories and certain points in time. There’s also potions that they have made out of blood and emotions that cure certain diseases, and even huge tapeworms that feed from choices.

Photo by Josh Hild on Pexels.com

I really enjoyed reading this book. The characters, although I couldn’t tell you what they look like, were easy to imagine in my own head. The world they live in is just like our own, except for the magical aspects, but it was just as immersive as any other. And once I started it, I didn’t want to put it down. I finished it in around a day, and I didn’t regret a minute of it. I’m really interested to see what happens in the next book, seeing as this is the beginning to a series. Something interesting though is that it really gave me Refraction vibes for some reason. I can’t even begin to explain why, but I just had that book in the back of my head when I was reading this. Maybe it’s the way it was written, maybe it’s the characters, maybe it’s just the storyline. Either way, I loved that book, and I loved this one too.

If you’d like to grab a copy, you can here!

And if you’d like to keep up with the author, you can here!

Thanks for reading! Hope you’re doing well, and staying safe, and not getting kidnapped and bonded to a stranger.

Disclaimer: Some of the links in this post are affiliate links. We are a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, a means for us to earn fees by linking to Amazon.ca and affiliated sites.

Book Birthday Review: Assassin’s Creed Valhalla – Geirmund’s Saga by Matthew J. Kirby

Something I have never really explored before is the world of the Assassins Creed books. As a huge fan of the games, though I haven’t played the last three that have come out, I couldn’t wait to get my hands on this story, because I just thought there’s no way I couldn’t like it, right? It’s part of the franchise! I have to love it. And even though it wasn’t exactly what I was expecting, I did thoroughly enjoy it. A mighty tale of Vikings, war, and of course the wins and losses of life, I couldn’t get enough.

3/5 Stars 448 pages
Published March 2nd 2021 by Aconyte

Following a man named Geirmund, I really feel like we get to see him grow throughout the years depicted in this story, first as a young man, and by the end he’s a strong and charismatic warrior. He knows what he wants, and even though it may be difficult or scary to get it, he’s willing to put everything he has up to fate, and power through it. Whatever happens at the end is meant to happen, and he’s perfectly fine with that. He’s very brave, I guess is what I’m trying to say here. Beginning with a battle between a pack of wolves with his twin brother, he’s determined to bring him home to heal after being badly wounded. Though many people judge him for saving his twin’s life, he knows it was the right thing to do, and he’s not going to feel bad about that. That being said, however, he wants a different life for himself than his father, and he’s willing to give up everything he knows to get that life.

I really loved the lore that was put into this book, though I didn’t know about hardly any of it, I liked getting to know even a sneak peek about it. That being said, I did have quite a lot of difficulty with the words I didn’t recognize. I felt like I couldn’t fully immerse myself into the book because of that, but it was still an epic read. It was full of blood and battles and bravery. What more could you ask for from a book about Vikings? I feel proud to have known Geirmund even just for this book, and I’m sure it’s something I’ll think about for a while after finishing it. I also really enjoyed the mix of worlds, Pagan and Christian, and learning the differences. I thought that the characters were really lifelike, though old world, and the environment they lived in was very easy to imagine, which is something I always appreciate. I had a hard time picturing the characters, however.

Photo by Meik Schmidt on Pexels.com

Overall, I did enjoy this book. I’m able to look past the things that I didn’t love about it, because I did have a good time reading it. I’m just saying that if you’re not completely versed in Viking history and culture that things might be a little confusing for you, like they were for me. If you’re looking for an epic tale of a man’s life from son to warrior king, than this is something you should check out. Just don’t expect it to be like a typical Assassin’s creed game, with the sneaking around and the wrist blade and the missing finger, and most of all with the aliens. This is just an epic tale of Vikings battling and looting and killing, and taking over new areas by whatever means necessary.

Photo by Fatme Ismailova on Pexels.com

If you’d like to grab a copy, you can here!

And if you’d like to keep up with the author, you can here!

Thanks for reading! Hope you’re doing well and feeling as strong as the people in this book!

Disclaimer: Some of the links in this post are affiliate links. We are a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, a means for us to earn fees by linking to Amazon.ca and affiliated sites.

Fae Child (The Fae Child Trilogy #1) by Jane-Holly Meissner Review

5/5 Stars 220 pages
Published December 15th 2020 by Inkshares

Here’s another one of those books that I finally finished, and thought to myself, why didn’t I read this sooner? With the same old winter and summer courts in the land of the fairies, this book gives a unique twists on the fantasy when a young child is mistakenly pulled through a portal, and left in her place is a changeling. Focusing on both sides of the portal, one with the girl and her journey back home, and the other with her father, an exiled elf from said land who’ll stop at nothing to get her back before it’s too late.

What I didn’t expect from this book was how childlike and innocent it managed to stay throughout the story, whether it was battles with goblins or wolfs or other wild creatures or on the other side of it, as a father battles his own feelings trying to pretend that the changeling is in fact the daughter he knows is missing to save his wife from finding out the unbelievable truth about the whole situation. Though the characters went through some stressful times in the story, I didn’t feel stressed out reading it, which is something I really appreciate especially with my headspace lately. I couldn’t ask for more from this book.

Photo by Mike on Pexels.com

The worlds that it’s weaved into are really easy to imagine, and the characters are loveable even when they’re being a touch frustrating throughout the story. I really couldn’t put it down once I started it, and I think my favourite characters were probably Foster, a young child guardian of the summer court, and of course Abbie, our main character. I’d love to get to know them better in the future. Since this is a trilogy, I can’t wait to see what’s next in the storyline. Will the characters be older? Will it be completely different characters in the same world? Why aren’t half elves really allowed to exist in either world? These are just some of the many questions I’d love to have answered in the next installment.

Photo by Tatiana Syrikova on Pexels.com

Overall, if you’re looking for an exciting story built out of an old classic, than I highly recommend checking out this book. It has a beautiful cover that would make a lovely addition to any bookshelf, mine included, and I think really anyone from young teen to adult would enjoy this, and I can’t see any reason why they wouldn’t, unless they’re just really not into fantasy like this.

If you’d like to grab a copy, you can do so here through my Amazon Associates link!

And if you’d like to keep up with the author, you can here on Twitter!

Thanks for reading! I hope you have a great day, and are doing well.

Sleepless (Bird of Stone #1) by Tracey Ward Review

5/5 Stars 373 Pages
Published August 12th 2013

After a long break from reading and a depression spell, an amazing book like this was just what I needed. What seems like any other ordinary story of a girl and a boy is actually something beautiful and addicting. Dreams becoming reality, lives being torn apart and rebuilt, and at it’s heart, a story of love and two people finding each other no matter what. And it’s everything I could ever want it to be.

The story follows two people, a girl named Alexia with a sleeping disorder that causes her to slip, or basically teleport herself to wherever she’s dreaming about. After losing her parents, they didn’t die they just decided that they didn’t want her to be apart of their lives at just sixteen, she lives with her older sister who’s deathly worried about her when she wakes up some days to find her missing. Sometimes she’s only gone a night, but sometimes she’s gone for a week, stuck in some frightening city that she’s not familiar with, or even stuck out in the wilderness with nothing but what she’s worn to bed. Good thing she started strapping her phone and some cash to her leg.

Photo by Francesco Ungaro on Pexels.com

The other character is a boy named Nick, who’s come from a military family, and who’s not very close to his mother after deciding he wants to be apart of a very prestigious and important branch of the military, one that saves people and risks their own lives in the process. He’s going through the training for most of the story, but there’s also something different about him. He’s not able to feel fear. The only thing he’s really truly scared of is a nightmare that he has often, one that Alexia also has.

The two find themselves intertwined one day when Alex and her sister are in Florida for a mini vacation, and out of nowhere Nick pops up, clearly drowning from something, but he’s just appeared out of thin air. After that event, they begin to meet in their dreams more often than not, and start to bond. But everything goes even deeper when Alexia tries to dig deep into why she is the way she is, and it’s unlike anything the two could have ever expected.

Photo by James Wheeler on Pexels.com

This story is amazing and exciting and heartfelt. I really couldn’t get enough of it. It’s books like these that really make me want to read 24/7, and after finding out that this is actually a series, I can’t wait until I can get my hands on the next book. The characters are so lifelike despite their obvious differences from our real world, that you could almost believe that they’re real people. The story was gripping and everything I could have hoped for, and more. If you’re looking for something to pull you out of your normal book rut, then I highly recommend checking this out if you get the chance.

If you’d like to grab a copy, you can here, through my Amazon Associates link.

And if you’d like to keep up with the author, you can do so here on Twitter!

Thanks for reading! I hope you’re having a great day.

Billionaire Island by Mark Russell, Steve Pugh, & Chris Chuckry Review

4/5 Stars 144 pages
Published November 11th 2020 by Ahoy Comics

I’m going to be honest, I haven’t read as many comics and graphic novels this year as I have in other years. No particular reason, just not as many have caught my eye lately. This one however, is very different than the usual ones I would pick up, horror or supernatural or superhuman comics. Billionaire Island is a story about what would happen if a massive corporation wanted to control the world’s population by not only creating a deadly sterilization virus, but also if they took the world’s richest people and stuck them all on a floating man made island away from the chaos. But as they’re going to find out, they can’t run and hide forever.

I really enjoyed the topic of this comic because I love apocalyptic fiction, and I love violent scenes in comics. The story was amazing and I really didn’t want to put it down once I finally got around to reading it. The characters ranged from kind of strange, chaotically neutral, and then just the diabolical richest of the rich. Sometimes I think that rich people really think like this, just without a care for anyone else in the world, and this book really takes it to the absolute extreme. Locking people up at their work station so that they don’t kill themselves, putting people that they don’t want around in a human sized hamster cage to live out the rest of their lives, and even letting a literal dog run their world. Who knew all of these things could go together so well?

And at the midst of the story, a man who’s lost everything he cares about in life, just trying to expose the billionaires for what they really are. And taking down anyone he has to in the process. He’s bad ass, and he’s ready to get his revenge. I really liked reading this story, and there isn’t really anything bad to say about it, at least in my opinion. I would say if you think you’d be into something like this, definitely grab a copy and check it out for yourself! I’d love to have one on my bookshelf.

You can grab one here, through my Amazon associates link.

And if you’d like to keep up with the creator’s on Twitter, you can here.

Mark Russell

Steve Pugh

Chris Chuckry

Thanks for reading! Hope you have a great day.

Siena (The Forestfolk #1) by Zoe Blessing Review

A bit different than the usual paranormal books I read, Siena is a story of a fifteen year old girl who’s only known captivity her whole life. As a child, she discovered her ability to heal, and after her loud mouth half brother blabbed about it, her mother was executed for hiding her secret, and she’s been a slave ever since. She often wonders if this is all life has for her.

5/5 Stars 186 pages
Published April 21st 2017 by Pennydragon Press

Told through the first person viewpoint, we really get the nitty gritty of Siena’s life and slavery in the beginning of the book. Pushed around by everyone in her compound, they use her powers and don’t care about her health or safety. She knows why people keep their abilities a secret, being called an horrible names. Little does she know that everyone else is just jealous of her power. 

One night, her compound is raided by a neighbouring one while their warriors are out scouting. They take down everyone in their path. Except for Siena, who narrowly escapes with her life. She finds a new home and a new life with the Forestfolk, originally a refuge camp in the middle of the woods. They accept her and her gift with welcoming arms. But bad things are happening to the people that were captured from her original camp, and she can’t stand around and let it be. She has to do something about it.

Photo by Dominika Roseclay on Pexels.com

I’m going to be honest, I wasn’t really sure what I was getting into with this book, but once I started it I completely devoured it, finishing it in just a few hours. I couldn’t get enough. The kindness in the hearts of these characters, even though they’re fictional, gives me hope for the people in our real lives. It’s a story of blossoming in the right conditions, and doing whatever you can to stay there. And if something bad happens, just keep going, and it’ll be okay eventually. You’ll find people who love you for you, and I think that’s the moral of the story.

If you’re looking for something very different in the way of magical powers and the woods, then this is the book for you. I can’t wait to get my hands on the second book, and really just suck myself into that one as well. This book really taught me a lesson that I hope stays with me for a while, if not forever, at least.

If you’d like to grab a copy, you can do so here, through my Amazon Associates link.

And if you’d like to keep up with the author, you can here on Twitter!

Thanks for reading! Hope you’re doing well and staying safe.

Resist (Breathe #2) by Sarah Crossan Review

4/5 Stars 368 pages
Published October 8th 2013 by Greenwillow Books

Can you believe that I read the first book to this duo over five years ago? Because I can’t. That being said, I did kind of forget what the whole thing was about, but that didn’t stop me from deep diving into this one. By the end of the book, I was all caught up, and remembered probably half of the other one. That’s not important, though. I really need to keep up with my books and remember to finish things like these before it gets to be too long. That being said, I really enjoyed reading this sequel to Breathe.

Following the same characters from the first book, we see Alina, Bea, Quinn and Ronan’s lives as they try to keep on living after The Grove has been nuked, and most of the characters have been pushed out of the life saving pod, one of the only places with air in their known world. But it’s still run by a corrupt minister and his men, who segregate the rich from the poor, and divide the available air accordingly.

Photo by Helena Lopes on Pexels.com

When the book begins, Alina and her friends are on a boat with some drifters that she’s met in the last story, and made a team with. They’re determined to get to Sequoia before their air tanks run out, though some of them are very sceptical, and one in particular ends her life because she feels so hopeless about the subject. They think that they’re the only ones left of their group. Bea, Quinn and Jazz are doing the same, but injured and hiding in the ruins. Ronan is back in the pod after the rebellion, his mind made up completely differently than his sisters, and that causes a lot of friction. Either way, all the characters are in very different situations, each thinking that they’re the only ones left.

Photo by Stefan Stefancik on Pexels.com

Action packed, rebellious and a struggle to survive, the characters go through horrifying things from forced pairings to war, and even torture. Some of the things I couldn’t believe were happening, that characters could be so evil, but it was so nice to finally reach the end of the book and see what happened in the end. Though this book took a day longer than it usually would take me to read a book of this size, that wasn’t because of the story. Once I was in, I was in, and I didn’t want to put it down.

Photo by Pixabay on Pexels.com

If you’re looking for a book about strong teenagers just trying to save the world no matter what their individual beliefs are, then this is the book for you. I love the post apocalyptic world with no air that they live in, because it’s a lot more unique than other post apocalyptic books I’ve read. I never had thought about the possibility of a world without plants or air, but now I have a clear picture in my mind. If you haven’t checked out the first book, I recommend that as well before this one.

Here’s a link to where you can grab a copy for yourself, if you’d like to, through my Amazon Associates.

If you’d like to keep up with the author, you can do so here.

Thanks for reading! Hope you’re doing well and staying safe. As always, I’m down to chat about this book and whatever else you’d like to talk about in the comments.

The Midnight Bargain by C.L. Polk Review

Now this is the kind of romance book I can really get into. Unlike the other one I read lately, I didn’t feel too immature to read this, even though I’m twenty three years old. There wasn’t any awkward scenes that made me uncomfortable to read, laughing too hard at parts I really should have skimmed over, or anything like that. This book was pure and amazing, a story of fighting for women’s rights, even though the world they were in was completely imaginary and full of magic. The romance was innocent and full, and it just really made me feel good to read. I couldn’t get enough of this book, and if more fantasy romance novels are like this, than I really should check more out.

5/5 Stars 384 pages
Published October 13th 2020 by Erewhon

Following an eighteen year old woman named Beatrice, we first meet her as she’s on her way to get ready for a season of awkward first dates, which are supposed to end with an arranged marriage. Women are used as bargaining chips, no matter how powerful their magic is, and it doesn’t matter what they want, because they’re only supposed to be used to make their family proud by doing two things: bringing money into their home from marrying a wealthy husband, and having as many children as she can. Not a very happy life for them, but what does it matter? That’s what’s not important. The fathers just think, I guess you should have been born a boy then, if you wanted a different life for yourself. That is, until Beatrice comes around with her insane amount of power, trying to find a way around the arranged marriage that haunts her. The only thing, is that the schools refuse to teach women, and even deny that women could have powers at all. They’re forced to wear a metal collar from the time that they’re married to the end of menopause, that takes their powers from them, making life dull and worthless, aside from getting pregnant and seeing their children grow. But that’s not the kind of life that Beatrice wants for herself, or anyone else.

Photo by fotografierende on Pexels.com

After collecting books with hidden messages for women trying to become mages before they’re married off, the only way to get around the horrible life that they’re forced into, she finds the one she needs, but another more powerful woman has her eye on it too. The two agree to pretend to be friends and teach each other what they know, and end up becoming actual friends along the way. And even though Beatrice has wanted nothing to do with marriage and love, only magic, she ends up falling in love too. But that’s when things start to get complicated. Her horrible father wants money, and that’s all he can think of. Her mother is a shell of who she used to be, having to wear the collar for so long. And her sister is obsessed with the arranged marriages, claiming that it’s the best thing that could ever happen, and really just hating that her sister despises everything about them. But she really doesn’t see the big picture.

Photo by Asad Photo Maldives on Pexels.com

I have to say, I’m not usually into these kinds of books, with their way of speaking, the topic of magic, but I’ve been getting more and more into them. The romance label made me worried I wouldn’t completely love it, but I was worried for nothing. I was obsessed with this book from the moment I picked it up, and I really couldn’t get enough. Something about Beatrice standing up for women’s rights really made me feel good about not only myself, but her and the women around her. She just wants to change the world, and will stop at nothing until she gets that, and I really respect that about her. Though she is young, five years younger than me, she really is a much stronger person than I am, than I could ever be. And that’s why I loved this book so much. In her short life, she’s gone through a lot, and was still able to accomplish what she accomplished by the end of the book. What an amazing person. If more fantasy romance books are like this one, than I want to read them all. And that’s really amazing.

If you love books about standing up for yourself, and others around you, and really just women’s rights in general, than you’re going to fall in love with this book as much as I did, even if you think you’re not going to be into it, like I did. Please give this book a chance if you see it, I don’t think anyone would regret it. I can’t wait to get a paper copy for myself and let it class up my bookshelf.

If you’d like a copy, you can grab one here through my Amazon Associates link!!

And if you’d like to keep up with the author, you can do so here!

Thanks for reading!

The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (The Hunger Games #0) by Suzanne Collins Review

5/5 Stars 439 pages
Published May 19th 2020 by Scholastic Press

Sometimes a prequel to a series you read years and years ago comes out, and you just have to read the other books again, but you can’t. And that’s a problem. After a solid nine year break, I was immediately sucked back into that world of The Hunger Games, and I think that’s amazing. I can still remember a ton about the books after that long. This time, however, it’s 63 years before the first book, following a teenage President Snow.

Now this is a book that kind of messes with you. It shows you the sad parts of his life before he was the harsh ruler he is in the rest of the series. He went through a rebellion himself, the districts bombing the capitol and reducing their impressive home to rubble and even cannibalism at it’s worst times. He’s just a teenager going to school, trying to keep his, his cousin and his grandma’am’s home alive and well, and eating as much cabbage soup as he can. That is, until everything changes, and the first mentor’s in the games are created.

At only the tenth games, the districts don’t pay attention to what’s going on past the reaping, and the other citizens of the capitol, although slowly regaining their wealth, are turned off by the brutality of it all, without the showboating that we know in the rest of the series. It’s as basic as basic can be, bringing the children into the arena, and tortured and starved before that. That’s when the gamemakers have the idea to bring mentors into it, choosing the best and brightest students of the academy to do it.

Photo by Jan Kopu0159iva on Pexels.com

Coriolanus is chosen to represent the female candidate from district 12, a frail songbird of a girl named Lucy Gray. He’s told to welcome her to their fine city, but when he reaches the train he realizes that he’s the only one there, and that they’re treated worse than wild animals. They’re brought in on an animal train, chained together like prisoners, and then forced to live and starve in the old abandoned monkey house in the zoo. He wants to change that, after all, they’re people too, even if they’re going to be forced to kill each other in a short week. 

I say this book messes with you, because it wants you to think that the future President Snow is a good person, despite his actions in the rest of the series. But his true colours show eventually, and if you’re me, you’re really feeling duped by the end of the book. I read this thick book in less than two days, if that shows you how much I was into it. I couldn’t get enough, and I can’t wait to get the rest of the series out of the storage locker to re read it. Definitely check it out if you get the chance.

If you’d like to grab a copy, you can do so here through my link with Amazon Associates!

Thanks for reading! Hope you’re doing well and staying safe.

Echoes of War (Echoes Trilogy #1) by Cheryl Campbell Review

5/5 Stars 400 pages
Published September 10th 2019 by SparkPress

Here’s another book I knew was going to be right up my alley before I even started it. Following a young woman in her 20’s named Dani, it shows her world, one torn apart by war, as an alien military has ravaged Earth for the last few decades. Though the Echoes, an alien race who had integrated themselves into the human population for hundreds of years, were living just fine before their military counterparts began trying to extinguish the human race, everyone opposing the Wardens are being torn apart. It’s all anyone can do to just barely survive.

Photo by cottonbro on Pexels.com

Living with her uncle Jace, Dani’s life as a scavenger has been hard. Always watching her back, she’s risking her life every day just trying to go out and steal food. It’s a little help that her boyfriend is part of the military defending their territory from the Wardens, but they’re not innocent either. They scoop up anyone they can to recruit them to fight for them, including other scavengers like Dani. Whether they’re an Echo or not. And even though the Wardens are Echo Military, they do horrible experiments to their own people and are genocidal against the humans, which is a lot worse than just being forced into the Military. No one can win this war, it seems like.

Photo by Pixabay on Pexels.com

That is, until Dani comes along. After losing her life, she regenerates as a young ten year old girl and must grow up all over again. Usually Echoes keep there memories with them when they regenerate, but Dani’s different. Her and Jace relocate to a small town and start fresh there. And Dani’s determined to change the way the world is, because she’s not the only one sick of the war.

Photo by Jeswin Thomas on Pexels.com

This book was amazing, and like I said, I knew from reading the description that I would love it immediately. It’s action packed, heart and gut wrenching, and the story isn’t one that’s used up and repeated. As you might know if you have followed my blog for a while, or even if you just read my blog name, I love books about aliens and/or the apocalypse. Everything about them intrigues me, and this book was no exception. I read it in just under a day, and I’m very thankful that I have the second book in the trilogy ready to go.  I can’t wait to start reading it, and I have high hopes for it because of how much I loved this one.

Photo by Michael Herren on Pexels.com

If you’re into books about aliens living among humans, and also a war against those same aliens on a war torn Earth, then this is the book for you. And if you don’t, I highly suggest giving this one a chance. I just loved it so much that I want everyone I know to check it out. It’s not so gory that it makes you shy away from it, but it’s still action packed and interesting. The characters are easy to imagine, and somehow they’re very realistic although their world is nothing like our own. I just can’t get enough. I hope we get to see more of Brody, Oliver, Dani, Mary, Hattie, Miles and everyone else I love in the next book, and I’m going to start it right after this.

If you’d like a copy, you can grab one here.

And here’s a link to the author’s Instagram, if you’d like to keep up with them!

Thanks for reading! Hope you’re having a great day and are staying safe.