Seesaw Monster by Kotaro Isaka


Seesaw Monster by Kotaro Isaka is divided into two sections with very different themes, yet they’re deeply connected in ways that only become clear as the story unfolds.

In the first part, Naoto Kitayama’s mother lives alone after her husband’s death. Worried about her, Naoto moves in with his wife, Miyako Shiota. From their first meeting, Miyako and her mother-in-law, Setsu, clash endlessly. What begins as a domestic drama soon turns dark when Miyako, a former secret agent, starts suspecting her father-in-law’s death wasn’t natural and that her husband might be framed in a work-related fraud.

The second part, Spin Monster, shifts to a futuristic Japan driven by advanced technology. A tragic accident leaves one boy as the sole survivor of two families, raised by grandparents Naomasa Mito and Kagetora Hiyama, who share no bond despite their shared loss. 

Fast forward, when an AI creator is murdered after sending a mysterious message through Mito, he becomes entangled in a dangerous conspiracy that could spark a war. Hiyama, now a police detective on the case, crosses paths with Mito once again. To my surprise, Miyako, now known as Miyako Setsu, a celebrated children’s book author in her nineties reappears, tying the two worlds together in an unexpected way.

Here, AI doesn’t just think, it feels, possessing an uncanny intuition that can predict and possibly manipulate future outcomes, posing real danger to humanity. Compared to the first part, this section is far more complex and layered, filled with unreliable characters and shifting truths. A mix of family drama, mystery, and sci-fi thriller, Seesaw Monster is both emotionally charged and intellectually gripping, an inventive exploration of human connection, suspicion, and the cost of progress.


Two Kinds of Stranger by Steve Cavanagh


Elly Parker built her fame on viral videos of random acts of kindness. Everyone adored her until everything fell apart. When she walked in on her husband, James, and her best friend, Harriet, in her own apartment livestreaming it by accident, the internet turned them into the most despised couple online. Suddenly, Elly’s entire life was under a microscope.

Determined to stay off-camera, Elly quietly helps a man on crutches one afternoon. No cameras. No hashtags. Just kindness. What she doesn’t realise is that someone has been watching her closely. Two weeks later, James and Harriet are found poisoned and Elly instantly becomes the prime suspect with the clearest motive imaginable.

This becomes Eddie Flynn’s next high-profile case, and it’s about to test every trick he’s ever learned. The deeper he and his team dig, the darker the truth gets and things only spiral further when his own ex-wife faces a murder accusation too.

I love a clever courtroom drama with an antagonist who always seems one step ahead. And that final twist completely froze my brain. This was my first Steve Cavanagh even though it’s book nine in the Eddie Flynn series, and now I’m fully invested.


The Break In by Katherine Faulkner


Alice Rawthorne was enjoying a quiet evening with friends when an intruder broke into her home. In a moment of panic, she struck the teenage boy, Ezra Jones, on the back of his head with a metal stool. He later died from his injuries. Since that night, Alice has been drowning in guilt and paranoia. Her husband, Jamie, urges her to seek help, while their exhausted nanny, Becca, decides to quit after the break-in.

But everything changes when Alice receives a chilling anonymous call. Someone claims that Ezra had a reason to be in her house that night and warns her to be careful.

From there, Alice begins to dig into Ezra’s past, convinced that the break-in was no random crime. The deeper she goes, the more unsettling the truth becomes. It seems she can’t trust anyone when every revelation points closer to home. Even Alice herself starts to feel unreliable as both a murder suspect and a tabloid obsession at the center of a national scandal. And now, Jamie has gone missing.

Though the story unfolds at a slow pace, I found it a gripping psychological rollercoaster. Katherine Faulkner masterfully explores betrayal, obsession, and the blurry line between guilt and innocence. There were moments I couldn’t even trust Alice and that’s what made it so addictive.


The Phoenix Pencil Company by Alisson King


Monica Tsai sets out to help her grandmother, Wong Yun, reconnect with her long-lost cousin, Chen Meng, the one she rarely spoke of, yet shared a childhood with in the old family business, the Phoenix Pencil Company of Shanghai. It’s been over seventy years since Yun last saw Meng, and both women have lived through the Occupation of Shanghai, a time that shaped and scarred them in ways words can barely capture.

What fascinated me most was how The Phoenix Pencil Company blends magical realism with historical fiction. The secret of pencils, the mysterious ability of the women in the company to Reforge, becomes a haunting metaphor for power, memory, and creation. A pencil, after all, can write, heal, and harm at the same time.

I love how Allison King intertwines the weight of history with the importance of remembering and speaking the past. Yun and Meng are portrayed not just as survivors but as women who carried a secret that demanded silence until Monica’s search forces it into the light.

Monica, raised by her grandparents after her parents’ absence, is determined to make this reconnection happen, even as Yun’s memory slowly fades. Her journey becomes more complicated and heartfelt when she meets Louise, a stranger who fortunately crosses their path during the search. I found the queer romance between them a bit overemphasized, perhaps more for modern appeal than depth.

What truly stood out for me, though, was the bond between grandparents and granddaughter. It’s the emotional core of the story, reminding us how love and memory intertwine across generations.

Overall, The Phoenix Pencil Company is a quiet yet evocative read, a story of art, memory, and the women who learn that even something as simple as a pencil can hold the power to change lives.

The Game Is Murder by Hazell Ward



It took me more than a week to finish this book. I’m not a fan of murder-mystery games, but for a debut, Hazell Ward has put in an outstanding effort. Kudos to the author! A 2.73 Goodreads rating feels like an unpopular opinion to me. This book deserves a fairer look.

The story is packed with a lot of extraneous detail, and at times, it feels quite repetitive. As a reader, I needed to piece together the context of the game, figure out who to trust since almost no one can be, and work with the minimal clues given.

Set in 1974, the book tells the story of Lord John Verreman, a professional gambler accused of brutally beating his children’s nanny, Mrs. Sally Gardner, to death. At the time, he had separated from his wife, Antonia, who later claimed he had tried to kill her. Her testimony, however, was dismissed due to her unstable mental state. The prosecution’s case relied on circumstantial evidence, and when Lord Verreman fled before trial, he left behind only a strange letter. He has remained missing ever since, and the truth of what happened that night was never proven.

Fifty years later, Max Enygma, a former detective, receives a mysterious invitation from Lord David Verreman to attend a murder mystery party. What begins as a harmless game soon unearths the echoes of a real crime one that still haunts the Verreman's. David’s eccentricities and delusions blur the line between reality and performance, and Max realizes that solving this case could restore not only his reputation but also his belief in justice.

In the end, The Game is Murder isn’t just about uncovering who did it, but understanding how the past continues to play its hand. It’s a slow, meticulous read, but one that rewards patience with a chilling sense of satisfaction.