Mastura by A. Samad Ismail

Membaca koleksi cerpen Mastura karya A. Samad Ismail terasa seperti terseret masuk ke sebuah mesin masa yang penuh warna, getir dan humor halus. Setiap cerpen menangkap ragam manusia dengan begitu tepat. 
1. Belum Baik-Baik Lagi, menghiburkan dengan pasangan pengantin baru yang masih malu-malu hingga keluarga terpaksa campur tangan. 
2. Ke Rumah Cucu pula menyentuh hati tentang seorang pesara, Encik Murad sanggup menggunting rambut orang kampung demi tambang ke Penang demi kasih pada cucunya.
3. Pak Yak Mahu Kahwin pula mencuit hati dengan kisah lelaki lembut yang diejek jiran tetapi tetap memasang impian berumahtangga. 
4. Rumah Pak Haji Harun membawa kita menyaksikan ketabahan masyarakat ketika pendudukan Jepun. 
5. Mastura mengisahkan kegelisahan wanita 40-an yang bergelut dengan rindu pada masa mudanya dan mula meragui suami serta dirinya sendiri.
6. Kau Mesti Sunat, Kata Bapa mencuit nostalgia zaman kanak-kanak dan pantang-larang dulu yang hendak bersunat. 
7. Puthu menyentuh sisi kehidupan buruh pengutip sampah yang akhirnya berani memikirkan masa depan dan mungkin cinta. 
8. Dongeng menyorot tentang Ramlah yang berjaya menjadi guru walau keluarganya tidak meletakkan harapan tinggi, namun cintanya ditentang. 
9. Amelia pula memaparkan sisi pahit suami yang makan luar, tema malang ini masih relevan. 
10. Mandi Kolam menampilkan remaja dengan kolam yang tidak mahu dikongsi dengan jirannya yang lain.

Ini karya keenam ASI yang aku baca dan keseluruhan koleksi ini padat dengan humor, kritik sosial, dan renungan yang masih relevan. ASI membuktikan sekali lagi bahawa karya klasik tak pernah hilang bisanya. Terima kasih @bukufixi atas naskhah yang terbaik ini. 

I'll Make A Spectacle Of You by Beatrice Winifred Iker


For a debut novel, the author delivers a captivating piece of storytelling. The story begins with Zora Robinson, a student with a degree in African and African American Studies. Passionate about local history, conjure traditions, and highly skilled in defensive magic, Zora is determined to excel in her thesis project. Her advisor, Dr. Grant, sees her dedication and gives her a diary belonging to a librarian who once disappeared. The same eerie motif connects back to the childhood trauma that fractured Zora’s relationship with her sister.

People are drawn into the woods by strange cries echoing through the trees, sounds only they can hear. The tension in the woods made me feel genuinely uneasy. To Zora, this is not just fear but an opportunity to uncover untold stories and contribute something meaningful to the folklore she studies.

Her investigation leads her to The Keepers of the Beast, a secret society formed around 1877 by Bricksbury’s founders. The community, shaped by struggles involving education, class, and race, endured relentless white violence. To protect Bricksbury and Jonesborough’s Black population, they relied on both faith and Hoodoo magic. What began with foxes eventually escalated into something darker involving human sacrifice.

As Zora digs deeper, she uncovers the truth behind the students who have gone missing for years. Her mission becomes more than documenting history. She seeks justice for the victims who were never heard.

I rate this novel 4.5 stars. The plot, the atmosphere, and the ending all work together to bring the story to life. My only complaint is a minor technical detail, but overall, this book is gripping from start to finish.

The Hallmarked Man by Robert Galbraith

At nearly 900 pages, The Hallmarked Man is a long but rewarding read. When I first picked it up, I didn’t even bother to read the blurb. Only later did I realize that Robert Galbraith is a pseudonym for J. K. Rowling, and this is the eighth book in the Cormoran Strike series. I’m grateful I gave it a chance and now I can’t wait for the ninth installment.

The story begins when Decima Mullins contacts the detective agency run by Cormoran Strike and Robin Ellacott. She wants answers about a body discovered months earlier in the vault of a silver shop. The police believed it to be William Wright, who turned out to be using the false identity of a convicted armed robber named Jason Knowles. The police were unable to obtain DNA confirmation because the body had been heavily mutilated. But Decima is convinced the victim was her young lover, Rupert Fleetwood, who vanished at the same time.

Strike and Robin suspect the murder might be tied to a priceless collection of Masonic treasures recently purchased by the silver shop. The body’s ritualistic wounds and the hallmark engraved on its back suggest a symbolic and sinister motive.

As the investigation unfolds, Strike and Robin navigate a maze of false identities, possible suspects, and personal struggles. Strike, worn down by old enemies and unspoken feelings for Robin, struggles to stay focused. Meanwhile, Robin faces the lingering trauma of her last undercover case. Together, they make an extraordinary team, both flawed and deeply human yet utterly compelling.

Rowling’s storytelling is as sharp and immersive as ever. Her attention to detail, complex plotting, and emotional depth make this a standout read. Every question finds its answer by the end, leaving me completely satisfied and eager for what comes next. 5⭐

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.