Christmas Corpse by Mona Marple

A fun and cute murder mystery! Never read one of those before but I enjoyed it a lot, definitely going to read more in the series.

The story is a simple caper, really: An outsider to the magical Christmas town of Candy Cane Hollow, Holly Wood (yes, like that), happens in just as the local doctor’s receptionist gets poisoned. As she is the main character, we know she didn’t do it, but it then becomes her purpose in town to track down the real killer; her benefactor Mrs. Claus (yes, like that) has become the prime suspect and Holly makes it her job to clear the name of the kindly woman.

With a plentiful cast of Christmas-y characters and a cozy aesthetic, Holly does figure out the mystery (no spoilers) and gets to enjoy a merry Christmas with Santa and his family.

I’m new to the “cozy mystery” genre, being recommended this book (inadvertently) by one of my favorite YouTubers, Peter Monn. Despite my unfamiliarity, I did enjoy this quite a lot. There are some criticisms one could levy at the short novel, but it was a fun and cute romp and everything ends happily for almost everyone (except the poor murder victim’s family, I suppose).

I liked the characters a lot and I’m definitely going to read the rest of the series, if I can find it.

Thoughts on Weightlessness by Ari Drennen

Sometimes you read a poem and you can feel the author reaching through the book to hold your hand for just a moment and you understand each other perfectly across the pages.

This poetry collection explores the poet’s early transition (she is transgender) and both her and others’ reactions to it, as well as some other life events she underwent during that time. It made me cry multiple times, which I consider a good showing for poetry.

I recommend it for anyone who likes autobiographical poetry or trans lived experience, though you may want to mind the content warnings.