Ella’s the protagonist of 'The Grimrose Girls,' but the book thrives on its ensemble energy. She’s the outsider who stumbles into Grimrose Academy’s nightmare, but the real magic (or horror) comes from how her story collides with Nani, Rory, and Yuki’s. Ella’s smart and resourceful, but what I love is how she doesn’t overshadow the others—their curses are just as visceral, their pain just as sharp. The group’s dynamic shifts from camaraderie to suspicion, and Ella’s often the glue holding them together… until she isn’t. It’s a brilliant take on how 'main character' status can blur when everyone’s drowning in the same tragedy.
The main character in 'The Grimrose Girls' is Ella, a girl who finds herself entangled in a dark and mysterious boarding school where fairy tale curses seem all too real. She’s not your typical protagonist—Ella carries this quiet intensity, like she’s constantly trying to piece together a puzzle no one else sees. The way she navigates the eerie atmosphere of Grimrose Academy feels so relatable, especially when she teams up with her friends to unravel secrets that hit way too close to home. There’s something about her determination mixed with vulnerability that makes her stand out.
What’s fascinating is how Ella’s story intertwines with the other girls—Nani, Rory, and Yuki—each with their own cursed legacies. It’s not just Ella’s perspective driving the narrative, but how their collective struggles create this haunting tapestry of friendship and survival. The book plays with the idea of who the 'main' character really is, since everyone’s fate feels equally pivotal. Ella’s journey is gripping, but it’s the group dynamic that gives the story its heart (and chills). I couldn’t put it down once their bonds started fraying under pressure.
Ella takes center stage in 'The Grimrose Girls,' but calling her the sole main character feels reductive. The novel’s brilliance lies in its ensemble cast—Ella, Nani, Rory, and Yuki—each carrying their own weight in the plot. Ella’s the lens we first peek through, a newcomer to Grimrose Academy’s cursed halls, but the others aren’t just sidekicks. Nani’s fiery defiance, Rory’s tragic elegance, and Yuki’s quiet desperation all weave into a narrative that’s as much about collective trauma as it is about individual survival.
Honestly, it’s the way their friendships crack and reform under the weight of secrets that hooked me. Ella’s role is crucial, but the story wouldn’t hit half as hard without the others. The book almost feels like a subversion of traditional 'chosen one' tropes—here, everyone’s cursed, everyone’s fighting, and no one gets to sit on the sidelines. It’s messy, heartbreaking, and so damn refreshing.
2026-03-15 15:50:36
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When Tawny, a were-cat hybrid is called back to the Kingdom of Cambiador, by her estranged grandfather. Tawny can't help but be curious as to why he would want to meet her after all these years of disowning her late mother.
*****
Tawny:
I finally found a place where I felt like I belonged. Only I have never felt so unwanted in my life. The mysterious and sexy Kolby Crimson is my fated mate, yet he has been promised to another. Bound by a contract he has no intention of breaking.
A team-building exercise turns into a nightmare trip.
Secrets of Cambiador come to light and a night with a pride pack tilts my world even further from its axis. Only one person can get me out of the mess I find myself in. The question is, will he step up to the challenge and save me? His mate, or will he submit to the kingdom's laws and leave me in the den of Lions?
The dead don't lie. At Nocturne Prep, everyone else does.
Where Alpha heirs and supernatural elites sharpen their claws before ruling the world, accidents don't happen. So when Luna heiress Seraphina Vale plunges to her death, no one dares question it. Not at this school.
Rae Vale spent her life hidden as an Alpha's omega bastard daughter. Now she's dragged from obscurity to replace her dead half-sister. Wearing Seraphina's crest, sleeping in her bed, drowning in vicious whispers. She's a fraud with a target on her back.
To Professor Cassian Rhys, she is the reincarnation of his first love and his second-chance mate. To Luca Ashborne, the untamed Alpha prince with cruel games and an iron will, she’s a threat. To Kieran Duskmoor, the elusive bloodborn who wears apathy like armor, she’s pure fascination. These boys rule the academy. They want to unravel her or bury her.
But Rae isn't here to play nice. Not when Seraphina's death was murder. Someone wants to finish what they started when Rae starts to get too close to the truth, and Rae refuses to be next.
At Nocturne Prep, loyalty is rare, power is everything, and love might be the deadliest weapon of all.
On her eighteenth birthday, Aria Veyne’s life is destroyed by a single burst of ancient magic.
Kidnapped by powerful elders and taken to Ebonveil Academy, a school built to monitor the world’s most dangerous supernaturals, Aria quickly learns one terrifying truth. No one knows what she is.
Not even her.
But the moment her powers awakened, three heirs felt it.
Archer Nightblade, the powerful werewolf heir, fights instincts that demand he protect her. Lucien Blackwell, the dangerously composed vampire heir, hides a hunger that has nothing to do with blood. Jasper Ashwyck, the charming fae heir, can’t decide if Aria is his greatest curiosity… or his greatest weakness.
The closer Aria gets to them, the stronger her mysterious magic becomes. As secrets buried for centuries begin to surface, the elders realize they may have made a catastrophic mistake.
Because Aria isn’t just another student.
She may be the one person capable of changing the supernatural world forever.
And if the darkness hunting her doesn’t claim her first, the girl with violet eyes just might.
Anastasia Gastiello, is not your typical girl. She was once the meanest, baddest, most cruel cheer captain in Grimsborrow high. That changed after the accident. When she woke up with no memories from the first day she entered high school, covered in her blood with the dead bodies of her family scattered around her.
Anastasia isn’t the main suspect, no in fact the police know that she didn’t do it because her injuries show that she’s supposed to be dead. But somehow she survived. As Anastasia tries to get back into her school routine, while the people she bullied seek out revenge, HE shows up to save her.
Griffin Masters scares her. This big black furred wolf hybrid is dangerous, and should not be trusted. But he won’t leave her alone, and seems obsessed with helping her uncover her memories of that night. He is the bad boy every parent warns you about.
They begin their investigation in private, away from the cops and some very powerful people who are hell bent on ensuring she never regains her memory, and that the truth about what happened to her family never gets out.
Anastasia desperately wants answers, and the closer she gets the more she realizes that the truth might not be worth discovering after all.
The dagger goes in before she understands her consort is the one holding it.
———
My consort is the one holding the blade.
I fall into the Forbidden Zone with his voice in my ear — *You were never going to be the queen this kingdom needed, Rose is everything you are not* — and every stroke downward the Hollow drinks my color, my voice, my breath. As I sink through the dark I understand, in a rising tide of memory I can no longer outrun, what I refused to see: my cousin Rose has been his lover for three years. My uncle Rick has been my father's killer for seven months.
I hit the Hollow's floor among the skeletons of seven women who came before me. I should die there. A black pearl pulses in the dark and asks me one question. I say yes.
What rises from the Forbidden Zone is not the princess they pushed.
My scales burn blood-red shot through with molten gold and piercing teal, edged in obsidian. My voice shatters coral when I choose. I can drain a merfolk's power until their scales grey to driftwood, and I can shift any being between human and merfolk form.
But the pearl hungers. Black veins creep across my chest with every life I take.
And the throne I want back? It was never the prize.
It was the trap.
———
Will Irene become the villainess her kingdom fears? Or will she remember the girl they buried long enough to choose what kind of queen to be?
And the older sister who has been waiting two hundred years to use her — what happens when Irene decides the family she was born into is not the one worth dying for?
For five years, Mira poured her obsession into The Reckoning of Caelen Mors—a dark fantasy about a ruthless duke and the woman he becomes dangerously fixated on. At 2:47 AM, exhausted and alone, she died at her laptop. Her final words still glowed on the screen: "Duke Caelen finally showed her his true face. It was nothing like she imagined."
She woke as Isadora Vess—the secondary character from her manuscript—in a silk bed, in a monster's house, with servants calling her by a name she'd invented.
The problem: Mira remembers writing this world. She knows every dark secret. She knows how the story should end. Except her memories are fractured. The manuscript was never finished. And the characters have evolved without her input, making choices she never wrote, saying things she never scripted.
Worse—Duke Caelen knows she's different. He's been waiting for her. Across seventeen timelines, he's seen her arrive at this exact moment. And in three of them, everything burned.
Now Isadora must navigate a world she created but no longer controls, surrounded by men who each want to use her—a charming prince offering escape, a dark count offering power, and a villain offering the only thing that might be true: the answer to why she's here, and what happens when an author gets trapped in her own story.
Because in every version where Isadora arrives, the empire falls. And Caelen has been waiting a very long time to see which ending she'll choose this time.
I recently dove into 'Grimoire Girl' and fell headfirst into its quirky, magical world! The protagonist, Hana, is this brilliantly awkward teen who stumbles upon a sentient grimoire in her school library—imagine a book that sasses you like a sarcastic best friend. Then there's Lucian, the grimoire's guardian spirit, who's equal parts mysterious and hilariously petty, like a Victorian ghost with a Netflix addiction. Hana's childhood friend, Ren, balances her chaos with grounded, 'please-stop-summoning-demons' energy, while the antagonist, Lady Vexis, is this glamorous but terrifying sorceress who treats magic like a corporate ladder. The dynamic between Hana and Lucian especially hooked me; their banter feels like a supernatural buddy cop movie.
What’s cool is how the side characters aren’t just cardboard cutouts—like Hana’s grandma, who casually drops cryptic prophecies between baking cookies. Even minor figures, like the school librarian who definitely knows more than she lets on, add layers to the story. The way the book blends humor with darker themes (hello, ancient curses!) gives it this addictive rhythm. I’m already itching for a sequel to see how Hana’s powers evolve—and if Lucian ever gets that espresso machine he keeps whining about.