
Member Reviews

Pros: This book was really good. Watching John and Linda relationship form as he reveals himself as Jack Frost was amazing to watch. Reading how Linda was grieving with death and struggling with the formation of friendships with people like John and Lavender because they remind her of her best friend, was an amazing character growth by the author. I loved how the author helped navigate Lavendar with coming out being gay by allowing her to seek mentorship with Mr. London who is a bisexual teacher.
Cons: The one thing that I will say that I wouldve loved to see more of is the thriller storyline development. I believe that certain aspects of the story such as what the teens were doing in school could have been cut out to focus more on the the Clari's and how Jane's mystery was more tied into Kelsie's murder. I also think that the fantasy element could have been dived into more, like how the book brought back Lavendar's brother. Like it mentioned it but I do wish that it was a little bit longer. I would have love more about Jack-Frost as well.
This is overall a good book for a cozy fantasy reader and also someone who is just getting into fantasy.
Spoiler Free Feedback for Followers.
This book gets a solid 4 stars from me. The story is such a fun and readable storyline to tell. Linda Waters never truly expected to make friends this year after the death of her best friend, Kelsie but when she makes friends with the new student, John a new world opened up that she did not think was possible. Now she's thrust into a helping John navigate life in their small town while trying to cope with grieving her best friend.
Lavendar has had enough of whispers and taunts, and she’ll do anything to keep her darkest secrets buried. Then John and Linda cross her path, and the fragile control she’s built begins to shatter.
John, the new kid with a magnetic smile, bonds instantly with lab partner Linda, but there’s something unsettling about him. Beneath his easy charm lurks a secret powerful enough to upend all their lives.
Jasmine reigns at school, gorgeous, confident, untouchable, until she falls headfirst into a relationship that threatens to drown her in complications she never saw coming.
And watching them all is Mr. London, haunted by the death of one student and the disappearance of another. His fierce devotion to protecting his pupils pushes him toward obsession, and he may soon discover that the line between guardian and threat is thinner than he ever imagined.
This Jack Frost retelling is unique as a group of teens and one teacher comes together to help Jack Frost find a mysterious item while also trying to solve the mystery of a missing student Jane Clari.

3.75 🌟
This book follows Linda Waters, a high school student who recently lost her best friend. As she navigates this grief, she meets a new student at her school who turns out to be Jack Frost. Together, they are looking for a book that has the potential to end everything about existence, and we follow along as the mysteries unravel.
I enjoyed this book! It was very unique and unlike anything I have read before, which is always something that I appreciate and that intrigues me. You could see that this story was crafted with care, in particular the description of grief, loss, and being different from the ‘norm’ was written about incredibly.
I loved our main character, Linda, and enjoyed seeing her growth; her grief felt very real, and was present throughout the entire book, but seeing her try to open up to Jack and Lavender was great! Lavender’s story was one I enjoyed too, but I wish we got to see a bit more of her!
If you enjoy a book that weaves together folklore, mystery, and emotions beautifully, with a unique writing style and nice queer representation; I recommend this one!
Thank you to Netgalley and Soncata Press for the ARC of this book in exchange for my honest review!

3.75⭐️ This was a quick read that I ended up doing as an immersion read. I received the audiobook and after listening for a bit I looked it up on NetGalley and it was a “read now” so I took advantage.
Usually I try to ascertain which format worked better for the book but this one is a toss up with positive and challenges for each.
The narrator Devon Sorvari did a decent job overall however it required me to speed up the playback rate as she spoke very slow making it hard to focus on the book. But she did various different voices which were fairly consistent. One issue I had is randomly different characters would morph into a hard NY accent for certain words. It was jarring especially when the book takes place in Maine. So I would rate her performance at a 3⭐️ for its inconsistencies as it takes you out of the world the author created.
The book is a “retelling” or “reimagining” of Jack Frost. I honestly don’t feel it was either but if I had to choose I guess reimagining would be the closest. It’s more like the author took the character and some very basic characteristics of the connection to the cold, plus his name, and that’s it. I personally didn’t find any connection to the lore of Jack Frost beyond that. But it was still a fun story using magical realism to explore different themes that can plague a teenager.
This is a YA book with the FMC which is a teen going through high school while trying to help Jack save the world from the apocalypse. A challenge is the chapters seem very disjointed at times. They don’t flow and connect with each other. I’ll mention that it is written in 3rd person which is fine with me but I do know that for some strange reason some readers won’t read material in that POV 🙄. That’s being said, I do think the book as a whole should go through another edit for the print version as there are sentence construction issues as well as other grammatical issues.
I did like the exploration of the Queer characters and what they may go through in certain areas of the US (since that’s where the book takes place). Overall this was a different and ultimately enjoyable read that is due to come out on September 1, 2025.
I am thankful to have gotten a complimentary audio ALC and eARC from High Gravity Productions and Soncata Press through High Gravities influencer program and NetGalley to read which gave me the opportunity to voluntarily leave a review.
My general rating system is below. Since I primarily read ARC books I rate according to how I think like minded readers will receive the book. I will round up or down depending on many factors and try not to let my personal wants affect a books ratings.
⭐️ Hated It but pushed through as so don’t DNF ARCs I have received.
⭐️⭐️ Had a lot of trouble, prose issues, content issues, poorly edited.
⭐️⭐️⭐️ Meh, it was an ok read but it had something that stopped me from rounding up. Usually the book may have much more potential than what was given. I recommend it but with reservations.
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ I Really enjoyed it or think others will. These are solid reads that I definitely would recommend for a variety of reasons.
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ Outstanding! These are books that remain rent free in my head for well after unfinished the book. It can be for a variety of reasons from being very well written or just the vibes that captured my mind. These books are also ones I would probably read again.

My thanks to Netgalley, Soncata Press and R.E. Kurz for the eARC of this book in exchange for a review.
I've never read a story about Jack Frost before. I know the general idea but I can honestly say that I do not seek out any book, show or movie that has had Jack Frost as a character. I don't know why, you'd think it'd be right up there with things that interest me and yet no, I've never sought out Jack Frost. So this book caught my attention because it sounded intriguing enough that I thought, first time for everything, why not?
This book follows the Linda Waters from the title, a high school student in Maine who is mourning the loss of her best friend. She meets a new student at school who turns out to be Jack Frost. Frost is in this particular small town and attending high school because he's trying to find a book that could be used to destroy everything about existence. Linda and Jack have to work together to find the book and the one who wants to use it for revenge.
First off, I liked this book. I didn't love it BUT I certainly liked it. I'll admit, I almost decided not to finish this story but I liked Linda so I stuck it out. Also, I learned things I've never heard of before, in the sense that I didn't know the correct names to things, like how the pigments in leaves are anthocyanin and carotenoid, or the term "blue field entoptic phenomenon" (look it up; I had to, and now I've learned something new). Little things like this made Kurz intriguing to me as a writer. I didn't think a high school student would necessarily know these things though, and I wished it was weaved into the story more about how Linda knew these things so easily. It would have rounded the character out more.
As is, I liked Linda because she tried. Every day was a day where she had to try. She had to try to get through school with horrible classmates, she had to try to help teachers she liked, she had to try to get through the days while grieving her best friend who died in a horrible accident. It was that attitude of getting through the worst that made me want to stick with Linda. Jack Frost was interesting in the sense that he was able to be the friend Linda needed when she needed something to help her. He was a stable presence and a constant for her to depend on while also becoming a bit of a defender for other students in need. I liked Lavender and Mr. London but I feel like the book didn't spend as much time with them as it could have to make their struggles feel more important to the reader.
I hated how Lavender was treated but at the same time, because Lavender wasn't necessarily the main character, her struggles felt like they were just there. The book doesn't have enough resolution to her issues at school so I feel like I don't get to see her end up in a good place. Same thing with Mr. London, there were things set in place to suggest happier times to come but again, the book moves on so readers are left wondering about their outcomes. I wanted more for them and I didn't get to see it.
The book is written as 3rd person omniscient, so readers see things from several character viewpoints as the story needs it to go. However, my main issue was with the PACING. Every chapter seems to stand as its own little story, almost as if they don't tie together as a whole. Things would happen in a chapter and then just continue on to something else in the next, without flowing together. As a result, the plot didn't feel like it was important enough as a driving point for the book. It felt like every chapter was Jack and Linda at school, dealing with obnoxious classmates and homework, helping Jack understand the nuances to human existence and whatnot, and it took a while for the search for the missing book to even become relevant. I wasn't sure how much time was passing and because of that, it felt like the characters relationships weren't developing as they should. When Lavender was added to the story, it felt a little jarring to see her demand answers from Jack and Linda when she felt excluded because she wasn't on the page enough with them. The same thing happened with Mr. London, where it felt like for the relationship to be what it seemed on the page, we needed to see more of it. Almost as if passages had been left out that needed to be seen to help the flow of the story stay on track and to show how the characters all interact with each other.
Also, it just ENDS. That's it, there's nothing else. I kept flipping pages thinking where's the rest of the book? It finished up in a few pages and for the length it took to get there, it felt like not enough of an ending. I always say that I wanted more at the end of the books I read but in this case, it NEEDED more. I still have questions about plot points that were never answered. I don't know if the plan is to write more in this world but for me, a lot is left unresolved so I'm left sitting here a little bereft, if I'm being honest. Not the best way to leave a book, when all is said and done.
Rating on my scale: 6 Stars. I wanted more. The book kind of feels unfinished in a way. It'll probably sit in the back of my mind where in the future I might wonder what happened to Linda and her best friend, Jack Frost. I hope they get their happy ending, eventually. That's the feeling I have about the everything of this book.

Unfortunately at DNF’d this book at about 30%. The pacing was just too slow for my personal taste and wasn’t able to capture my attention. From the part that I read I think this book would be good for younger/mid teens who are really into descriptive whimsical books and high school drama.
Thankyou for the chance to read it.