Review: Meant to Be

Meant to Be
Meant to Be by Emily Giffin
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

This was a quick read but since I am not particularly a fan (or not) of JFK Jr. this didn’t really speak to me. I liked the audio and the voice of both of the characters but I found the book to be mostly boring to be honest.

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Review: Ugly Love

Ugly Love
Ugly Love by Colleen Hoover
My rating: 1 of 5 stars

I think I might be done with Colleen Hoover. This one just felt lazy to me. Both of the stories felt super dragged out just to make a book. I thought all of the characters were not well developed and the plot was way way too contrived. This one wasn’t for me.

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Review: The Overnight Guest

The Overnight Guest
The Overnight Guest by Heather Gudenkauf
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

This was a well-written and unexpected mystery. I liked the fast pace and I actually quite liked the twist, too. I enjoyed the time I spent with it.

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Review: Now Is Not the Time to Panic

Now Is Not the Time to Panic
Now Is Not the Time to Panic by Kevin Wilson
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

“But Zeke needed to know. You had to choose sides. And you always chose the person who didn’t fuck everything up. You chose the person who was stuck with you.”

What an incredibly unusual story. This is the story of Zeke and Frankie who spend a summer together making a poster that has Zeke’s art and Frankie’s words on it. They then plaster the poster all over town. Next thing you know, it gets enmeshed with a story some teens make up to get out of trouble and things get out of hand and copies start appearing all over the world. It becomes a phenomenon. Crazy things happen. It gets out of hand.

And the whole time, no one knows they started it all.

“I thought that the saddest thing that could happen was that something inside your head worked so hard to make it into the world and then nothing happened. It just disappeared. Now that I’d put those words into the open air, I needed them to multiply, to reproduce, to cover the world.”

This book captured the feeling of being a teen and coming of age in the 90s. What art is. What friendship can look like during those years: intense and like it’s your whole world. The characters are so real, jump out of the page so much that you can’t help but root for them.

“And I wanted to say that it wasn’t his fault, that it was an accident, but maybe everything is an accident. Maybe nothing in the world is intentional. Maybe everything that has ever happened and ever will happen is some dumb mistake. So who cares if you apologize?”

Wilson’s stories have so much heart and are so unique and so bittersweet and the characters are so flawed and yet beautiful. It’s not possible not to love the books. And this was no exception.

with gratitude to netgalley and ecco for an advanced copy in exchange for an honest review

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Review: Four Treasures of the Sky

Four Treasures of the Sky
Four Treasures of the Sky by Jenny Tinghui Zhang
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I think this was a 3.5 star read for me but I bumped it up because i learned a lot about history while I was reading it and I felt grateful that this book is out there. It’s a tough subject and I will say that much of it was tough to read but I am still glad I read it.

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Review: The Winners

The Winners
The Winners by Fredrik Backman
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

“It’s a terrible moment for all kids when we realize that our parents can’t protect us. That we won’t be able to protect our own. That the whole world can come and take us whenever it likes.”

I have loved every book Backman has written. I have loved the Beartown series so very much and I wasn’t sure I was prepared to read another book on it and I also wasn’t sure I was prepared for it to end. I loved this small town with its broken and violent and struggling and loving people. I both wanted to swallow this book up in one sitting and also savor every single moment I spent with it.

I wanted to go slowly and yet I couldn’t stop reading it. These characters are all so real, they jump off the page and they pull you into their lives. You fall in love with each of them in unique and inexplicable ways.

“There ought to be a different word for it once you’ve been married for enough years. When you’ve long since passed the point where it stopped feeling like a choice. I no longer choose you every morning, that was a beautiful thing we said on our wedding day, I just can’t imagine life without you now. We aren’t freshly blooming flowers, we’re two trees with intertwined roots, you’ve grown old within me.”

And even though you know the book is going to break your heart, you know it from the first line because Backman tells you, you can’t stop hoping that it won’t happen. You can’t stop falling apart when it does even though he’s warned you again and again. Because you’re so invested in these characters and you’ve grown to love them so very much.

Backman has a way of creating characters that are so flawed and yet still so lovable. He has a way of getting to the heart of what makes us each human and pulling out the essence of his characters. Once you’ve seen their beauty, even in the midst of all the terrible things they do, you can’t help but root for them. Every single character in this book is three dimensional, flawed and broken and also extraordinary. They are showing up to life. Facing it head on. You can’t help but root for even the most irredeemable ones.

“All children are victims of their parents’ childhoods, because all adults try to give their kids what they themselves enjoyed or lacked. In the end everything is either a revolt against the adults we encountered or an attempt to copy them. That’s why someone who hated their own childhood often has greater empathy than someone who loved theirs. Because someone who had a hard time dreamed of other realities, but someone who had it easy can hardly imagine that things could be any different. We take happiness so easily for granted if we’ve had it from the start.”

There’s so much in this book, like all of them. So much about parenting, marriage, community, love, friendship, family. So much heart. I loved every single minute I spent with it. I was worried it would be too many pages and in the end it felt like not nearly enough because these characters will stay with me forever.

with gratitude to atria books and netgalley for an advanced copy in exchange for an honest review

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Review: Chef’s Kiss

Chef's Kiss
Chef’s Kiss by T.J. Alexander
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Love love loved the characters in this story. Loved the diversity of their backgrounds and how it was handled. Loved the story. Loved all the food and all the fun. Enjoyable, light read.

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Review: I Guess I Haven’t Learned That Yet: Discovering New Ways of Living When the Old Ways Stop Working

I Guess I Haven't Learned That Yet: Discovering New Ways of Living When the Old Ways Stop Working
I Guess I Haven’t Learned That Yet: Discovering New Ways of Living When the Old Ways Stop Working by Shauna Niequist
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

3.5 stars.

I enjoyed this essay collection and loved the parts where I felt the author went deep into what it means to start over and give oneself grace and space. In some ways, I felt like maybe she hadn’t spent enough time in this new life yet to really dig deep enough to pull out all of her learnings/lessons. Like it was still all a bit too new. So it still felt a bit more on the surface than I would have liked. Still enjoyed them.

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Review: The Old Place

The Old Place
The Old Place by Bobby Finger
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I loved the time I spent with The Old Place. This is the story of Mary Alice and Ellie and Josie, all of whom live in a small town in Texas (Billington.) Ellie and Mary Alice live next door to each other and are best friends (both are also single moms of children who’ve died.) Josie is the New Yorker wife of a Billington resident who comes back home to take over his family’s business and she takes a job being a schoolteacher after Mary Alice (unwillingly) retires.

There are several other lovely and interesting and textured characters but most of the story revolves around these three women and you can’t help but fall in love with them, as flawed as they are. Even though Mary Alice wasn’t a likable character, I still found myself caring about her and wanting things to work out for her. You can tell that she hasn’t had it easy.

This story is about family, small towns, sisterhood, friendship and so much more. I loved every second I spent with it.

with gratitude to netgalley and Penguin Putnam for an advanced copy in exchange for an honest review.

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Review: The Homewreckers

The Homewreckers
The Homewreckers by Mary Kay Andrews
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

3.5 stars

I’ve never read MKA before. This was fun and engaging and I enjoyed reading it. It was a light read and I am not sure it will stay with me but I still liked reading it.

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Review: You Made a Fool of Death with Your Beauty

You Made a Fool of Death with Your Beauty
You Made a Fool of Death with Your Beauty by Akwaeke Emezi
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

I love Emezi’s writing. This is not my favorite novel by them but I still love their writing and this unusual story of a woman who suffered a great loss and has three different romantic partners is no exception. Beautiful writing but not an interesting plot.

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Review: Notes on an Execution

Notes on an Execution
Notes on an Execution by Danya Kukafka
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

This book was really quite depressing. But it was also really well done. This is the story of Ansel Packer who is about to be executed on death row for murdering multiple women. The story is told by him and several of the women from his life: his mom, his wife’s sister and the officer who caught him. It’s a layered and captivating story.

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