Review: Only If You’re Lucky

Only If You're Lucky
Only If You’re Lucky by Stacy Willingham
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

What an excellent, excellent storyteller Stacy Willingham is. She can weave these chilling and yet so real characters and situations that truly give you the creeps. I love reading her novels even as they stress me out.

This one was no exception. The female friendship in this book is so raw, so real, and so disturbing all at once. The frats, too. So real and so disturbing.

I didn’t see the twists coming and I just truly got lost in this book. I will think about this book for a long time.

with gratitude to netgalley and St. Martin’s Press, Minotaur Books for an advanced copy in exchange for an honest review.

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Review: The Second Chance Year

The Second Chance Year
The Second Chance Year by Melissa Wiesner
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I love second chance stories and I love reliving and time travel too so this one was meant for me and it did not disappoint. I woke up this morning and I was at only 2% and read it all the way through before getting out of bed. I loved the characters and I loved the romance.

I loved the women standing up for themselves and each other. I loved the slow-burn romance even as you know it’s coming. Can’t wait to read of Wiesner’s novels.

with gratitude to netgalley and Forever (Grand Central Publishing) for an advanced copy in exchange for an honest review.

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Review: Radiant Rebellion: Reclaim Aging, Practice Joy, and Raise a Little Hell

Radiant Rebellion: Reclaim Aging, Practice Joy, and Raise a Little Hell
Radiant Rebellion: Reclaim Aging, Practice Joy, and Raise a Little Hell by Karen Walrond
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Radiant Rebellion is around reclaiming aging. I am not a worrier over aging so I wasn’t sure I should request this book but I have read books by and taken classes from Karen before and I knew there would be wisdom here I’d appreciate. And I was right.

This book is full of stories, wisdom, insight, and practical steps you can take. But what I appreciate the most is how much Karen encourages you to go within and to be intentional with your life. She had great journaling questions to help the reader do her own exploration.

Loved this one.

with gratitude to edelweiss and Broadleaf Books for an advanced copy in exchange for an honest review.

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Review: The Connellys of County Down

The Connellys of County Down
The Connellys of County Down by Tracey Lange
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

I loved this book. I love Lange’s writing and I love this character-driven story of a family trying to make things work as each of them hides fears and secrets and are battling their own daemons as they look out for each other. Loved it.

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Review: Beautiful Shining People: The extraordinary, EPIC speculative masterpiece…

Beautiful Shining People: The extraordinary, EPIC speculative masterpiece…
Beautiful Shining People: The extraordinary, EPIC speculative masterpiece… by Michael Grothaus
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Wow what an unusual book this was. I don’t really even know what to say about it without spoiling anything. Let’s just say John meets a woman in a cafe who turns out to be more enigmatic than he originally thought. There’s a retired sumo wrestler and a peculiar dog.

There’s a future where deep fakes are so common that it’s causing regular disruptions in the world economy. There’s quantum coding. There’s so much in this unusual, interesting book that you’ll have to pick it up and check it out yourself.

with gratitude to Orenda Books and edelweiss for an advanced copy in exchange for an honest review

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Review: None of This Is True

None of This Is True
None of This Is True by Lisa Jewell
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

3.5 stars

I seem to have liked this much less than most of the people. I thought it was good, just didn’t think it was great. Also didn’t love the ending. But others loved it more so i am the outlier on this one.

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Review: The Honeymoon Crashers

The Honeymoon Crashers
The Honeymoon Crashers by Christina Lauren
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

I didn’t realize this was an audio-only companion but I loved it and it was a wonderful palette cleanser. Christina Lauren are always fun to read.

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Review: Tom Lake

Tom Lake
Tom Lake by Ann Patchett
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

I waited for this book from the moment I heard it was coming. I love and adore Patchett and I knew I was going to love this book. And I completely did. Getting to listen to Meryl Streep read it was just an additional unexpected bonus. It’s light, beautiful and a true joy to read.

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Review: Translation State

Translation State
Translation State by Ann Leckie
My rating: 3 of 5 stars

3.5 stars

This was my first Ann Leckie. Even though it was hard to follow at times, I loved the themes of belonging and family in this unusual novel. I also loved the seamless diversity in the book while it’s a topic of discussion inside a story. I think this one would have been better read vs listened to but I am still glad I picked it up.

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Review: Just Another Missing Person

Just Another Missing Person
Just Another Missing Person by Gillian McAllister
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

4.5 stars

I love McAllisters books. I loved this last one and was waiting for this one with baited breath. It did not disappoint. It’s excellent. Even with being able to guess a few of the twists, I read this book from start to finish without stopping. If mysteries are your thing, you will love this!

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Review: The Heart of It All

The Heart of It All
The Heart of It All by Christian Kiefer
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

“In some life other than this one, his words might have been condescending, but what she knew, beyond his touch, beyond the warmth of it, the feeling of his hand so gentle upon her, was that he had just said two words her mother had never said to her and never would. And it was all she had ever wanted to hear. Nothing less. Nothing more.”

This is one of the best novels I’ve read this year. It’s about several families in a small town. A local factory owner, several workers in the factory, their families, workers in the local grocery store and how their lives intertwine and how they hold each other and help each other through grief and loneliness and form a community.

There’s so much covered here: immigration, loss, grief, racism, sexism, patriotism, politics, love, family, loneliness, poverty, drugs, i can go on and on. None of it feels too much, though, it just feels like ordinary people going about their ordinary lives.

“She did not know how to tell them how much these nights meant to her and did not want to admit that they had had such meaning, that bowling had saved her from a loneliness so deeply rooted in her soul that she had ceased to think of it as something that could change but instead had come to understand that it was the very center of her, that she would always feel this way, that she would always be alone. “

The characters are three-dimensional and real and flawed and you can’t help but love each of them and their vulnerability and the difficulties they are having to endure. I loved spending time with them. I rooted for each of them, cheered them on, laughed out loud and cried and cried.

“And there they were at the heart of it all: himself and, just ahead, his father and his son, the two of them laughing, talking lightly about dinner now, about their day in Columbus. Khalid knew he would remember this moment all his life and he wondered if Rashid too would recall it one day, perhaps when he was Khalid’s age and had children of his own, time wheeling on and the people who ran upon that wheel plucking an occasional moment from its turning like a pearl stolen from the sea. That he had once been Rashid’s age was difficult to fathom.”

I will not forget this book for a long, long time. Highly recommended.

with gratitude to edelweiss and Melville House for an advanced copy in exchange for an honest review.

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Review: Through the Snow Globe

Through the Snow Globe
Through the Snow Globe by Annie Rains
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

People either hate or love Groundhog Day stories. I’m in the “love” camp. I enjoy watching how a character grows, learns, lets go, and slowly understands. I love watching how a writer executes on these stories. I love seeing what finally starts breaking the spell. Rains’ novel was no exception. I loved her characters, I loved the way the stories intertwined and I loved how she grew and deepened her love, found herself and I loved the focus on love.

A lovely and wonderful christmastime book for lovers of repeat days like me.

with gratitude to edelweiss and Kensington for an advanced copy in exchange for an honest review.

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