Friday, May 31, 2024

I MAY have read some good books this month, I MAY have read some amazing ones…..

 A pretty average month this month. I read 10 books. A total of 3,157 pages. And an average of 102 pages a day. So let’s get into what I read, shall we?


Love, Theoretically by Ali Hazelwood (386 pages). Elsie Hannaway is a theoretical physicist (think Sheldon from Big Bang Theory) and adjunct professor at several Boston area colleges, hoping to one day become a tenured professor.  But Elsie is also a people pleasing chameleon who supplements her income by being a fake girlfriend. And she’s hoping to get a job at MIT. But the experimental physicist (think Leonard from Big Bang) standing in her way is Jack Smith, the man who made a mockery of theorists with one article. Jack also happens to be the older brother of her favorite fake girlfriend client. Turns out all that hatred she thought was emanating from Jack was actually admiration. Once Elsie learns to be honest, she opens herself up to the idea that theorists and experimentalists can actually get along, maybe better than she ever imagined. Not many rom-coms focus on women in STEM, so I love that about this author. It was a cute, nerdy love story. I finished in 4 days.


Heard it in a Love Song by Tracey Garcia Graves (289 pages). Layla is an elementary school music teacher who once has dreams of being a rock star. She’s also recently divorced. Josh is the father of Sasha, one of Layla’s kindergarteners, and recently separated himself. After Sasha asks Layla if she likes dogs, Layla inadvertently ends up as their dog sitter. But Josh and Layla slowly realize their attraction to each other. I liked the slow pace of their relationship.  Both of them are still trying to figure out who they are (Layla’s marriage was about a decade, Josh got married after high school graduation). The book also contained flashbacks for each of them, so you understood their former relationships. It was pretty good. I finished in 3 days.


How to Eat Fried Worms by Thomas Rockwell (117 pages). 10 year olds Billy and Alan make a bet. Alan bets Billy $50 that Billy can’t eat 1 worm a day for 15 days. Billy knows he can. And the rules are that he must eat every bit of the worm but can cook it and condiment it any way he wants. As the days pass, Billy worries that he’s bitten off more than he can chew (literally). And Alan plots on how he can keep Billy from winning. I hadn’t read this book since I was a kid. It was fun then and fun now. Kids are crazy!  I finished in 1 day. 


The Husbands by Holly Gramazio (338 pages). Lauren comes home to her flat after a night out with the girls to find her husband, amused with her attempts to quietly come in. The problem?  Lauren doesn’t have a husband. When he goes up into the attic to change a lightbulb, he comes down a completely different man. And this begins Lauren’s discovery of her magic attic. Some husbands stay for a few moments before she sends them back up into the attic. Others stay for a week until she decides they aren’t the right fit. But when do you know you’ve found the right one?  I finished in 2 days.


The Heart Goes Last by Margaret Atwood (380 pages). Stan and Charmaine are just a young couple, trying to make it in a world that is in the midst of economic collapse. When they hear about the Positron Project in the city of Consilience, they decide to sign up.  In Consilience, they’ll have jobs and a house and security. Every other month. Those alternating months?  They’ll be living in Positron Prison and the inmates will take over their lives. At first, everything seems perfect. But things are never as they appear. And bad things are happening in Positron. Very bad (and crazy) things. I wasn’t really sure what to expect with this one (Atwood is the queen of social commentary), but I wasn’t expecting what I read. It wasn’t bad, but I didn’t love it like some of the other books of hers I’ve read. I finished in 3 days.


The Hate U Give by Angie Thomas (444 pages). Starr Carter is 16 years old and divides her time between two worlds- her predominantly white private school where she’s cool just because she’s black and her poor black neighborhood where she doesn’t really fit in anymore because she goes to a white school. One night, she leaves a party with a friend from the Heights. And they get stopped by a cop. What happens next changes Starr’s life and the lives of her entire community. I saw the movie adaption years ago and found it very powerful. The book is even more so. It’s a very heavy book, so I wanted to take it slow. And I’m glad I did- it’s one that needs to be processed to be appreciated. I finished in 5 days. 


Endless Summer by Elin Hilderbrand (356 pages). This was a collection of 9 short stories (that were really more continuations of novels). I think I need to read more Hilderbrand novels so I appreciate this one even more. But the ones that were connected to the books I had read were a lot of fun to revisit!  I finished in 2 days.


The Bookseller of Dachau by Shari J Ryan (265 pages). In 1940’s Augsburg, Germany, 17 year old Matilda Ellman enjoys spending time with her best friend (and love of her life), 17 year old Hans Bauer. The problem is that Hans is Jewish. So Matilda does everything in her power to save him, including hiding him in the attic. In 2018 Boston, architect Grace Laurent receives the shock of her life. After her mother spent her entire life trying to track down family, Grace learns that she had inherited a bookshop in Dachau from her maternal grandmother. So Grace did something completely out of character- she immediately flew to Germany to learn the story of her family. And what a story it was!  Y’all know I love some WWII historical fiction!  And this one had me in tears for the entire last quarter of the book it seemed. I finished in 2 days.


Diva by Daisy Goodwin (324 pages). When I was in college, I planned to double major in English and Theater. And one of the classes I took toward my theater major was a current NY seminar. For spring break, we went to New York and saw 6 plays in 4 days. One of those plays was Master Class. I doubt I had ever heard of Maria Callas before then. Maria Callas was the greatest soprano to ever live. She was glamorous and world famous. And when she met Aristotle Onassis, her whole world changed. She left her husband for him. And after 9 years of a relationship, found out that he was leaving her when it was announced that he had married Jackie Kennedy. On his private island. In the chapel he’d been building for Maria. I loved this novel so much. I finished in 4 days.


Blood on their Hands by Mandy Matney (258 pages). I started listening to the Murdaugh Murders Podcast back in 2020. And followed it up through Alex’s conviction. This is the story of how Mandy became the Murdaugh expert. I really enjoyed reading the background of her journalism career and how it took off. She truly is a phenomenal writer. I finished in 4 days.


This month’s favorite is…….a tie. Between The Bookseller and Diva. I can’t choose a favorite and you can’t make me!

Wednesday, May 1, 2024

April readings bring forth a lot of happiness (sadly no flowers)

 April was a good reading month. 8 books. 3,348 pages total. An average of 112 pages a day. I finished off and started some great series. So let’s get to it!


The Crown by Kiera Cass (282 pages). The fifth book in the Selection series. Only the Elite remain. Eadlyn is down to only five men who she thinks could share her life. Fashionable Hale. Foreign born Henri (with his translator Erik). Companionable Fox. Aloof but committed Ean. And childhood friend Kile. But when a heart attack sidelines her mother (and father to be nursemaid), Eadlyn realizes that she needs to take on the task of ruling in order to bring peace to her family and their country. But which young man will be by her side at the end?  This was a great ending to this series. Following the family from King Clarkson to Queen Eadlyn showed a beautiful progression. I finished in 3 days.


Happily Ever After by Kiera Cass (390 pages).  So this was a companion book to the series. It contained a map of Illea (would have been nice to have at the start of the series, just because I’m a dork like that). And a lot more in depth information about the characters of the series: Queen Amberly, Prince Maxon, Aspen, Marlee, Celeste, Lucy, Kriss, Natalie and Elise. We learned more about the Selection from their points of view. And what some of them did post Selection.  I really liked this. I actually would have loved to have read them during the other novels. But enjoyed it nonetheless.  I finished in 3 days.


The Midwife of Auschwitz by Anna Stuart (348  pages). Ana Kaminski is a midwife in Poland in the 1940’s. As life in her town becomes more overrun with Nazis, Ana and her family fight with the Resistence. Across town in the ghetto, young Ester Pasternak is a newlywed and a nurse. The women had known each other before the war began but found themselves together in Auschwitz. One for being Jewish and one for being a traitor. Together, they helped bring babies into the world. And when the Nazis began taking the “acceptably Aryan” ones to be raised by good German families, they tattooed them with their mothers’ numbers, so that the mothers could find them if they survived the camps.  Y’all- when I tell you I wept, I WEPT. This story was so beautiful. The horrors or WW2 still just appall me. But the stories of survival and love that came from it give me such warmth. This book was based on the life of Stanislawa Leszczynska, a Polish midwife who was sent to Auschwitz for being part of the Resistence. And one who delivered over 3000 babies during her 2 year internment, never losing a mother or a child during childbirth. And yes, she tattooed the babies, in the hopes they could be returned to their birth parents. Honestly, other than her name being changed and Ester being a family friend rather than her biological daughter, most of the characters are real- the SS, the Nazi doctors and kapo, even some of her children’s names. Y’all- reading just a little bit about this woman brought me to tears. She has been nominated for sainthood in the Catholic Church. I sure hope she gets it- she sounds like a literal angel on earth who lived through literal hell. I finished in 4 days.


Haunting Adeline by HD Carlton (538 pages). Adeline Reilly is a 26 year old successful author who just inherited her grandparents’ very gothic home, Parsons Manor. The Manor has a dark history, as her great grandmother Gigi was murdered there in the 1940’s. Her murder was never solved, but Addie suspects that Gigi’s stalker killed her. Meanwhile, Addie has a stalker of her own. Zade Meadows created an underground organization and their sole purpose is to take down human traffickers. Honestly I didn’t like this book.  I don’t mind a “dark romance.”  But this one pushed my limits of what I can handle. Zade seems like a wonderful man in some ways. Who doesn’t love a man who rights atrocities of this world?  But the fact that he stalks Addie and blurs the line of consent while mentally/emotionally abusing her was very disturbing. Very. I’m not sure why this book was so booktok famous. The only part I really liked was Addie solving Gigi’s murder. I finished in 5 days. 


The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo by Taylor Jenkins Reid (385 pages).  I read this book about 2 years ago and loved it. But one of my book clubs decided to read it so I did a re-read. Monique Grant is a scrub writer for a magazine in New York. So no one is more shocked than she is when Evelyn Hugo’s people reach out and state that Monique (and Monique only) can have an exclusive. But Evelyn has more than an article in mind- she has handpicked Monique to tell her story. For reasons only Evelyn knows. But Evelyn was one of the biggest movie stars of all time. Monique isn’t going to let this chance pass her by. The book is in 7 parts- one for each of Evelyn’s husbands.  Turns out I loved this book just as much the second time around!  I finished in 2 days.


The Midwife of Berlin by Anna Stuart (444 pages). A sequel of sorts to The Midwife of Auschwitz. It’s 1961 Berlin. The country (and the city) are divided into East and West. The war is over but the world hasn’t fully healed yet. Ester is now a midwife outside of Berlin. Her 17 year old adopted daughter Olivia helps her. Olivia was the first baby that Ester tattooed under her armpit. And that tattoo is what brought Olivia into their family. But then Olivia discovers her own love- throwing the javelin. So she joins Dynamo, an athletic club in East Berlin, for training. Meanwhile, 17 year old Kirsten works in a cafe across town in West Berlin. She and her friends, led by student Dieter, question the socialism that is happening just across the street from them. Kirsten begins to learn some family secrets, including the truth as to how she got a scar under her armpit. But then, the unimaginable happens- a wall is built. A wall that separates the East from the West. And Olivia from Kirsten.  But Olivia isn’t happy under communist rule. And Kirsten isn’t going to let her stay there. So good. Apparently only one character was a real person- Dieter. But the events (the wall, the separation, the communist regime) were all true. Oddly, this is not an era of history that I had much knowledge about. So I found it fascinating. I finished in 4 days. 


Bridesmaid for Hire by Meghan Quinn (444 pages). Maggie Mitchell is an event planner. Brody McFadden works for Hopper Industries. And they have known each other for years- he was her brother’s fraternity brother and best friend. But after a drunken kiss gone bad, Maggie just can’t stand him. When they both end up at a resort in Bora Bora (her for vacation and him for his boss’s daughter’s wedding), they realize they can help each other. Meeting the Hoppers could help Maggie’s business. Having Maggie on his arm could help Brody make in-waves with the Hoppers. And when the maid of honor can’t make it, Maggie steps in as a last minute bridesmaid. Spending all this time together makes it hard for Maggie and Brody to deny their chemistry. But Brody’s boss is a shrewd man who has figured out that Brody is there to try to get ahead at Hopper Industries and Maggie is there to get a leg up with her own business. And Mr Hopper is not a man who likes to be played. So one drunken night turns everything upside down for Brody and Maggie. Alas- the path of love never is easy in a rom com!  This one was super cute. And I love that Meghan Quinn interweaves characters from other series into each new series (the Cane brothers from an earlier series I read). I finished in 4 days.


The Way I Hate Him by Meghan Quinn (517 pages). Hattie Rowley is a little bit worried. She’s still lost after her beloved oldest sister’s death, she’s failed out of graduate school and she just got dumped by her jerk of a boyfriend, who had been rock star Hayes Farrow’s assistant. Until he got fired for stealing from Hayes. Which Hattie knew about because she’d helped steal Hayes’ Grammy. But when Hattie and Hayes both end up back in their small hometown of Almond Bay, a deep seated family rivalry sets sparks flying. But Hayes has real issues with abandonment. And when his past shows up, his fears cause him to push Hattie away. Can love overcome everything?  This is a rom-com, of course it can!  Hattie is Maggie’s best friend and this story takes place before the prior book. I finished in 5 days.


This month’s favorite is…….The Midwife of Auschwitz

Sunday, March 31, 2024

I just Marched through my to-be-read list this month

 I got a LOT of reading down this month. I did read several short stories, which helped. But it was just a really read-y month. I read 17 books/short stories. A total of 4,034 pages. An average of 130 pages a day. This is probably my highest totals and average ever!  So let’s get into it


The Song of Achilles by Madeline Miller (369 pages). Young prince Patroclus is just 10 years old when he is exiled from his father’s kingdom. He is taken in by King Peleus and taught to fight. He also becomes best friends with Peleus’ son, Achilles. The boys create an unbreakable bond. And when they are called on for Patroclus to honor his oath to protect a kidnapped Helen of Troy, they join the fight. But the Fates and the gods control the outcome of the war. And the love between Achilles and Patroclus isn’t enough to stop what fate has decreed. I’ve read a lot of mythology. And I really love it. This was a much deeper look into what I always just assumed was a rumor of a relationship between these two men. I finished in 3 days.


Four Funerals and a Wedding by Rhys Bowen (291 pages). Lady Georgina Rannoch is thrilled to be marrying Darcy O’Mara, despite her dreams for a simple wedding turning into a much grandly scale, with the queen in attendance and Princesses Elizabeth and Margaret set to be her bridesmaids (I mean, Georgie’s great-grandmother WAS Queen Victoria). When her former stepfather offers up his ancestral home of Eynsleigh as their new marital residence, Georgie is thrilled. But the estate isn’t the same as the one she remembers from childhood. And Georgie is going to have to figure out why.  With a little help from her maid, her mother, her grandfather and her fiancĂ©. I finished in 3 days.


Paris: The Memoir by Paris Hilton (328 pages).  I always thought Paris Hilton was a spoiled party girl. Turns out, that’s not really the truth. She’s certainly privileged. And she loves the party scene. But there’s a lot more to her than that. Paris had a vision for her life and she’s worked hard to create that life. And she went through a lot more than I ever thought. Her parents sent her to one of those horrific behavioral camps for nearly 2 years. She tried to escape several times. And it created a level of trauma to her psyche that it seems like is only now healing after meeting her husband. And she did all of this with undiagnosed ADHD (which is most likely what led to her minor behavioral issues as a teen). I actually found myself respecting her a lot more, as a businesswoman and as a woman.  I finished in 3 days.


Something Wicked This Way Comes by Ray Bradbury (335 pages, including 70 pages of commentary). This movie absolutely terrified me as a child (yet I loved it). So I decided to read it. It’s the story of 12 year olds Will Halloway and Jim Nightshade and the October that the Cooger and Dark’s Pandemonium Shadow Show came to their town. The carnival is centuries old, feeding on the souls of people who are willing to trade everything for the fantasy of nothing. Even Jim is tempted by Dark’s fantastical carousel, a carousel that can age you in any direction. But with help from Will’s father (a significantly older father who is the janitor at the library), the boys figure out a way to stop Dark. Sadly, the movie isn’t streaming anywhere (I found a pirated copy on YouTube but the quality is horrific). So until Disney gets it together and puts it on Disney+, I guess there’ll be no rewatch. I finished in 3 days.


The Younger Wife by Sally Hepworth (342 pages). Stephen Aston is a doctor in his 60’s. Pamela, his wife, is in her late 60’s and in late stage Alzheimer’s. Their adult daughters Tully and Rachel are in their 30’s. And Stephen’s new fiancĂ©e?  Well, Heather Wisher is younger than his daughters. But as the wedding date draws closer, Tully and Rachel wonder about some family secrets that have begun to rear their heads.  There were some interesting twists to each of the characters. I finished in 3 days.


The Midnight Library by Matt Haig (288 pages). This is my third time reading this book (once just for me, twice for totally different book clubs). And I will never NOT be happy about reading this book. I wish I could read it again for the first time. I finished in 1 day. 


Coffee Shop Girl by Katie Cross (282 pages). Bethany is 24 years old and inherited her father’s coffee shop in a small mountain town 8 months ago when he died. Bethany hates coffee and wants to be a real estate agent. Maverick is in town, renovating a cabin. And he has a proposal for Bethany. No, not that kind. A business proposal. Meanwhile, Bethany’s younger half sisters Lizbeth and Ellie flee their father and show up on Bethany’s doorstep. As Bethany struggles to turn her coffee shop into a success so she can gain custody of her sisters, she also struggles with her feelings for Mac. This was the sweetest, most PG little rom com ever. I finished in 3 days. 


Jane in Love by Rachel Givney (434 pages). In 1803 in Bath, a woman of a certain age (namely 28) who is unmarried stands a very small chance of finding a husband. Such is Jane Austen’s fate. While her writing helps ease some of her disappointment, it’s not enough. Especially because her mother hates it. So when she is given a chance to change her life, she takes it. Little does she know that her adventure will result in a change of time more than a change of place. Namely, time traveling to Bath in 2020. And the film set of Northanger Abbey!  One of the stars of the movie is Sofia Wentworth, an actress whose star power is fading but who is desperate to save her marriage to the film’s director. When Jane meets Sofia’s brother Fred, she finally begins to understand what love is. But when Jane’s books begin to disappear, she must make a decision. Remain in 2020 with the man she loves and be erased from history as one of the most famous female authors of all time. Or return to 1803 to fulfill her artistic destiny. Which do you choose, love or the pen? This book was delightful!  I finished in 4 days.


The Exception to the Rule by Christina Lauren (100 pages). On February 14, 2014, c.sun16@ipsd.edu emails t.sol18@ipsd.edu about a missing assignment for class. But T isn’t his teacher, she’s actually another student in the Irvine California school system. Their email exchange ends with wishing each other Happy Valentine’s Day. And thus begins a decade’s long email exchange that only takes place on Valentine’s Day.  They share very few details about themselves (no names, phone numbers or school information is exchanged).  But they still share enough that they make a connection. But one year, T (real name Terra) goes to a party with friends and accidentally overhears a very embarrassing conversation involving Callum, the very hot TA in her graduate program. When she emails C this very funny story, he realizes that he finally met T face to face.  Such a cute short story that was the first of a six book series called Improbably Meet-Cute. I finished in about an hour. 


Worst Wingman Ever by Abby Jimenez (60 pages). Short story #2. Holly is a hospice nurse on her toughest assignment ever- being with her grandmother while she’s dying. John is the resident maintenance man at an apartment complex. But when he accidentally places a Valentine’s Day card meant for his brother’s girlfriend on Holly’s car, it sparks an interaction that results in the world’s worst wingman getting the girl. Another cute short story. I finished in about an hour. 


Rosie and the Dreamboat by Sally Thorne (43 pages). Short story #3. Rosie ‘s life never really seems to go well. Case in point- she decided to treat her sister to a fabulous Valentine’s Day treat. An all day spa-cation. But when Rosie’s sensory deprivation tank malfunctions, she trapped in total darkness. And mineral water. Enter fireman Leo to save the day. Through the metal of the tank, they have such a delightful exchange that it’s absolute love when she escapes from her watery doom.  I finished in less than an hour. 


Drop, Cover and Hild On by Jasmine Guillory (39 pages). Short story #4. It’s Valentine’s Day. And all Daisy wants is some pastry from her favorite bakery. But going in means she’ll have to see her least favorite baker, the scowling owner Harris. But pastries win out. As soon as she enters, she’s greeted with a scowl. And a 6.8 earthquake!  After the quake, they are trapped in the bakery. And turns out Harris’ scowl was never really directed at her. I finished in about 30 minutes. 


With Any Luck by Ashley Poston (42 pages). Short story #5. Audrey Love is super lucky. In everything BUT love (ironically). She’s lucky for others in love though- any time she kisses a guy, the next girl he meets is his soulmate. When her best friend Rhett asks her to be his best man, she happily agrees. When she arrives for the wedding, she unhappily learns that the bride’s maid of honor is Theodore Luck, with whom Audrey has a bit of a past. But when the groom goes missing after the bachelor party, Theo and Audrey have to team up to figure out what happened. I finished in about 30 minutes. 


Royal Valentine by Sariah Wilson (70 pages). Short story #6. Princess Ilaria of Monterra just wants one weekend of normalcy. so she convinces her assistant Anne to pretend to be her so she can enjoy anonymity in Rome for 2 days. She meets a charming man, Callum (no, not the Callum from the first book. Although the two Callum know each other). And enjoys a magical Valentine’s Day with him. Until the paparazzi spot them.  To each of their chagrin. Because Ilaria isn’t the only one hiding a royal secret!  This one was super cute too. I finished in less than an hour. 


The Elite by Kiera Cass (324 pages). The second in The Selection series. The Selection is down to the Elite (only 6 of 36 remain). One of them being America. While she still has lingering feelings for first love Aspen, her feelings for Prince Maxon grow stronger with every passing day. But when Maxon must make a decision that causes America to question her feelings, she begins to wonder if she is cut out for the crown. Or is she actually what the country needs?  As more girls are let go, America decides she is ready to fight for Maxon. I finished in 3 days. 


The One by Kiera Cass (328 pages). The third in the series. The Selection is down to four. America. Her number one rival (and friend) Kriss. The only one with foreign political connections Elise. And everyone’s number one enemy Celeste. But as the girls begin to grow closer, the country remains in a state of unrest. rebels are fighting back against the caste system that was placed on them years against by the first King Gregory. But through fights and threats, Maxon and America can’t seem to deny that they belong together. I finished in 2 days. 


The Heir by Kiera Cass (359 pages). The fourth in the series. Princess Eadlyn respects that her parents found love through the Selection 20 years ago. But that’s not what she wants. Despite the good her parents have done while in power, there is still unrest in Illea. So Eadlyn agrees to participate in the first ever female led Selection for three months to buy her father some time to fix things. But as she watches the love between her parents and the love between her twin brother and his girlfriend, the princess of France, she wonders if love could be in her future. The Selected slowly begin to make an impact on her heart (with some bad eggs along the way). I liked meeting the next generation of this family. I finished in 2 days.


This month’s favorite is…….The Song of Achilles and Jane in Love. I truly can’t pick just one. And I don’t feel like it’s fair to declare The Midnight Library the favorite of the month. It’s in my top favorites of all time. 

Thursday, February 29, 2024

The month of love(ing to read)!

 I’ve been reading a lot of books that have movie/show adaptations. Which has been kind of fun. This was a pretty average month for me. 10 books. 2,823 pages.  An average of 97 pages a day. But y’all aren’t here for that. You are here for the recaps. So let’s go


Raiders of the Lost Heart by Jo Segura (345 pages). This was the Valentine’s Once Upon a Book Club special edition, so gifties on social. Archaeologist Dr Corrie Mejia has dreamt of one dig- to find the remains of her ancestor, the Aztec warrior Chimalli. When she is invited to join a dig in Mexico, it’s literally her dream come true. But the dig becomes a nightmare when Corrie realizes that her nemesis, Dr Ford Matthews, is running it. Corrie and Ford have a long history of rivalry, dating back to their graduate school days. But they also have a long history of attraction, dating back to one night in the library. And the steamy Mexican jungle might be more than either of them can handle. A little bit Lara Croft, a little bit Indiana Jones. It was fun. The gifts were a little racier than usual though. I finished in 3 days.


The Incredible Journey by Sheila Burnford (148 pages). I’ve seen both versions of this movie- the 1963 one and the 1993 one. Loved them both (yes, I cry every time I watch). If you don’t know the story, it might be one of the sweetest ever. Luath (a young golden retriever), Tao (a Siamese cat) and Bodger (an 11 year old Bull Terrier) journey over 200 milers through the Canadian wilderness to be reunited with their family. Their adventures and their love for each other is beautiful. Y’all- cried reading the book. Then promptly watched the 1963 version and cried again. I finished in 1 day.


Dead Poets Society by N.H. Kleinbaum (166 pages). In a weird twist, this book was based on the movie, not the other way around. I absolutely love this movie. Seize the day. Make your lives extraordinary. O Captain, my Captain. If you don’t know the story, it’s about a stuffy boys prep school and their new English teacher. Mr Keating doesn’t just teach the boys about poetry- he teaches them about life!  I finished in 1 day. 


The Amityville Horror by Jay Anson (237 pages). This is my 6th book this year that I’ve both seen the show or movie AND now read the book. I sense a theme….  Anyway, this is the true story of the Lutz family. In December of 1975, the Lutzes bought their dream home in Amityville, NY.  A house where just one year earlier Ronnie DeFeo had murdered his parents and 4 siblings in their sleep. Only 28 days later, they fled the nightmare house and never returned. If you don’t know what they experienced in the house, you’ve clearly been living under a rock!  The book is a day by day account of what they experienced during those 28 days. I finished in 3 days.


The Magic Hour by Kristin Hannah (391 pages). A six year old girl and her wolf cub wander into the public park of Rain Valley, Washington. Local police chief Ellie Barton has no idea what to do with this child who can’t speak. But luckily her sister Julia Cates is a famous (and recently somewhat disgraced) child psychiatrist. So Julia returns to her hometown to find out who this little girl is. After naming her Alice, Julia (with help from the town) begins to bring her out of her shell and give her words and a voice. But when her father shows up, will all that go away?  Alice is clearly a child who has been abused. Was it at her father’s hand?  I really liked this book. I loved the relationship between Alice and Julia. I finished in 3 days. 


The Rose that Grew from Concrete by Tupac Shakur (151 pages). My 40 book reading challenge included a book of poetry this time. When I went book shopping at Books-A-Million, I had just listened to a podcast episode about Tupac. So when I saw this, I had to grab it. I am not a big fan of poetry. But y’all, this was beautiful. Gave me a whole new view of Tupac. As a true artist, not merely a rapper. The poems were deep and thoughtful and even heartbreaking. I finished in days. (2/14)


The Modern Girl’s Guide to Magic by Linsey Hall (327 pages). Charming Cove is the most magical place in England. But only the witches from there know it. Aria has been away from her hometown and her family’s potion shop for years. Why?  Because she’s a magical disaster. Literally. Callan is a self made millionaire property mogul mage. And Aria hates him with every fiber of her being. When both of them show up to compete to inherit the Garden of Enchantment, it’s game on. But Callan has never felt about Aria the way she feels about him. And he realizes that it’s more important for her to inherit the Garden. But will she accept his help?  And can anyone help her harness her true magic?  This was such a cute rom-com. I finished in 4 days.


Too Hard to Forget by Tessa Bailey (305 pages). It’s been three years since head cheerleader Peggy Clarkson graduated from University of Cincinnati. And it’s been three years since her relationship with head football coach Elliott Brooks ended. Elliott has kept his focus on football. But has never had Peggy far from his thoughts. Peggy has been engaged four times and knows that her lingering feelings for Elliott have affected her relationships. So when alumni weekend rolls around, Peggy decides this is the year to get Elliott out of her heart and mind for good. Honestly, I love a romcom. But this one wasn’t my favorite. The story was all over the place.  I finished in 3 days.


The Japanese Lover by Isabel Allende (324 pages). This was different than the other Allende books I’ve read- no magical realism to be found. But still such beautiful writing and stories. Alma arrived in America as a young child, escaping the war that was engulfing Poland. Her family in San Francisco embraced her as their own. She immediately fell in love with Ichimei, the gardener’s son. But America’s fear of Japanese kept them apart. Eventually, despite her love for Ichi (which became physical after many years apart), she married her cousin Nathaniel for the stability he offered. In her old age, she moved to Lark House. Where she met Irina, a young Moldovan woman who worked there. Together with Alma’s grandson Seth, Irina begins to uncover Alma’s secrets. And share some of her own. I finished in 4 days.


Icebreaker by Hannah Grace (429 pages). Anastasia is a junior at Unoversity of California, Maple Hills, and a star on the figure skating team. Her life’s goal?  Making the Olympics with her skating partner. Nathan is a senior and the captain of the university’s hockey team. And equally as focused on his sport and making it to the NHL. Until a facility mishap leaves both teams to practice on the same rink.  And Stassie and Nate have a hard time denying their attraction. Imagine a racier The Cutting Edge, set at a college. “Toe pick”.  I finished in 5 days. 


This month’s favorite is…….The Rose that Grew from Concrete. I cannot believe I chose poetry!

Wednesday, January 31, 2024

New year, new books

 I started off the year a little slow (for me). I only read 7 books. A total of 2,468 pages. An average of 80 pages a day. But I read some pretty good books this month. Actually, I really enjoyed all of them. 


Red, White and Royal Blue by Casey McQuiston (417 pages). Alex Claremont-Diaz is the son of the first female US President. Prince Henry is the youngest grandchild of the Queen of England. And they are archenemies. Their animosity comes to a head at Henry’s brother’s royal wedding. And both the President and the royal family act quickly to stop an international debacle. Alex and Henry must pretend to be friends. But what isn’t expected is that they actually do become friends. Until a New Years kiss changes everything. And now two of the most powerful and recognizable young men in the world have to figure out how to navigate falling in love while hiding their relationship. After all, Henry’s gran is the Queen. And Alex’s mom is running for reelection. It was a sweet story about love and family. I finished in 4 days.


The Selection by Kiera Cass (326 pages). In the country of Illea, the caste system reigns supreme. America Singer and her family are Fives, only three away from the bottom of the system. But now that Prince Maxon is of age, it’s time for The Selection. Where 35 girls from every section of the country compete to marry the Prince, regardless of their caste. For America, it’s a chance to give her family a better life. She would automatically become a Three. But it would also tear her away from Aspen, the boy she loves who’s a Six and therefore not an option for her.  As America spends more time with Maxon, their friendship begins to turn into something more. But can she truly give him her heart when it has so firmly belonged to someone else?  Think Hunger Games meets the Bachelor.  Hunger Games in that it is a dystopian North America, completely united and provinces redrawn. And Bachelor because, well, duh.  The first book in a series. And now I might need to look into the rest of the series!  I finished in 4 days.


Holes by Louis Sachar (233 pages). I’ve seen this movie more times than I can count. And I’ve heard that it is one of the more faithful adaptations of a book. So I was excited to read it!  If you don’t know the story, Stanley Yelnats IV is innocent of the crime that sends him to Camp Green Lake. Where the boys dig holes. There’s a lot of backstory about Stanley’s family curse and about the town of Green Lake (which is all very interesting, just like the movie). Honestly, the biggest differences are that Stanley is overweight when he first arrives at Green Lake. And that Stanley’s dad is trying to invent a use for old tennis shoes (not a foot odor eliminator). Everything else is just very, very minor changes. I liked the book, but I loved the movie. I finished in 2 days.


Lessons in Chemistry by Bonnie Garmus (386 pages). It’s 1961. Elizabeth Zott has a successful tv show called Supper at Six. But Elizabeth is a chemist. In fact, that’s what makes her cooking show so successful. She’s actually so much more than a chemist- she’s a single mother, a forward thinker, an inspiration. After a series of events lead her from being a researcher at Hastings Institute and madly in love with fellow scientist Calvin Evans to being a single mother of a brilliant child, Mad, and an equally brilliant dog, Six-Thirty, she finds herself on television. But she refuses to pander to the executives. Women need to know they are more than just housewives and Mrs. insert husband’s name.  They can do anything. And Elizabeth gives them that confidence, all while teaching them that cooking is a science. With help from her neighbor Harriet, her tv producer Walter, local preacher Wakely and her ob/rowing coach Dr Mason, Elizabeth creates a life that is truly wonderful. She learns that family (both biological and created) and science are all she needs.  I found Elizabeth inspiring. And then promptly started watching the Appletv show as soon as I finished the book. Sadly, I was very, VERY disappointed in the show. I do not understand when major changes are made to amazing stories. Never have, never will. I finished in 4 days.


The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue by VE Schwab (442 pages). In 1714, Adeline LaRue made a Faustian deal with a stranger- she would never grow old, she would never die, she would never be remembered. Literally, people forget her as soon as she is out of their presence. And no one from her small village has any memory of her. She can’t even tell people her name. For the next 300 years, she travels the world- meeting people, stealing things, never making concrete connections to anything but inspiring wherever she goes. Then, she meets a boy in a bookstore. A boy who remembers her name. This book, y’all. I absolutely loved it. LOVED it!!  It was beautiful. It was intriguing. I finished in 4 days.


The Road Trip by Beth O’Leary (381 pages). Four years ago, Addie and Dylan met in France. She was the caretaker at a chateau for the summer, he was on a family vacation (without most of his family). The next two years were intense. But a misunderstanding and a lie led to a breakup. Now, two years later, they find themselves road tripping to a friend’s wedding in Scotland with her stepsister, his best friend and another wedding guest. Subsequent misadventures occur on the road trip. Honestly, while I knew there were some factors working against Addie and Dylan, I didn’t really like them as a couple. I’ve never found myself rooting for a couple NOT to work out in a rom-com. But I did in this one. This misadventures on the road trip were fantastic, however. I finished in 4 days.


Beaches by Iris Rainer Dart (283 pages). I love this movie. Bette Midler and Barbara Hershey were perfection. And I had no idea that it was based on a book!  They kept remarkably close to the story. A few changes. Cee Cee Bloom is 10 and Roberta “Bertie” White is 7 when they first meet on the boardwalk of Atlantic City in 1951. There is a theatre owner they both love and Cee Cee marries. Bertie gets married while in college rather than becoming a lawyer (and her husband is a perfect douche). She does find out she’s pregnant after he walks out on her. I really liked this one. It was such a sweet story of friendship. And yes, I cried. Just like I did during the movie.  I finished in 3 days.


This month’s favorite is…….The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue. Hands down. It was probably be the favorite of the year. The bar is set HIGH, y’all. Like the cashier at Book-A-Million said, I find myself thinking about this book at random moments, all the time. I wish I could read it again for the first time