Book Review, Fiction

Fun for the Whole Family by Jennifer E. Smith ~ Book Review

My Rating: 🍪🍪

Genre: Fiction

        Gemma, Connor, Roddy, and Jude Endicott were once bound together by the annual trips with their elusive mother, to a different state every year. They are suddenly brought back together by Jude, who initiates a new family trip, though their mother is long gone.

        I finished this book about a week ago and I can hardly remember it. The characters felt unrealistic to me, each one packed with stereotypes to try to make them feel distinct which actually just made them feel one-dimensional. It created a distinct lack of ability to care about what happened to them – maybe that’s also partially because I didn’t care for most of them. I also didn’t buy that they’d all just drop everything to fly to North Dakota.

        Central to the plot is three big secrets that Jude wants to get off her chest to her siblings. This was the most compelling part of the book for me (the rest felt very low on plot). We get flashbacks to the family’s road trips over the year that help to inform and provide context around the secrets.

        I’m kind of grasping at straws as to what else to say about this one because it was so forgettable for me.

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Book Review, Fiction, Romance

Yours for the Season by Emily Stone ~ Book Review

Genre: Romance
My Rating: 🍪🍪.5

I was feeling ready for a light read so I picked up my first holiday romance of the year. In Yours for the Season, Mel’s ex, Finn, begs her to go on his family’s Christmas trip to Scotland with him and she…. says yes? From the get-go, I found her character hard to connect with because of that choice. She rationalizes it because she would otherwise be alone for the holidays. Call me crazy, but I’d much rather be alone.

The story bounces back and forth between their present day experience in Scotland and their past relationship. I enjoyed the parts set in the present. The forced proximity made for a cute build up of romance. Everything felt very cozy and festive with Finn’s family and I liked the holiday vibes.

The segments outlining Finn and Mel’s relationship when they were together didn’t do enough to make me care about them as a couple. There wasn’t enough chemistry for me to root for them and Finn’s decision to break up with her and the way he did it felt really poorly thought out.

This wasn’t a total loss because it did help me get in the holiday spirit, but there are other holiday romances that do a lot more.

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Book Review, Fiction, Science Fiction

The Dream Hotel by Laila Lalami ~ Book Review

Genre: Science Fiction

My Rating: 🍪🍪.5

        The Dream Hotel follows Sara as she is detained on her way home from a conference abroad. She lives in a world where the Risk Assessment Administration can monitor people’s dreams and put them in a retention center if it’s believed that, based on those dreams, they could become a threat.

        Sara has a husband and infant twins at home and is desperate to get back to them. She soon begins to realize that all the other women detained with her believe themselves innocent as well and yet their stays are lengthened time and time again by a deeply faulty system.

        There is so much in this book that is reflective of our actual current reality, making this all the more horrifying to read about. The details about how personal data was twisted and used against the women made me uncomfortable and deeply aware of how much of my own data is floating around.

        Despite the really fascinating premise and set up, this book was incredibly slow. I felt like I was reading the same chapter over and over again. I’m sure to some extent this was intentional, to reflect the monotony of Sara’s life, but it was way too extreme. I also found the characters to be kind of one dimensional. They each had their “thing” that defined them, but I didn’t feel I knew them beyond that.

        Phenomenal world-building and ideas, but really challenging pacing and amount of plot.

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Book Review, Fiction

The Compound by Aisling Rawle ~ Book Review

My Rating: 🍪🍪🍪🍪.5
Genre: Fiction

I was obsessed with the concept behind this book. It takes place on the ‘set’ of a reality show much like Love Island in which contestants must pair up into couples as a safety net to remain on the show. The compound they are staying with starts out trashed from the previous season of contestants and with few supplies and they must complete tasks or challenges to gain things, which they often then promote to watchers back home.

The setting of this compound was so vivid to me and I loved the way it changed throughout the story as contestants were rewarded or punished for their actions. It was also clear that the outside world was in some way dystopian, making the motivation to stay on the show and in the compound that much greater. I love it when a setting feels almost like a character in itself and that was definitely the case in this one.

Lily, our narrator, is extremely beautiful but doesn’t have much else going for her (in her own words). She doesn’t really have much of a personality, but I think that was largely the point. She’s exactly the type of vain, fame-hungry person you might expect to be on this kind of show. I appreciated getting to know the other contestants through her eyes and trying to figure out who would be trustworthy.

I’m a big fan of reality tv, which I think added to my enjoyment of the premise, but the unsettling, cutthroat nature of the game upped the ante. There were elements of desperation in the game that reminded me of The Hunger Games in the best way.

I was expecting there to be a little more to the ending, which is why this didn’t quite make it to five stars, but I loved it nonetheless.

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Book Review, Fiction, mystery, thriller

The Kind Worth Killing by Peter Swanson ~ Book Review

My Rating: 🍪🍪🍪.5
Genre: Thriller

When Ted meets Lily on a flight, he finds himself confessing to her that his wife, Miranda, is cheating on him. After a throwaway comment expressing his anger, Lily offers to help him kill Miranda. Slowly, we begin to learn that there might be much more to Lily’s interest in helping Ted.

I enjoyed the parts of this book narrated by Lily. We hear about her dark childhood and she speaks in such a matter of fact way about her twisted thoughts and actions. It allowed me to really get inside her head and understand her motivations. Miranda’s sections on the other hand seemed pretty surface level. Ted as a narrator had no real personality and I had trouble caring about him.

The storyline was very twisty with a lot of layers, which I enjoyed. That said, I didn’t find any of it super gripping or particularly shocking. This was a pretty good thriller, but nothing I would go out of my way to recommend.

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Book Review, Fiction, Magical Realism

Cassandra in Reverse by Holly Smale ~ Book Review

My Rating: 🍪.5
Genre: Fiction

Cassandra, our neurodivergent main character, has always needed things to be done in a certain way and tends to struggle to understand other people’s perspectives. When she unexpectedly discovers that she has the ability to go back in time, she uses it to her advantage to learn more about the people and experiences around her and play out scenarios in a way that she’s happier with. Most notably, she attempts to keep her job and her boyfriend, both of which she loses at the beginning of the book.

The premise of this story was so intriguing to me. I love magical realism and have enjoyed a lot of similar types of books. Unfortunately, the way time travel was used in this book was a) incredibly repetitive and b) undefined to a point where it was confusing what the rules of this new ‘ability’ were.

I really enjoyed the way that Cassandra (sometimes) learned and grew from her power, but often she was just hitting rewind willy nilly to her heart’s content when she said something slightly wrong. I also didn’t particularly appreciate how much effort she spent trying to change herself for a man and using her powers to keep herself in situations that clearly did not serve her. I found it to be incredibly frustrating.

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Book Review, Fiction

Eleanor Oliphant is Completely Fine by Gail Honeyman ~ Book Review

My Rating: 🍪🍪🍪🍪
Genre: Fiction

I’ve seen this book around forever and I don’t know why it took me so long to pick it up. Now that I’ve finished it, I keep kind of getting it mixed up with I Hope This Finds You Well, which I read earlier this year and is also primarily a workplace focused story about someone who doesn’t quite fit in with her colleagues around her.

Eleanor Oliphant is Completely Fine did an exceptional job at getting inside of Eleanor’s head and showing the reader how she came to the conclusions she did and why other people might find her thought processes odd. She strikes up an unexpected friendship with the IT guy at work, Raymond, and it was really heartwarming to watch them open up to each other. I really appreciated seeing her realize that maybe the things she believed about herself and her future were not all true.

Eleanor has frequent phone calls with her ‘Mummy’ and we slowly learn about the abuse she suffered as a child. There was a lot more to this part of the story than I was expecting and it helps to inform Eleanor’s actions in the present-day narrative.

This was a surprising and unusual book where not all that much happens plot-wise, but the main character is interesting enough that I stayed invested and a whole lot happens in terms of her growth.

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Book Review, Fiction

Finding Grace by Loretta Rothschild ~ Book Review

My Rating: 🍪🍪🍪🍪
Genre: Fiction

It’s hard to write a review of Finding Grace without giving away a major twist in the book – but don’t worry, it happens very early on. The story is told from the perspective of Honor, who has a daughter named Chloe, and a husband, Tom, but longs for another child. She is so close to getting what she wants until suddenly, the unthinkable happens and the entire story is flipped on its head.

The rest of the book is kind of a weird twisted, suspenseful romance. I was so shocked by the initial twist in this book and completely sucked in by Tom’s compulsive behavior. This was the kind of book where you feel utterly sickened by characters’ actions, so much so that you can’t look away.

I will say, toward the end of the book I was completely fed up with Tom and felt like his behavior had gone off the tracks to the point where it wasn’t really enjoyable to read about. But overall, a suspenseful and unexpected story start to finish.

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Book Review, Fiction, Romance

Maine Characters by Hannah Orenstein ~ Book Review


My Rating: 🍪🍪.5
Genre: Romance

The first time I tried to read this book I couldn’t get into it at all, but I decided to revisit it during the summer since it has a lake house setting. Marginally helpful. Vivian’s dad never told her she had a half sister, so after he dies, she is shocked to find Lucy at her dad’s lake house. The two of them are forced to grapple not only with the grief of losing their father, but also the reality of coexisting.

I really enjoyed the Maine setting and the descriptions of life on the lake. It was atmospheric and realistic and fun to hear about during the summer, particularly since I live in New England. That was the main (get it) redeeming quality of the book for me. Both sisters were incredibly annoying. There was too much emphasis on one being really not well-off and the other being an uppity city girl. I did not care about their romances whatsoever A. because they were making bad choices and B. because I did not care about them.

People keep comparing this one to The Parent Trap and I personally find that insulting.

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Book Review, Fiction

The Island by Elin Hilderbrand ~ Book Review

My Rating: 🍪🍪🍪.5
Genre: Fiction

When Chess abruptly calls off her wedding, her mom, Birdie, summons her sister and her youngest daughter to join them on remote Tuckernuck Island for the summer. Trapped together with no phone service or television, the women alternately turn to and turn on one another.

Because the setting was so singular, there are not a ton of characters in this book which meant we focused deeply on the four women and the few visitors who came over to see them. I enjoyed being stuck on Tuckernuck with them. Hilderbrand allowed me to perfectly visualize their home there and the sprawling beauty of the island.

We get some variety with flashbacks from Chess of her romance gone wrong. These bring us to the city and allow us to slowly see how her relationship unfolded and what led to its dramatic end. I really liked the way these excerpts contrasted with the present-day part of the book.

I found Chess’s younger sister Tate to be pretty annoying. I’m sure we’re supposed to be rooting for her romance to work out, but she was too ‘woe is me’ for me to respect her. None of the romance actually felt that central to the book for me, I cared much more about the familial relationships and found them more compelling (at least out of everything happening in the present-day part of the story).

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