Book Review, Fiction, Romance

Heartbreak for Hire by Sonia Hartl ~ Book Review

Gallery Books
Genre: Romance
Release Date: July 27, 2021
My Rating: 🍪🍪🍪.5

Brinkley works at Heartbreak for Hire, an agency that specializes in taking down men who have somehow wronged their female friends, coworkers, or lovers. She keeps her job secret from those around her, especially her mom, who’s still disappointed that Brinkley dropped out of grad school and didn’t follow in her academic footsteps.

I was sucked into Brinkley’s unorthodox world and loved seeing how she prepared for her work missions and carried them out. It made for a sexy, empowering narrative that immediately made me like Brinkley. Although she knows that there must be more to him than meets the eye, Brinkley finds herself undeniably attracted to one of her targets, and things get awkward when he shows up at her office a few days later.

The romance in this book was steamy and electric. There were a lot of other elements to this book, including Brinkley’s rocky relationship with her mom and former classmates, and the troubling control her boss seems to hold over her. I felt like these elements needed to either be fleshed out a little more, or omitted, because they seemed a little incomplete. The overall plot, however, was flirty and captivating.

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Book Review, Fiction, Uncategorized

Normal People: A Novel, by Sally Rooney ~ Book Review

Normal People and DonutFaber and Faber
Release Date: August 28, 2018
Fiction
My Rating: 🍪🍪🍪

Given all the hype surrounding this book, I was disappointed. The first thing that really stood out to me was the stylistic choice to omit quotation marks, making the narrative feel very stream-of-consciousness. This was a little jarring at first, but I came to like it. For me, it made the story feel more personal to the characters, as if experiencing conversations the same way they would.

The book follows the relationship between Connell and Marianne, beginning in High School. Connell’s mother works as a cleaning lady, and one of her clients is Marianne’s family. The two of them seldom interact at school, Marianne is a loner without friends, and Connell is popular. Nonetheless, a romance sparks between them. A romance that they only acknowledge when they’re alone together.

Connell’s mother is skeptical of the scope of the relationship: she loves Marianne, and she loves Connell, but she is concerned that he is mistreating Marianne by only paying attention to her in public. I mean, agreed. I loved Connell’s mom.

Unsurprisingly, the two have an on-again-off-again relationship. They seem to always be judging the people the other one surrounds themselves with. It all felt very repetitive to me. There was a constant struggle about whether or not they should hook up, and endless miscommunication. That’s what annoyed me the most. They kept breaking up just because they were bad at communicating. Like one person heard one thing and the other one heard something else and no one asked for any clarification. They were infuriatingly passive. Their relationship felt unbearably toxic, and I was deflated by the thought that they wasted so many years chasing each other in circles regardless of their fictional-ness. 

The writing in this book was exceptional, and the style was unique and interesting. The characters were detailed and vivid. The focus on their strained relationships with sex and violence was powerful and added a lot to my perception of Marianne and the household she was raised in. With all that being said, this story really didn’t blow me away like I was anticipating based on how much acclaim it has received. The maple bacon doughnut that I had to accompany it, however, absolutely did blow me away.

My Rating: 🍪🍪🍪
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Book Review, Fiction, Horror, Uncategorized

It by Stephen King ~ Book Review

It Book with Rainbow Sprinkle Donut

Viking
Release Date: September 15, 1986
Genre: Horror
My Rating: 🍪🍪🍪🍪

Honestly, I’m just proud of myself for finishing this book. At over 1,100 pages, it is by far the longest book I’ve ever read, and suffice it to say, I would not have completed it if I didn’t enjoy it. That being said, I’m not really a horror person. This was my first Stephen King read, and I was a little nervous about being horrified and/or scared to walk around my apartment after dark. I was pleasantly surprised by the content, however. There were absolutely, without a doubt, parts of this book that were pure horror, but it is such a big book, that they seemed more diffused throughout it, and I could handle them at this less concentrated level. 

The book follows the lives of The Losers, a group of seven misfits growing up in Derry, Maine. The chapters alternate between their childhood lives, at about twelve years old, chronicling how they all come together, and their adult lives, as they all return to Derry for the first time since moving away. I need to pause here for a moment to address setting in this story. Derry truly takes on a life of its own. King goes into great detail about the history of the town, as well as the types of people who live there, and a narrative surrounding the homophobia that exists within its borders. Having grown up in New England, and spent a lot of time in small-town Maine, I could picture Derry through King’s descriptions. I feel like I’ve been there, and that was maybe the most horrifying part of all for me.

Within the detailed history of this town, there was also, of course, the history of It, a horrifying being (more of presence really) that resides within the town and preys on children. Although its true form is never seen, it most often appears as a clown named Pennywise, who wears a suit with orange pompoms, and is accompanied by a bunch of balloons. Throughout the book, these pompoms and the balloons taunt the group of losers as a precursor to It’s appearances.

The return of the adults back to their hometown is initiated by Mike, who has remained in Derry all his life, working in the library. He realizes that It has returned to the town after a break of twenty some-odd years. As children, the losers tried, and nearly succeeded at killing It, and made a vow to return to Derry to finish It off should the violence start again. As they are called back to Derry after so many years away, they realize they had forgotten their childhood entirely, but the horror, as well as the camaraderie, all comes rushing back to them as they begin their return journeys. The terror is so great, in fact, that one of them, Stan, kills himself, rather than facing Derry and It once more. 

The sections and chapters through most of the book are quite long. King goes into details about different children who were killed in the town, and how they died, as well as introducing many friends and enemies of our seven misfits. He is able to go off on descriptions that are pages long about the smallest details (which accounts for the length of this book) but without making the writing feel bogged down. Towards the end, the chapters begin to flip-flop much more rapidly between present and past, showing how the kids tried to defeat It before, and how the adults are copying their past actions to do so again. 

My one complaint about this book is the length. Although I appreciate King’s descriptive style, I do feel there were sections and backstories that did not directly pertain to the narrative that could have been cut. I did read and enjoy the entirety of the book, but by the end I was ready to be done with it, if only to move on to a read that I could fit in my purse.

My Rating: 🍪🍪🍪🍪
It on Goodreads
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