Review: That Summer

That Summer That Summer by Jennifer Weiner
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Another terrific read from Jennifer Weiner! This book is so timely with references to current events, political and otherwise. It is a well-paced story centering around two women, Diana and Daisy (also Diana but that is in the book...), who each have their own reasons to meet and become friends.
Diana is a complicated women who had a traumatic event happen during the summer before her 10th grade year of school whilst working on Cape Cod as a nanny. Daisy was raised in a loving family by parents she adored but tragically lost her father too soon. This changed the course of her life's choices going forward, completely rewriting what her life as she had planned. As the story unfolds, you get completely immersed in both women's stories and the people that surround them. As with everything that I have read from this author, the characters are beautifully developed. I think my personal favorite character is Daisy's daughter, Beatrice, who is a high school student and has embraced her own style, or an aesthetic, as she would say.
I cannot recommend this book enough for anyone that loves a book that will make you laugh and shed a few tears and teaches you something along the way. I really enjoyed these characters and being a part of their lives.
#ThatSummer #NetGalley #AtriaBooks

View all my reviews

Review: Never Saw Me Coming

Never Saw Me Coming Never Saw Me Coming by Vera Kurian
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Definitely recommend! Full review to come.

View all my reviews

Review: The Book of Accidents

The Book of Accidents The Book of Accidents by Chuck Wendig
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

This book! Wow. It is a wild ride. It is a chunky work of fiction that grabs you from the first chapter and takes you on an impressive, and somewhat challenging, journey. I don't want to give much away because I prefer to read books like this with little information at the start.
The book opens with the execution night of a serial killer who has been found guilty of abducting 5 girls and killing 4 of them. He is having his last meal and preparing for the electric chair when the current is turned on and he is plucked away to some other reality.
We primarily follow a teenage boy, Oliver, who is overly empathetic, where he can literally feel the pain of everyone around him. He doesn't quite know how to utilize this ability or gift yet and it causes him to be emotionally unstable and highly anxious about certain situations. His father, Nate, was raised in a small town, by an abusive father who is now dying of cancer. Oliver's mother is Maddie and she is an artist who makes sculptures primarily. As Oliver is bullied at school due to his inability to quiet his empathetic mind, his dad discovers that he is due to inherit the home that he grew up in and has vowed to never return. The family decides that the break from Chicago life and moving to this small town might be just what Oliver needs to restore some calm to his life. This couldn't be further from the case.
A story that is full of time-travel, magical realism, supernatural events, magic, good versus evil, and human interaction will deliver a wild ride. At times the ride seems rocky (as in possibly abandoning ship) but ultimately is worth the effort.
This book reads quickly and easily despite its length. It is a page turner with short chapters that pack a punch. This feels like a book that will stick with me and I will be thinking about for a long time.
Highly recommend, especially for those readers that are willing to step outside their comfort zone of reality based stories and into a different world.
#TheBookofAccidents #NetGalley #RandomHousePublishingGroup #Ballantine

View all my reviews

Best book of the Year!

Review: The Book of Accidents

The Book of Accidents by Chuck Wendig My rating: 5 of 5 stars This book! Wow. It is a wild ride. It is a...