Touch. Book Review #32

Hello everyone!

Finally I was able to finish a book that I have been dying to talk about for some time.

Touch by the wonderful Claire North is an adult sci-fi mystery novel that follows Kepler, the being without a face or a body of their own. Kepler is not a male or a female, Kepler does not die and Kepler’s name is not Kepler. In this novel North imagines a world where a separate species of life is able to jump between human hosts by nothing more than a touch of skin. This book is a whirlwind race across the world through different lives, different loves and different faces.

If you know anything about me as a book worm you will also know that Claire North is one of my all time favourite authors without any shadow of a doubt. Seemingly effortlessly, she weaves fine tapestries of weird and whimsical tales into stories that feel bold and true. Touch did not fall short of my expectations.

Kepler, like all of North’s anti heroes, was both extremely intelligent and extremely interesting. The writer creates a wealth of nooks and crannies and corners of detail within the houses of her cast that stitch together and intermingle into words that become real people. From the multiple languages Kepler spoke to the past lives in past bodies she recalled it was fascinating to get inside the head of a character who is eternal and eternally lonely in their most unique set of circumstances.

I have always said that North has an enormous grasp on the world despite realistically never being able to have visited all of the places that we visit inside of her books. She is a purveyor of the small details. Like the smell of a train station in a French city or the colour of the trees in a German city. All of these rivulets of information, big and small, bind together into a more full and vivid image that feels nostalgic despite being the first time read.

Lastly, I’d like to comment on the plot. Obviously everything I have said so far has been positive and I would like to finish with a positive ending too which thankfully due to the stunning plot of this book I am able to do. I won’t give spoilers but North’s grasp on mystery and thrill is bespoke. She understands how to play with narratives and dance with time all within the confines of a couple hundred pages and for that I commend her greatly.

I largely enjoy the books I review because I always vet them out before starting but for this book I can’t say I enjoyed it. I can only say I loved it.

I give this book a 5 out of 5 stars.

Keep on reading!

And thanks again Beth.

My Name is Memory. Book Review #31

Hi everyone!

This week’s post is about a VERY interesting book that looks at the concept of time

My Name is Memory by Ann Brashares is a young adult romance science fiction novel that follows Daniel, the boy who has lived many lives and has spent all of them falling in love with the same girl. This book spans multiple ages, multiple societies and multiple love stories. In a deadly race across time Daniel must save his love’s life and all of her lives so that maybe one day they can be together. But first she needs to remember him.

Firstly I would like to note that I read this book absolutely ages ago so my knowledge of it may be semi-shoddy however when I saw it on my shelf the other day I knew I had to talk about it.

The characters, specifically Daniel and Sophia are both very well written. One of the major strengths of this book, and one of the first things I felt upon reading it was how real their love felt. Brashares does a superb job at crafting Daniel in a way that shows how ancient and wise he is as one who ‘remembers’ but also how pure and innocent he is a perpetual teenager in love. Sophia and her lack of memory is both frustrating and also fascinating because as a reader we learn of what romance looks like from two perspectives: one that is fresh and one that is matured with time.

My favourite part of this book, without a doubt, is the role time plays in the plot. The fact that Daniel has lived multiple lives felt extremely cool to me and the concept of rebirth within My Name Is Memory felt very unique too. Unlike many of it’s contemporaries this book never over dramatises Daniel’s situation or makes it feel like he is some weird isolated godlike figure. Instead he is just a man who is very old which I found was both endearing and natural.

The only downside to My Name Is Memory has to lie in it’s ending. Due to the fact that the plot is so strong (notice I haven’t spoiled it because I want you to see for yourself) it only felt fitting that a strong ending should exist too however in this case there was a simple lack of one. In my opinion Brashares bit off more than she could chew in the time frame of the narrative and this led to a hasty and weirdly broken up ending that did not feel conceivable.

Would I recommend this book? Certainly. Just be aware that the ending is pretty horrible!

I give this book a 3.6 out of 5 stars.

Keep on reading!

And thanks again Beth.

Review: 36 Questions That Changed My Mind About You by Vicki Grant

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Goodreads | Amazon

Two random strangers. Thirty-six questions to make them fall in love.
Hildy and Paul each have their own reasons for taking part in the psychology study (in Paul’s case it is the $40, in Hildy’s the reasons are significantly more complex). The study poses the simple question: Can love be engineered between two random strangers?
Hildy and Paul must ask each other 36 questions, ranging from “What is your most terrible memory?” to “When did you last sing to yourself?” By the time Hildy and Paul have made it to the end of the questionnaire, they’ve laughed and cried and lied and thrown things and run away and come back again. They’ve also each discovered the painful secret the other was trying so hard to hide. But have they fallen in love?

Thank you to Hot Key Books for providing me with a copy of this book in exchange for an honest review!

This book has such an interesting concept! It’s based on The Experimental Generation of Interpersonal Closeness, which is a 1997 experiment where couples were set the task of asking each other 36 questions over the course of around an hour and staring into each others eyes for 4 minutes. Six months after the real experiment, two of the couples were married.

“I have to tell you to your face. That’s the only way I can and/or should do it. I’ve got to think of myself, too.”

I can totally see why Vicki wrote about this experiment. It facsinated me, and so did the book. I went into this book worried that it would be predictable and cheesy. Worried that it would be taking place just in one room with dialogue, and wondering how the author would portray this incredible experiment.

But I actually think that Vicki did an incredibly good job. I won’t say this book wasn’t predictable and cheesy – it was. But I couldn’t help but find it adorable and romantic. I loved both characters, and I found it so clever how Vicki made us fall for someone who originally came across as such an a**hole. I really loved Hildy and the way the book talked about her family life and her friends.

“Because, honestly, if you don’t want to see me, you probably don’t deserve to know the answer, in which case it’ll be my secret which I’ll take to death.”

This book was so fast paced and really easy to read, I literally sped through this book so quickly. I guess you could say I’m a big romantic, and because of that I really liked this book. But I think you do kind of have to be a romantic to love this book. It’s no bad thing, but I think you should go into this book prepared for cheese.

I found the mixture of texting/dialogue and prose actually worked and is part of the reason this book is so fast paced. Overall, I can safely say I enjoyed this book and I found it really well written. It also included some hilarious lines that actually made me chuckle out loud. I won’t be giving it the full 5 stars simply because it’s not perfect and didn’t completely blow me away, but it’s definitely one I’ll be recommending in the future for lovers of a good rom com. In fact, if this was a rom com movie, I think it’d do really well. And I’d definitely be queuing up to see it.

★★★★

P.S. If you like the sound of books based on The Experimental Generation of Interpersonal Closeness, I’m fairly certain it’s loosely mentioned in one of my favourite books, The Sun is Also a Star by Nicola Yoon.

-Beth

May your shelves forever overflow with books! ☽

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Review: Everything Leads to You by Nina LaCour

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Goodreads | Amazon

A wunderkind young set designer, Emi has already started to find her way in the competitive Hollywood film world.
Emi is a film buff and a true romantic, but her real-life relationships are a mess. She has desperately gone back to the same girl too many times to mention. But then a mysterious letter from a silver screen legend leads Emi to Ava. Ava is unlike anyone Emi has ever met. She has a tumultuous, not-so-glamorous past, and lives an unconventional life. She’s enigmatic…. She’s beautiful. And she is about to expand Emi’s understanding of family, acceptance, and true romance.

This book had everything. It has beautiful characters, a lovely romance, a great setting, an interesting focus and passages that left me reaching for tabs. To put it simply – I adored this book.

Let’s begin with the characters. I adored Emi immediately. She’s smart, creative, enthusiastic and good at what she does. But she’s also humble, grateful and has her own faults. Throughout the book she is growing up and learning, finding her feet in the world of film and work. She goes through difficult challenges but learns from them, and in turn teaches the reader.

“”The best things aren’t perfectly constructed. They aren’t illusions. They aren’t larger than life. They are life.”

I also loved Emi’s family and her best friend, Charlotte. I wish their friendship was explored in maybe a little more depth, but that is the only tiny fault I could pick out from this book.

Emi is a set designer, and I can’t think of a better thing for a book to focus on. I’m a creative media student, and I also love interior design. Emi had a brilliant understanding of her industry and job, and the book talked in-depth about her life as a set designer. This is just so awesome. This book is a romance with a different focus. It’s not entirely about Emi and Ava. In fact, the plot follows her working on a movie, and Ava is involved.

“Part of me knew that all along, but I got it wrong anyway. What I’m trying to say is that I just want to know you.

This book is set in summer in LA, and I found the setting worked perfectly. I wouldn’t say this is exactly a ‘summer read’, but I felt the underlying tones of school breaks and summer jobs.

Nina LaCour is a great writer of LGBTQIA+ books, and I really love how she approaches Emi’s sexuality. It’s not a big thing, she’s not treated differently..she just fits in. This book does tackle the subject but it’s not a main focus, and that works incredibly well.

“You don’t have to be at your best. We can’t all be at our best all the time. But”, I say again, “I just want to know you”.”

I’m happy to tell you I don’t have a bad word to say about this book. I just loved it, I felt utterly absorbed and I’m still feeling sad about having to say goodbye to Emi’s world. This is definitely one of the most enjoyable and well-written books I’ve read recently!

★★★★★

-Beth

May your shelves forever overflow with books! ☽

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Books I want to read. #30

Hey guys.

Today i’m going to share with you some of the books that have been sitting on my shelf, staring at me, waiting to be read. I would recommend all of these books even though I’ve never read any of them myself! Disclaimer my recommendation is purely based off of all of the good things I have heard about them.

Our Chemical Hearts by Krystal Sutherland.

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The first book on my TBR and probably the next book I will read is Our Chemical Hearts by Krystal Sutherland. This is a Young adult novel that follows Henry Page, the hopeless romantic and Grace Town the unusual girl who walks with a cane. I know absolutely nothing about the plot but I do know that it is meant to be hilarious and so i’m basically sold already. Also this was the book Beth (the owner of this blog who you obviously know) gave me for my birthday. Thanks Beth.

Harry Potter by J.K. Rowling

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I’m certain you are all completely aware of what Harry Potter is (if you aren’t- who are you?). I have been wanting to read these books ever since I found out about the story. I’ve watched all of the films and have even claimed to be a super fan yet I can’t even say I have read the books. The only thing that’s been stopping me is time but I reckon I could fit them in over winter break with a lot of tight manoeuvres and ignoring of homeworks.

Sapiens by Yuval Noah Harari

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Over the past year or so I have been seeing this book more and more in Waterstones. It recently got to the point where I simply gave in and looked it up. Turns out it’s a super interesting non fiction narrative that looks at the origins of man. I didn’t even have to buy my own copy thanks to the kindness of one of my friends in history class. Cannot wait to start it even with the two million pages it’s made of.

Thank you for reading this post. I hope you pick one of these books up if you haven’t already!

Keep on reading!

And thanks again Beth.

Ruin and Rising. Book Review #29

Hey everyone,

I am back after that brief and busy two week interlude.

This week I want to give a follow up review for the final book in the Grisha Trilogy.

Ruin and Rising by Leigh Bardugo is the last instalment in her widely acclaimed Grisha trilogy. The book follows Alina Starkov, a peasant who became a saint who became an exile. In this final adventure Starkov must save the lives of her nation and her world from the Darkling, an ancient and devilishly handsome ruler who has taken control of Ravka and now wants to take control of Alina. This is Bardugo’s tying of ends and farewell to the world she created for some of her most beloved characters.

Firstly I’d like to comment on how proud I am of myself for actually finishing a trilogy. This task never used to be such a rare occurrence but recently i’ve been finding myself unable to care about a story long enough to stick with it across books. So bravo me!

Now I always find it difficult to review end books because endings to me are such a personal thing. The role of an author is an impossible one that always ends in heartbreak and saltiness from the fandom and so this review has to, to some degree, remain subjective.

Bardugo has always been good with worlds. In Ruin and Rising her talent is no less prevalent. Ravka in this final production is even more gorgeous. We certainly see much less of the urban areas that the authoress is so skilful in creating however the countryside and landscape that the crew of characters explore is described so carefully that the pages I was reading felt like a memory I had lived.

The setting was a big win for me and so with all big wins that has to be some losses too. I did feel as though the amount of characters introduced into the main plot were not relevant at this stage. It felt forced- like the writer was trying to inject something fresh by adding new people despite there being no actual logistical need for them. Sometimes the blur of names being mentioned did take away from the thrilling plot which was a shame.

I will not give any spoilers regarding the romance because it is always one of my favourite parts and I’m pretty sure that it’s probably one of your favourites too. What I will say is that the romance just became plain confusing and unnecessarily ambiguous at this stage. There was a lot of umming and arring that I didn’t care for. Quite frankly it was the situation of me staring at the page and wanting to scream: just be in love!

Alina continued to be a powerful and intelligent lead but there was some unneeded immaturity and whining that I felt was only put in to make her feel more real. Don’t get me wrong- as I’ve said many times before – the best books are realistic but Alina just annoyed me at parts which I felt was a let down.

The ending itself was very satisfactory (in my opinion). I always believe that in fiction there never should be a true happily ever after because it simply makes for a boring and un-provoking plot. Bardugo did not let me down in this department because the trade off between wins and losses was so balanced.

Would I recommend this book/trilogy? Yes if not to fill in the gaps in Six of Crows or simply show allegiance to the queen that is Leigh Bardugo then just because it is a good read. Was this book a sensational life changing experience? No- I would say that that was book one. The Grisha trilogy, like many things in life, just went gradually down hill. But thats ok.

I give this book a 3.6 out of 5 stars.

Keep on reading!

And thanks again Beth.

Review: There’s Someone Inside Your House by Stephanie Perkins

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Goodreads | Amazon

Love hurts…
Makani Young thought she’d left her dark past behind her in Hawaii, settling in with her grandmother in landlocked Nebraska. She’s found new friends and has even started to fall for mysterious outsider Ollie Larsson. But her past isn’t far behind.
Then, one by one, the students of Osborne Hugh begin to die in a series f gruesome murders, each with increasingly grotesque flair. As the terror grows closer and her feelings for Ollie intensify, Makani is forced to confront her own dark secrets.

I’ve wanted to read this book since wayyy before the release, and I had the perfect opportunity while I was in Wales on holiday last week!

Okay, this was interesting. I don’t even know how to describe how I feel about this one…so mixed! Firstly, it’s kind of weird to read this book afterPerkins’ other stuff. I’m sorry, but she is not a horror writer in my eyes.

“Neither of then was a monster.”

I’ve been reading a couple of Goodreads reviews and I’ve definitely found the best way to describe this book is this. It’s like a cheesy high school slasher movie in book form. Take Scream, but halfway through the movie you know who the killer is and the book just seems to carry on. It must obvious so far I have a few issues here. But saying that, I certainly didn’t dislike it.

For one, this book actually made me laugh out loud. Like, I really don’t laugh at books, even Me and Earl and the Dying Girl didn’t make me burst into giggles. But there were some incredibly ridiculous sentences that made me had to put the book down and explain why I was giggling.

“She was a human who had made a terrible mistake.”

I really enjoyed reading about the characters, and I’m happy to say this book is really diverse. Makani made a great main character and I enjoyed reading about her background in Hawaii and her Grandma was great! I love that her Grandma was a big part of this novel, because families aren’t usually so included. However, I do wish her two best friends (Darby and Alex) had a little more development.

Unfortunately, the big twist about Makani’s ‘dark background’ did disappoint me. It was built up to be such a big and bad thing that I actually expected a hell of a lot more. I won’t say anything else because of spoilers, but there was just a lot of build up, and in the end I don’t think all of it was needed, or it should have been a bigger twist.

“(S)he was a human who had planned his/her terrible actions.”
(Added gender terms due to spoilers!)

And finally, can we just mention that ending. Like, if anything, the book should have started after, and had what Makani ended on as the goddamn dark background. Unfortunately, it all went downhill at the end for me. Although I can kind of appreciate why it ended like it did, it literally destroyed this book for me.

I actually can’t explain why I hated the ending so much, but I have to remember that I did really enjoy reading pretty much all of this book (apart from the end). I did find it funny, thrilling, diverse and all round enjoyable to read. It had just the right amount of gore/horror for me and the romance was done well in my opinion. So I’m very mixed,  and let’s leave it at that.

★★★

-Beth

May your shelves forever overflow with books! ☽

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Review: It’s About Love by Steven Camden

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Goodreads | Amazon

He’s Luke. She’s Leia.
Just like in Star Wars. Just like they’re made for each other. Same film studies course, different backgrounds, different ends of town.
Only this isn’t a film. This is real life. This is where monsters from the past come back to take revenge. This is where you are sometimes the monster.
But real life? Sometimes, only sometimes, it turns out just like in the movies…
… maybe.

I bought this book well over a year ago at YALC 2016 simply because I liked the synopsis, but I’ve only just got around to reading it now. I actually enjoyed this book quite a lot, and there were so many things I liked about it.

On a personal level, this book was pretty cool. For one, Camden is apparently from about 10 minutes up the road from me! And this book is set in my local big city – which I (for obvious reasons) really enjoyed reading about.

“Apology is pointless. Apologies are for when you forget something. Or bump into somebody. Apologies are for accidents.”

I loved a lot about this book. It really tackles some great (and difficult) topics, such as living with someone who has committed a serious crime, which I found really interesting to read about. I also felt (as a media student) that college was portrayed really accurately. I felt utterly convinced that Luke was a film student and Camden obviously knows a lot about scriptwriting. His knowledge really shines through in the book!

You can’t apologise for something you chose to do. That’s like apologising for being you.”

Unfortunately I did have a few gripes with this book – and one of these was Luke. I was wondering why there was something not feeling right about this book, and I think it’s because of Luke. I just felt like he wasn’t the most likeable character at times and although his mistakes were real, they also made me dislike him.

I liked this book and I can’t really fault it – but I don’t think I connected to it as much as other readers did. It was just a little too gritty for me.

★★★★

-Beth

May your shelves forever overflow with books! ☽

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Mini Review: Milk and Honey by Rupi Kaur

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milk and honey is a collection of poetry and prose about survival. It is about the experience of violence, abuse, love, loss, and femininity. It is split into four chapters, and each chapter serves a different purpose, deals with a different pain, heals a different heartache. milk and honey takes readers through a journey of the most bitter moments in life and finds sweetness in them because there is sweetness everywhere if you are just willing to look.

As mentioned in my birthday wishlist and book haul, I’ve wanted to read this collection of poetry for a long time, actually since it came out. I was lucky enough to receive it from my lovely friend Amy for my birthday, and I finished it in less than an hour the other evening.

“you tell me to quiet down cause
my opinions make me less beautiful
but i was not made with a fire in my belly
so i could be put out
i was not made with a lightness on my tongue
so i could be easy to swallow
i was made heavy
half blade and half silk
difficult to forget and not easy
for the mind to follow”

Milk and Honey is everthing I expected and more. This book is just so raw. It is a complete outpouring of emotion and it made me feel so many too. I cried at the amount of herself Rupi has thrown into this story. I admire her for opening herself up so much to us.

Although this is a collection of poems, it also follows a simple storyline – the journey of Rupi’s self-acceptance and healing. It also includes some gorgeous little simple illustrations which fit perfectly with the poems.

“you were a dragon long before
he came around and said
you could fly
you will remain a dragon
long after he’s left”

Overall, this book is tender, raw, sensitive and emotional. It is heart breaking and heart warming. It is brutal and healing. It is beautiful.

(I don’t to ruin my no doubt 5 star thoughts with this, but the only niggle I had is the lack of capitalisation in this book. Although I actually felt like it worked, I simply can’t be swayed in my opinion of capitalisation. Sorry.)

★★★★★

-Beth

May your shelves forever overflow with books! ☽

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Siege and Storm. Book Review #28

Hi guys!

Today’s review is a follow on from a book I talked about a few weeks ago.

Siege and Storm is the second instalment in the Shadow and Bone trilogy by Leigh Bardugo.

The story picks up right after Alina and Mal have escaped the Darkling and are now onboard a ship to Novyi Zem across the True Sea in search of a better, safer life.

I started this a few days after my reading of Shadow and Bone but I found I was able to jump right back into the world with great ease. This was probably down to Bardugo’s skill at world building but also the action and drama your thrown right into from the beginning probably also has something to do with it.

In Siege and Storm we see a wiser and more considerate Alina who has clearly grown up from book one. Further than this, the protagonist’s attitude to her power and her bestfriend/boyfriend also evolves in a way that feels more realistic and mature. The writer, I feel, in this instalment very clearly defined her characters and their personalities and I believe that was a real credit to this book.

The pacing of the plot as previously mentioned was lightning fast but I never felt like details were being left out; in fact I found it only made the narrative more exciting.

All of the delicate world and culture that Bardugo forged in book one carries over nicely into Siege and Storm and I was really glad to see that places like Os Alta and the Little Palace were revisited and described in greater depth. It felt like I was returning to a fictional home.

My review is largely in favour of the story yet I do have one qualm about SaS: The romance. I didn’t really care much for Alina and Mal’s relationship at the end of SaB but I thought it was reasonably fluffy and nicely carried out. However moving into the second book Bardugo puts a lot of effort into investing you into these character’s love and then, like some evil masterful authoress, destroys it all. And I hated it. I wanted them to be together because it had always felt so right within the context of the world and so it didn’t really make sense to me when they weren’t.

This book was definitely great if not fantastic but some details made me feel a little less positive. Maybe it was just mid book syndrome.

I give this book a 3.8 out of 5 stars.

Keep on reading!

And thanks again Beth. HAPPY BIRTHDAY!!!!!!!!!!!!!