Book #21 of 2023. Falling in Love with Hominids by Nalo Hopkinson.
I really enjoyed these short stories! Ms, Hopkinson is slowly but surely moving up the list of my favorite authors - and BONUS the narrator is another fave, Bahni Turpin!
There were several short stories here but my fave has to be the one about the haunted mall - not at all what I expected and it was truly touching. Another fave was the re-telling of The Tempest - EXCELLENT spin on the story!!
I don’t often read short stories, but this was an excellent pick!
Book #20 of 2023. The Heretic’s Daughter by Kathleen Kent.
This Sarah’s story of how she survived the Salem Witch Trials but her mother did not. A moving tale of early American life infected by fear, jealousy, bigotry and hatred.
Sarah, her mother and brothers were all accused of witchcraft by various neighbors and relatives. In this novel, Sarah shares her day-to-day life, inter-family relationships and various interactions with the people living around them. I really enjoyed this moving view of how hysteria can take hold of a community and ruin lives.
Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated
3.0
Books # 17 & 18. It Ends With Us and It Starts With Us by Colleen Hoover.
These are my first Hoover books and I know she has a dedicated following, but I just thought they were ok.
The books are a narrative of the Lily - Atlas - Ryle love triangle. Lily meets Atlas when they’re both in high school and dealing with personal trauma. They go their separate ways and meet again as adults when Lily is involved with Ryle.
There is a LOT of trauma across both books - be warned!
The only character that I cared for was Atlas - he seemed to be a great guy. Lily annoyed me on so many levels and I tried so hard to root for her. Ryle was a very flat character - he had no depth and we really didn’t learn much about him or his motivations.
The concept was interesting but I think the story could have been so much more. 3 out of 5.
Books # 17 & 18. It Ends With Us and It Starts With Us by Colleen Hoover.
These are my first Hoover books and I know she has a dedicated following, but I just thought they were ok.
The books are a narrative of the Lily - Atlas - Ryle love triangle. Lily meets Atlas when they’re both in high school and dealing with personal trauma. They go their separate ways and meet again as adults when Lily is involved with Ryle.
There is a LOT of trauma across both books - be warned!
The only character that I cared for was Atlas - he seemed to be a great guy. Lily annoyed me on so many levels and I tried so hard to root for her. Ryle was a very flat character - he had no depth and we really didn’t learn much about him or his motivations.
The concept was interesting but I think the story could have been so much more. 3 out of 5.
Book #16 of 2023. Things I Should Have Told My Daughter by Pearl Cleage.
I was really excited to read this one because I have loved so much of her writing. This one just didn’t do it for me. Maybe a different format would have worked for me, I don’t know.
The book is a series of entries from her personal journals over a 2-decade span. We see the inner workings of her mind through marriage, pregnancy and divorce. She also shares her jubilation in helping to get Atlanta’s first black mayor elected and her eventual distaste for working in politics.
It was very interesting to hear her viewpoint of historic events/people. But it is very much a collection of journal entries and sometimes comes across and fragmented and disjointed, as a journal would. I guess I’ll keep holding out for a true biography, maybe.
Book #15 of 2023. Brown Girl in the Ring by Nalo Hopkinson.
This is my first novel by this author and I really look forward to seeing what else she has published!
The story is set in 21st century Toronto. The city is in ruins due to economic decline and all with the means to do so have left the city and live in the suburbs. Ti-Jeanne is a new mom - young and single. When she realized she was pregnant, she left her drug-addicted boyfriend and went back home to her grandmother. Shortly after their son is born, however, Tony finds himself trapped in an organ-stealing scheme. He turns to Ti-Jeanne and Mami to help him elude the gang he’s involved with so he can skip town. The plot fails and much messiness (great and interesting messiness) ensues. I loved the distinct Caribbean voice and culture that was evident throughout the story. The narration was superb. I give it 4/5.
I really enjoyed this story! Charlie Reade is your typical high school junior - good student, good athlete, good kid - with a not-so-typical past OR future.
Charlie’s mother was killed in a horrible accident when he was a small boy and his dad turned to alcoholism to cope. When we meet Charlie, both are doing much better.
One day, Charlie is riding past the home of a cantankerous neighbor and hears a call for help. He does the neighborly thing and helps Mr. Bowditch, which takes his life in a completely new direction. He finds out things about Mr. Bowditch that he never would have imagined and they become very close friends. Then Mr. Bowditch dies and he finds a whole new world!
Charlie ventures to this world and his journey leads him to discover the type of man he will become - but he has to choose. Will he be a Disney Prince or a Dark Prince? The story was riveting! 4.75/5
Book #13 of 2023. The Last Black Unicorn by Tiffany Haddish.
I have decided to read more non-fiction books this year and I’ve found that biographies and memoirs are most interesting to me. This is the third so far.
I really did not know much about Tiffany before reading this (she narrates the audiobook and I do recommend!) and now I want to know her personally.
She has overcome so many hardships in life and still manages to have such an aura of positivity! She has experienced child abuse, abandonment, foster care, illiteracy, and domestic violence and that isn’t all. Through all this she keeps growing and keeps loving.
The essays are all open and honest and hearing her get emotional while reading made them feel even more genuine. I already knew that she was funny, but she is also all heart! I give it 4/5.
I must confess that I’m a fan of Stephen King’s novels - the film and tv adaptations, not so much, but I’d LOVE to see this one adapted to the screen!
I really feel like this is King’s homage to Something Wicked this Way Comes by Ray Bradbury. This is the story of Devin Jones’ summer after his junior year of college. He’s in a great relationship with the girl of his dreams and when she gets a summer job in Boston, he gets a summer job at an amusement park in North Carolina. He makes life-long friends; learns what love is not; matures a lot AND unveils a serial killer!
This was a fast read that never got predictable. The characters were multi-dimensional (even the eccentric ones); the setting is a small Carolina beach town and the story is amazing! I can’t say much more without giving the whole story away, but I love Devin and I would be interested in seeing what happened with him after this story. I give it 4.75/5!