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Saturday, April 28, 2018

Review: The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo

The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo by Taylor Jenkins Reid
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

I'm not even sure where to begin. I am forever grateful to the friends and other FB book group members who recommended this book. This book was one of my Book of the Month selections almost a year ago but I passed it up for what sounded like much more exciting reads.

Something about this one didn't appeal to me...the slant of celeb gossip, most likely...or those who rated it a "great Summer beach read" (they could NOT be more wrong). Not at all my style. I prefer a book with depth of character, intensity of feeling, questions of moral conflict. (I mean, Sophie's Choice and Fahrenheit 451 are my two all-time favorite books.)

From the book's write up, all I could think was some celeb-watching, salacious, ego-driven gossipy story just wasn't my kind of read. Yet, I saw it selected as a finalist on several Books of the Year lists for 2017 and, every month, as I would go to make my BOTM selection, there it was in the list of alternate selections. So last month, I re-read the write-up and a couple of fave-list synopses and, this time, I felt intrigued.

I'm still in the midst of trying to finalize a divorce that has been an extended, painful process. As I try to hold my ground and my emotions during this time along with several other substantial emotional losses over the past few years, my emotions have been frayed and raw as I struggle with several of my own personal issues. So I started to think that maybe, just maybe, this book could be the lighter read to help me refocus my energy. Maybe it WAS exactly what I needed to read...so I marked it as one of my April 2018 selections.

When it arrived and, with encouragement and recommendation from several members in a couple of my online book groups, I decided to flag it as my next read and dove in. All I can say without spoilers for those who haven't read it is this...

This book is beautiful. It is literally breathtaking. The writing is superb. The character development unfolds throughout the book like the petals of a blossoming flower. You step into the lives of these main characters seeing them as superficial personas. As you would a person you first meet. You aren't sure who they are or what makes them tick or how they live their lives...but as the pages turn, you begin to get to know them. Not all at once. Not in any "unveiling" as when some authors reveal their inner thoughts or backstories...but in an organic way, as you would a person you've met in real life, as you come to slowly learn their body language, their nuances, their history.

You become more than just a bystander. A witness. You BECOME part of Monique (the narrator of the story and one of the two main characters in the book). You begin to see Evelyn take shape and form in front of you. You feel her energy. You share Monique's nervousness, fascination, excitement, boldness as she experiences them. As Evelyn shares her story, you are swept up along with Monique in the allure of her, the beauty, the arrogance, the strength. You understand, admire, and disdain her all at the same time. You wait to learn what could possibly have drawn Evelyn to select Monique, how her life story will reveal itself, and where this journey will take Monique (and you) as it is unveiled.

I'm not sure what more to leave with you other than this...

This is, by far, one of the most exquisitely executed books I have read in a long, long time. To say you will be swept away by emotion is an understatement...or maybe that is just me because my emotions are so rawly accessible right now. I will never forget where, the specific line, when all the pieces of the book snapped together like magnets...and I gasped and had to set the book down and cry while I processed all the intersections at once, like watching a kaleidoscope coming into focus.

I stepped into this story expecting...well, I'm not sure what I was expecting...but no matter what it was, that wasn't what I found. What I found was a book filled with glamour and beauty...with darkness and conflict...with humor and joy...but mostly of love and humanity...deep deep love...and treasuring what TRULY matters in this world.

I know this book may have hit me more deeply than many because of the rawness of my heart right now, but like Monique, I found myself coming to admire, love, loathe, and respect Evelyn Hugo in all her complicated layers...and I am, from here forward, officially an unabashed fan of Taylor Jenkins Reid and look forward to lining my shelves with the rest of her writings.

If you are looking for a book to touch...no, embrace...fill, swell, and completely manipulate your heart...and leave you with characters who will forever forward be some small part of you, get your hands on this book, add it to your TBR pile...but put it at the top...

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Monday, April 16, 2018

Review: The Ice Queen - Alice Hoffman

Uniquely beautiful. I identified so deeply with  the narrator from the very first page. I don't really even know what to say. All I can say for certain is "that" chapter..."that" scene... is one of the single most beautiful scenes I've ever read in print and I would give anything to see it on film... if anyone could do justice to the imagery it created in my head. Thank you, Alice, for a brief moment so beautiful I will never ever forget it. An unforgettable moment of love, beauty, strength, and hope that brought tears to my eyes and uplifted my heart. Thank you from the bottom of my heart for this vision and this gift.

Friday, April 6, 2018

Review: Disappearance at Devil's Rock

Disappearance at Devil's Rock Disappearance at Devil's Rock by Paul Tremblay
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

This is my first Paul Tremblay book (won via Goodreads giveaway) and I have to say, I am a big fan! I have "A Head Full of Ghosts" in my TBR pile but hadn't gotten to it yet. When Disappearance arrived, I was finishing up another book but set it right on top of the stack.

Creepy. Eerie. Riveting. Reminds me of those early years reading Stephen King so many decades ago. He has been added to my list as a preferred author and I plan to delve into the rest of his work. I suspect he will easily become one of my HAVE-TO-HAVE authors for all his future work. Nah, cancel that...he already is. :)

If you're looking for a good creepy read. Not the kind you can't read with the lights down low, alone...but enough eerieness, creepiness to keep you on edge, this is a great one.

Grateful to have been selected for the giveaway. I'll definitely be making a space on my shelves for him!


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Tuesday, March 20, 2018

Review: The Girl in the Red Coat

The Girl in the Red Coat The Girl in the Red Coat by Kate Hamer
My rating: 4 of 5 stars

Actual Rating: 4.5
Absolutely loved this book. Wasn't sure before I got started. Wasn't sure which way it might go. Will it be ugly? Will it be too religious? Will it be too much like too many other "missing child" books, done to death with nothing fresh to say? But this book caught me by surprise.

A unique story but the true draw is getting to know Carmel and Beth. Getting to know them through their fears, their memories, their emotions, their strengths. Kate Hamer has a unique voice that draws you in slowly, deeply until you are immersed in their world and you don't even recognize when it happened. Many other similar novels focus on the hunt, trying to find the child, the reasons behind the disappearance, or the trauma of what might happen to the child. This book, in some odd respects, reminds me a bit of The Lovely Bones only in the respect that you get to know Carmel through how she views the world. Her thoughts more than her actions. You wish you could reach in and tell her the one truth she doesn't know that would change her whole world. By the conclusion, you know she has the strength to change her fate even if things had been different on that last day if only she had known.

A treasure of a book. Not a boisterous, action-packed, edge-of-your-seat suspense, but a quiet urging to move forward.

Highly recommend it if you are looking for a good solid read with a small handful of characters you won't easily forget.

Looking forward to reading more of her work!

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Monday, March 5, 2018

Review: Mudbound

Mudbound Mudbound by Hillary Jordan
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Just finished. I'm not sure I can muster any words of elegance as I sit with the emotions that are overwhelming me but I will try.

If you haven't yet read this book and are up to it, get a copy. Get a physical copy. Move it to the top of your TBR pile. When it comes time to read it, open the cover and feel the pages. You will want to feel their texture underneath your fingertips. This read won't be one of soaring imagination, lyrical beauty, lifted spirits. As you will see, the deeper you wade, you will feel yourself becoming bogged down in the mud along with them. The darkness and the duty that drives each of them. But underlying it all is an ugliness and an evil that consumes the very oxygen they breathe.

I warn you, this is a TOUGH read. It is dark and heavy and the words weigh heavy on your soul. There is an underlying anger that wells up and you feel helpless to find somewhere to put it. You see, early on, where things are headed, though you can't picture exactly how it will play out. But you know...yet you are helpless to derail it...to change things. To warn them. But, as you see them headed down their path, you are compelled to hold tight and stay with them and pray there will eventually be a real end to this evil once and for all one day.

When it is over, you will be thankful to have held this book in your hands. To feel a physical part of it. To have held onto something to remind you that this is fiction. Words on a page. Not truth. Laura and Henry, Jamie, Florence, Hap, Ronsel, Resl, Franz aren't real. They don't live...and breathe...although at times you can almost feel them taking a breath beside you. We can breathe because we know this is just a story...and they didn't live...but how many thousands of named and nameless faces who did have the same stories to tell?

I grew up surrounded by it. Surrounded by people on the wrong side of it. I will never begin to understand it...and I hope none of us ever does.

Hillary Jordan has created a simple but tangible world in Mudbound. We know it so well by the end of the book, we can almost pick it out on a map, complete with the characters that inhabit its land. Its story is riveting and immersive...dark and powerful. If you are looking for a light read, pass this by. But if you are willing to allow yourself to dig deep and really feel...even the darker side of humanity... If you are looking for a read that will impact you and stay with you long after it is done and has an impact on how you interact with the real world around you, then this is a book for you. ...and when it's over, close the cover and hold it quietly and let it settle into your soul.


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