Top 10 Books I’m Thankful to Have Finally Read This Year
/34 Comments/by Suzanne
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Top Ten Tuesday is a fun weekly meme hosted by The Broke and the Bookish. This week’s topic is Top Ten Books I’m Thankful For (Happy Thanksgiving week in the USA!). I tweaked this topic a bit since I couldn’t begin to name just ten books that I’m most thankful for. Instead, I decided to go with the top ten books I’m thankful to have finally gotten off of my TBR. I’ve always accumulated books faster than I can read them, but this seems to have gotten out of control since I started blogging. Older books have been pushed aside in favor of newer releases, and I’ve also gotten so caught up in immediately buying books that were super-hyped but then setting them aside for months (*cough* more like years) in favor of other new releases. This year I decided to actively start getting my backlist under control by participating in several challenges designed to do just that. It’s nowhere near under control yet, but I am happy that I was able to knock off this list of books, each of which had been on my TBR for at least a year, and quite often, several years.
Happy Thanksgiving to all who are celebrating this week!
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Top 10 Books I’m Thankful to Have Finally Read This Year
CARAVAL by Stephanie Garber
HEARTLESS by Marissa Meyer
A COURT OF MIST AND FURY by Sarah J. Maas
A STORM OF SWORDS by George R. R. Martin
EVERYTHING, EVERYTHING by Nicola Yoon
A MONSTER CALLS by Patrick Ness
SIX OF CROWS by Leigh Bardugo
ILLUMINAE by Amie Kaufman and Jay Kristoff
WHEN WE COLLIDED by Emery Lord
PRACTICAL MAGIC by Alice Hoffman
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Question: What are some books that you are thankful to have finally gotten off of your TBR this year?
Book Review: The Names They Gave Us by Emery Lord
/16 Comments/by Suzanne
Also by this author: When We Collided, The Map from Here to There

Published by Bloomsbury USA Childrens on May 16th 2017
Genres: Contemporary Fiction, Young Adult Fiction
Pages: 390
Source: Library
Amazon
Goodreads
MY REVIEW:
Emery Lord’s The Names They Gave Us is a book that I was actually a little apprehensive about reading even though I fell in love with her writing when I read When We Collided. My hesitation this time around was because I had read that this book focuses a lot on religion and faith. Since I don’t consider myself to be a particularly religious person, I was a little worried the subject matter might put me off. Thankfully, my worries were unfounded. Even though faith does play a prominent role in the story, Emery Lord handles it in a way that doesn’t come across as heavy-handed at all. The Names They Gave Us is essentially a coming of age story and part of the main character’s coming of age journey is to actually question her own faith.
The Names They Gave Us follows Lucy Hansson, a high school student who is also the daughter of a preacher. Because religion has just always been a part of Lucy’s life, she has always felt secure in her faith and has never questioned it. That is, until her mother is diagnosed with breast cancer for the second time. That diagnosis sets off a chain reaction of events that strips all of the constants out of Lucy’s life. Her longtime boyfriend Lucas, the boy she fully expects to marry someday, suddenly decides that the two of them should take a break and make sure they really love each other. Not only that, but Lucy’s mom also decides that instead of Lucy being a counselor at their church camp like she has for every summer for as long as she can remember, she should take a job as a counselor at Daybreak, a local camp for troubled kids.
Lucy is crushed that Lucas would choose now of all times to break up with her and is also completely baffled as to why her mom would not want her to be with them at the church camp. She is also starting to question her own faith: After all of their prayers and the prayers of everyone in their congregation, how could her mom’s cancer have possibly come back? Feeling like her whole world has been turned upside down, but ultimately knowing that she doesn’t want to do anything to upset her mother, Lucy reluctantly agrees to work at Daybreak for the summer.
When she first arrives at Daybreak, Lucy feels overwhelmed and wants nothing more than to be back at the church camp with her parents, but then she eventually starts to make friends – real friends that she actually has things in common with, friends who are also going through or have been through some bad times in their lives. They provide a support system for Lucy that she has never had before, even with friends from school she thought she was close to – and suddenly things aren’t quite as bad as they first seemed.
Could this be why Lucy’s mom insisted that she go to Daybreak? Is this Lucy’s mom’s way of making sure her little girl will be okay no matter what happens. Or is there more to it than that?
I really liked Lucy and her family right away. They’re just good people who fully embrace their faith but who also don’t try to force their beliefs on to others. I was immediately devastated for them when it was revealed that Lucy’s mom’s cancer had come back. The family was just getting back on its feet after her first battle with it, and now it sends them all reeling again.
Lucy was so easy to root for her not just because she was likable, but also because her emotions and fears, and those questions that just kept running through her mind felt so real. Emery Lord does a very nice job of getting inside the mind of someone who is having a crisis of faith and possibly facing the loss of a loved one. It was often heart-wrenching to read, but the portrayal felt very authentic.
I also loved that Lucy keeps an open mind about going to Daybreak and that her character undergoes tremendous growth during her stay there. The counselors and the children who come there are a diverse group and, as such, Lucy meets a lot of people there who are very different from her and from anyone else she has ever known. She doesn’t shy away from them or judge them at all though. She meets a lesbian and a transgender counselor, for example, and she’s very open to asking any questions she has about their experiences. She just genuinely wants to know everything about them and does so without trying to push any of her own beliefs on to them.
The beautiful friendships Lucy makes with her fellow counselors at Daybreak are one of my absolute favorite parts of The Names They Gave Us. Each counselor has their own issues to deal with, whether it’s severe anxiety, abuse, or something else, but they come to camp and set aside those issues and try to help other kids who may be going through similar hard times. Because the kids they counsel are often having such a rough go of things, they are not allowed to show any signs of their own issues while around them. The counselors therefore lean on each other for support behind closed doors and, over their many years of working together, have become a very tight-knit group of friends. And even though Lucy is the new girl and they know nothing about her, they still welcome her in with open arms. Once she gets to know them and sees how much they truly are there for each other, Lucy slowly starts to realize that she doesn’t have to carry her burdens alone, that her friends will be there to support her.
This theme of the importance of friendship was what resonated with me most, as did the idea that it’s perfectly okay to question your own faith and beliefs from time to time. It’s all just a normal part of that journey to find yourself and figure out your place in the world.
The only real issue I had with The Names They Gave Us is with the way Emery Lord left one important aspect of the story unresolved. I don’t want to give away the ending so I’m going to be a little vague here. I know this is Lucy’s story and that I should be satisfied knowing that she’ll be okay no matter what happens, but I still wanted to know how everything was going to turn out for her family. I guess maybe I got a little too invested in the Hansson family but the characters were just so beautifully drawn that I couldn’t help but fall in love with them all.
With its focus on heavy topics such as cancer and religion, The Names They gave Us is not what I would consider to be a light contemporary read. It is a beautiful read though and one I would highly recommend if you’re into books that focus on love, friendship, family, and faith.
GOODREADS SYNOPSIS
When it all falls apart, who can you believe in?
Everything is going right for Lucy Hansson, until her mom’s cancer reappears. Just like that, Lucy breaks with all the constants in her life: her do-good boyfriend, her steady faith, even her longtime summer church camp job.
Instead, Lucy lands at a camp for kids who have been through tough times. As a counselor, Lucy is in over her head and longs to be with her parents across the lake. But that’s before she gets to know her coworkers, who are as loving and unafraid as she so desperately wants to be.
It’s not just new friends that Lucy discovers at camp—more than one old secret is revealed along the way. In fact, maybe there’s much more to her family and her faith than Lucy ever realized.

About Emery Lord
“Hi! I’m Emery. I’m the author of four novels about teenage girls: OPEN ROAD SUMMER, THE START OF ME & YOU, WHEN WE COLLIDED, and THE NAMES THEY GAVE US. I was born near a harbor on the East coast and raised near a beach, an ocean, a great lake, and the Ohio River. I’m a longtime Cincinnatian, where we love good beer, good music, and our public library. I’m married to a scientist who shuts down every wedding dance floor, and we are owned by two rescue dogs. I believe in the magic of storytelling, Ferris wheels, and you.” – Emery Load, in her own words
Top 10 Books (and Series) I Hope My Child Will Read Someday
/42 Comments/by Suzanne
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Top Ten Tuesday is a fun weekly meme hosted by The Broke and the Bookish. This week’s topic is Top Ten Books I Want My Future Children to Read (Or nieces and nephews, Godchildren, etc.). Since I already have a child and actively aspire to have him be as big of a bookworm as I am, I’ve had a wishlist of books and series for a while now that I’ve been hoping my son will eventually read. What’s cool is that we’ve already made a little bit of progress on this list and so far he has loved everything we’ve read. I’m hoping that as he grows older, he will continue to trust my taste in books and so will read the rest of these two.
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Top 10 Books (and Series) I Hope My Child Will Read Someday
- HARRY POTTER SERIES by J.K. Rowling I’m thrilled to say that my son and I have already read this entire series together. He loved every minute of it, especially the Weasley twins. I’m hoping this will be a favorite that he revisits from time to time.
- CHARLIE AND THE CHOCOLATE FACTORY by Roald Dahl Is there anything better to make a child fall in love with reading than the whimsical books of Roald Dahl? My son and I have read Charlie and the Chocolate Factory together and he loved it so much that we moved on to Charlie and the Great Glass Elevator, Matilda, and The B.F.G.
- THE GIVING TREE by Shel Silverstein I can’t take credit for getting my son to read this beautiful story since he read it at school, but I’ll give his teacher props for making one of my wishlist reads a reality. My son loved this one too and has since started reading Where the Sidewalk Ends.
- PERCY JACKSON & THE OLYMPIANS by Rick Riordan This is a series that we’ve started but haven’t gotten very far into yet. You’ll find that many of the books and series on my wishlist are fantasy. Since I was a child, fantasy books have always fascinated me so I’m hoping they’ll have the same effect on my child. I also think they’re great for really making a child use their imagination to envision the world building that takes place. And in the case of the Percy Jackson series, it also provides an entertaining introduction to Greek Mythology, which is a nice bonus.
- THE CHRONICLES OF NARNIA by C.S. Lewis We have not tackled this series yet, but it’s high on my list of must-reads for my son because it’s one of my all-time favorites.
- THE LORD OF THE FLIES by William Golding He’s nowhere near old enough for this book yet, but I remember being equal parts fascinated and horrified by this book when I read it in high school and it has still stuck with me after all these years. It’s a book that makes you think and I definitely want my son reading books that will engage his mind and keep him thinking about life.
- TO KILL A MOCKINGBIRD by Harper Lee This will be another book for when he is older, but I really hope I can get my son to read this one. One because it’s my all-time favorite book, and two because it tackles important social issues that are still relevant today. If I can only get him to read one classic, this is the one I’d choose.
- 1984 by George Orwell If I could get my son to read 2 classics, this is the second one I’d choose. It’s another one of those creepy reads that makes you think and it manages to still be relevant today. I’d also want him to read it, if for no other reason, than so he understands what someone means if they say Big Brother is watching.
- THE HOBBIT & THE LORD OF THE RINGS TRILOGY by J.R.R. Tolkien We’re still a few years away from this one too, I think, although my son has checked The Hobbit out of the library before. It ended up being a little over his head, but he is definitely interested in revisiting it someday and I will most certainly encourage him to do so since it’s one of the greatest fantasy series of all time.
- THE OUTSIDERS by S.E. Hinton Again, for when my son is older, but this is a book from my childhood that has continued to captivate young readers to this day. I’m hoping my child will not grow up to be a reluctant reader, but if he does, I still think this is a book that would appeal to him.
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