Mini Reviews – Magical Meet Cute, The Summer Pact, & Wicked Serve
/6 Comments/by SuzanneHey everyone! I was actually motivated to post today so I’m really hoping it means that the end of my blogging slump is in sight. Today I’m sharing reviews for some books I’ve read in recent weeks but didn’t have time to write the reviews until our long holiday weekend. These were mostly really good reads, although I did have issues with a couple of them.
Magical Meet Cute Goodreads
Author: Jean Meltzer
Publication Date: August 27, 2024
Publisher: MIRA
FTC Disclosure: I received a complimentary e-copy of this book from the publisher via Netgalley. All opinions are my own.
I always enjoy Jean Meltzer’s books so I was excited to receive a review e-arc of her latest release, Magical Meet Cute, from Mira Books.
The story follows Faye, the Jewish owner of a pottery shop in Woodstock, NY. Faye is usually pretty content with her life, but after someone leaves anti-semitic fliers all over her town, she is distraught and looking for comfort. She turns to her pottery, and in a drunken haze, decides she needs to create a golem to protect the town. She takes some creative license along the way, infusing the golem with characters she finds attractive in a man. The next day, too hungover to properly function, Faye accidentally runs into a handsome man with her bike. He has no memory of who he is and no idea what he is in her town. Faye becomes determined to help him find out who he is. The more she gets to know him, however, the more she finds herself incredibly attracted to him and also a little fearful that instead of being her dream man, he may, in fact, actually be the golem she crafted.
I really enjoyed this story! It’s the perfect blend of adorable romance and magical realism, while also tackling the very serious topic of anti-semitism. 4 STARS
The Summer Pact Goodreads
Author: Emily Giffin
Publication Date: July 9, 2024
Publisher: Ballantine Books
FTC Disclosure: I received a complimentary e-copy of this book from the publisher via Netgalley. All opinions are my own.
The Summer Pact is the latest novel from Emily Giffin and I’m not going to lie, it’s a tough read in that it covers heavy topics like suicide and addiction. It’s a story about friends coming together after an unthinkable tragedy. It’s dark at times, which I found somewhat at odds with the bright, summery cover, but once I got past that, I appreciated it for what it is, a story that explores the bonds of friendship and found family.
The story starts out on a college campus where four students from four different walks of life meet and become the best of friends. When tragedy strikes, three friends are left reeling from the loss and make a pact to always be there for each other no matter what. Ten years later, one of them makes good on the pact which leads them all on the most surprising, healing, and life changing journeys.
I really enjoyed the travel aspect of this book as the three remaining friends each choose a destination they’ve always wanted to visit, and one of them chooses Capri, a place their lost friend always dreamed of visiting, as a way to keep her with them.
Even though I enjoyed the book overall, it wasn’t quite as much of a hit with me as Giffin’s books usually are. It felt a little off, like too heavy but not heavy enough at the same time, if that makes sense. 3.5 STARS
Wicked Serve (Beyond the Play, #4) Goodreads
Author: Grace Reilly
Publication Date: August 13, 2024
Publisher: Avon Books
FTC Disclosure: I received a complimentary e-copy of this book from the publisher via Netgalley. All opinions are my own.
Wicked Serve is the new hockey romance from Grace Reilly. The story follows Nikolai and Izzy. Nikolai is a college hockey player who is determined to make the most of his senior year. When he’s forced to transfer to a rival college, things get messy when he realizes he had a secret summer fling with the younger sister of his new team’s captain. Nikolai knows that rekindling his fling with Izzy would not go over well with his captain, not to mention he’s dealing with scars from his past that make a real relationship impossible. As soon as he sees Izzy again though, all bets are off because he can’t deny he’s still attracted to her.
Izzy, for her part, is solely focused on two goals this school year. She wants to win back the spot she lost on the volleyball team, and she wants to forget that Nikolai even exists. Just like with Nikolai though, as soon as Izzy sees him again, she can’t resist the attraction she still has to Nikolai. They begin a friends-with-benefits arrangement that soon morphs into so much more.
I honestly have mixed feelings about this book. I really like Izzy and Nikolai and thought Nikolai’s journey of healing as he worked through the scars of his past was really well done. I liked Izzy and Nikolai as a couple but would have liked a bit more depth to their connection, which felt mostly sexual and surface level to me. I also thought the pacing was a little slow at times. I still very much enjoyed the story overall but did catch myself checking a few times to see how many pages I had left to read. 3.5 STARS
Thriller Thursday Reviews: Dear Hanna & The Family Experiment
/4 Comments/by Sharon
Hi, Sharon here with another Thriller Thursday post. I am so excited to share my thoughts on Zoje Stage’s Dear Hanna and also John Marrs’ The Family Experiment. I love both of these authors and always look forward to reading their newest releases.
Dear Hanna Goodreads
Author: Zoje Stage
Publication Date: August 13, 2024
Publisher: Thomas & Mercer
Zoje Stage’s Dear Hanna was one of my most anticipated books of 2024. I loved Baby Teeth and was so excited when I saw that Stage was writing a sequel. I couldn’t wait to find out what became of Hanna in her adult life, and I am happy to report that Zoje Stage did not disappoint with Dear Hanna.
When Hanna was seven years old, she tried multiple times to kill her mother. Hanna was a very disturbed child, but after therapy she has been able to curb her dark thoughts, well for the most part. Hanna is now twenty-four and works as a phlebotomist, which is perfect for her for when she feels the need to inflict harm in people, she just gives them extra jabs while trying to find a vein. LOL! It is at work that Hanna met widower, Jacob and his teenage daughter, Joelle. Hanna and Jacob hit it off and within a few months they were married. Everything is going great for a few years, but then Joelle comes to Jacob and Hanna with some news, and the perfect world that Hanna has built starts to slip out of her control. Hanna’s dark thoughts come back with a vengeance as she tries to find a way to get her perfect family back under her control.
I loved grown up Hanna. She really is damaged and in this book I could not help but have sympathy for her. Sure, she is plotting to take people out and some of her ideas were bizarre, but I think if she had the love and support of her parents and kept up with the therapy she needed, she would have been okay. I loved how Stage was able to make Hanna a protagonist that was such a sociopath, but also a protagonist that I was rooting for.
The first half of the book was a slow burn and we got normal Hanna. But then halfway through the book, after Joelle breaks her news, the paced really picked up and we got psycho Hanna.
As much as I loved getting to know Hanna again, I also loved the letters between Hanna and her younger brother Goose. Goose is the only one that loved Hanna for who she was. In the letters, Hanna and Goose would bounce ideas around on the best way to get rid of someone without getting caught.
There was a reveal at the end that though it didn’t take me by surprise (I kind of figured that was where it would go), it still made me gasp and brought tears to my eyes.
While Dear Hanna is considered a stand-alone sequel to Baby Teeth, and Zoje Stage does a great job of giving enough back story on Hanna, I would still recommend reading Baby Teeth first. I think getting to know Hanna as a seven-year-old and then getting to know her as an adult is the way to go. Dear Hanna was everything I was hoping for and if Zoje Stage wants to write another sequel (hint hint), I would not be opposed to getting more Hanna. 4 ½ stars
The Family Experiment Goodreads
Author: John Marrs
Publication Date: July 9, 2024
Publisher: Hanover Square Press
John Marrs’ newest book, The Family Experiment, is set in the same world as, The One, The Marriage Act and The Passengers. In a world where most people can no longer afford to start a family or raise one in, one company, Awakening Entertainment, has developed software where couples can access the metaverse and create and raise a virtual child. To launch this new technology, Awakening Entertainment has created a reality TV show called, The Family Experiment. The show will follow five couples and one single dad who will raise a virtual child, from birth to eighteen years old, condensed into a nine-month period. Viewers will pick their favorite and at the end of the nine months, the winner will be able to keep their virtual child or have them deleted and take the prize money to start a real family of their own. What could go wrong?
When the story opens, we are introduced to all the contestants: Rufus and Kitty, Selena and Jade, Cadman and Gabriel, Woody and Tina, Dimitri and Zoe, and single dad Hudson. Rufus and Kitty are eliminated right away, when there was an accident with their virtual child. All the other contestants have secrets that they do not want anyone to find out. And what juicy secrets they are.
I loved getting to know each contestant and watching them interact with their virtual child. Hudson was my favorite. He is twenty-two and his virtual child is Alice. Hudson is not in the contest to win the prize, he wants to expose something, which we don’t find out until the end of the book what it is. But I loved watching him with Alice. For someone who was not in this for the child or money, he was a great dad.
Cadman and Gabriel were my least favorite couple, well Cadman mostly. Cadman is a social media influencer, and he is in this contest for the money. He makes some very questionable decisions, and I just hated him.
Dimitri and Zoe had a son years ago but lost him. This contest is their only chance to be parents again. They seem like a nice couple, but behind closed doors they are anything but. Someone knows their secret and has been sending them threatening letters.
Woody and Tina are another couple that seem nice, but they are hiding a dark secret in their basement.
Rounding out the contestants are Jaden and Selena. Selena is not very motherly and does not connect with her virtual child as much as Jaden does. Jaden has a stalker, that is about to explode their world.
I really cannot say much about what happens in the book, but I will say that as I was reading, I kept thinking “I could never go on a show like this, knowing that if I lose, the child I was raising and loved would be deleted right before my eyes.”
As usual, John Marrs has created an intense futuristic story that kept me glued from beginning to end. And one that also made me think “Yup, I could see virtual families unfortunately becoming a thing one day.” I definitely recommend The Family Experiment. 4 ½ stars
Top Ten Tuesday – 10 of My Favorite Bookish Families
/10 Comments/by Suzanne
Top Ten Tuesday was created by The Broke and the Bookish in June of 2010 and was moved to That Artsy Reader Girl in January 2018. It was born of a love of lists, a love of books, and a desire to bring bookish friends together. Top Ten Tuesday has been one of my favorite memes ever since I started blogging, so huge thanks to Jana for taking over the hosting duties!
This week’s TTT topic is Relationship Freebie (Pick a relationship type and choose characters who fit that relationship as it relates to you. So, characters you’d like to date, be friends with, be enemies with, etc. Bookish families you’d like to be a part of, characters you’d want as your siblings, pets you’d like to take for yourself, etc.).
I decided to share some of my favorite families from the books I’ve read over the years. Some are biologically-related families, while others are found families. What they all have in common, whether biologically related or not, is that their relationships with one another are just so heartwarming, supportive, and fun.
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10 of My Favorite Bookish Families
1. THE BRIDGERTONS (Bridgerton series)
2. THE BERGMANS (Bergman Brothers series)
3. THE WEASLEYS (Harry Potter series)
6. THE MURPHYS (Peachtree Bluff series)
7. RILEY’S PACK OF ELDERLY NEIGHBORS (Riley Thorn series))
8. ARTHUR, LINUS, & THE ORPHANS (The House in the Cerulean Sea)
9. THE REN FAIRE FAMILY (Well Met series)
10. VIV’S FOUND FAMILY (Legends & Lattes)
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