June 2021 Reads

Rosaline Palmer Takes the Cake is the first book in Alexis Hall’s new queer Great British Bake Off series, and it is delightful.

The book follows Rosaline, a single mom, as she works her way through the different stages of a Great British Bake Off-esque show. The character development is amazing, and I absolutely fell in love with Harry. I really wish I could have watched this as a show.

5 Stars

Dirty Dancing meets Schitt’s Creek, The Last Summer at the Golden Hotel was a fun read. An abundance of characters, and a family tree as reference, it is not difficult to keep track of the zany characters. Even with the point of view jumping all over the place.

The book felt nostalgic, even though I have never been to the Catskills. The end of the book moved me to tears, and overall the book had a very magical feel to it. (BOTM)

5 Stars

Easily my favorite read of the month, The Guncle follows Patrick, a gay former television star, as he takes in his niece and nephew for the summer after their mother (his best friend) dies and their father (his brother) enters rehab. A coming of age story, if you can come of age in your forties, The Guncle tugs on your heartstrings as you watch Patrick help his niece and nephew navigate their grief and come to terms with their new reality.

The book is all at once heartfelt and heartbreaking, humorous and tender. The book made me laugh and cry, and when I finished all I wanted to do was hug it close to my chest. It is a book I wish I could completely forget so I could experience reading it for the first time again.

5 Stars

Taylor Jenkins Reid is a new favorite author of mine, and Malibu Rising is a book I highly anticipated the release for. And I was not disappointed.

Following the Riva siblings, children of Mick Riva the rock star, Malibu Rising‘s A-plot takes place during a single day leading up to and during the annual end of summer party. The B-plot takes place in the past, weaving in the siblings past to give a clearer picture of the choices they make the day of the party.

Like her previous books, Reid’s characters make the story. They come to life on the page and draw you in never letting you go. (BOTM)

5 Stars

Your typical regency romance, The Duke and I was our book club pick for the month of June. While I was worried it wouldn’t live up to the hype surrounding it with the Netflix show, I thoroughly enjoyed this book.

Fake dating and friends to lovers are two of my favorite romance tropes, and they were both included here. The relationship between Simon and Daphne was fun, and I loved seeing them interact. I enjoyed all of Daphne’s siblings as well, and I am planning to read the rest of the books in the series.

5 Stars

Another highly anticipated release, John Green’s Anthropocene Reviewed is a series of essays in which Green reviews aspects of the Anthropocene on a five star scale, all while interweaving personal stories.

This book is a beautifully written, honest and heart wrenching picture into Green’s life, and this book has catapulted to the top of my list as my favorite of his books. While I had heard some of these personal stories before on both his Vlog and his Pod, some he has never really told before. Deeply personal, and extremely eye-opening, I love that Green has shared this book with the world. (BOTM)

5 stars

The Road Trip is such a lovely book. While telling the story of two exes who are forced to take a road trip to a mutual friend’s wedding, we get flashbacks to their time as a couple.

The “then” storyline was very frustrating for me to read, but I understand in order to root for them to reunite, you have to understand why they broke up in the first place. In all I didn’t find the character of Marcus to be at all redeemable, but I loved Addie and Dylan, and I just wanted their love to succeed.

4 Stars

Have you ever really looked forward to a book, and then when you read it are utterly let down? That’s me with Anne of Manhattan. I’m a sucker for retellings, just look at my bookshelf and you will find at least 3 retellings of Beauty and the Beast. And this was a retelling of one of my favorite books, Anne of Green Gables. However, this book ended up falling way short for me.

The book read like fanfiction, which as an avid reader and writer of fanfiction I’m very familiar with. What I mean by that is the author never really delved deeply into the familiar characters. We only saw them, and their romance, at surface levels. She did a lot of telling, and not a lot of showing. Which was very frustrating because I love Anne and Gilbert, and wanted to see a modern take on their romance.

3 Stars.

Book two in a series (oops!), Hang the Moon tells the story of Brenden and Annie and their journey to love.

Typical friends to lovers trope, this book is fun and lovely and hits the right spots if you love a good rom com. I enjoyed the story, and never felt like I was missing something even though I didn’t read the first book. I really enjoyed the flipped character trait of the man being the hopeless romantic and the woman being the cynical one.

4 stars

A fast-paced thriller from beginning to end, Riley Sager’s Survive the Night is one to read if you like to be kept guessing.

Charlie wants to get off campus ASAP after the tragedy of her best friend being murdered, and she finds a ride home with a stranger, Josh. From the second she gets in the car until the end of the book, it’s impossible to put down. Taking place in 1991 without cell phones and social media, it’s the right setting for keeping you on the edge of your seat. I was able to guess some of the twists, but only paragraphs before they were revealed, and guessing didn’t detract from the story at all.

Completely satisfying, I read the book in two sittings. (BOTM)

5 Stars.

April, May and June Reads

Quarantine happened, and I slowed WAY down on reading. And then I got too busy with helping facilitate distance learning for my first grader, that I totally lost track and didn’t post what I’ve been reading! So, now, in probably not the order I read them, here are the books I read in the last three months!

The Hour of the Assassin

If you’re looking for a quick political thriller, Hour of the Assassin is the book for you! Fast paced from the very beginning, this book is impossible to put down. The characters are engaging, and I found myself reading the whole book in about two days.

The author made an interesting choice to spread out backstory through most of the book, choosing to reveal relationships between the characters much later than I would have expected. The book maintains suspense throughout, and has a really good payoff in the end. (BOTM)

The Holdout

Another thriller that is impossible to put down, The Holdout gives a detailed look into the role of being a juror, being placed on a high profile case, and the ramifications on your life once that trial is put forward.

This is another book I read in a couple days, and it was one where I absolutely did not see the ending coming. The book changed points of view every other chapter, and we got to see inside the mind of all twelve people on the jury. All while trying to solve a current day mystery.

The book is already optioned to become a movie for Hulu, and I’ll definitely be watching. (BOTM)

How to Speak Dragonese

The Third How to Train Your Dragon book is just as fun, and hilarious, as the previous two. I love these books, because I listen to them as audiobooks, and they’re narrated by David Tennant, and they’re only a 2-3 hour commitment.

Toothless is kidnapped by Pirates, and Hiccup needs to get him back. That is the simplified plot of this installment. However, for the first time, the author has chosen to end the book on a cliffhanger, where you can only learn what happens next through reading the next book. I’m currently on hold to get the next book to find out what happens next!

The Kissing Game

Out of all the books I’ve read this year, The Kissing Game is the only one that I’ve read that I wouldn’t recommend. While it wasn’t terrible, it definitely isn’t one of my favorites.

I think the main problem with the book is it’s not made clear it is part of a series. It’s the third book in a series, to be specific. Therefore, the author just assumes you know the characters and she doesn’t flesh them out at all. After all, you’re supposed to know them as background characters in the other two books.

And I know romance books are usually contrived and follow a format, but I found this book a little too contrived, and I didn’t find myself rooting for the characters at all.

The Two Lives of Lydia Bird

If you love tragic romance, The Two Lives of Lydia Bird is for you! Telling the story of a woman (Lydia) whose fiance dies tragically in a car accident. Soon after, she realizes when she takes a sleeping pill, she can live a life where Freddy never died. While in her waking life, she moves through her grief, and eventually the idea that she may be able to love again.

While it starts off really depressing (I cried through about the first quarter of the book), the book really does give off a feeling of hope. As Lydia begins to function more, and is ready to move on, you can see her growth and her healing through the tragedy. (BOTM)

The Box is Protection Not Prison

I fell into a bit of a reading rut this spring, and in order to jump start my reading again, I picked up this short story written by a friend. I don’t want to say too much about it, because I don’t want to give anything away, but this story is very timely. If you want to read a story that has a commentary on mass media and biases that feels like you’re reading about what is happening right now, you should definitely check this story out.

The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo

My favorite book of 2019 was Taylor Jenkins Reid’s Daisy Jones and the Six. I was supposed to see Reid at the Des Moines Book Festival back in March, but because of Covid, that was canceled. I put myself on the list for this book, and it was delivered right before I went on vacation, and this has easily become one of my top books I’ve read for the year so far.

Where Daisy Jones seemed to be a fictional story that included many elements of bands like Fleetwood Mac, Evelyn Hugo definitely felt like it took its inspiration from stars like Elizabeth Taylor. The book follows Evelyn Hugo as she navigates stardom through Old Hollywood and the studio system, the transition into the “New Hollywood” and as an aging actress in the industry.

Along the way we learn her story as it is told around her many husbands. The story is at once heartwarming, tragic, and includes a twist that made me gasp out loud. (BOTM)