Monday, 12 October 2020

Teaser Tuesday (12) Fine by AmyLea Murphy

       
       
Teaser Tuesdays is a weekly meme hosted by MizB of 
Should be Reading. Anyone can participate in Teaser Tuesdays. Just do the following:
• Grab your read
• Open to a random page
• Share two (2) “teaser” sentences from somewhere on that page
• Be careful not to include spoilers!
• Share the title & author, too, so that other TT participants can add the book to their TBR Lists if they like your 
teasers!

      
       This week the teaser is coming to you from Fine by AmyLea Murphy, a book about a girl who wants to find out more about her sister's disappearance, and does so by sifting through her police report.

My teasers:

"I'm humiliated. Not only do I have a big mouth, but now the most normal and well-adjusted person I know has a front-row seat to my dysfunctional family."

"I recognize the pain in his face. It flickers across his eyes for just a moment, but it's unmistakable. It's such an odd kind of ache that it's impossible to miss in another person once you've felt it yourself."

Page 82

       Most of this book is Katie sifting through police files, but these teasers take place in Katie's life right now, which, I'm finding, doesn't take up much of the book. I'm almost finished the book, so my review will be up soon!

Friday, 9 October 2020

First Line Friday (2) Fine by AmyLea Murphy

 
       First Line Friday is a bookish tag hosted over at Abstract Books that is used to showcase your favourite first lines of books.

       There really is something to be said about a good first line, and I'm going to be using this tag from now on to showcase my current read's first lines.


This week, I've been reading Fine by AmyLea Murphy, a book about a girl who sets out to find out more about her sister's disappearance by looking through her police file.

The first (few) lines are as follows:

       "Today is Anna's 24th birthday. Every year, on June 8th, I get out of whatever obligations that I have and spend the day at home. I watch movies, eat macaroni and cheese, and listen to the CDs she made me. Sometimes I do something crafty, or even read one of her old books. I always spend Anna's birthday doing the things we used to do together, wallowing in my sorrow and celebrating the best sister anyone could ever have."

I think this is a good way to start the book, because it shows just how much Katie, the protagonist, still misses Anna, which is the driving force behind the whole book.



Wednesday, 7 October 2020

Between by Jessica Warman

Title: Between
Author: Jessica Warman
Publication Date: August 2, 2011
Publisher: Walker & Company
Pages: 454

Introduction

On the night of her 18th birthday, Elizabeth "Liz" Valchar dies. Stuck between life and death, she finds her body knocking against her family's boat long before her friends find her. Liz can't remember anything from her life, or her death. Everything has holes. She has no idea how she managed to drown on her 18th birthday, surrounded by her friends. The only way she can figure it out is by waiting for the memories to hit her, and by silently observing her family and friends as they grieve. 

Luckily, she isn't alone. With her in this limbo like state is Alex Berg, a boy who was hit by a car a year prior to Liz's death. They had no connection in life. Liz was popular, and had everything anybody could ever want. Alex was introverted, from a modest family, and spent his school days trying to avoid being bullied. They have no idea why they're together, but slowly, together, they're going to figure out what happened on the nights of their deaths.

Characters

Almost all of the characters are very difficult to like, which is usually what happens when all pf the characters are spoiled rich kids. They are the classic rich kid characters who are all troubled in some way, but I found a lot of their troubles fell a little flat. They are all very real and tough problems, but most of them weren't delved into deep enough for me to really care about them. As a result, a good number of the characters were never very interesting to me, and a couple of them felt completely pointless to the story.

Liz did a lot of growing and maturing throughout the book--a result of seeing herself in her memories--and seeing her grow into a less stuck up version of her was wonderful.

Mystery/Ending

I had predictions about the ending very early on in the book. probably less than halfway through, and when I got to the end, all of my predictions turned out to be right. The ending felt a little predictable to me, and because of this, I wouldn't label it the most effective mystery. However, even though I figured out what was going to happen early on in the book, I still enjoyed reading it as it all unfolded.

Romance

I was very pleased that no romance happened between Alex and Liz. I admit, I really expected that that was what was going to happen when I first started the book, but I think if it did happen, it would have made the story entirely different than what it was and I'm really glad that it didn't go that way.

Conclusion

Despite not truly connecting with many of the supporting characters and essentially figuring out the mystery long before the ending, I did find this book entertaining to read, and I think I will try to read more from Warman. This book does feature a few mature themes, and does depict disordered eating as a large part of Liz's life, so if that is triggering to you, I would stay away from this book.

Tuesday, 6 October 2020

Teaser Tuesday (11): Between by Jessica Warman



Teaser Tuesdays is a weekly meme hosted by MizB of Should be Reading. Anyone can participate in Teaser Tuesdays. Just do the following:
• Grab your read
• Open to a random page
• Share two (2) “teaser” sentences from somewhere on that page
• Be careful not to include spoilers!
• Share the title & author, too, so that other TT participants can add the book to their TBR Lists if they like your 
teasers!

This week, I have teasers from the book Between by Jessica Warman. A book about a girl who passed away on her 18th birthday and is now stuck wondering through her town as she observes her friends and family grieving and moving on. 

My teasers

"A person's character, I realize, is never back-and-white. There is so much gray"

"Cops, I've learned, are like vampires; they can't come in unless you invite them."

Page 413

I have just recently finished this book, and I liked it a lot, the review will be up soon!



Friday, 2 October 2020

First Line Friday (1) Between by Jessica Warman

       First Line Friday is a bookish tag hosted over at Abstract Books that is used to showcase your favourite first lines of books.

       There really is something to be said about a good first line, and I'm going to be using this tag from now on to showcase my current read's first lines.

        Right now, I'm about halfway through Between by Jessica Warman. A book about a girl who discovers that she died on her 18th birthday and is now stuck wandering her town, observing her family and friends as they grieve.




       The first (few) lines of Between are as follows:

        "It's a little after two a.m. Outside the Elizabeth, things are relatively quiet. Boats--yachts, really--are tied to the docks, clean white buoys protecting their fiberglass and porcelain exteriors from the wood. The slosh of the Long Island Sound, water bearing against the boats and shore, is a constant in the background. In most of the other boats--with names like Well Deserved, Privacy, Good Life--There is peace.
 
        But inside the Elizabeth, there is persistent unrest." 

Thursday, 1 October 2020

We Were Restless Things by Cole Nagamatsu



Title: We Were Restless Things
Author: Cole Nagamatsu
Expected Publication: October 6, 2020
Publisher: Sourcebooks Fire
Pages: 400

Introduction

One summer after the death of teen Link Miller, his friends are left coping with the loss. Coping with the loss of a close friend is hard enough when the passing comes under normal circumstances, but the details surrounding Link's are anything but normal. Link's death was ruled a strange accident, as it was discovered that he had managed to drown in a forest miles away from the nearest body of water.

His friend, Noemi, is the only one that knows the truth. Link drowned in a lake in the forest that only she can find. With this knowledge, coupled with the fact that recently, she's started to receive text messages from a number claiming to be Link, Noemi is finding moving passed her friend's death to be a difficult process.

With the help of her friends, they begin to unravel the mystery surrounding Link's death and in doing so, attempt to move forward together.

Pace

This is a very quiet, and at times, successfully eerie book. It isn't told like a typical teen mystery. There is no dramatic sleuthing. The story is told slowly, and the answer to all the books questions seem to creep up on you, mostly without any over the top dramatic reveals.

This story is told through the points of view of four characters. Three that were Link's friends prior to his death, and one labelled "unknown" I like books that are told through multiple different POVs, but because the story is told through four different ones, the chapters were very short and at times, the change of POV felt unnecessary. 

Characters

I didn't particularly like or dislike any of the characters. Although, sometimes they felt flat and difficult to relate to.

Noemi was an especially difficult character for me to like. She is overbearingly controlling of her friends, and she also had a very quick-tempered attitude that was difficult to get passed. Obviously every character needs to have flaws to feel realistic, but being as controlling and as quick-tempered as she is, I had a hard time believing that she would be able to keep many friends, (Spoiler! I also had a hard time believing that, just based on her attitude alone, all three of the male characters would show romantic interest in her).  

There was some good representation of different sexualities throughout the story, Noemi is asexual, and Amberlyn and Lyle share a few romantic moments together.

I thought that Lyle and Amberlyn were adorable together and I wish that that relationship had played a larger part in the book. In my opinion they were much more interesting than the central relationship in the book.

The Forest (Big spoilers!)

I enjoyed the concept of "the forest" as a character/being/entity. It was a very interesting aspect to read, although I wish it had been developed a little further. By the time the main characters get to truly speak to "the forest," I believe that there is only 30 or so more pages left. In my opinion, having the characters speak to "the forest" was the most interesting part of the whole book, so I wish that it could have somehow played a larger part. Squishing all of the true interaction to the end of the book felt a little rushed and I was a slightly disappointed.

Conclusion

This book was pretty good, there were some aspects that missed the mark for me but other parts that made the book worth reading. As a warning, there are brief sexual themes, so I would recommend this book to teens who are a little older and who are looking for a read that is a little contemporary while having some mysterious and eerie moods intertwined in it.

Tuesday, 29 September 2020

A Return From my Accidental 3 Year Break

        I should start off by saying that the three year hiatus from this blog was not intentional in the slightest. What started as a small break from reading became a very large break and now here we are, three years later.

       I can count the books that I have read in the past three years on one hand. I read My Friend Dahmer by Derf Backderf, 1984 by George Orwell, (which, in itself took me two years to get through,)  and To Kill  a Mocking Bird by Harper Lee. It's safe to assume that I haven't been in the mood to read for quite some time, and I've also been quite busy. But the good news is that right now I have tons of time on my hands, and I'm finally in the mood to read again! In fact, I am already in the middle of writing a review. I recently finished an ARC of We Were Restless Things by Cole Nagamatsu, so the review for that will be up shortly.

I'm not sure if anybody even still reads my blog, but I am very excited to be back to reading and reviewing again. :)