| I am PP who was looking for something lighter and started “I hope this finds you well” which I heard about on here (can’t remember which thread). It’s ok so far. Not my favorite though to be fair I don’t typically like a super unrealistic plot device, which I knew was the whole point of the book so the fact I am even reading it is a recommendation I guess. About a quarter of the way through. |
I read one of Alix Harrow's books at the end of last year and was surprised at how fresh her voice was--and the book was well-plotted and imaginative. But, ITA, that she could use an editor to pare back the "over-writing" & statements of the obvious and prevent her (apparent) tendency to descend into overly precious storytelling. I know that "cozy fantasy" is having its moment these days, but basically feel like she could be better than that! |
I just started this and it's great so far! |
I read The Everlasting based on a recommendation here and it was really great. I will be trying more of her books, but do agree that a little bit of paring back wouldn't hurt. Still, one of the more interesting, original books I've encountered in awhile. |
| The Everlasting is crazy short for Alix! It's just over 300 pages. It has the beautiful prose you're used to getting from her, but it's somehow very compact. |
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Marble Hall Murders by Anthony Horowitz
This is book three for Susan Ryeland/Atticus Pund. The first two books were adapted for TV series starring Lesley Manville and Tim McMullan. I found the shows very entertaining. I didn't read the first two books, but when I saw this one I decided to read. According to the author it was written because Manville said she wanted to play Susan one more time. As far as I know, the show hasn't been released yet but was filming in 2025. Manville and McMullan narrate the audiobook. It's a bit of a commitment at 18 hours, and the paper book is 500+ pages, but it maintains a quick pace. The story alternates between current day actual happenings and the book within a book about Atticus Pund in long sections, so if you hate that you will hate this! I liked it and will be watching for the show release. |
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Finished Buckeye by Patrick Ryan.
A little long, but enjoyable. The characters were fairly endearing and true to themselves. I would recommend you read it! Undecided if it will stay in my collection. I don't love when it feels like trying too hard to weave in the title, the way he did it just felt a little meh to me, like would that actually have happened in these families? And there was a hug at the end that felt implausible. But other than those two things, this book was great. Weaving through generations, imperfect parents, the shame of secrets, accepting humanness - all themes I enjoy in a family drama. I cried multiple times reading it. There was a quote toward the end, "This is why old people seem distant and distracted, he thought. We aren't living in the past; the past is living in us. And it's talking." I'm only 42 but really felt this. Beautiful. |
| Just finished Daughters of Shandong, The Alice Network and now My Friends - all good but My Friends a step above, IMO |
OK OK guys, I'll stop nitpicking & put the Everlasting on my list for later this year...
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DNF Flashlight, by Susan Choi, at 25%. The story was dragging and the characters were all unlikable, with no signs of redeeming themselves.
Now reading Circe…. Liking it so far. |
I loved Circe. Very easy read. |
I also got that recommendation from here and I thought it was fine, but not great. It started out well and then kind of fizzled for me. |
I LOVED My Friends. Read the Beartown trilogy if you haven't already and you like Backman. Also, if you haven't the Rose Code, it's my other favorite Kate Quinn book. |
I appreciate your POV-very validating! I decided “Once and Future Witches” is a DNF for me… I just started “On the Calculation of Volume I” and am completely drawn in. My library doesn’t have part II yet, so I may be buying it soon! And I’ve also picked up “Dark Renaissance,” which I’m really enjoying (reading Wolf Hall/Bring Up the Bodies plus Stoned last year has made it extra fun to jump into Elizabethan England at this point in my life). |
I did not like My Friends! That cutesy narrative voice drove me crazy. The friendships were also unbelievable and schmaltzy. |