books

Book Review: True Colors by Kristin Hannah

Image result for True Colors Kristin Hannah

Kristin Hannah grabbed my attention when The Nightingale became easily one of my favorite books to date. The Great Alone followed a couple of years later which I ordered with my Book of the Month subscription and I was immediately enthralled. I decided to read one of her earlier novels, True Colors, to see if it could live up to her newer works.

One thing that is consistent across all of Hannah’s tales are her well developed characters. True Colors is the story of three sisters living on a horse ranch with their ornery, stoic father. Winona is the eldest sister. She is smart, hard working and under appreciated by her father. She is plagued by insecurity due to her forever single status and being overweight. She tends to be sidelined to “the best friend” by every man she is interested in. As a young girl, when her mother passed away, she was deemed incompetent as a horsewoman by her father and immediately he lost interest in her while her youngest sister, Vivi Ann, stepped into easily into their mother’s shoes and had a natural knack with horses. This moment becomes the basis of Winona’s jealousy and resentment towards her youngest sister, that and her envy of Vivi Ann’s beauty and constant attention from men in town. The middle sister, Aurora, is your typical middle child who spends most of her time trying to keep the peace between her sisters. When a new ranch hand comes to town with a mysterious aura and dangerous past, the lives of these three sisters are changed forever.

One thing that I enjoyed about this book were some of the parallels I could draw between the Grey sisters and my own relationships with my two sisters. Although not to the extremes seen in this story, it was interesting to see the dynamic between sisters play out across the pages.

Once Dallas, the new Native American ranch hand, is introduced to the Grey family, chaos ensues. Vivi Ann is immediately drawn to him and although she tries to fight it at first, she ends up giving up her resolve and falling for him. She faces exile from her prejudiced father, whom she once adored, as well as judgement from both of her sisters. After Dallas is arrested for murder and their small town turns against him, the bond between the Grey sisters is really put to the test. Horses are known to see a person’s true colors- will this trio be able to weather the storm of scandal and stay true to theirs? I would recommend you read this one through to the end, you won’t be disappointed!

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Book Review: There There by Tommy Orange

Image result for there there tommy orange review

The discovery of the “New World” was a blessing to those escaping religious persecution in Europe. The colonists found a place to be free, to start fresh and a whole lot of land to make that all possible. A little kink in their plan was the fact that this world was already home to indigenous peoples who had been living off the land for years. Since then Native Americans have been slaughtered, ripped from their homes, and forced onto designated land now called reservations. The modern day Native American stereotype is not a pretty one- most of the time the reservations are associated with alcoholism, gambling addiction and diabetes.

Once a people of health and freedom, Native Americans for the most part are now part of a low socioeconomic class plagued with a sense of not belonging.  Tommy Orange portrays the struggle of the “Urban Indians” in his novel There There. He writes, “We are the memories we don’t remember, which live in us, which we feel, which make us sing and dance and pray the way we do, feelings from memories that flare and bloom unexpectedly in our lives like blood through a blanket from a wound made by a bullet fired by a man shooting us in the back for our hair, for our heads, for a bounty, or just to get rid of us.” This sets the tone of the novel in which Orange tells the story of twelve characters, varying in their degree of Indian, as they plan to attend a big powwow in Oakland, California. As the characters develop we learn of their connections but the major similarity between them is the fact that they all struggle with being Native American in today’s America. Depression, alcoholism, domestic abuse, gang violence, teenage pregnancies, suicide are all realities for these individuals and their journey to find where and how they fit in ends at the Big Oakland Powwow.

Harvey, the MC travelling to the powwow says, “We all been through a lot we don’t understand in a world made to either break us or make us so hard we can’t break even when it’s what we need to do.” He is a recovering alcoholic who runs AA meetings for fellow urban Native Americans.  He is travelling to the powwow with a woman who he forced himself upon earlier in life and also plans to meet a son that he has never met at the powwow. This is an example of how interconnected Orange’s characters are in the novel. They are all on a path of self discovery which unfortunately coincides with self destruction.

I thoroughly enjoyed reading There There because of the raw emotion that Orange is able to portray in his words. He paints a very clear picture of the struggle Native Americans face today in this country which is a topic that rarely gets the recognition it deserves. This is not the story told in school history books but a very real and very current slow destruction of a group of people that is eerily reminiscent of the past. It is well worth a read.

books · Thriller

Book Review: The Death of Mrs. Westaway

Ah summer- the perfect time to curl up on the couch in the AC during a thunder boomer and read! I was excited to start my most recent read as there was a lot of hype surrounding Ruth Ware’s The Death of Mrs. Westaway. I read The Woman in Cabin 10 last year and found it initially enticing but it ended up falling a little flat for me. Although my hopes were high, I have to say the same about this one.

Hal is our protagonist in this thriller. She is a tarot card reader in her early 20’s reeling from the recent and sudden death of her mother. She is struggling to pay the bills and even owes scary loan sharks money. In a twist of fate she is unexpectedly contacted by a solicitor (English verbiage for lawyer)  who notifies Hal that she has been named in the will of a Mrs. Westaway whom has recently passed away. She knows nothing about her mother’s family and did not know her father, however she is doubtful that this correspondence is rightfully meant for her. Seeing as she has nothing to lose, she decides to go to the estate of Mrs. Westaway, called Trepassan, to claim her prize.  She believes that she can use the people -reading skills and intuition that she uses daily to make a living to convince this family that she is Mrs. Westaway’s long lost granddaughter and hopefully get some money out of it. Little does she know that Trepassan holds many dark and twisted secrets and that the family she is about to meet may not be one she wants to keep.

The novel has a dreary almost Gothic vibe and is set in rainy, cold England which is the perfect setting for a murder mystery. As I was reading I felt as if I was on the Clue game board; It was the Colonel with the knife in the kitchen! As with most mysteries I did successfully guess “who dun it” and was not overly satisfied with the outcome. I do enjoy Ruth’s detailed writing style and her character development. Overall even though it held my attention I would say to skip this one. Hoping her newest thriller, The Turn of the Key has a little more oomph to it!

Beach Reads · Historical Fiction · Romance

Book Review: The Age of Light

The Age of Light by Whitney Scharer

The Age of Light by Whitney Scharer is a historical fiction following the relationship between famed photographers Lee Miller and Man Ray. The two were part of the Surrealist movement in the late 1920s- 1930s. Lee, a reputable model, moves to Paris to fulfill her dream of becoming a photographer. She is determined to be behind the camera instead of at its focus. She meets Man Ray at a party one night and he is intrigued by her beauty. At the time of their meet-cute, Man Ray had already made a name for himself as a leader of the Surrealist movement and was well known for his photographs. He also ran in a circle of well known artists and Lee knew that if she could convince him to hire her as his assistant, she would be able to penetrate the photography world in Paris.

First as his assistant and then as his lover and partner, Lee and Man Ray trademark a technique called “solarization” where they expose the developing picture to light at different times to create an image that looked like a photo’s negative. Although they work very well together in the studio, their relationship becomes quickly blurred. Although Man is an eager teacher and mentor, he also takes credit for ideas that are Lee’s and, intentionally or not, is intent on reminding her that she is merely his assistant. Man becomes possesive and overbearing. Eventually their love affair self destructs, but not before Lee has an extensive foundation in photography and ability to venture out on her own.

Lee Miller was a badass. She saw opportunities and went for them. She was not afraid to put herself out there. She used her beauty to her advantage and was not ashamed. She was determined to separate herself from Man Ray and knew that her career as a photographer and her unique eye were more important that assuaging a possessive lover.  She later became known for her portraits of Pablo Picasso and as a war correspondent in WWII, being one of the first photographers to capture the horror of Dachau concentration camp.

I admit I did not know much about Lee Miller or Man Ray prior to reading this novel. I enjoy when a historical fiction piques my interest in the subject enough for me to research about it after, which The Age of Light did. It was interesting to peruse some of their work after gaining some insight to their short but intense relationship. Overall I would recommend the book. I felt that it may have been too focused on their sexual relationship rather than their careers as photographers but it definitely kept me interested and was written well. Scharer is able to portray Miller and Man Ray’s relationship in such a way that it almost makes the reader imagine it as a series of photographs.

books

Book Review: I’ll be Your Blue Sky

Imagine a terrific, deep, true love story combined with an empowering coming- of- age novel. Now add a little mystery, twists and turns and a second love story and you have Marisa De Los Santos’ I’ll be Your Blue Sky.  I have not felt wowed by a book in a few months. Don’t get me wrong I’ve read some quality novels, but even though the characters were there and the plot was there, I just didn’t feel 100% satisfied by the end. You know that feeling when you don’t want a book to end because you want to just keep following the characters through their lives? That is what I felt when I closed this book.

Clare is a young twenty-something who we meet on the eve of her wedding day. She is marrying a successful, handsome man but we quickly learn her heart is not completely in it. Coincidently (or not) she meets an elderly woman, Edith, at the hotel where the wedding is taking place. Edith is quick to pick up on Clare’s nerves and Clare opens up to her about some concerns she has for her future with her fiancé. She describes how much Zach adores her and how she would feel guilty abandoning him when he has had a troubled past. Edith replies, “You’re his blue sky. When everything else is darkness. But is he yours?” Edith quickly became my favorite character and what I thought was a brief cameo was actually the introduction to her story, which is told in parallel to Clare’s.

In the past Edith had a great love story of her own. Although it was cut short when her husband died of cancer shortly after their marriage, she held on to this love for the rest of her life and celebrated it through her photography. We learn that Edith is not only empathetic but extremely brave. When she was a young woman, after her husband’s death, she used their home as a safe house for battered women.

If you are wondering how these stories are connected, you are not alone! I thought we would be journeying with Clare as she decides what to do about her almost marriage- but this event is just the beginning of the story. Will she take the advice of a complete stranger? Is Edith a complete stranger? How are the two connected? What is Edith’s story and how does her involvement in a secret escape route for domestic violence victims impact Clare’s life? You will get the answers to all of your questions (and more) once you delve in to I’ll be Your Blue Sky and you will not be disappointed.

Beach Reads · Romance

Book Review: Drawing Home

Jamie Brenner’s Drawing Home transports readers to Sag Harbor for the summer. Here we find Emma Mapson and her daughter Penny who are Sag Harbor natives. Emma is a single mother who has been a concierge at the town’s most highly rated establishment, The American Inn, for about a decade. Her fourteen year old daughter Penny is an anxiety stricken teenager trying hard to fit in. Penny often spends afternoons at the hotel while waiting for Emma to finish her shift. At the hotel Penny forms an unlikely relationship with Henry Wyatt, a well known artist who settled in Sag Harbor when the hustle and bustle of New York City became too much for him. Henry mentors Penny and helps her use her art as an escape from her anxiety. When Henry dies, he leaves his multimillion dollar estate to Penny which houses his art collection. This comes as a huge shock to both Penny and her mother, who struggle to make ends meet. Penny sees it as a change to escape her mundane life but Emma is weary of the artist’s decision.

Henry’s decision to bequeath his estate to a fourteen year old stranger also comes as a shock to Bea Winstead, Henry’s longtime manager, business partner and friend. It was Bea that first noticed Henry’s talent and was the founder of the first art gallery to show his work. Although the two lost touch later in life, she questions the validity of his will and decides to travel to Sag Harbor herself to handle it. When Henry first decided to leave the city and settle down in the seaside town, Bea thought he was crazy. When Henry built his estate he told Bea that he wanted it to one day be made into a museum of his work for the residents of Sag Harbor to cherish. This explains why Bea is convinced Emma and Penny swindled their way into Henry’s will.

As Bea begins to investigate Emma and Penny she comes to find out exactly why Henry decided to leave them his estate.  As the novel progresses Penny begins to evolve from a nervous, eager to fit in teenager to a more self confident young adult. We also see Emma figure out how to be a dedicated single parent but also take care of herself and follow her own dreams and desires. An unlikely but entertaining friendship develops between the Mapsons and Bea, and Henry’s plan for the three of them unfolds just the way he imagines…well, almost. Mix up your favorite cocktail and sit on the porch with this quick but worthwhile read.

Historical Fiction · Romance

Book Review: Next Year in Havana

Next Year in Havana

Chanel Cleeton’s Next Year in Havana is the perfect early summer novel. Not only did I fall quickly for Cleeton’s characters but she describes Cuba in such detail that you feel like you are there (Think Dirty Dancing: Havana Nights ). The novel flip flops between 1958 and 2017 but the connections between the characters and their circumstances are very prominent.

In 1958 we follow Elisa Perez, the daughter of an elite sugar plantation owner in Havana. Elisa is witnessing the Cuban Revolution from the walls of her mansion in the wealthy part of town. She and her siblings are very privileged and shielded from much of the cruelties that come with the revolution… at least initially. Elisa’s father supports Cuban dictator Batista whom the U.S backs at the time. The rebels are fighting with Fidel Castro who is supporting a revolution and promising the poor an end to the Cuban elite. Elisa falls in love with a rebel fighter, Pablo, very unexpectedly while out at a party. Their love story is brief as he is often away fighting for the cause but their connection remains strong through dozens of love letters over their courtship. When Castro’s rebels are finally successful at running Batista out of the country, many of Batista’s supporters decide to leave Havana due to the fear that they may not be safe under the new ruler. Elisa’s parents and siblings are one of these families and she leaves Cuba with much more than a broken heart.

While we delve deeper into Elisa and Pablo’s love story the novel also introduces Marisol Ferrera, the granddaughter of Elisa Perez who in 2017 is a freelance writer of fluff pieces for a travel publication. She too is the product of a wealthy family living in Miami, Florida where the Perez family settled after leaving Cuba. She has a close bond to her grandmother Elisa and after her death, she is left with the task of taking Elisa’s ashes back to Havana to be scattered. Elisa leaves little instruction on where she wants her final resting place to be but she is confident that Marisol will figure it out. In 2017 after Castro’s death the travel ban between the U.S and Cuba had been lifted and Marisol is finally able to visit Havana, a place her heart longed for her whole life. While there she meets Luis, the grandson of Elisa Perez’s old next door neighbor. Luis is also a revolutionary for his time, eager for new leadership after Castro’s death and hopes for progression for his country. Ultimately Marisol learns a lot about her grandmother’s past all while growing to love Cuba as much as Elisa did.

While reading this novel I found myself thinking a lot about what I would do in Elisa’s circumstance. What if I loved someone who was from a completely different background with very different beliefs? What if our love was literally separated by a revolution and our happiness depended on the outcome of war? I would hope that I would be as brave as Elisa and Pablo were and fight not only for my relationship but also for the livelihood of my family and my country. This novel was enlightening and I learned a lot about Cuba’s history while enjoying the plot and character development. Overall Next Year in Havana was an enjoyable read and one that I would recommend to all fans of historical fiction.

Beach Reads · Romance

Book Review: The Light We Lost by Jill Santopolo

Image result for the light we lost

“Two roads diverged in a yellow wood, and sorry I could not travel both” – Robert Frost

Everyone has a moment- a defining moment in life where there are two paths, two options for how life will go, and you have to choose just one. For some this is encountered in deciding practical things such as which college to go to, what to major in, which job offer to take. For others it involves love and the person you end up spending your life with. Or maybe it’s both. Maybe you have a lot of moments you forever look back on and wonder, “where would I be if…”

The Light We Lost by Jill Santopolo is a story full of individuals making decisions that affect the course of their lives. Lucy is an ambitious, smart woman who falls in love, twice. She falls in love first with a boy she meets in college. They are young and full of life. Their love is passionate and raw. Their love is something that she is never able to fully move on from. Their love also breaks her more than once and eventually, this love leaves her. She goes on to find another love a little later in life. This love is more practical, more reliable and in many ways makes more sense. This love is mature and safe. Readers follow Lucy as she grows from a college girl, in love, to a full time working mom, also in love, and listen as she recounts all of the decisions that she makes and their consequences.

The novel captured my attention very quickly. I am a sucker for a good love story- and in this book there are two. Although Lucy alludes to a not so happy ending more than once, I did hold out hope that she would end up finding her way back to her true love. I’ll leave it up to you to decide who you think that is. The Light We Lost is definitely worth a read.

Beach Reads · books · Thriller · Thriller

Review: The Silent Patient by Alex Michaelides

the silent patient - alex michaelides thriller NYT bestseller

Just like any typical 20 -something I seem to be drawn to psychological thrillers these days. Not to brag, but I can usually see all of the “unexpected plot twists” coming from a mile away. I am also notorious for predicting the ending of a movie 10 minutes in and whispering to my boyfriend “she did it”, which he is obviously really fond of.  I started reading The Silent Patient by Alex Michaelides with the expectation that I would be able to use my amazing skills to see the ending coming early on. However, I am pleasantly surprised to report that this was not the case.

 The Silent Patient is the story of a psychotherapist, Theo Faber, who takes a job at a high security psychiatric hospital in the hopes of triggering a breakthrough in one of the most notorious patients there, a woman who shot her husband five times without any known motive. Alicia Berenson has not spoken one word since she was charged with the murder of her husband. She is a well known local artist and her last attempt at communication was a self portrait entitled Alcestis.  To provide some background Alcestis is a lesser known Greek play in which the Queen Alcestis volunteers to die in the place of her husband Admetus. She was rescued by Hercules and brought back to life. Alcestis is the epitome of a selfless woman/wife in the setting of ancient Greece. Alex Michaelides uses Alcestis to help build Alicia Berenson’s character and to set the stage for the events leading to her husband’s death.

Theo Faber has a personal history of mental illness. He uses his experience with depression, child abuse and PTSD to help foster meaningful bonds with his patients. He is determined to help Alicia come to terms with her crime and speak out about what happened to her. As the novel unfolds we slowly learn that Theo has some unresolved issues of his own that still haunt him, and that he relates to Alicia’s situation on a very personal level.

The author does an excellent job at periodically introducing less significant characters that may or may not have played a role in the crime. This led to numerous moments where I thought I had figured it all out- but alas, I must admit I did not accurately predict this one.

Beach Reads · books

Book Review: The Flight Attendant

When in Dubai…

The Flight Attendant by Chris Bohjalian was exactly what you would expect from a book that you pick up on your way home from a trip to Florida. The story was comparable to a turbulent flight that regained its composure with an unexpected surprise landing; the elderly people on your flight would give it a few loud claps.

Our main character is Cassandra “Cassie” Bowden. She is a seasoned flight attendant known to her co-workers for disappearing with passengers during their layovers, and drinking a little too much. Despite her party girl exterior she is a reliable employee and her passengers enjoy her. We soon learn that she puts out this carefree persona to cover up a darker, more complex past. Our story begins in Dubai where Cassie spends the night with a passenger, Alex, which is something pretty routine for her. This “run of the mill” one night stand takes a sinister turn when she wakes up with her lover in bed next to her, dead, after being murdered at some point in the night.

The rest of the novel follows Cassie as she faces the consequences of her drunken actions. Cassie as a character is inherently interesting because she is a single flight attendant and also a drunk. She has gotten away with a lot in life due to her good looks and is not accustomed to having to deal with the repercussions of her poor choices. In other words she’s flighty (ba-dum bum). Being that she woke up next to the dead passenger it is assumed at first that she killed him, except she was too drunk to remember if she did or not. Going forward, much of the book depicts Cassie waiting to hear from her lawyer regarding if/when she would be charged with murder, while also continuing to work as a flight attendant and have romantic rendezvous with foreign men. 

Elena (aka Miranda) is the other female lead in the novel. She is the errand girl for a prominent Russian gangster. She is introduced to us as an acquaintance of Alex (Cassie’s dead lover) and the three share a nightcap shortly before Alex ends up bleeding out in bed. The reader learns that Elena’s father was involved with the KGB and she followed a similar path. It is clear early on that Elena is involved with Alex’s death but the reader slowly learns a lot more about the black widow as the story unfolds.

The novel has potential. There are your typical Russian ex- KGB villains, multiple romps across Europe, and spies. Although it has the ingredients for an enthralling story I found myself bored for most of it. I did appreciate that Cassie as a character ended up being deeper than I initially thought. I found her carefree, fly- off -the- seat- of -your pants attitude endearing and definitely rooted for her for the whole entirety of the book. The ending made up for an overall slow story progression but it was also somewhat confusing and I felt as if the author was pulling things out of “thin air” to get the book over with. All in all giving this one * 2 paws up *.

Categories: Beach reads, travel, spies, mystery