Beach Reads · books · Mystery

Where the Crawdads Sing by Delia Owens – Book Review

Alt= Where the Crawdads Sing

Where the Crawdads Sing by Delia Owens has become a bit of a phenomenon. If you haven’t noticed, rave reviews of the novel are popping up everywhere, and not without good reason. As a reader, and in other facets of my day-to-day life, I tend to not give in to the hype. Rather, I try desperately to resist the hyped-up books, TV shows, and trends, until I eventually give in and admit I was wrong about not believing the hype all along.

Crawdads was on my list, but it was bumped to the top when my Dad chose it for our family book club. The decision was made for me, and I’m glad.

Kya Clark is the “Marsh Girl.” Abandoned by her parents at a young age, one a battered wife, one a drunk, she grows up in a shack on the North Carolina swamp, raising herself beside the gulls and the shellfish.

Kya lives a lonesome existence. The story ebbs and flows like the tides of the marsh, ushering loneliness forth with the tide. The story conveys the state of isolation as reprehensible, and yet the most natural state of being.

Desperate to learn, Kya is taught to read by a local boy, Tate Walker. Tate is a wholesome, selfless character who serves the purpose of loving and caring for Kya above all else. Even when he makes mistakes, Tate is immediately regretful and willing to devote himself completely to making Kya trust him again.

One issue I have with the character development is Tate’s Christ-like goodness.  He’s just too good. Conversely, Kya is extremely untrusting, unwilling to ask for or accept help. Neither is a believable character, TBH.

Humans are social beings, born out of connection and bred for it. With a lack of socialization, Kya’s development parallels the marsh more so than it does her peers in the village. Kya and the marsh are symbiotic. It feeds her, teaches hers to grow and mature in her biology. In turn, she takes care of the gulls, feeds them, nurtures them like her friends. Kya’s love for the marsh is both endearing and heartbreaking.

“Needing people ended in hurt.” Kya learns this as a child of the marsh, and as she grows, she doubles down on this belief. It may be unfortunate, but Kya’s experience teaches her that love disappoints. And hurts. She just does not want to give in to that hurt, which I commend.

The masses are voraciously claiming this book to be fantastic. I say, it’s a great story. I found the ending to be satisfactory based on the distant way Kya developed throughout. Her character comes full circle in the sunset of the novel in a way that I found to be refreshingly true to the character.

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.

books · Historical Fiction

Review: What the Winds Know by Amy Harmon

What the Wind Knows
Anne Gallagher finds herself in 1912 Ireland in Amy Harmon’s new time travel romance.

No matter how hard I try, I just keep falling ass-backwards into time travel love stories. For the love of god, it needs to stop. Not only do they typically make very little sense (what modern woman is going to fall for a guy who she has to school on the greater challenges of feminism in recent decades) but I am trying to branch out in genre. Not doing great so far.

Regardless of that, I have to say that I really enjoyed Amy Harmon’s What the Wind Knows. Surrounding the 20th Century Irish rebellions and quest for freedom from Great Britain, this was offered as an Amazon First read book for prime users in March (any excuse for a St. Paddy’s Day promo).

“Was I changing history, or had I always been part of it?” The main character Anne asks herself this age old time travel question. This book answers the question and is worth reading, although I’m glad I didn’t pay for it.

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

books · Mystery

Review: The Thirteenth Tale by Diane Setterfield

I was in a bit of reading slump lately. Everything that I had been picking up was very slow. I was perusing Amazon for new releases when I stumbled on The Thirteenth Tale. Once I realized that Once Upon a River, another novel by Setterfield I’ve been hearing a lot about, won’t be released until the summer, I lost myself in the author bio and took a look at some of Setterfield’s past work. The Thirteenth Tale stood out.

This book was as eerie as described and even more unsettling than I anticipated. Margaret Lea, the daughter of a a bookshop owner, is called upon, unprompted, by famed author Vida Winter to write the legend’s biography.

Vida Winter is notorious for lying to reporters and making up outlandish stories about her past. She has not told (or faced) the truth about her life ever before, but now chooses Margaret to write the truth.

One of my biggest issues with the book was that Ms. Winter seemed way too comfortable with Margaret. For someone who had kept her life a complete secret, she is all too prepared to tell this absolute stranger her full story, without any reasoning for why. In my opinion, Vida’s justification for why she hired Margaret doesn’t explain her comfort with her. I would have expected a closeted person to have more walls up. Still, Vida Winter is a complex and satisfying character. She is a storyteller, and she is determined to make sure she remains as such, even as she is narrating the story of her own life.

Margaret is a far less exciting character. She is the daughter of a bookshop owner (a personal dream) and yet she is somehow able to make even that seem boring. She’s never read a Vida Winter book, but is called upon to bring her character to life, the only known record of the writer’s life. She wouldn’t be my first choice.

Vida Winter reveals her secrets (and some that are not hers to tell) to Margaret. Their developing friendship is heartwarming – one gets the sense neither of them has ever had a true friend.

The underlying theme of the novel is identity. Both characters struggle with it, and not in the traditional “finding yourself” way you see in most novels. Both women are twins. There is A LOT of twin symbolism in this book. Typically I find the twin/psychic telepathy theme to be overplayed, but the layers of originality in the story are too good to be mistaken for poor thematic writing.

Margaret was born with a twin, but she died after a surgery was performed to separate their connected torsos. She has lived the rest of her life with the incessant feeling that there is a piece of herself missing – a feeling that leaves her largely depressed and not all that much of an asset to society. She feels guilt at surviving. She feels lost for surviving. This faceted idea of identity resonated with me. As someone who is largely independent, and yet still has the tug of directions when making decisions, I can’t imagine the feeling of having a missing piece of myself that I feel an allegiance to, an ever-nagging shadow.

The identity crisis goes much further. It’s deep and surprising and gives the book a mysterious, gothic quality.

The crossover between Gothic and Realism is a winner. Diane Setterfield s a great storyteller and I think this is a quality read for those looking for a mystery that isn’t just based in modern-missing-girl-true-crime (looking at you, Girl on the Train). If you want a mystery with edge, a complex story, ghostly hauntings, and good writing – read this!

About Us

Each book has a beginning, middle, and end….

Thanks for joining us at the beginning! Welcome to 2 Book Girls, the newly minted blog for book reviews from a modern female perspective. Contributing authors of this blog are Katelyn Cullinan and Jessica Doran, best friends from college who have always bonded over a love of reading and storytelling. We are thrilled to have the opportunity to create a space where we can learn, discuss, and provide commentary on the things we read, and the things we’ll warn you just aren’t worth reading.

Kate and I have been friends for about 8 years now. We became close when we were designated as roommates on a study abroad trip in York, England. We studied the Classics together on that trip and throughout college: all different types of literature. Although Kate was on the medical track and I was an English major, we shared a love of good stories – something that brings everyone together!

We hope that this blog can be a destination for avid readers who are looking to join in a discussion of contemporary (and not so contemporary) books, laugh at the books that are really just terrible, and follow along on our journey to enriching our lives with words. We hope you enjoy, and follow our “To Read” lists on Goodreads for what we are looking forward to.

Happy Reading,

Jess & Kate