Tuesday, May 23, 2023

The Island by Natasha Preston

I HATED THIS BOOK!!!!!!!

I am so angry I spent even the discounted price.  I am angry I stayed up to read this, hoping it got better.  

It was terrible.  I don't even want to add it to the collection.

Full Tilt is one of my favorite books, and Clue is one of my favorite movies.  So a whodunit set in a creepy amusement park?  Perfect.

Not.  There was zero character development, the plot jumps so bad you have no idea who's doing what and has more holes than Swiss cheese, and the ending was a cliffhanger that made no sense.  I stayed up an hour past my bedtime to chuck this book so hard it woke the dogs up.  

One of the worst books I have ever wasted my time on. 

All opinions expressed on this blog are solely those of Mrs. W. 


 

Wednesday, May 17, 2023

Our Crooked Hearts by Melissa Albert

This was recommended to me by Amazon, I guess because I like horror and stories of the craft.  I will call it "readable".  

I have to say, after digitizing Donnie Darko for a teacher, I was definitely a little apprehensive of the creepy bunny on the cover.  But, this was not scary.  

In the present day, in a typical white American suburb, Ivy has always felt something was "off" about her mother, long suspecting clairvoyance or special knowledge of herbs, etc.  But as things get weirder as Ivy and her older brother grow, they start understanding their mother and her best friend Fee are witches.  We flash back to when Dana was a teen herself in a very urban and poor city, learning about her abilities.  There are several witches who come into Dana, Fee's, and Ivy's lives throughout their stories, and the reader must determine, for lack of a better way of describing it, who is Good Witch and who is a Bad Witch.  All whole navigating typical teenhood like cliques and homework, societal norms in wealth and poverty, and a lot of dead bunnies.

Why I rate this readable and not good is the changing point of view, not just in flashback/forward.  It changes from 1st to 3rd within the time periods.  So sometimes Ivy or Dana narrates their own story, sometimes an omniscient narrator is telling the story.  I wish the author chose one and stuck with it.   

All opinions expressed on this blog are solely those of Mrs. W.    

Thursday, May 4, 2023

Blackbird House by Alice Hoffman

Yesterday afternoon and evening were a very quiet time in my home.  My husband was spending the night in Massachusetts for work.  Our puppy Shyne was spending the night at the vet after her spay. And my son was studying for APUSH.  My old girl Shandy and I curled up the on couch with a blankie to finish this week's book.  

I loved The Museum of Ordinary Things and Incantation, but I'm not sure why Amazon decided to recommend this, which was published in 2004, to me last week...

This is a short novel, a novella, like Hoffman's Green Heart.  Also like Green Heart, it is several stories that are united but were previously published piecemeal.  There is also a supernatural element, which is typical of her work.  

The stories are mostly set in Cape Cod, centered around an old farmhouse and fertile plot of land.  The home is inherited, sold, bought, gifted over two centuries.  As I myself love old homes and the stories about them (mine being built in 1930; we are only its 3rd owners), this was very touching.  It was sad, but also beautiful.

A very quick read that I definitely recommend.

All opinions expressed on this blog are solely those of Mrs. W.        

Wednesday, May 3, 2023

Murder Your Employer by Rupert Holmes

The latest in my New Title Tuesday, this was suggested to me by Amazon. We are on book number 12 of 18. 

You may not know the author's name, but you might've heard a song he wrote on the Oldies station: The Pina Colada Song.  Honestly, I had no idea that's who the author was when I bought the book, and didn't until a friend commented on my FB post.  It really has no bearing on the review or the book anyway, but interesting factoid.

This was a weird book.  It is set up like a journal with editorial comments.  The journal portion is from a former student and now staff member at McMasters Conservatory, a school dedicated to learning how to murder, er, DELETE, those who deserve it.  Think Scythe school.  The school location is never revealed, but it was VERY Hogwarts-like (a little too much in my opinion).  The editorial comments come from the Headmaster.  In addition to the journaling student, we learn about two other future Deletists.  It also felt very Harry Potter course bookish, like the original Fantastic Beasts or Quidditch Through the Ages.   

It was readable, but I saw the plot twist coming fairly early.  I also had trouble NOT picturing Hogwarts or the Dean as Dumbledore. The hardest part for me was the anachronisms: Holmes refers to people of my parents' or even grandparents' generation for references, and I had to Google them.  If I didn't know some, it's unlikely my kids will.  

All opinions expressed on this blog are solely those of Mrs. W.