Sunday, December 29, 2019

The Woman Inside by E. G. Scott

A special thank you to NetGalley and Penguin Dutton for an ARC in exchange for an honest review.

Husband and wife, Rebecca and Paul, are both meant to be and a highly dangerous match.

Drawn together by their dark and painful pasts, the couple met when charismatic Paul was married. Now they are hitched, and after two decades, the relationship is failing just like Paul's contracting business. Rebecca however, is successful. She's a rep for a pharmaceutical company—a convenient job for someone with an opioid addiction.

But both of them are liars: Paul constantly lies about his cheating and womanizing, whereas Rebecca lies about how many drugs she is taking. Their relationship volleys between passion and paranoia—when you add to the mix a crazy mistress and a murder, it becomes the ultimate game of cat and mouse.

The Woman Inside is an explosive novel about secrets, lies, and revenge.

Told through multiple first-person narrators, this domestic thriller jumps between past and present. There are a few instances where the reader may be confused by the timeline towards the middle, but the narrative gets back on track for the last part where the authors ratchet up the suspense to a frenzied finish. The pace is partly why this book works—the whiplash speed does not leave the reader much time to ponder the plot issues. They will need to suspend their disbelief, and if they can, they will love this book.

BUY NOW

E. G. SCOTT is the pseudonym for two writers, Elizabeth Keenan and Greg Wands. The duo have been friends for over twenty years and have been writing plays, screenplays, and short fiction separately since childhood.

Friday, December 27, 2019

You Were There Too by Colleen Oakley

A special thank you to Edelweiss and Penguin Publishing Group for an ARC in exchange for an honest review.

Artist Mia Graydon is married to Harrison, a doctor, and the couple have just relocated to small town in Pennsylvania. Her life looks like the perfect dream—only she's having other dreams, ones that reoccur with the same leading man.

Excited for the next chapter in their life, Mia and Harrison hope to start a family. But when a chance meeting has Mia coming face-to-face with Oliver, the stranger from her dreams, who confesses that he has too been dreaming about her, she starts to wonder if fate has other plans for her.

Colleen, you are amazing! What a truly remarkable story. Dreams have always been a fascination of mine and make for an interesting premise. Mia is faced with choosing the man she married, or the man of her dreams, literally, but which one has captured her heart?

Told from multiple perspectives, this is a deep dive into matters of the heart—it is exploration of love and loss. Oakley tackles some heavy issues, but she infuses her writing with humour and is truly funny. Her characters are flawed, real, and just plain likeable.

You Were There Too is a fresh, contemporary, and modern take on the romance novel. It is a study on the power of love juxtaposed against the allure of fate. Heartbreaking and raw, I devoured it in one sitting. Thank you, Colleen, for the perfect way to spend a chilly afternoon.

BUY NOW

COLLEEN OAKLEY is critically acclaimed author of Before I Go and Close Enough to Touch. Her novels have been translated into 18 languages, optioned for film, and have received numerous accolades.

Oakley resides in Atlanta with her husband and four children.

Such a Fun Age by Kiley Reid

A special thank you to Libro.fm Audiobooks, Penguin Random House Audio Publishing Group, NetGalley, and Penguin Group Putnam for an ARC/audiobook listening copy in exchange for an honest review.

Alix Chamberlain is a mom and blogger who has become somewhat of a social media darling and her own brand. She is a privileged white woman who always gets what she wants and has made this her business model.

Emira is the young black babysitter for the Chamberlains. Working two jobs, she is trying to make rent, keep up with her health insurance, and decide what exactly she wants to do with her life.

While minding Briar one night, Emira is confronted by another shopper and security guard in the Chamberlain's upscale neighbourhood supermarket—she is accused of kidnapping the toddler. A crowd gathers to watch the events unfold, and a bystander captures everything on his phone. Emira is left shaken, humiliated and determined to put the incident behind her whereas Alix makes it her mission to right the situation.

When the video unearths someone from Alix's past, the women end up on a crash course that will topple their delicate relationship and undo them both.

What could easily be mistaken as a light and breezy beach read is quickly squashed—this rich and captivating narrative has many layers and subtle nuances. Such a Fun Age is an explosive debut with a comment on racism, classism, and transactional relationships.

Reid's character development is nothing short of amazing. Both Alix and Kelley perceive that they are protecting Emira and saving her, but what they don't realize is the huge disconnect they have from her real life. They think that they are the hero whereas the other is the villain. Alix and Kelley also can't seem to see the bigger picture—even though they are well meaning, they are part of the problem. And can we just talk about Briar for a moment? She is precocious but there is an innate sadness about her, she can sense that she is not important to her mother but has no way of articulating her feelings. Reid gives voice to this by creating an anxious, serious child that flourishes under Emira's care. The exchanges between Emira and Briar are some of the best writing in the book.

Alix's feelings towards Amira force a relationship that is not only inappropriate as her employer, but borders on being unhealthy. I think that Alix is a bit unhinged, perhaps this is a result of her micro-celebrity status, therefore she tries to control those around her, especially through her need to help. This is a case of where well-intentioned white people try to save black people and instead, make the situation more difficult.  

Can I just tell you how outstanding the audiobook version is? Nicole Lewis is incredibly talented. I highly recommend this five star book.

BUY NOW

KILEY REID earned her MFA from the Iowa Writers’ Workshop, where she was awarded the Truman Capote Fellowship and taught undergraduate creative writing workshops with a focus on race and class. Her short stories have been featured in Ploughshares, December, New South, and Lumina.

Reid lives in Philadelphia with her husband. 

Tuesday, December 24, 2019

Lock Every Door by Riley Sager

A special thank you to NetGalley and Penguin Group/Dutton for an ARC in exchange for an honest review.

Newly heartbroken and just plain broke, Jules Larson is determined to put her past behind her and accepts a job as an apartment sitter. The famed Bartholomew is one of Manhattan's most prestigious and mysterious buildings. Assuming this responsibility means that Jules has to adhere to some very strict rules: no visitors, no nights spent away from the apartment, and no disturbing the other residents—all of which are rich or famous (or both).

One of the other apartment sitters reminds Jules of the sister she lost eight yers ago. She is drawn to Ingrid, and the two agree to meet every day for lunch. Ingrid confides in Jules that she is becoming frightened of the Bartholomew with its sinister yet mysterious history. Enamoured with the grandeur of her surroundings, Jules brushes off Ingrid's concerns as nothing more than stories. That is until Ingrid vanishes.

Jules digs deeper into the history of the Bartholomew in the hopes of finding out what happened to Ingrid. What she uncovers is astonishing—Ingrid is just one of many apartment sitters to go missing. She must figure out who the killer is and expose what is really going on at the Bartholomew before her life becomes temporary.

The gothic Bartholomew with its creepy wallpaper, dark and haunted past, and looming gargoyles was the perfect setting. Tightly plotted, Sager perfectly executes this thriller/mystery and leaves no loose ends, although some of what happens is a little far fetched.  

Atmospheric, shocking, and thrilling. This was bonkers! And I mean that in the best way. I didn't fully buy in with Final Girls, and thought that The Last Time I Lied was a better effort, but Lock Every Door has solidified Sager for me as an author that I wouldn't hesitate to pick up.

BUY NOW

RILEY SAGER is a pseudonym of the author whose first book Final Girls was a national and international bestseller. His second book The Last Time I Lied was a New York Times bestseller.

Sager lives in Princeton, New Jersey.

Sunday, December 22, 2019

Darling Rose Gold by Stephanie Wrobel

A special thank you to Edelweiss, NetGalley, Berkley and Simon & Schuster Canada for an ARC in exchange for an honest review.

Rose Gold Watts has believed all her life that she was seriously ill—she was allergic to everything, needed the use of a wheelchair, and was a permanent fixture at the hospital. But no matter how many doctors and tests, nobody can figure out what is wrong with Rose Gold.

What's actually wrong? Her mother is a really convincing liar.

Patty is being released from prison after serving five years. She's lost all her friends and has been shunned by the very same neighbours that supported them and held fundraisers. When her daughter agrees to take her in, the entire community is shocked—it was Rose Rose Gold that turned her in and testified against her.

Wanting to reconcile, Patty has forgiven her daughter. But unfortunately for her, the feelings are not mutual. Rose Gold is not her little darling anymore, and she's waited a long time for her mother to come home.

As far as debuts go, this is a stellar effort. A solid 3.75 stars.

Mothers and daughters can be complex, but this is on a whole other level. Wrobel pens one of the most layered and convoluted mother-daughter relationships I have ever read with two very complicated and twisted characters.

Alternating between Patty and Rose's perspective, we are trying to figure out exactly who is manipulating who. Both women are unreliable, vile, and insidious. Readers will go back-and-forth as to who to believe and will be questioning their loyalties to both.

My only criticisms are that I wanted more of a character study and that the pacing was off. Given that Patty has a psychological disorder, the manipulation and control should have been fully fleshed out. And the timelines didn't quite come together as they should, and the ending seemed rushed.

BUY NOW

STEPHANIE WROBEL has an MFA from Emerson College. She has had short fiction published in Bellevue Literary Review, and was nominated for the 2018 PEN/Robert J. Dau Short Story Prize for Emerging Writers. Before turning to fiction, she worked as a creative copywriter at various advertising agencies.

Wrobel grew up in Chicago but has been living in the UK for the last three years with her husband and dog.

Monday, December 16, 2019

The Dictionary of Animal Languages by Heidi Sopinka

A special thank you to Edelweiss and Scribe for an ARC in exchange for an honest review.

Ivory Frame is a world-renowned painter now in her nineties. Fiercely private, she is still devoted to her work. She has never been married, has no family, and no children. When a letter arrives to notify Ivory that she has a granddaughter who lives in New York, her life is turned upside down and her painful past collides with the life she's built for herself.

Disowned by her bourgeois family, the young Ivory had gone to interwar Paris to study art. She discovered her calling with the avant-garde painters and poets who frequent the city's cafes and at the Zoological Gardens, the subject for her art. Ivory also found love in Russian painter, Lev.

When the Second World War claims the life that Ivory has carved out for herself, she turns back to the project that she began in Paris—the dictionary of animal languages—which will consume the rest of her life. The dictionary is both scientific and artistic.

Ivory fully withdraws into her work until one of Lev's paintings is discovered which is inscribed to her. It is now worth a fortune and it brings to light a secret from Ivory's time in Paris. Now in her nineties, she is forced to acknowledge what she has lost.

I had the pleasure of attending an author event with Heidi and she is articulate, gracious, and truly lovely.

Sopinka's novel is a slow burn with lyrical prose. She uses her words as a form of art in this solid debut about love, grief, and art. It is an emotionally charged novel that reflects a love of language with each beautifully written chapter named after an animal.

The vehicle to uncover Ivory's past is the letter that arrives informing her that she has a granddaughter. This information is shocking given that she has never married, or has any family. The reader is then taken on a journey through Ivory's memories in times of art, war, and her yearning for Lev.

The only thing I struggled with, and am unclear about, is why the choice to omit the quotations around the dialogue—this is a huge pet peeve of mine. I never understand why someone would willingly choose to confuse the reader. And who decides this? Is it the writer, or is it the editor? This is incredibly distracting and it detracted from what could have been an amazing story.

BUY NOW

HEIDI SOPINKA is a published journalist who has also written for The Believer.

She has also worked as a bush cook in the Yukon, a travel writer in Southeast Asia, a helicopter pilot, a magazine editor, and is co-founder and co-designer at Horses Atelier. The Dictionary of Animal Languages is her first novel.

Wednesday, December 11, 2019

The Starless Sea by Erin Morgenstern

A special thank you to Libro.fm and Penguin Random House Audio Publishing for an audiobook listening copy.

Beginning with our protagonist not opening a very special door, The Starless Sea is an expanse of stories from a realm that contains lost cities and seas, and stories whispered by the dead.

Zachary Ezra Rawlins, now grown and a graduate student, finds an authorless book in his Uni library which has detailed him seeing (and not opening) that door. Completely baffled, armed with clues—a bee, a key, and a sword—and at a loss of how anyone could have known of this experience from his childhood, Zachary sets off on a journey to discover his life's purpose and what was behind the door.

After an eight year hiatus, Morgenstern returns with her elegant prose. This beautifully lyrical masterpiece is a story made up of stories, fables, and fairytales. Erin makes connections to these stories by interspersing them throughout Zachary's journey of self-discovery where he finds his own place in the book's narrative.

Told through an omniscient narrator, The Starless Sea is a whopping 512 pages of dazzling imagery. When I attended an event with Erin, she spoke of how she likes her books to have a strong visual language. This comes as no surprise given the intricate detail in the book.

Unlike other readers that found fault with there being too many stories with the actual story, my criticism has to do with the characters themselves. Morgenstern's writing is so visually stunning, her descriptions are rich and vivid, truly a feast for the senses, but the characters are the opposite—they are flat in that they are not fully fleshed out. One of my favourite descriptions in the book was Allegra's collection of door handles that were suspended like a mobile. We also never find out the symbolism and meaning behind the main visuals throughout the story: the bee, the sword, and the key. Perhaps this was done on purpose to leave the reader to draw their own conclusions? Or maybe the book is one giant metaphor?

The pure magic and genius of this book will solidify Morgenstern as one of the most gifted and unique writers today.

BUY NOW

ERIN MORGENSTERN is the author of the number-on national bestseller The Night Circus that has been sold around the world and translated into thirty-seven languages. Erin also has a degree in theater from Smith College.

Morgenstern lives in Massachusetts with her husband.

Friday, December 6, 2019

A Good Neighborhood by Therese Anne Fowler

A special thank you to Libro.fm Audiobooks, Macmillan Audio, Edelweiss, NetGalley and St. Martin's Press for an ARC/audiobook listening copy in exchange for an honest review.

The Whitman family moves into their newly built home in a tight-knit, established community. Their next door neighbours are single mother, Valerie Alston-Holt, a professor of forestry and ecology, and Xavier, her biracial gifted eighteen-year-old son. Other than sharing a property line, the families have little in common.

At first, the nouveaux-riche Whitmans appear to be a family with traditional values. Brad, the father, is a local celebrity with his charming commercials for his booming HVAC company. He also stepped up to raise Juniper, his wife's (secretly troubled) teenage daughter. But Brad's public persona is quite the opposite to his private one, and he's got secrets of his own.

Brad and Valerie become embroiled in a legal battle over the oak tree in Valerie's yard that is dying as a result of the Whitman's new build and Juniper and Xavier's romance fuels the fight between her stepfather and his mother. This cautionary tale builds to an incredible, tragic climax that negotiates its way through topics of race and race and racism, class and gentrification, sex and sexual violence, and the environment. 

This explosive novel takes place in a "good neighbourhood." Even though the tragedy that ensues has been heavily foretold, what unfolds is nothing short of remarkable. The narrative is layered and intricate with blame and consequence woven in. Fowler skewers the plot with topics of race, class, and love.

What I found most intriguing was how Fowler used the third person omniscient narrator—the neighbourhood—and occasionally breaks the fourth wall. This type of narrator brings forth some awesome truths, offers foreshadowing, and keeps the reader's interest.

My only criticisms are, that the story did take a while to get moving, and the relationship between Zay and Juniper was not fleshed out enough to be believable.

BUY NOW

THERESE ANNE FOWLER is the author of the New York Times bestselling novel Z: A Novel of Zelda Fitzgerald and A Well-Behaved Woman. She holds a BA in sociology/cultural anthropology and an MFA in creative writing from North Carolina State University.

Fowler lives in North Carolina. 

Monday, December 2, 2019

Get a Life, Chloe Brown by Talia Hibbert

A special thank you to Libro.fm and HarperAudio for an audiobook listening copy.

Chloe Brown is a computer geek with a debilitating chronic illness. She has allowed her disorder to rob her of living her best life. After a near death experience, she decides to get a life and makes a list of things that will help her accomplish this.

The list is underway—Chloe has already checked off the first task which is to move out of her family's mansion. But she's going to need help with the rest of the items and knows just who to ask. She enlists the help of Redford 'Red' Morgan, her building's handyman. He has tattoos, a motorcycle, and is incredibly hot. Red is also an artist, he paints at night—Chloe may have spied on him a time or two.

Told in alternating points of view, Red is working on overcoming a past abusive relationship and Chloe is learning to stop letting her fibromyalgia steal any more of her happiness than it already has.

The narrator, Adjoa Andoh, was so FAB! She did a bang up job and was absolute perfection with all of the different character voices. (I hope she is signed on to do the rest of the series.)

This is a romance that deals with some rather heavy subject matter and Hibbert handles this with care. Her writing is authentic with multi-faceted characters: Red is sexy and charming, but vulnerable and creative, whereas Chloe deflects with her sharp-tongue and wit. She is also fabulously stylish and smart.

Hibbert writes sexy and diverse romances and this is exactly what we need more of. This book took me by surprise and quite simply captured my heart. Not only was it engaging, it was incredibly delightful and absolutely hilarious!

Talia, you are such a talent! I was utterly charmed and I can't wait to read the second book about the Brown sisters.

BUY NOW

TALIA HIBBERT is an award winning author who believes that people of marginalized identities need honest and positive representation. Her interests include makeup, junk food, and unnecessary sarcasm.

Sunday, December 1, 2019

#HarperPresents: Holiday Cookie Decorating at the Toronto Christmas Market

Photo credit: Girl Well Read and #HarperPresents. Do not use without written permission.

What better way to get in the holiday spirit than with holiday cookie decorating at the world famous Toronto Christmas Market in the Distillery Historic District?

Karen Schaler—known as 'Christmas Karen' for all of her holiday themed books and films—was joined by Refinery 29's Carli Whitwell to talk about Karen's Netflix sensation A Christmas Prince, and her new novel Finding Christmas

A former military reporter, Karen was a hard news reporter (al-Qaeda, homeland security) who would pitch every day. She said that they were the saddest, hardest stories to hear. As cliché as it sounds, Karen wanted to make a difference and decided to try her hand at her new passion, travel journalism. She was a one-woman show with no photographer and no producer. It was just her!

When she was in Toronto doing her a travel show, she had a bit of a medical issue that required surgery, and she couldn't travel for three weeks. It was right around the holidays and Christmas movies became her therapy.

"It is a very formulaic story and surprisingly, they are difficult to write because you all know the ending," Karen said. So she studied the formula (the meet up, so many problems, the "near-miss" kiss, the "oh-no" moment when all is lost) and researched how commercials are timed. Her desire was to pull from her travel adventures and to tell love stories that anyone can watch.

In less than two years, Schaler has written original screenplays for Netflix, Hallmark, and Lifetime Christmas movies, as well as three Christmas novels for HarperCollins. Her original screenplay, A Christmas Prince, became one of Netflix’s most watched movies of all time. In 2018 she wrote the Hallmark original movie, Christmas Campand was then offered a book deal with HarperCollins. Even though she had the screen play for Christmas Camp, she wanted to do a novella (Christmas Camp Wedding: A Novella) and wanted to do a stand-alone book which turned out to be Finding Christmas (Karen also wrote the screenplay for it). Her newest movie, Rediscovering Christmas, will premier on Lifetime on December 15th, 2019.

"Finding Christmas was inspired by my dad." Schaler's parents split up when she was six and she grew up with very modest means. They didn't have a lot, but every Christmas, Karen's dad would set up a scavenger hunt for her to find her present. She didn't realize until she was older that it was the actual hunt that was the gift.

When Karen is writing, she doesn't describe someone by their hair colour, or their skin colour. This is done on purpose because she wants the reader to put themselves in the story and envision the character the way that they want to. "If I put diversity that might (in the Hollywood world) you know, throw somebody off. So if I don't say, it's kind of odd I think as an author, but I'm a new author and nobody told me I couldn't, so I don't say blonde hair, blue eyed."

Why do you think people want these movies right now?

"Things have been very divisive no matter what side you are on. There's so much anger, there's so much anxiety, there's so much uncertainty. We've gone backwards decades with some of our politics," Karen said. "A Christmas Prince is a safe place, it's an escape." You know you are getting your happily ever after.

Karen watches Hallmark for her wish fulfillment. She wanted to be part of that type of family, have all the beautiful decorations, and experience a happy ending because she didn't have any of that growing up. It is a connection—people are feeling a sense of family and these Christmas movies/novels are bringing people together. (As a side note: almost all of the Hallmark movies are shot in Canada and Karen is a proud member of the Writers Guild of Canada.)

In writing novels, Karen gets to be the director and the producer—they are in her own time. "When you can pick up a book and can be taken to that place, and you can be cozy with your mulled wine and your cookies. Novels will always be the ultimate number one storytelling in my mind." She went on to say that it is the purest way for an author to tell their story.

To end the afternoon, we all toasted with our mulled wine.

Finding Christmas

With all the glittering decorations, twinkling lights, snow angels, gingerbread men and mistletoe, Christmas is Emmie's first true love.

This year, she can't wait to share her favorite Christmas traditions with her boyfriend, Grant. Especially because she thinks he's "the one." So when Grant's hectic work schedule has him more "Bah Humbug" than "Ho, Ho, Ho," Emmie creates a holiday-themed scavenger hunt to help him find his Christmas spirit. At the end of the journey, Grant will arrive at the charming town of Christmas Point where she's planned a romantic weekend filled with holiday activities.

But Emmie's plan backfires—a mix-up has the wrong guy following her clues! Sam, a best-selling mystery writer, thinks that Emmie's clever Christmas riddles are from his agent to help him get over his case of writer's block.

When he arrives at Christmas Point and finds the stunned Emmie, he immediately feels she's someone special. But Emmie can't get past the fact that the wrong guy has shown up. Inspired by the charming town, Sam decides to make the best of it and convinces Emmie to join him in a little holiday fun while she waits for Grant.

When Grant finally does shows up, Emmie is disappointed that he's not enjoying the activities she so carefully planned and can't help wonder if he really is the one. She also can't get Sam out of her mind. With Christmas fast approaching, Emmie will need the magic of the season to help steer her in the direction of true love…

BUY NOW

KAREN SCHALER is a three-time Emmy Award–winning storyteller, author, screenwriter, journalist, and national TV host. She has written original screenplays for Netflix, Hallmark, and Lifetime Christmas movies, including the Netflix sensation A Christmas Prince.

Traveling to more than sixty-five countries as the creator and host of Travel Therapy TV, Karen is constantly inspired by the diverse people, places, and cultures she encounters. All of Karen’s stories are uplifting, filled with heart and hope.

Better Believe It by Fern Ronay

A special thank you to the author, Fern Ronay, for a copy of the book in exchange for an honest review.

On social media, Jada Marlone is living the perfect life. She has a loving husband, a beautiful little boy, and a successful career. But her real life is far from being Instagram worthy—she is disconnected from her husband, motherhood is not what she expected, she has a strained relationship with her mother (if it's not one thing, it's your mother), and she's barely keeping it together at work.

Thinking that her lot in life is already set by the choices she's made, she has a chance encounter with her ex and wonders if this is the universe giving her a sign. But then Jada's dead cousin, Gina, starts appearing in her dreams to help her figure out why she's made some of the choices in her life. When things start to unravel, will she learn from Gina's lessons, or will she continue to make the same mistakes and live miserably ever after?

This story had the right amount of sass and smarts, and was purely entertaining. Jada is a complex character—on the surface she seems to have it all together, but she is simply trying to hold it together. I'm sure that there are many women that will be able to see parts of themselves in her and be able to relate on some level. My favourite scene was Ethan's fourth birthday party. Pure comedic gold. And I do love characters that cuss. There are loads of us that are well educated that curse like the proverbial drunken sailor.

For those of you that regularly read my blog, you know that I don't like comparisons. But Fern's writing is comparable to a Sophie Kinsella novel in that there is the same sharpness and humour. Once again, Ronay strikes the right balance of lightheartedness and purpose, and I devoured this in one sitting.

Congratulations, Fern, on another fab novel!

FERN RONAY is the author of two novels: Better in the Morning and Better Believe It. She also is the host of the podcast Signs from the Other Side.

Ronay has lived in NYC, Chicago, and now resides in Los Angeles with her husband, but she will always consider herself a Jersey girl. 

Saturday, November 30, 2019

Reputation: A Novel by Sara Shepard

A special thank you to Edelweiss, NetGalley and Penguin Group/Dutton for an ARC in exchange for an honest review.

When a hacker dumps 40,000 people's emails onto an easily accessible database, the entire student body, faculty, staff, and alums at Aldrich University are rocked. Secrets, affairs, scandals...it's all there.

But when Kit Manning's husband, Dr. Greg Strasser, is found murdered in his kitchen, things take a dramatic turn. Kit's sister, Willa, returns home to attend Greg's funeral. She fled fifteen years ago after a night she desperately would like to forget. Willa is an investigative reporter and knows that something is off with the events surrounding Greg's death—she's determined to find out what actually happened before someone else ends up dead.

Sara Shepard is always a standout. This explosive, sharp, and propulsive novel is full of twists and shocking reveals. Her writing is captivating, clever, and above all, entertaining. It is framed more like a TV series, with Shepards foot firmly on the gas, but it works. There are several moving pieces to this story—none of the characters are innocent and they all have something to hide. She skillfully tells the story from multiple female perspectives. None of these women are particularly enjoyable, but that just amps up the drama and pettiness.  

Given the number of twists and turns the narrative takes, unfortunately the #MeToo tie-in gets lost and ultimately ends up as more of a comment in passing. For me, this was the difference between 4 and 5 stars.

Reputation is a soapy story of intrigue, sabotage, secrets, and the lengths we go to keep them. I devoured it for the gossipy treat it was.

BUY NOW

SARA SHEPARD is the author of two New York Times bestselling series, Pretty Little Liars and The Lying Game, as well as the series The Perfectionists. She is a graduate from New York University and holds an MFA from Brooklyn College. 

Thursday, November 28, 2019

Woman on the Edge Launch Party

Photo credit: Girl Well Read—do not use without written permission.

The event took place at Supermarket, a vibrant restaurant and bar located in the heart of Kensington Market in downtown Toronto. It was the perfect venue to celebrate Samantha M. Bailey's incredible debut.

Bailey is a delight! She's so gracious, and was a charming hostess—I couldn't be more happy for her success. Thank you to both Samantha and her inimitable team at Simon & Schuster Canada for inviting me to the launch party.

After six years of hard work, Woman on the Edge was published on November 26th. In this explosive novel, Bailey deftly alternates between Morgan's and Nicole's stories, past and present. One of the women is struggling with her grief and the desire to become a mother, the other is struggling with becoming a mother and the overwhelming desire to protect her child.

Nicole's anxiety is compounded by the guilt of a traumatic event in her past. Her angst is palpable, as are her fears of motherhood, and she becomes a shell of her former self—a far cry from the successful CEO of her own company. Morgan's life fell apart when her husband committed suicide as a result of being found guilty of embezzlement. She was left with the repercussions, including the police thinking that she was his accomplice. The two women are forever joined by tragedy, but what is their connection?

The character descension and strong pacing ratchet up the tension. Cleverly delivered in short, suspenseful chapters, readers will grapple with not only who to believe, but with also not being able to put the book down.

With the speed of a train, this incredible debut comes careening down the tracks. It is exhilarating, tense, and consuming.

Woman on the Edge

On a subway platform in Chicago, Morgan Kincaid’s life is changed forever when a stranger hands her a baby, then jumps in front of an oncoming train. Morgan can't understand why someone would give their child to a complete stranger and take their own life.

Unfortunately, Morgan's involvement runs deeper when she's considered a suspect in the death of the woman. But Morgan has never seen her before that day. With no witnesses to corroborate her version of events, things are not looking good.

To clear her name, Morgan tries to piece together Nicole Markham's final days. Nicole believed that she, and her new baby, were in danger. Or was she a new mother struggling with postpartum depression and paranoia? And what is Morgan's connection to all of this? As she gets closer to the truth, one thing become apparent, her life is also in danger.

BUY NOW

SAMANTHA M. BAILEY is a Toronto-based novelist, journalist, and freelance editor. Her work has appeared in NOW Magazine, The Village Post, and Oxford University Press, among other publications. She was a writer-in-residence for Kobo Writing Life at BookExpo America 2013. She is the co-founder of BookBuzz, a promotional and interactive author-reader event held in New York City and Toronto.

Woman on the Edge is her debut novel.

Sunday, November 24, 2019

The Godmother: A Crime Novel by Hannelore Cayre

A special thank you to EWC Press for an ARC in exchange for an honest review.

Patience Portefeux is a 53-year-old widow who is just getting by. Working as a translator for the Paris drug squad she can barely cover the cost of university for her two daughters, as well as the care her elderly mother requires. She comes in contact with the mother of a drug trafficker through information received from the police wiretaps and is able to secure a large amount of hash. Taking on an alias as "The Godmother," Patience become financially secure—she even has to launder money.

With a fascinating woman at its core, The Godmother is an unflinching look at the gritty side of Paris in contemporary France.

What struck me about this book was the subtly and understatedness—it was clever without being trite or predictable. What Cayre makes up for with ingenuity, she alienates with the slightly formal tone and quirkiness of the book.

The story itself was well executed, however, (dare I say) lacking in morals. At times it was rather dark and twisted so if this is your bag, you will love it. Readers are taken to the underbelly of Paris—forget the glamour one associates with the City of Lights, this is the drug infested criminal underground. For me the difference between 3 and 4 stars was the slow start. It took several attempts to get into the story, but once I did, I enjoyed the book.

BUY NOW

HANNELORE CAYRE is a criminal lawyer, film director, and writer.

She currently resides in France.

Saturday, November 23, 2019

The Shape of Family by Shilpi Somaya Gowda

A special thank you to Edelweiss and HarperCollins Canada for an ARC in exchange for an honest review.

The Shape of Family is an intimate look at a family fractured by an unspeakable tragedy. Jaya and Keith meet in 1988 at a pub in London—she is the cultured daughter of an Indian diplomat and he is a middle-class banker from Philadelphia. Their union results in a house in the suburbs of California complete with two children; Karina is the oldest, a typical strong-willed teenager, and Prem, their treasured youngest.

When an unspeakable tragedy happens, the Olanders are not immune and the family splits. Jaya turns to religion taking and takes comfort in her spirituality. Keith puts all his energy and attention into his career and women. Karina exercises her independence, trying to regain control of her life, and Prem watches it all unravel.

Karina's self-destruction is exacerbated when she goes away to college—this should have been her new beginning. Desperate for the love of a family, she makes a choice that ultimately forces her immediate family to deal with their painful past and the roles they've played.

A solid 3.5 stars.

This novel was incredibly captivating from the onset. It is a brilliant character study about a family that is torn apart by tragedy, unspoken grief, and regrets. It is a quiet study on a tender topic in that grief is deeply personal—everyone mourns differently.

However, the different between 3.5 and 4 stars was Karina's disintegration. Without giving too much away, the narrative veers into a storyline that I not only detached from, but grew incredibly frustrated with. And then the novel ends rather abruptly.

There is no denying that Gowda is a beautiful and riveting writer, and I would definitely recommend this book. 

BUY NOW

SHILPI SOMAYA GOWDA is the international bestselling author of Secret Daughter and The Golden Son.

Gowda was born and raised in Toronto and now resides in California with her husband and children.

Monday, November 18, 2019

Erin Morgenstern: The Starless Sea by Ben McNally Books

Photo credit: Girl Well Read and Ben McNally Books.  Do not use without written permission.

Ben McNally Books and Doubleday Canada hosted Erin Morgenstern to discusses her new novel, The Starless Sea, the highly anticipated follow-up to her 2011 bestseller The Night Circus. The event took place in Toronto at the Isabel Bader Theatre where Morgenstern took the stage for a reading.  Erin was then joined by Ajay Fry to discuss the inspiration behind the book, her writing process, and answer questions from the audience.

Erin has special ties to Canada—she got her first passport to come to Toronto for The Night Circus book tour and she met her husband here. If she was to list her favourite things about Canada, half of them would be food!

Are you inspired by symbolism in including it, or do you find symbolism as you are writing?

"I knew I wanted to start with symbols for this one, partially because I like a very strong visual language and The Night Circus clearly has a very strong visual language and it has a colour scheme," Erin said. She also wanted the same for The Starless Sea, but not start with the colours, but with symbols. Erin created a running list of symbols she might use, and from there she focused on the key, the bee, and the sword which became the main motif. "Symbols are for interpretation and not definition."

What did you draw upon for inspiration?

"It's very much a book about stories and I though I was writing a book about books when I first started," Erin mused. She wanted to write a story about books and used this as her jumping off point. The idea of a story, as opposed to a book, is a malleable sort of thing. What is the story?

Your protagonist is someone who is interested in video games, were you trying to write a Choose Your Own Adventure type story?

It takes Erin a long time to figure out what exactly she is writing. She knew Zachary was a grad student and that he was studying something story related, but she wanted something different. This is where the game theory/game design piece comes in. The idea of which version of the story is the actual story (choices within choices) reminded Erin of the retelling of old stories or myths. The Starless Sea felt old and new at the same time (the video game element was the new feel).

How difficult is the editing process? 

Erin can't get overly attached to what she writes because there is a 50/50 chance of the material making it into the final version. "It allows me to write more and take more chances, where I can push things, and not settling on the first try." Her first draft is a trepidatious draft. Once the words are there, she can go back over it, make it stronger, and find the pieces that work—but during that process, she throws a lot away.

Where does The Starless Sea come from?

"I actually don't remember," Erin joked. She has a lot of imaginary architecture in her head and has always envisioned an underground libraryesque space. It is not an actual library because there are no librarians. "If it doesn't have a librarian, is it really a library?" There are bits and pieces that she wrote easily ten years ago—she didn't know where they were going, but that they belonged to this space. To come up with the narrative, Erin needed to take her time and explore the space and figure out who the people are that occupy said space and what their stories are.   

What is the most rewarding feedback you get?

"I feel like the most rewarding feedback is when people have tattoos." Erin admitted that even though she loves tattoos, that she doesn't have any because she doesn't have anything that she relates to/reacts to that strongly.

What sparked your fascination with stories to begin with?

Erin was an overactive, imaginative, artsy kid and so she gave Zachary one of the qualities that she had as a kid which was to read in her closet—she wanted to be that immersed in the work without distractions. She was also a theatre kid (creative theatre) and even got her degree in theatre. Erin studied light and design, acted and directed, and wanted to pursue theatre professionally. This has come in very handy when she is writing—she has a very theatrical vision about the way a room is lit, what is smells like, how she stages things, and she gets to play all the roles. It is more fun for her to approach it this way, but because Erin is very visual, she struggles finding the right words so that her readers can experience what she is seeing. Erin admitted to using thesaurus.com a lot.

Another thing she struggles with is the rhythm of the prose and how it needs to sound lyrical. "I don’t know what I’m doing with commas, but I know how it needs to sound."

What is that when you spend so much time doing a solitary thing and then go out and be face-to-face?

"Being alone with this book for so long in the imaginary space in my head, it takes on a life of its own." The book was very meaningful to Erin, but the point is for it to be read, and for the reader to have an experience with it. She can’t have that same experience with all of the false starts and things in her head, so she tries to imagine what the reader experiences, but that is individual and unique—each reader will have their own reactions.

What advice would have given yourself?

“Calm it down,” Erin quipped. Her advice to herself would be to strike the right balance because sometimes she writes for herself and sometimes she writes for the book.

When is your next book coming out?

Her next book is literally a 3,000 Word document of notes and weird phrases—it isn’t anything close to resembling a story.

Writing process

"You need to put the words on the paper, that’s the tricky part." She tricks her brain that the work is worth pursing by writing late at night (and sometimes she has wine). In the early stages, Erin says that you have to find a way to stop doubting yourself and viewing the writing as work. "I will pretend I’m not really working and work at odd times of the day, or really really late at night because my inner editor, my self-doubt voice, goes to bed before the rest of me," Erin said. "You have to play games with yourself and you have to figure out what works for your own personal process." She was always a reader before becoming a writer. A finished book is looks so nice and she thought that as a writer you would start and the beginning and write to the end and then stop. Change a few commas here and there. But that isn't how she works. "I think you don’t get to see the messy stages of the process, you don’t get to see the false starts, you can only hope that someone talks about them." When you go to a theatrical production, you know there was a rehearsal, or when you look at a painting you know there are many layers over sketches, but as a reader, you don’t see the process behind the finished product, it can only be imagined.

She writes in short vignettes that are self-contained. This comes in handy when she does revisions because she can omit whole parts and can layer different plot elements.

When in doubt, just add Ninjas!

How would you describe The Starless Sea?

"I thought I was writing a book about books and then it turned into a book about stories. But at its core it's a story about a guy names Zachary Ezra Rawlings who is a grad student in Vermont and when he was about 11, he found a magic painted door and if he had opened it, it would have led him to this magical space, and he didn't. What if you didn’t follow the rabbit down the rabbit hole? What if you didn't test the structural integrity of the back of your wardrobe? Do you think about that years later, does the rabbit haunt you?"

What does the editing process actually look like?

Erin starts with a letter from her editor (that makes her mad) of the big picture things that are not working. She reads through the letter twice and then she throws the letter away—if it is important enough, she will remember. She goes back into her document and starts with writing new things, the sections that need a rewrite. By focusing on the new material, it removes her from the existing material and she can be more objective with it and remove what isn't working.

Scribner is the program that Erin uses to write. It enables her to organize pieces of the story on a bite size level which makes it possible for her to be able to layer the new pieces over the old.

Final words

Erin thanked us all for coming. "Yay, Canada!" But also to Ben McNally Books which makes a blink-and-you'll-miss-it cameo in the book via the intersection of Bay and King.

The Starless Sea

A timeless love story set in a secret underground world—a place of pirates, painters, lovers, liars, and ships that sail upon a starless sea.

Zachary Ezra Rawlins is a graduate student in Vermont when he discovers a mysterious book hidden in the stacks. As he turns the pages, entranced by tales of lovelorn prisoners, key collectors, and nameless acolytes, he reads something strange: a story from his own childhood. Bewildered by this inexplicable book and desperate to make sense of how his own life came to be recorded, Zachary uncovers a series of clues—a bee, a key, and a sword—that lead him to a masquerade party in New York, to a secret club, and through a doorway to an ancient library hidden far below the surface of the earth.

What Zachary finds in this curious place is more than just a buried home for books and their guardians—it is a place of lost cities and seas, lovers who pass notes under doors and across time, and of stories whispered by the dead. Zachary learns of those who have sacrificed much to protect this realm, relinquishing their sight and their tongues to preserve this archive, and also of those who are intent on its destruction. Together with Mirabel, a fierce, pink-haired protector of the place, and Dorian, a handsome, barefoot man with shifting alliances, Zachary travels the twisting tunnels, darkened stairwells, crowded ballrooms, and sweetly soaked shores of this magical world, discovering his purpose—in both the mysterious book and in his own life.

BUY NOW

ERIN MORGENSTERN is the author of the number-one national best seller of The Night Circus that has been sold around the world and translated into thirty-seven languages. She has a degree in theatre from Smith College.

Morgenstern lives in Massachusetts.

Sunday, November 17, 2019

Lit on Tour: In Conversation with Jennifer Robson

Photo credit: Toronto International Festival of Authors and Girl Well Read.  Do not use without written permission.

As part of the Lit on Tour series, Jennifer Robson read from her newest enthralling novel, The Gown, which is about the real-life wedding of Princess Elizabeth to Lieutenant Philip Mountbatten.

In conversation with professional costume designer, Delphine White, Robson spoke about her inspiration for the novel, the wedding gown, and her time in England. She even brought an embroidery sample she made to give context of the work that went into the dress. A question and answer period, as well as a book signing followed.

In the beginning of the novel, the women were working on the wardrobe for the Royal Family's visit to Australia.

How did the Royal Family justify new clothes? 

Quite simply, they didn't ask. They went on a grand tour of South Africa to cement their diplomatic relationships. In 1941, there was a clothing ration and you had to buy garments with coupons where you were given a one-time coupon for a summer wardrobe. The recovery period from this was felt for a long time.

"The Royal Wedding was used to lighten up," Jennifer said. 1947 was an exciting year for fashion (the house of Dior was founded). Fashion designer Norman Hartnell and Christian Dior had a relationship—he dressed the Queen Mum who always wore crinolines.

"Women from this time dressed stark, almost like they too were in the military with boxy, plain garments," Robson explained. "Dior was exciting, he was using yards of fabric in his skirts which could not be sold in England because they had too much fabric." His designs were very structured and featured the waist rather than hide it.

Elizabeth's gown was flattering—it was more defined at the waist and skimmed the more anxiety areas (hips) and aged her a little bit (she was only 21 when she got married). As dictated by the King, the gown did not have short sleeves. It was opposite to the Queen Mum's 1923 wedding gown which was rather shapeless and Robson described as resembling a pillowcase.

Hartnell was a conservative designer, but for the wedding gown, he used lots of embellishments and the train was fifteen feet long. Jennifer estimates that there were about 350 people involved in making the gown (which includes the fabric makers). There were also bridesmaids gowns to make, as well as gowns for the duchesses. 

For her research, Robson interviewed Betty Foster, the last surviving seamstress that worked on the Princess' wedding gown. Betty started her work day at 8:30 a.m. and worked until 6:00 p.m. After eight hours, there are diminished returns in that the peau de soie would mark if you were to make a mistake. Betty also worked on Greer Garson's gowns. (Eileen Evelyn Greer Garson, CBE, was a British-American actress who was popular during the Second World War, as one of America's top ten box office draws from 1942 to 1946.)

What was the timeline for making the gown?

"It was three months from [the] commission awarded to the wedding," Jennifer said. Betty told Robson that the timeline was reasonable, they were used to it. She also said the the 1953 Coronation gown was more important that the wedding gown. 

With the world's press at their doorstep, these women had tremendous pressure and coped extremely well under the circumstances.

Six different women were responsible for the embroidery on the gown, yet it looks like it was done with one hand. The women would not have had a pattern to work from, just sketches. There are also no known samples of the wedding gown in existence, just of the Coronation gown.

Symbolism

Hartnell was inspired after seeing Botticelli's La Primavera, and the gown is full of flowing lines, leaves, swags, and vines that are reminiscent of the painting. The Princess' gown also had symbols of rebirth, growth, and fertility (roses, orange blossom, ears of wheat). The star flower is the most noticed motif, as well as roses which symbolize purity and the monarch.

Elizabeth was originally going to wear her ATS uniform to get married in. The Princess became a member of the Auxiliary Territorial Service in 1945. She was the first full-time female member of the Royal Family to join the Armed Services. During her time in the ATS, Princess Elizabeth learned to drive and to maintain vehicles.

Controversies 

How could she afford the gown? Even though she was the future Queen of England, the Princess did not have an unlimited budget. Wartime rationing was still in place for everyone, including the Royal Family. Jennifer explained that people started sending in their ration coupons, but legally they could not be used. The Princess' ladies-in-waiting opened the envelopes, wrote thank you notes, and sent them back. In addition to the coupons Princess Elizabeth had saved, the government ended up granting the bride 200 extra clothing coupons.  

There was also a debate as to where the silk worms were from—were they from the enemy, Japan, or from the ally, China? It was determined that they were indeed from China.

10,000 seed pearls were imported from the US, and they had to pay the duties on the pearls.

How much impact did Elizabeth have?

Robson explained that it was actually the King and Queen Mum who decided on the design of the gown based on the ten sketches that Hartnell did.

The Gown

London, 1947: Besieged by the harshest winter in living memory, burdened by onerous shortages and rationing, the people of postwar Britain are enduring lives of quiet desperation despite their nation’s recent victory. Among them are Ann Hughes and Miriam Dassin, embroiderers at the famed Mayfair fashion house of Norman Hartnell. Together they forge an unlikely friendship, but their nascent hopes for a brighter future are tested when they are chosen for a once-in-a-lifetime honor: taking part in the creation of Princess Elizabeth’s wedding gown.

Toronto, 2016: More than half a century later, Heather Mackenzie seeks to unravel the mystery of a set of embroidered flowers, a legacy from her late grandmother. How did her beloved Nan, a woman who never spoke of her old life in Britain, come to possess the priceless embroideries that so closely resemble the motifs on the stunning gown worn by Queen Elizabeth II at her wedding almost seventy years before? And what was her Nan’s connection to the celebrated textile artist and holocaust survivor Miriam Dassin?

Robson takes us inside the workrooms where one of the most famous wedding gowns in history was created. Balancing behind-the-scenes details with a sweeping portrait of a society left reeling by the calamitous costs of victory, she introduces readers to three unforgettable heroines, their points of view alternating and intersecting throughout its pages, whose lives are woven together by the pain of survival, the bonds of friendship, and the redemptive power of love. For this novel, she traveled to England to speak with the last surviving woman who worked on Queen Elizabeth's gown and was greatly inspired by all the stories the seamstress remembered.

BUY NOW

JENNIFER ROBSON is the internationally bestselling author of Somewhere in France, After the War Is Over, Moonlight Over Paris, and Goodnight from London. She studied French literature and Modern History as an undergraduate at King’s University College at Western University, then attended Saint Antony’s College at the University of Oxford, where she obtained her doctorate in British economic and social history. While at Oxford, she was a Commonwealth Scholar and SSHRC Doctoral Fellow.

Robson lives in Toronto with her husband and children. 

Thursday, November 14, 2019

Everything My Mother Taught Me by Alice Hoffman

A special thank you to NetGalley and Amazon Original Stories for an ARC in exchange for an honest review.

Hoffman's latest work is a short story about loyalty and betrayal that takes place in early 1900s Massachusetts. A young woman is literally and figuratively trying to find her voice.

After the death of her beloved father, twelve-year-old Adeline vows never to speak again. Her adulterous mother needs to support them financially so she accepts a job as a housekeeper to the families of the three lighthouse keepers. When a local woman disappears, it is Adeline, who holds the key the mystery.

This short story is part of Inheritance, a collection of stories.

What a beautifully atmospheric story. Readers of my blog will know that Alice Hoffman is my favourite author. In this 28 page short story, she manages to do what it usually takes a whole novel to accomplish—the characters are fully developed and the narrative is compelling and intricate.

Haunting, mesmerizing, and heartbreaking. Alice Hoffman, you are a gift!

ALICE HOFFMAN has a BA from Adelphi University and an MA in creative writing from Stanford University.

Hoffman's first novel, Property Of, was written at the age of twenty-one, while she was studying at Stanford, and published shortly thereafter by Farrar Straus and Giroux. Since that remarkable beginning, Alice Hoffman has become one of our most distinguished novelists. She has published over thirty novels, three books of short fiction, and eight books for children and young adults.

Her novel, Here on Earth, an Oprah Book Club choice, was a modern reworking of some of the themes of Emily Bronte’s masterpiece Wuthering HeightsPractical Magic was made into a Warner film starring Sandra Bullock and Nicole Kidman. Her novel, At Risk, which concerns a family dealing with AIDS, can be found on the reading lists of many universities, colleges and secondary schools. Hoffman’s advance from Local Girls, a collection of inter-related fictions about love and loss on Long Island, was donated to help create the Hoffman Breast Center at Mt. Auburn Hospital in Cambridge, MA.

Hoffman has written a number of novels for young adults, including AquamarineGreen Angel, and the New York Times bestseller The Ice Queen. In 2007 Little Brown published the teen novel Incantation, a story about hidden Jews during the Spanish Inquisition, which Publishers Weekly has chosen as one of the best books of the year.

Her works have been published in more than twenty translations and more than one hundred foreign editions. Hoffman's novels have received mention as notable books of the year by The New York TimesEntertainment WeeklyThe Los Angeles TimesLibrary Journal, and People Magazine. She has also worked as a screenwriter and is the author of the original screenplay “Independence Day,” a film starring Kathleen Quinlan and Diane Wiest. Her teen novel Aquamarine was made into a film starring Emma Roberts. Her short fiction and non-fiction have appeared in The New York TimesThe Boston Globe MagazineKenyon ReviewThe Los Angeles TimesArchitectural DigestHarvard ReviewPloughshares and other magazines.

She currently lives in Boston and New York. 

Monday, November 11, 2019

Christmas Shopaholic by Sophie Kinsella

A special thank you to NetGalley and Random House for an ARC in exchange for an honest review.

Becky Brandon (née Bloomwood) is back in a holiday installment of the Shopaholic series and there's nothing she loves more than Christmas! Well, not including a good sale...or online shopping.

It is the most wonderful time of the year. Her mum and dad always host and there's carols playing, the neighbours coming over for some cheer, Christmas pudding, and of course, presents.

Only this year, Becky's parents are moving and have asked her to host. What could possibly go wrong? Well for starters, her sister Jess needs to have a vegan turkey. How hard can that be to find? And Minnie is asking for a picnic hamper. She can definitely find one online. But Luke only wants aftershave, how boring. Where is his Christmas spirit? Then the guest list, and their demands, start spiralling out of control. And to top it all off, an old boyfriend surfaces along with his pushy girlfriend and it is not exactly clear as to what their motives are.

Will Becky be able to deck the halls and pull off Christmas?

Readers of my blog will know how much I ADORE Sophie Kinsella so it will come as no surprise that I was thrilled to receive an advanced copy of the newest Shopaholic book! Her writing makes me smile and if you haven't listened to a Sophie Kinsella audiobook, I highly recommend it, especially if narrated by Jayne Entwistle.

I love how Kinsella capitalizes on the chaos of Christmas. She juxtaposes the frenzy of the season against the time-honoured festivities. We all have our traditions and there are certainly times where I question some of the things I bring upon myself in the spirit of Christmas. It's totally worth it, right?

These books always border on being a little over the top, but they are so engaging and entertaining. Becky tugs on my heartstrings—she is endearing, fun, and hilarious (even when she's trying to be serious). We could all use more Becky in our lives.

This book is sparkly, festive, and simply delightful. A must holiday read.

BUY NOW

SOPHIE KINSELLA is the author of the bestselling Shopaholic series as well as the standalone novels Can You Keep a Secret?, The Undomestic Goddess, Remember Me?, Twenties Girl, I’ve Got Your Number, Wedding Night, My Not So Perfect Life, Surprise Me and I Owe You One.

She lives between London and the country.

Love Offline by Olivia Spring

A special thank you to the author, Olivia Spring, for inviting me to participate in the blog tour and for generously providing an ARC in exchange for an honest review.

Emily is trying to get over a bad break-up. Her ex-boyfriend had been cheating on her for the last six months of their five year relationship. Only she can't stop torturing herself by looking at her ex on social media where he just posed about his engagement to the very same girl!

An introvert, Emily is more comfortable hiding behind a screen than to go out and meet someone. However, she's not having any luck with online dating so her best friend, Chloe, suggests that she unplug and instead, attend events geared towards singles. The very thought of actually doing this is giving Emily some anxiety.

But then she meets Josh. He is funny, handsome, and above all, kind. He almost seems to good to be true. Emily's hunch may be right when she suspects that he is hiding something. Should she give him a chance and fall in love the old fashioned way, or go back online and protect her heart?

If you are a fan of Sophie Kinsella and Lindsey Kelk, then this book is for you! Love Offline is a rom-com for the modern woman.

Those of you who are regular readers know how much I adore British authors and Olivia Spring is definitely one that I never pass on. She injects humour and heat throughout her books (warning: some may be offended at the language and sex scenes) and I love her phrasing. Her writing is clever, fresh and a contemporary take on a love story.

I adored Chloe and Emily—their friendship was so endearing. Chloe also brings cake in a crisis. Doesn't every woman need a Chloe in their life? Spring pens some strong female characters and although Emily doesn't appear to be strong because she is an introvert, she is forced outside her comfort zone in order to get out and actually meet people versus just swiping, and as a result experiences growth in more than just in the romantic/relationship sense. What I also liked was the comment on social media and online dating, and how things work, or...don't.

Olivia, congratulations on another smart, sexy, and fabulous book!

OLIVIA SPRING is a PR professional from London. She loves cake and has always wanted to be a writer. Because she still works in public relations, she adopted a pen name to spare the embarrassment of any clients that may read anything racy.

Thursday, November 7, 2019

Forbidden by Time by Negeen Papehn

A special thank you to the author, Negeen Papehn, for a copy of the book in exchange for an honest review.

Bita is a strong, modern woman who is successful in her professional life—she's a dentist—and is a no-nonsense kind of gal. In her personal life, she is single, which to her pushy Iranian mother (and the rest of her family), is concerning. 

Determined to be self-sufficient and to stand on her own two feet, Bita purchases her first home. An unexpected spark with the handsome, older real estate agent leads to more than just a business transaction.

The relationship has its challenges with their fifteen-year age gap, Ramtin's ex-wife and daughters, and Bita's overbearing family. Despite all that is working against them, it is Ramtin who she wants to be with. But then something unexpected happens and Bita must decide if he is worth the ultimate sacrifice she will have to make.

Although this is the third and final installment in the Forbidden series, it can read as a standalone novel. There is enough information provided for those that didn't read Forbidden by Faith or Forbidden by Destiny, yet isn't repetitive.

Bita is the strong-willed, older sister of Maziar from Forbidden by Faith. She was a stand-out character in that book, so I was happy that she was chosen to be the main character for this story. She is a dynamic, strong, and multi-faceted character that many women will be able to relate to. 

What I enjoy most about this series is that it is a modern/cultural take on the forbidden love/Romeo and Juliet trope. Each of the main characters must overcome familial obligations and expectations, as well as experience growth and ultimately, they must decide if the relationship is worth the fall-out that could occur.  

Papehn writes with intense feeling and purpose—she injects her contemporary love stories with the emotions of all of the characters. She also infuses the novels with her own experiences and voice, bringing her Iranian heritage into each book in this series as the basis of the narrative. These types of stories are important to tell because they represent so many, yet are not widely read or written about.

Congratulations, Negeen, on another fabulous achievement. I can't wait to see what you do next!

BUY NOW

NEGEEN PAPEHN is a graduate of USC dental school and divides her time between her patients and writing.

She was born and raised in southern California, where she currently lives with her husband and two boys.