Thursday, May 28, 2020

The Glass Hotel by Emily St. John Mandel

A special thank you to Libro.fm and Penguin Random House Audio for an audiobook listening copy, and Edelweiss and Knopf for an ARC in exchange for an honest review.

Vincent is a bartender at the Hotel Caiette, a five-star glass spectacle on a beautiful island in British Columbia. The owner of the hotel, Jonathan Alkaitis works in finance and slips Vincent his card—this encounter marks the beginning of their life together. On that very same day, Vincent's troubled half-brother, Paul, leaves a cryptic and disturbing message on one of the hotel's window: "Why don't you swallow broken glass." A shipping executive for Neptune-Avramidis, sees the note from where he is perched in the hotel bar and it shakes him to his core. Mysteriously, Vincent vanishes from from the deck of one of Neptune-Avramidis' ships thirteen years later. How did she fall overboard? Does it have anything to do with being Alkaitis' trophy wife?

This is a story about wealth, greed, corruption, unintended consequences, and how the ghosts of the past always find you. 

The audiobook is spectacular and Dylan Moore was the perfect casting choice.

There is a gentleness to St. John Mandel's beautiful writing and I was utterly captivated. There are so many subtle nuances and layers to this spider's web of a novel. This book is much more than a story about a Ponzi scheme. She slowly pulls back the proverbial curtain to reveal her characters struggles and juxtaposes their life choices against what could have been. It is a ghost story of sorts—the characters are haunted by themselves as much as Alkaitis is haunted by the ghosts of his victims.

Mesmerizing and haunting, The Glass Hotel is an understated and unexpected gift.

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EMILY ST. JOHN MANDEL is the author of five novels. The bestselling Station Eleven was a finalist for a National Book Award and the PEN/Faulkner Award, it has also been translated into thirty-two languages.

St. John Mandel lives in New York City with her husband and daughter.

Friday, May 22, 2020

Recipe for a Perfect Wife by Karma Brown

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

Recipe for a Perfect Wife is a dual narrative novel wherein a modern woman finds inspiration from a 1950s housewife in the form of a cookbook and handwritten notes.

Alice Hale has left not only her career in publicity, but the city she loves, and finds herself in the suburbs attempting to write a novel. In the basement of her fixer upper century home, she uncovers a well-loved cookbook and within its pages, notations and handwritten letters. She comes to learn that they are written by the previous home owner, Nellie Murdoch, to her mother.

Feeling inspired, and an affinity towards Nellie, Alice starts cooking from her recipes and wearing vintage clothing. As she experiments with the tried-and-true recipes, she uncovers a dangerous side to Nellie's marriage and comes to the realization that she too is unhappy with the pressures that are also in her relationship. Alice begins to take control of her life and like Nellie, arms herself with some secrets of her own.

The dual narrative was the perfect vehicle to tell this story. The chapters alternate between Nellie's narrative, and Alice learning about Nellie's past which she uses to frame her own marriage. Nellie's chapters begin with (often shocking) marital advice, whereas Alice's open with recipes from the cookbook.

adore Karma's writing and this book delivered! Both storylines are equally well-written and engaging—I found myself completely immersed in the narratives and didn't favour one over the other. The women are highly developed and complex, yet there is an intimacy that the reader will feel with them. Alice and Nellie have tremendous depth and incredible strength.

What I most appreciated was Brown tackling some weighty and timely topics, keeping the spotlight on the issues that many women face and can relate to: white male privilege, inequality, misogyny, abuse, and reproductive rights. It is a comment on how women are confined by the limited number of choices they have in order to conform with what is expected of them. Many women are completely stifled in their lives, and lose a sense of who they are after becoming wives and/or mothers.

True to her style, the ending is not wrapped up with a bow and presented to the reader. Instead, there is a satisfying conclusion, leaving her audience with some sense of closure, but also left pondering. As such, this would make a fantastic book club choice.

Congratulations, Karma! This is a truly remarkable book.

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KARMA BROWN is an award-winning journalist and author of the bestsellers Come Away With Me, The Choices We MakeIn This Moment, and The Life Lucy Knew. In addition to her novels, Karma's writing has appeared in publications such as Redbook, SELF, and Chatelaine.

Brown lives just outside Toronto, Canada with her husband, daughter, and their adorably handsome labradoodle, Fred.



Q & A with Karma Brown*

GWR: Can you tell me a little bit about the research you did for Recipe for a Perfect Wife?

KB: I’m a former journalist, so sourcing people, things, quotes…it’s my go-to. But this novel was my first stab at writing historical fiction and I knew the research would be more intense, as I wanted those 1950s sections to feel authentic. A lot of the research was anecdotal—I had many conversations with my parents and read first-hand accounts of life in the 1950s—but I also watched dozens of home economics videos from that decade, and went through stacks of old magazines and newspaper clippings from that era. Finally, the recipes: though I didn’t make all of the recipes in the book (I’m a vegetarian, so meatloaf is never on the menu), my daughter and I tackled a handful. Most impressively, the Baked Alaska!

GWR: What’s the inspiration behind Recipe for a Perfect Wife?

KB: My mom gave me a few vintage cookbooks that had been passed down through our family, and there was one in particular—a Canadian cookbook called The Purity Cookbook from the 1940s—that inspired Nellie’s 1950s character. I had a clear image of Nellie, smoking one of her cigarettes out in her beloved garden, flipping through this cookbook and searching for a dinner recipe. Her life looked simple on the surface—the quintessential housewife—but I knew underneath the façade there was a lot more to Nellie. Everything started from that one scene, actually.

GWR: Do you have a favourite character?

KB: It’s impossible for me to choose, to be honest. Though I will say I loved writing the two older women—Miriam in the 1950s and Sally, her daughter, in the present day—into the story. They both acted as surrogate mothers for my main characters, Nellie and Alice, and offered wisdom, kindness and guidance for these younger women.

GWR: One of my favourite quotes in the book is: “Sally, the hardest question we have to ask ourselves in this life is, ‘Who am I?’. Ideally, we answer it for ourselves, but be warned that others will strive to do it for you—so don’t let them.” It’s so powerful. Did you receive this advice at some point in your life?

KB: It isn’t advice I received, but something I saw one afternoon when I was procrastibaking (procrastinating via baking) and watching Netflix. It was a soapy FBI show, and the main character, who was struggling to find her footing, was told to ask herself who she wanted to be. I immediately went and wrote it down… because it was a perfect theme for the book and precisely the advice I imagined Sally imparting to Alice. Who says bingeing Netflix can’t be considered, ‘working’?

GWR: Recipe for a Perfect Wife has been categorized as historical fiction and somewhat of a ‘departure’ for you. How did the writing process differ? Were there any challenges to writing historical fiction?

KB: I research every book I write, and whether it’s a setting or a character’s career or a medical condition, there’s always so much to learn. But with historical fiction it wasn’t only accurate details I had to worry about. It was also capturing the flavour and ambiance of the decade—including language, fashion, social norms—and being able to translate those on to the page. It was a challenge, but it was fun and I loved every bit of it.

GWR: Each of Alice’s chapters open with a piece of advice from various publications. What surprised you most about these?

KB: Aside from the fact that they even exist? Probably how widespread and longstanding this misogyny and inequality really was… and in more subtle ways, how it continues today. There are snippets of advice from the early 1900s up to the 1960s…and in all cases the general consensus was this: a woman only gets to be happy if she makes a man happy first.

GWR: What was the hardest scene to write?

KB: There’s a scene with Nellie and her husband Richard that takes place in their living room, and it’s violent and tragic and awful, yet I know many women in those times endured similar situations. As a woman it was a tough scene to write.

GWR: What are you working on now?

KB: I have a non-fiction book coming out with HarperCollins Canada in December 2020 called THE 4% FIX: How one hour can change your life, and it delves into my 5 a.m. writing habit, as well as how protecting your time is the best investment you can make. And I’ve just started working on my next novel, which is set in the Adirondacks and again will be a dual narrative story shifting between the 1970s (and the second wave of feminism) and the present day. Look for that one sometime in 2022!

*A version of this post was published on STYLE Canada

Tuesday, May 19, 2020

Sister Dear: A Novel by Hannah Mary McKinnon

A special thank you to Edelweiss, NetGalley, and HarperCollins Canada, Harlequin/MIRA for an ARC in exchange for an honest review. Thank you also to Harlequin for the opportunity to be a part of the Blog Tour.

Eleanor Hardwicke has just lost her beloved father. Her world is beyond shattered when she learns that the man that she cherished was not actually her father and that she was the result of an affair. Eleanor's biological father, Stan Gallinger, is alive and well. He's a successful businessman with an adoring family.

Victoria, Eleanor's half sister, had the loving childhood that Eleanor so desired. She has a doting husband, a budding business, and lives the charmed life that should be Eleanor's. But sisters are supposed to share...and now it's Eleanor's turn.

Hannah Mary McKinnon! That was all kinds of crazy, and I loved it!

Our narrator, Eleanor, is flawed and imperfect. As a result of her difficult upbringing, she has poor judgement and isn't overly strong. McKinnon juxtaposes this against half-sister Victoria's beauty, wealth, and success. Although both characters are well-written and captivating, it is Eleanor, with all her faults, that will play on your sympathies. Her transformation was astounding and compelling.

McKinnon explores some pretty toxic familiar relationships in her latest domestic thriller. She blurs the line between good and evil by writing her leading ladies with both qualities. Deftly plotted and perfectly paced, Sister Dear will have readers enthralled until the stunning conclusion. It is a story about love, loss, and the best dish of all, revenge.

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HANNAH MARY MCKINNON was born in the UK, grew up in Switzerland, and moved to Canada in 2010. After a successful career in recruitment, she quit the corporate world in favour of writing.

She now lives in Oakville, Ontario, with her husband and three sons.



Q & A with Hannah Mary McKinnon*

GWR: How many hours a day do you write? What does your writing process look like?

HMM: How many hours I write depends on the stage I’m at in a book. Typically I’ll work between about 8am and 4pm, but if I’m in the final editing stages then all bets are off and I’ll work whenever I can because I get so sucked into the story. In terms of process, with each book it has become more streamlined, but the biggest change is that, five books in, I feel more in control. That doesn’t necessarily mean it gets easier. Self-doubt always, always creeps in, particularly when I’m writing my first “skeleton draft,” which is a first, very loose version nobody will ever see. It’s rough, dirty and…terrible—my skeleton drafts always have been. However, I’ve learned to trust my writing process. If I can get the bones of the story on paper, I’ll add layers and complexity as I go over the novel again and again in preparation for my editor’s eyes. I accept the finer details will come as I work through the story. Just like most people who draw, paint, or write music or books, the first draft will never be my best work. I’m glad I’ve accepted that because it stops me from being overly self-critical when I start a project. I’m also more disciplined than in the past because I have deadlines. And I’ve always loved deadlines—especially beating them.

GWR: Are you a pantser or a plotter?

HMM: 100% a plotter. I’m very structured, and the more I write, the more I plan. My novels start with an idea—something that pops into my head, a newspaper article, or a discussion I overheard. I noodle the thoughts around for a while as the main characters take shape. The next step is to write an outline. I start by jotting down the big picture plot points, which I then use as stepping-stones to build and write the rest of the plot. I fill out personality questionnaires for my main characters to understand them better, and search for photos on the internet to build a gallery I stick on my pin-board, too. I do all of this before I’ve written “Chapter 1.”

GWR: Where did you come up with the concept for Sister Dear?

HMM: I heard a radio segment about a woman who’d found a wedding ring at a playground and was trying to locate the owner through social media. It got me thinking—what if the woman found out the ring’s owner had a dream life, and felt jealous? The more I thought about it, the more twisted things became. I realized the individuals had to be related somehow, and if I made them half-sisters it would add to the drama and intrigue. It seems some of the most despicable acts are carried out within families. That was something I wanted to explore.

GWR: Do you have a favourite character in the book?

HMM: Eleanor for the win! Writing the entire story from her point-of-view allowed me to really get inside her head and understand how and why she’d become who she was. Right from the start I knew Eleanor would have a distinct lack of confidence, particularly regarding her physical traits. She’d perceive herself far more negatively than anybody else did—primarily because of her relationship with her mother—and she’d suffer from a kind of body dysmorphia. I wanted to show how the attitude of others can impact a person, how we carry these things forward and what they can do to us. It made Eleanor complex and interesting to write, and most of the time I wanted to give her a hug. Having said that, while I hoped the reader felt sympathy for her, I didn’t want it to be so during the entire novel. She did make some rather dubious choices, after all. I did enjoy writing Lewis, too. He was such a good man, the one with the strongest moral compass and he was my guilty pleasure.

GWR: Tell me about the research you did for the novel?

HMM: There were geographical issues to figure out as I set the book in Portland, Maine, and while I’ve visited, I still needed to make sure I got the streets and distances right. I also had to research legal details including how sentencing and victim impact statements work. I had conversations with a taxi cab owner, the local hospital, and an undertaker, too. I don’t do a huge amount of research before I start writing but tend to put placeholders for areas that need fleshing out, and go back to them after I’ve finished my skeleton draft. That way I’m not spending hours on facts that don’t make the cut, or getting sidetracked by facts which are interesting, but potentially irrelevant to the story.

GWR: What was the hardest scene to write?

HMM: There’s a scene where Eleanor gives into her emotions and binge eats. That one cut a little too close to home. Let’s just say food and I are have been frenemies for a long, long time.

GWR: In Sister Dear, you explore some pretty toxic familial relationships. Have you always been interested in family dynamics? What themes do you find most interesting? 

HMM: I’m fascinated by the resilience and strength of people, how they cope when faced with tragedy, what they do to survive—including the lies they tell themselves, and each other. Our experiences, both good and bad, shape who we become, and shape us differently, which is equally interesting to explore. Creating difficult but entirely fictional circumstances for my characters provides the opportunity to think about how, and why, people have varying reactions to the same situation. I hope my stories also make the reader wonder what they would do if they found themselves in my characters’ shoes.

I’ve always been interested in family dynamics and was raised in traditional nuclear family environment. My parents have been together since the early 60s, they’re generous, loving and open, and have always supported us. I get along very well with my sister, too, and we all enjoy spending time together whenever we can. I’m extremely fortunate. Maybe that’s why I write these twisted stories—having a highly dysfunctional family frightens me; it would rip away a large part of what gives me stability and comfort, and what my husband and I want to provide our kids with. Writing about it lets me explore those fears from the safety of my keyboard, and reminds me not to take what I have, and the privileges that come with that, for granted.

GWR: If you could tell your younger self something about writing and becoming an author, what would it be?

HMM: “Slow down! Take a course!” I rushed submitting my first novel, Time After Time, to agents when it was far from ready, only I didn’t know it at the time. After multiple rejections I took creative writing workshops and weekly courses, and had the manuscript professionally edited, which was eye-opening. A few agents were kind enough to tell me the premise was good, but the execution was flawed, so I had a lot of work to do. On the other hand, my inexperience perhaps wasn’t such a bad thing. If I’d known how difficult it was going to be from the outset, maybe I wouldn’t have persevered. However, there’s no question that taking writing courses earlier would have helped!

GWR: What are you working on now?

HMM: My next two novels are psychological suspense stories. Book 5 (2021 release) is about a man who wakes up on a beach with no recollection who he is or what he’s doing there, and when he finds his way home he discovers he abandoned the place two years prior…and some people suspect him of murder. We’re in the editing stages of that one and I can’t wait to share the final title. Book 6 (2022 release) is outlined and I’ve made a start on the first chapters, but it’s too early to give more details – but I’m incredibly excited about them both, and the prospect of introducing you to more of my messed up characters.

*A version of this post was published on STYLE Canada.

Monday, May 18, 2020

A Good Marriage: A Novel by Kimberly McCreight

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

Isn't it always the husband?

Lizzie Kitsakis is a senior associate at the prestigious Manhattan law firm of Young & Crane. While working late one evening, Lizzie receives a collect call from a New York State correctional facility asking if she will accept a call from an inmate. Zach Grayson, her former college friend, is being held at Rikers for the assault of a police officer. But he also reveals that his wife was found dead at their upscale brownstone and he is the prime suspect. Zach maintains he didn't kill Amanda, and begs for Lizzie's help.

Diving deeper into the gossipy events leading up to Amanda's death, Lizzie discovers a series of journals. In these pages, Amanda details the abuse she endured as a child, as well the fact that she is in a loveless marriage. Lizzie also uncovers that there is a lot more that meets the eye with the Grayson's friend group, the fellow parents from their son's private school. And even Lizzie has secrets of her own. Her alcoholic husband, Sam, was involved in a car accident and has to pay a large settlement. This is why she had to give up her lower-paying job that she loved as a federal prosecutor and the reason that she lied on the financial disclosure form to get the job at Young & Crane.

Lizzie's worlds collide when she finds an earring that belonged to the victim in the pocket of Sam's messenger bag. She begins to question everything she thinks she knows as well as her own marriage.

Marketed as Big Little Lies meets Presumed Innocent, this spellbinding new novel from Kimberly McCreight is a clever—part legal and part psychological—thriller. The book opens with the most genius prologue. I'm not going to give away who is narrating, but what I can tell you is that after you finish, you will go back to the beginning and read it again! And can we just take a moment to appreciate the cover? Do you see the guy? I literally gasped when I saw him.

Character and plot are so intertwined. An author needs to develop both, because if they get it wrong, it can simply ruin the book. A Good Marriage definitely strikes this balance. It is a high-concept novel with strong pacing and deliciously complex characters.

The story is told by Lizzie in the present day, from Amanda's perspective in the days leading up to the murder, as well as through additional testimony and evidence. The two narrators are incredibly effective as the perfect mirror image of one another. I also loved how the whole book is a comment on marriage: the different types of marriages—open, traditional, of convenience—as well as the compromises that couples make, or the secrets they keep, in order to stay married.

Congratulations, Kimberly, on this fantastic book!

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KIMBERLY MCCREIGHT is the New York Times bestselling author of Reconstructing Amelia (which has also been optioned for film by HBO and Nicole Kidman's Blossom Films), Where They Found Her, and the teen trilogy The Outliers (optioned for film by Lionsgate, Mandeville, and Reese Witherspoon's Pacific Standard).

McCreight lives in Park Slope, Brooklyn with her husband and two daughters.

Monday, May 11, 2020

Secret Lives of Mothers & Daughters by Anita Kushwaha

A special thank you to the author, Anita Kushwaha, and HarperCollins Canada for a copy of the book in exchange for an honest review.

After her eighteenth birthday, Asha is devastated to learn that she was adopted. Her birth mother died when she was a baby from a mysterious illness. She left Asha a letter that leaves her with more questions than answers.

Nandini, Asha’s adoptive mother, has always feared the truth because she knows that it would come between her and her daughter.

Veena, a recent widow, is worried about her daughter Mala’s future. She is still in shock from the death of her husband and is pushing her daughter into marriage to secure her future.

Mala is struggling to balance what she wants to be against what her mother wants for her. She also has a secret that is threatening her very life.

Kushwaha is a beautiful storyteller. In Secret Lives of Mothers & Daughters she intersects the stories of Veena, Mala, and Nandidi. At the centre of this powerful story is Asha—the girl that connects them all.

Each of the women have cultural obligations as well as expectations that have been placed on them. They also have a secret, one that that is born out of love and that will impact not only their lives, but also the lives of their daughters—the risk of telling the truth is too great, as are the consequences. What unfolds is an emotional and powerful story about family, obligations, and the choices we make for those we love.

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ANITA KUSHWAHA studied human geography at Carleton University and earned an M.A. and a Ph.D. She is also a graduate of the Humber School for Writers creative writing program. Her first novel, Side by Side, won the silver medal for multicultural fiction from the Independent Publisher Book Awards in 2019. She is also the author of the novella The Escape Artist.

Kushwaha lives in Ottawa.

Blue Ticket by Sophie Mackintosh

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

When Calla hits puberty, she is taken to a lottery station where girls learn what kind of women they will become. You are relived of making the choice. A white ticket gives you children. A blue ticket gives you an IUD and your freedom. Once you have your ticket, your fate is determined—there's no going back.

But what if the life you're given is not the life you want?

Can we just take a moment to appreciate this cover? Mackintosh's sophomore effort is uncomfortable, unapologetic, and will definitely find its audience. Unfortunately, it was a little too far into its niche and ultimately left me feeling claustrophobic.

Blue Ticket is a devastating and shocking look into free will, human longing, animal instinct, and lengths one will go to in order to become a mother. It is a provocative work of dystopian feminism that lives in the space between female identity and the constraints of the patriarchy. 


SOPHIE MACKINTOSH is the author of The Water Cure, which was longlisted for the Man Booker Prize 2018. She also won the 2016 White Review Short Story Prize and the 2016 Virago/Stylist Short Story competition. Blue Ticket is her second novel.

Mackintosh currently resides in London, England.

Thursday, May 7, 2020

Wine Girl by Victoria James

A special thank you to HarperCollins Canada for a copy of the book and Victoria James for the wine tasting experience and for signing my copy.

At the age of 21, Victoria James became the youngest certified sommelier. Arriving at this distinction was no easy task—she endured sexual harassment, verbal abuse, and lower pay than her male counterparts.

Even though she was a certified sommelier, James was still continuously belated for her age and gender and still faced sexism and the abuse of power from not only her employers, but also her patrons.

Taking a step back from the years of humiliation in the restaurant industry—even from those that were of the highest regard—Victoria visited France to experience what she envisioned as the life of a sommelier. She experienced an authentic experience and discovered her true sense of purpose.

James is now a co-owner and Beverage Director of Cote, a Michelin-starred restaurant in New York City, where they have a zero-tolerance policy. The majority of hospitality workers are women and minorities and James asked the question: why isn't the industry's top tier management, community of wine buyers, and corporate leadership represented with the same diversity? To address this, she founded the non-profit educational organization, Wine Empowered, that provides tuition-free wine classes to women and minorities in the hospitality industry.

Wine Girl is incredibly well-written and captivating. Victoria shares her passion and love of wine, her knowledge is vast and nothing short of impressive and inspiring. Although there are many experiences that are traumatic and horrific, including her upbringing, James triumphs. This book is truly a gift that shines a much needed spotlight on the toxic male-dominated culture that exists in the hospitality industry. Bravo, Victoria. And cheers!

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VICTORIA JAMES has worked in the restaurant industry since she was thirteen. Becoming the youngest certified sommelier in the country at age 21, Victoria has appeared on both Forbes and Zagat’s “30 Under 30” lists. She is also the author of Drink Pink: A Celebration of Rosé, which Harper Design published in 2017.

Victoria has worked at some of the most prestigious restaurants in New York City, including Marea and Aureole. Currently, she is the Beverage Director and partner at Cote, a Michelin-starred hot spot in the Flatiron district.

James currently resides in NYC with her husband and dog, Rocco.

Wednesday, May 6, 2020

The Roxy Letters by Mary Pauline Lowry

A special thank you to Libro.fm Audiobooks and Simon & Schuster Audio for an audiobook listening copy.

The Roxy Letters is a series of letters that are penned to our heroine's dud ex-boyfriend, Everett. He also happens to be her roommate because of her financial straits. At first, Roxy is using the notes to establish rules and remind Everett of his overdue rent payments. But as time goes on, her letters become less about the rent and more about the shambles of her life—how did things get so messy?

Fed up with being a deli maid at Whole Foods, her dismal love life, and the corporatization of her beloved Austin, Roxy decides that it is time to become the heroine of her own story. Enlisting the help of her two best friends, Anna and Artemis, she sets her sights on taking down Lululemon. And on top of that, she also trying to stay employed, spark a romance with Patrick from Beer Alley, and keep her dog safe from her meth head neighbours.

Will Roxy ever figure out her life's purpose and get her groove back?

Epistolary novels are usually my bag—I love the format and find them a refreshing change—but I struggled with The Roxy Letters. At first I thought Roxy was hilarious and had this book pegged as my new favourite, but then it started to become rather ridiculous. The letters were sometimes rant-y, sometimes hilarious, and sometimes completely cringe-worthy. Ahem, the sex cult. Not being judgemental, and I'm certainly no prude, but this was weird. And so not necessary.

Lowry is a great writer, she's engaging and funny, but ultimately lost the plot on several occasions when things became overly manic with Roxy.

This is no Bridget Jones' Diary. Bridge is completely relatable and you are rooting so hard for her whereas Roxy is a rambling hot mess—I mean how many ridiculous situations can she get herself into?

I know like it sounds like I didn't like this book, but I did, and would rate it a solid three stars. If Lowry had tightened up the rambling speech, cut out the sex cult stuff, and injected more Artemus and Annie, this would have easily been four stars.

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MARY PAULINE LOWRY received her MFA from Boise State University. She is the author of the novels The Roxy Letters and Wildfire, she’s also a regular contributor to O, The Oprah Magazine. Her work has appeared in The New York Times Magazine, The New York Times, The Millions, and other publications.

Lowry is a native of Austin, Texas.

Friday, May 1, 2020

The Guest List by Lucy Foley

A special thank you to Libro.fm, Edelweiss, HarperAudio, and HarperCollins Canada for an ARC/audiobook listening copy in exchange for an honest review.

In this modern take of Agatha Christie's Murder on the Orient Express, Lucy Foley creates a guest list that no one will want to be on.

On an eerie remote island off the coast of Ireland, the family and friends of Jules and Will gather for their wedding. Jules is a beautiful and successful magazine publisher and Will is a handsome and charming reality TV star. Their wedding will be magazine-worthy: designer gown, boutique liquor, private remote location, majestic marquees, exquisite cake, Irish band, and personalized luxe favours for the guests. Expertly planned with meticulous detail, the festivities will be overseen by Aoife, the wedding planner, and her chef husband, Freddy. The stakes are high for the couple since it is their first wedding on the island.

With the celebrations underway, things begin to unravel with the help of too much champagne and the surfacing resentments and jealousies circulating amongst the guests. And then someone turns up dead.

The Guest List is a classic whodunit told from several different characters' perspectives—each with a different secret—from the days before the wedding and from the present wedding scene, with a few scattered flash flashbacks dispersed throughout.

Foley expertly builds tension through brilliant pacing, a creepy setting, and from an eclectic and vibrant cast of characters who are fuelled by the festivities, their motives, and alcohol. Resentments are building, as are lies, and motives to kill. There is also a literal storm brewing, as well as a figurative one, in which the island becomes even more isolated and threatening.

Foley gives just enough away and then pulls back the curtain for the stunning conclusion of this wicked and atmospheric thriller. The Guest List is completely enthralling, completely sublime, and completely addictive.

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LUCY FOLEY studied English literature at Durham University and University College London and worked for several years as a fiction editor in the publishing industry. She is the author of The Book of Lost and Found, The Invitation, and The Hunting Party.

Foley lives in London.