Monthly Archives: April 2015

The Husband’s Secret

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At the heart of The Husband’s Secret is a letter that is no meant to be read…
My darling Cecilia,
If you’re reading this, then I’ve died…

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Imagine your husband wrote you a letter, to be opened after his death. Imagine, too, that the letter contains his deepest, darkest secret–something with the potential to destroy not only the life you have built together, but the lives of others as well. And then imagine that you stumble across that letter while your husband is still very much alive…

Cecilia Fitzpatrick has achieved it all–she’s an incredibly successful businesswoman, a pillar of her small community, a devoted wife and mother. Her life is as orderly and spotless as her home. But that letter is about to change everything–and not just for her. There are other women who barely know Cecilia–or each other–but they, too, are about to feel the earth-shattering repercussions of her husband’s secret.

REVIEW

Exceptionally exploitive! Slow moving at first as I was impatient to know the secret, curious if I was correct, it became a slightly anticlimactic climb to the women’s collision. Moriarty effortlessly explores the reality that nothing is truly felt until the tragedy happens to you. She exploits the blindness caused by overwhelming tragedy and the need for revenge, the crippling truth behind everything is clearer in hindsight. She begs the question of what happens when the choices we are forced to make seem incapable of holding a right decision, when there is no correct answer. She creates a world imagining for us what happens when one turns a blind eye to injustice. She draws attention to the idea that children pay for the sins of their parents, that there is a balancing of scores, that no crime goes unpunished. Moriarty forces the reader to question every black and white thought, to dive into the grey, the idea that everything isn’t always as it seems. We live in a society where it is assumed the white collar family man is pure and innocent while children are told to fear the presumably bad creepy man–Moriarty unravels this wrongful assumption. I love an author who forces me to think, to imagine, to question my own beliefs; leads me to ask of myself, what would I do? To top her own brilliant imagination and drive it all home, Moriarty goes to the length of declaring what would have happened if these people had made better choices, if tragedy hadn’t struck and they chose the path to prevent this domino of catastrophe.

The Silent Wife: A Silent Bore

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“Better than Gillian Flynn’s Gone Girl. A must read for anyone who is occasionally ruthless, reckless, or…loves clever books with depth and heart.” –Sophie Hannah, author of The Other Woman’s House

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Jodi and Todd are at a bad place in their marriage. Much is at stake, including the affluent life they lead in their beautiful waterfront condo in Chicago, as she, the killer, and he, the victim, rush haplessly toward the main event. He is a committed cheater. She lives and breathes denial. He exists in dual worlds. She likes to settle scores. He decides to play for keeps. She has nothing left to lose. Told in alternating voices, The Silent Wife is about a marriage in the throes of dissolution, a couple headed for catastrophe, concessions that can’t be made, and promises that won’t be kept.

REVIEW

With foreshadow as the reader’s villain, suspense was brutally murdered before the opening line was read. It was my own stupidity and naivety that led me to believe this would be a great read. I had hoped for a thrilling novel but was met with multiple character monologues–the book thrived off these intense internal dialogues. Spoken dialogue was slim and the characters were annoyingly flawed, ranting their excuses to the reader. Classified with Gone Girl and Before I Go To Sleep, both exceptionally brilliant novels, The Silent Wife fell so short it didn’t even leave the ground. I wanted to like it–I craved to read it–but upon beginning, it became a race to the finishing line because of how disappointingly boring it was. After glimpsing it on the store’s shelf for months and finally giving in to the nagging curiosity, this was one book I wish I wouldn’t have wasted my time on. Bluntly put, Sophie Hannah was wrong, this book doesn’t even belong on a shelf next to Gone Girl.

Looking For Alaska

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Before. Miles “Pudge” Halter’s whole existence has been one big nonevent, and his obsession with famous last words has only made him crave the “Great Perhaps” (Francois Rabelais, poet) even more. He heads off to the sometimes crazy, possibly unstable, and anything-but-boring world of Culver Creek Boarding School, and his life becomes the opposite of safe. Because down the hall is Alaska Young. The gorgeous, clever, funny, sexy, self-destructive, screwed-up, and utterly fascinating Alaska Young, who is an event into herself. She pulls Pudge into her world, launches him into the Great Perhaps, and steals his heart.

After. Nothing is ever the same.

REVIEW

Green makes writing a true piece of art, brilliantly crafting the characters, scenes, and plot twists. He knows how to flawlessly write a character with depth without overdoing or overdramatizing it; a character we can befriend and whose emotions we believe, thought processes we can comprehend (or at least follow); a character we cry for, and cry for I did. Most books hold the heartbreak for the end–a tragic finale, something grand to leave the reader with–or begin with it–something to overcome, build the character up with. Green blindsided me with the heartache halfway through then prolonged it as Pudge fought to survive it. I forgot what a teenage crush felt like, never realized that as an adolescent our feelings seem all consuming, but Green effortlessly transported me back into that time and age; made me want to be a teenager again, one willing to take chances and get my heart broken. I hated my high school years but somehow Green had me wanting to relive them.

Where She Went

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It’s been three years since the devastating accident…three years since Mia walked out of Adam’s life forever.

Now living on opposite coasts, Mia is a rising star at Julliard and Adam is a bona fide rock star, complete with tabloid headlines and a celebrity girlfriend.

Then chance brings them together again, for one night.

As they explore the city that has become Mia’s home, Adam and Mia revisit the past and open their hearts to the future—and to each other.

REVIEW:

This time written from Adam’s perspective and once again an intermingling of the past and present, Forman articulates the rollercoaster ride of heartache and love. She proves her talent of weaving in Adam’s memories so seamlessly. She does an excellent job of breaking the reader’s heart through Adam’s story. It’s an achingly beautiful portrayal of unforeseen rejection, of everything is always clearer in hindsight, of coming to grips with the biggest mistakes felt for a lifetime. It’s also a story of hope and love rekindled, when all bridges have burned and there is a greater risk of reopening wounds but an even greater reward if everything wished for comes true. Forman begs the question, what would you do if the one you never got over, the one who broke your heart and left you in a black hole, came back in your life? Would you risk having to say goodbye again if it meant twenty-four hours of being with your love? And if so, would you be able to survive having to walk away again?

The Fault in Our Stars

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Insightful, bold, irreverent, and raw, The Fault in Our Stars brilliantly explores the funny, thrilling, and tragic business of being alive and in love.

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Despite the tumor-shrinking medical miracle that has bought her a few years, Hazel has never been anything but terminal, her final chapter inscribed upon diagnosis. But when a gorgeous plot twist named Augustus Waters suddenly appears at Cancer Kid Support Group, Hazel’s story is about to be completely rewritten.

REVIEW:

Don’t let the script and Young Adult genre placement fool you; The Fault in Our Stars is anything but an easy read and is great for all ages. It will break your heart in every way: as a parent, a lover, a teenager, a survivor, and a victim. Green will have you falling prey—not by the fact that yes, this story is cry-your-eyes-out tragic, but by your craving to gulp it down in one afternoon. It is delicious in every manner we wish a book to be. It is heartbreaking beyond repair, and it is of our own doing that Green breaks our hearts because we hope for a happy ending despite knowing it can’t exist. The surrealism, the hope, the courage, and the devastation that surrounds the characters leaves us feeling everything they feel. We cry, we hope, we dream, we imagine. We fall in love. This is the story of overcoming. This is the story of being alive when dying. This is the story of teenage love—a love only few encounter and fewer survive—amidst impossible odds and devastation. Read it and weep your eyes out.

Atonement

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A tour de force… Every bit as affecting as it is gripping.” —The New York Times

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On a summer day in 1935, thirteen-year-old Briony Tallis witnesses a moment’s flirtation between her older sister, Cecilia, and Robbie Turner, the son of a servant. But Briony’s incomplete grasp of adult motives and her precocious imagination bring about a crime that will change all their lives, a crime whose repercussions Atonement follows through the chaos and carnage of World War II and into the close of the twentieth century.

REVIEW:

It takes patience to read this book but I promise you McEwan delivers a miraculous love story birthed in tragedy. It is impossible to forgive Briony, despite her endeavor to rewrite the future she stole from the young lovers. McEwan’s brilliant writing captures the immature mind of a thirteen-year-old desperate for attention and acceptance while showcasing humanity’s often inability to admit wrongdoing and accept consequences for doing such, as children and as adults. McEwan builds up Briony’s tendencies toward falsehood, misinterpretation, and creative imagination for quite a few chapters before this main event showcases her faults. Though beautifully written—McEwan has a talent for stringing along words and then sentences to present something picturesque and poignant to the writer—the first quarter of the book takes some endurance but I promise you, if you can get through these beginning slow chapters, what follows is worth a rainy afternoon spent lounging and reading.

Gone Girl

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Ice-pick sharp…spectacularly sneaky…impressively cagey.” –Janet Maslin, New York Times

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On a warm summer morning in North Carthage, Missouri, it is Nick and Amy Dunne’s fifth wedding anniversary. Presents are being wrapped and reservations are being made when Nick’s clever and beautiful wife disappears. As the police begin to investigate, the town golden boy parades a series of lies, deceits, and inappropriate behavior. Nick is oddly evasive, and he’s definitely bitter—but is he really a killer?

REVIEW:

Mercilessly menacing, hilariously terrifying, and deviously wicked. Flynn cleverly manipulates the reader’s thoughts, predictions, and uncertainties. She holds her audience captivated, enthralled, in the palm of her hand. She surpasses mesmerizing and plunges into hypnotizing. It begs to be read twice simply to put the reader’s mind at ease, to navigate the clues she so wittingly hid the first read through. Flynn once again creates characters we can’t entirely trust, leaving us incapable to love or hate them until everything we are to know of them is displayed—at the end of the novel. We don’t want to admit the brilliance and stupidity of the characters, but find them fascinating in their easy ability to be manipulated—as Flynn does to us. She proves that everything is never as it seems and plants the thrilling possibility of not really knowing your spouse.

Sharp Objects: A Cutting Thriller

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Fresh from a brief stay at a psych hospital, reporter Camille Preaker faces a troubling assignment: she must return to her tiny hometown to cover the murders of two preteen girls. For years, Camille has hardly spoken to her neurotic, hypochondriac mother or to the half-sister she barely knows: a beautiful thirteen-year-old with an eerie grip on the town. Now, installed in her old bedroom in her family’s Victorian mansion, Camille finds herself identifying with the young victims—a bit too strongly. Dogged by her own demons, she must unravel the psychological puzzle of her own past if she wants to get the story—and survive this homecoming.

REVIEW:

I want more Flynn. Rating between Dark Places and Gone Girl, both of which I absolutely loved, Sharp Objects is a disturbingly addictive thriller. Once again, we are introduced to a main character who we can’t entirely love for her psychological disturbances nor entirely hate for her childish vulnerability, though often the two intertwine so well that what we find annoying and revolting about her is also exactly why we sympathize for her. It has become Flynn’s trademark and area of expertise—they’re flawed and complicated, they’re human.

A page-turner until the end, it sadly concludes and wraps up in less than ten pages, one chapter and an epilogue. One minute, we are living a captivating mystery and then we are suddenly transported to a finale that failed to be grand—blink and you miss it. It’s the novel’s only downfall but it’s a big one—how ironic.

Disillusioned: A Disappointing Understatement

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Their passion was real, but how many more secrets can Bianca accept?

When Bianca London was kidnapped and taken to a deserted island, the only positive was meeting Jakob, the mysterious and handsome man with whom she was stranded on the island. When Bianca finds out that Jakob isn’t exactly who he says he is, she fears for her life—until he does something unbelievable to gain her trust and possibly her love.

Bianca makes it back home, but soon cryptic letters start arriving, hinting of more secrets to be spilled. When Jakob comes back into her life, Bianca doesn’t know whether to trust her instincts or her heart. Jakob is still hiding things from her, and when they come out, everything she thought she knew is put to the test. Turns out getting off the island was only the beginning of the story.

REVIEW:

I give Cooper credit for attempting to pursue such a difficult and unrealistic plot, but that’s the major issue with this story: what the first book, Illusion, had planted as a possibility, Disillusioned had destroyed through its failure to deliver anything conceivable. Bianca, convinced Jacob is dangerous, still gives herself to the man. The entire story is dialogue, giving no framework or mind to time. Hell, I’ll say it: the steamy scenes are even lacking the steam aspect that romance novels need to thrive on. Furthermore, Cooper fails to build upon the characters after the first book. Somehow, through this second installment of the trilogy, they have become entirely boring and unmoving while the author is completely incapable of making a decision as to where to take the story and the characters. The dialogue is repetitive and readers are sent dancing in circles. If I had wanted to square dance, I’d have taken a class. Disappointment was the ringing theme, unfortunately, but I must be stupid because I’ll still read the third book out of pure, uncontrollable curiosity once it’s released. Sorry, Cat.