The Power by Naomi Alderman (★★★★☆)
Audiobook • Libby • Dystopian Fiction • 2016
Short synopsis: In this new world, teenage girls find out that they have immense power: they have an electrical current running through them that can cause agonizing pain to anyone who comes near them.
I had such an interesting experience with this book. First, I do not recommend the audiobook. I did not enjoy the narration and wish there had been different voices for each perspective (there were multiple perspectives). The narrator did some voices really well and some really terribly. Throughout most of the story, this was a 3-star read. I found it a bit difficult to get into and hard to keep the different storylines straight. But the ending of the book was so good and really helped me understand what the author was doing here, envisioning a matriarchal society where women are the ones with all of the power. What would that look like? And would it look all that different than our society today? Is power corrupt no matter what? This was our May book club pick, and we had a really good discussion about the book, feminism, and power.
The Swimmers by Julia Otsuka (★★★★☆)
Audiobook • Libby • Fiction • 2022
Short synopsis: A slim novel about a woman with dementia, the pool where she can escape her disease for an hour every day, and the woman’s daughter.
This is the kind of novel, or audiobook in my case, that can be zipped through in an afternoon. At just four hours on audio, it was a quick listen for me and an entirely depressing one, too. The story is mainly about Alice, a woman who has dementia and is trying to escape the reality of her disease by doing laps in the neighborhood pool. The story is told in vignettes: about the pool, about the people who swim in the pool, and about Alice. It’s an interesting way to tell a story, and ultimately, an impactful one. One of my greatest fears is watching a loved one deal with dementia/Alzheimers, and this book really hit me right in the feels. This is the kind of book I am hesitant to recommend because it has a very specific style that won’t appeal to everyone, but it really worked for me.
Happy Place by Emily Henry (★★★★☆)
Print • Owned (Tombolo Books) • Romance • 2023
Short synopsis: Harriet and her friends get together as often as they can, but it’s been a few years since their last get-together. They come together this year at Sabrina’s insistence. What Harriet doesn’t expect during this trip is to see Wyn, her ex-fiance and the man her friends still think she’s in a relationship with.
Emily Henry is not an auto-buy author for me. I liked Beach Read, loathed People We Meet on Vacation, and consider Book Lovers to be my all-time favorite romance. So she either really works for me, or really does not. But because I loved Book Lovers so much, I was excited to see what she was going to do with Happy Place. I started to see a lot of mixed reviews as I read it, which tempered my own expectations, and it ended up being a pretty good book for me. It was very clear from the start that Harriet is a classic enneagram 9—a people pleaser to her very core and someone who hates confrontation so much that she wouldn’t even tell her best friends that she was going through a horrific breakup. I, too, struggle with telling my best friends when bad things are happening or I’m dealing with something hard because I don’t want to bring them down. I don’t think I’ve ever connected to a character as much as I connected to Harriet. Did I have to suspend some of my belief in this novel? Yes, of course. But that’s romance novels for ya! They are not real life. But ultimately, I found myself really loving this story and how things turned out for Harriet and Wyn. I’d probably place this as my second-favorite novel of hers.
What are you reading?




