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Stephany Writes

Categories: Books

What I’m Reading (11.16.20)

My bookish moment of the week was giving a friend a long list of book recommendations! She reached out to me, telling me that I always gave her the best recommendations (which, hello, heart eyes!) so it was a delight to look over my recently read list, as well as some of the books on my TBR, to give her about 10 books to request from the library. I consider this friend to be one of my “book twins,” as we tend to have the same taste in books so it’s always easy to recommend books to her! I looooove when friends reach out to me for recommendations!

I didn’t publish a reading update last week since I wanted to post about the election results (and I only finished one book that week!), so this update comprises two weeks of reading. I finished four books, three of which were 5-star reads!

Simon vs. the Homo Sapiens Agenda by Becky Albertalli (★★★★★)

Short synopsis: Simon is a closeted gay teen trying to get through high school and corresponding with another closeted gay teen through email. They both go to the same school but remain anonymous to each other. When Simon finds himself falling for his secret email buddy, will he have the courage to come out?

This YA love story was SO cute and I started it the night before the election. It was the perfect “brain candy”-type read I needed to get me through those very uncertain times. I loved Simon as a character—he’s definitely a teen so he can be angsty at times, but he’s ultimately a good kid who is trying to figure out how to come out to his family and friends. There was a great focus on friendship, and I loved how authentically high school friendship was written about in this book. Simon and his friends had their flaws and their jealousies, but they were ultimately good to each other and supportive when it mattered. Of course, I was mostly interested in the blossoming relationship between Simon and his email buddy, and I was so excited for the reveal of who it was! This is a book I will most definitely read again because it gave me such happy feels!

Hidden Away by Maya Banks (★★★☆☆)

One-sentence synopsis: Garrett’s latest assignment is to get close to a woman named Sarah whose brother has been on the wanted list for a whole host of government agencies… but what happens when he starts to fall for his assignment?

I really, really liked this book. I thought it was fast-paced, well-written, and I loved how it all came together in the end. But what I didn’t love is that this is the third book in this series with a weak-willed female character who had to be saved by her male counterpart. Honestly, at this point, I can’t tell any of the women apart because they’ve all been written from the same mold. There was even this really awful scene of five adult men bullying a teenage boy because he had hurt their teenage sister. Was this boy a bully? Yes, he was. But the sister should have been annoyed at her brothers trying to fight her battles for her, rather than crying from happiness. (Yes, that really happened.) I keep reading her books because I do love the writing, but she gets one more chance from me. If the next book in this series follows the same format, I’m done. (Open-door romance.)

Where the Forest Meets the Stars by Glendy Vanderah (★★★★★)

Short synopsis: Joanna is a graduate student studying ornithology and is spending a few months in rural Illinois to conduct her research. Her routine is thrown off by the arrival of Ursa, a child who is barefoot, covered in bruises, and claims to be an alien from a faraway galaxy who is on Earth to find five miracles.

Listen, I know the synopsis sounds crazy. Aliens and galaxies and miracles? It’s all a little far-fetched, but the premise works. This book is pure magic from beginning to end; it’s the kind of book that makes me so happy to be a reader. I was captivated by Ursa, struggling right along with Joanna about what to do about her, and caught up in the imagery of this tiny rural area. And I’ll admit: I didn’t really know what to believe. Was Ursa an alien? Or was she just a lost little girl who wanted to believe in something bigger? There’s a beautiful love story intertwined in this book that made this book just a touch more lovely for me. (You know me: I love a good love story.) A must-read!

Murder on Cold Street by Sherry Thomas (★★★★★)

Short synopsis: A friend of Charlotte Holmes’s, Inspector Treadles, is found locked in a room with two dead men and is charged with their murders. It’s up to Charlotte and her team to clear his name.

The only disappointing thing about this novel is knowing I’m going to have to wait months and months for the next Charlotte Holmes mystery! Argh! I loved everything about this novel: the team Charlotte has amassed to help her solve crimes, the little details Charlotte was able to figure out based on her own intuition, the way the mystery was revealed, and, of course, Charlotte’s penchant for cake. 🙂 It was a solid mystery, one I honestly couldn’t figure out on my own, and every little detail that was unveiled was perfectly done. Now I’ll just try to sit here patiently as I await Book #6.

What I’m Reading Now

  • How to Be an Antiracist by Ibram X. Kendi (print) – I’m halfway through this book, and it’s going to be one I recommend to everyone. I thought I knew what antiracism work looked like, but this book has shown me I have so much more to learn.
  • Daring and the Duke by Sarah MacLean (e-book) – I’m really rather bored with this Regency romance, which is unusual for a Sarah MacLean book. I keep thinking about abandoning it, which is always a good sign that I should.
  • The Year of Yes: How to Dance It Out, Stand in the Sun and Be Your Own Person by Shonda Rhimes (e-book) – I’m about halfway through this book and it’s been a good read so far. Shonda Rhimes is hilarious and I can fully relate to so many of her fears and vulnerabilities (who knew we had so much in common?!).
  • Come Away with Me by Karma Brown (audiobook) – I’m planning on starting this audiobook today! It won’t be an easy read (it involves a major tragedy in a young couple’s life) but other friends have raved about it, so I’m going to give it a shot.

What are you reading?

Categories: Books

What I’m Reading (11.2.20)

There’s an elephant in the room and I’m not going to acknowledge it. Not because I don’t care, but because we all need a little distraction right now. So, instead, I bring to you this week’s reading recap, which is filled with great books. Two romances, a biography, and a YA thriller—so many genres! I had a great reading week for sure.

My bookish moment this week was watching my mom’s neighbor hand out picture books to children who came by to trick or treat. (She also handed out bags of candy—she’s not a monster!) She was also dressed as a handmaid and, you guys, I just need to meet and become friends with this woman. She’s like my literary twin! I need to get over my shyness and introduce myself and tell her how much I love the Little Free Library she has in her yard.

Anyway, let’s discuss my reads!

It’s in His Kiss by Jill Shalvis (★★★★☆)

One-sentence synopsis: Becca has escaped to small-town Lucky Harbor after a difficult family situation, never expecting to fall in love with the first person she meets in this new place.

I loved this romance! It was pure fun from start to finish, and there was a lot of depth to the plot, as Becca is trying to heal after some traumatic things have happened to her. This novel is the 10th book in the Lucky Harbor series (but like most romance series, you don’t have to read the books in order) and it’s so fun to see some of my favorite characters pop back up in this novel. While I think some things wrapped up a little too easily—it always drives me crazy when authors feel the need to make everyone one big happy family at the end; that’s just not real life!—this was still a solid romance with some very steamy scenes! (Open-door romance.)

You Never Forget Your First: A Biography of George Washington by Alexis Coe (★★★★☆)

One-sentence synopsis: For the first time, a woman pens a biography of George Washington and doesn’t hold back about his flaws, including about the enslaved people he owned.

This was an excellent biography and I really hope Coe is planning on writing more books about our presidents because I learned so much in just 230 short pages. This book includes charts and other infographics that detail little things about Washington, like all of his illnesses, the “frenemies” he made while he was president, his war history, etc. Washington is an incredibly flawed character and he did not have many fans when he left the presidency, and I enjoyed this more nuanced take on his life. But what struck me most when reading this biography was learning more about his wife, Martha. Her life was a difficult one—losing her first husband, then both of her children, and countless grandchildren and great-grandchildren. Not to mention, she had to share Washington with the country. He was away from her for years fighting in the war and then became president. And a year after he left the presidency, he was dead. I felt a lot for Martha and was encouraged by the way she soldiered on, even in the face of so much tragedy. Anyway, this is a great, accessible biography and I encourage everyone to give it a try!

Driven to Distraction by Lori Foster (★★☆☆☆)

One-sentence synopsis: When prim and proper Mary hires rugged bad boy Brodie as her driver, sparks fly.

Ehhhh… this book relied a little too heavily on stereotypes, and I was actually surprised to learn it was published in 2018 because it felt very dated. The characters felt two-dimensional and the plot seemed to drag on and on with no apparent destination. Until this weird mystery subplot was introduced that was just so cheesy and unrealistic that I started skimming those sections. Not a great sign! This is the first book I’ve read of Lori Foster, who is a prolific romance novelist, and I’ll give her another shot… but this isn’t a novel I’d recommend. (Open-door romance.)

A Good Girl’s Guide to Murder by Holly Jackson (★★★★☆)

One-sentence synopsis: For her senior capstone project, Pip decides to investigate a five-year-old murder that took place in her town.

THIS NOVEL WAS SO GOOD. The only reason it doesn’t get five stars from me is because parts of it were a little too unbelievable—such as a seventeen-year-old launching such a complex murder investigation with no experience or training. (This was, like, Serial-level investigation and Sarah Koenig is no slouch in the experience department + had a whole team working with her.) But as long as you can get past that (which I could), this novel is incredible. I loved Pip so much, and her partnership with Ravi (whose brother allegedly killed his girlfriend five years ago, which is the murder Pip is investigating with the intent to clear his name) was such a sweet little addition. This novel took so many twists and turns that I wasn’t expecting, and I loved them all. I truly could not figure out who the murderer was or the motive, so the reveal was completely unexpected. All in all, an insanely good debut novel!

What I’m Reading This Week

  • Murder on Cold Street by Sherry Thomas – This is the fifth book in the Lady Sherlock series, and I was thrilled when I came off the holds list at my library. I’m listening to it on audio, my favorite way to consume this series. I’m only an hour in and I’m already so happy to be back in the world of Charlotte Holmes.
  • Simon vs. the Homo Sapiens Agenda by Becky Albertalli – I’m reading this YA novel to fulfill November’s prompt for the Unread Shelf Challenge (read a book in your favorite genre). I don’t have any traditional romances on my unread shelf (my actual favorite genre; I always read those quickly!) but YA romance is a close second, so it fits.
  • How to Be an Antiracist by Ibram X. Kendi – Ah, yes. I am finally plucking this book off my shelf to read. I am planning on taking this book slowly, perhaps one chapter a day. This is not a book to speed-read through.

What are you reading?

Categories: Books

What I’m Reading (10.26.20)

My bookish moment this week is having a fun conversation about self-help books with a coworker over chat! She wanted to recommend two really great titles that she just read and loved (Atomic Habits and Digital Minimalism) and I’m hoping we can read at least one of them for our work book club soon. I think Digital Minimalism, especially, would make for a great discussion! Anyway, I just love talking books with people and it was a nice interruption to my workday. 🙂

I finished two books since my last update, which was on Wednesday. I sped through a thriller and also finally finished my “slow but steady” read that I’ve been reading since August! I’m thinking about the next “slow but steady” book to pick up—probably something off the Serial Reader app.

A Yellow Raft in Blue Water by Michael Dorris (★★☆☆☆)

One-sentence synopsis: Three generations of Indigenous women tell their life stories.

I read this book because a good friend recommended it to me, and then lent me her high school copy. I chose it as my “slow and steady” read for the fall, reading about 10 pages a day until I finished it. I wanted to like this book, I really did, but it just did not work for me at all. The story is set up in three parts, starting with the granddaughter telling the story, and then the mother telling the story, and finally the grandmother. In each story, the mother figure is this terrible person with no love or compassion for her, someone who is really easy to root against. And then, the mother figure would try to explain her actions when she was telling the story. I assume the lesson to take from this is that humans are flawed and complicated, but to me, it just didn’t work. The explanations didn’t make me feel any sort of compassion toward these women when they’re treating their children and the people around them like shit. I wanted more from their lives and more from this story. Not one I would recommend, unfortunately.

The Family Upstairs by Lisa Jewell (★★★☆☆)

Short synopsis: Twenty-five years ago, police were called to a home where they found three adults dead in an apparent suicide and a healthy 10-month-old baby crying in a crib upstairs. That baby is now all grown up and has inherited this house, knowing nothing of its sinister past.

Oooof. I had high hopes for this book, but it just did not meet them at all. I was expecting something dark and twisted, especially with the way the premise is laid out, and at times it felt more like a feel-good fiction novel than a thriller. I appreciated all the twists and turns the novel took, as certain things were revealed slowly (and most of them, I only predicted right before they were unveiled). I also liked that most of the characters were easy to root for, which is not always a given in a thriller. But it just didn’t live up to my expectations for a thriller and ultimately, it’s kinda forgettable.

Georgia Peaches and Other Forbidden Fruit by Jaye Robin Brown – abandoned

I was listening to this book on audio and around the 51% mark, I decided to abandon it because I just wasn’t on board with the message it was trying to send. (The book was about a queer teenager who was asked by her father to pretend to be straight for her senior year after they moved to a conservative city in Georgia.)

What I’m Reading This Week

  • It’s in His Kiss by Jill Shalvis – I’m nearly finished with this contemporary romance (50 pages to go!) and it’s been a fun, easy-breezy read.
  • You Never Forget Your First: A Biography of George Washington by Alexis Coe – I’m halfway through this biography and it’s so very interesting!
  • Driven to Distraction by Lori Foster – I’ll start this contemporary romance sometime in the next day or so, once I finish It’s in His Kiss.
  • A Good Girl’s Guide to Murder by Holly Jackson – Looking forward to diving into this one later this week!

What are you reading?

Categories: Books

What I’m Reading (10.21.20)

My bookish moment of the week is having a reading date with a friend this weekend. It was so nice to sit by the water and read my book, and man, I feel like hitting up that spot every Saturday evening just before the sun goes down. It was so peaceful and I loved watching the sky turn all different colors as the sun set. Perfection!

I’ve got four book reviews for you today, and all of them were 4-star reads! That’s the sign of a great reading week. 🙂

Man Down by Kate Meader (★★★★☆)

One-sentence synopsis: It’s been three years since Gunnar’s wife and children died in a car accident and he’s finding his way back to himself—first by re-entering the NHL and then by falling in love.

This book made me cry! Gunnar’s grief is so raw and real, and you could feel his love for his late wife and kids just seeping from the page. And then comes Sadie, a sweet woman with a heart of gold but someone who is not here for Gunnar’s bullshit, at all. Their meet-cute is really fun, setting up and enemies-to-lovers trope, and I loved watching each of their walls come down as they fell in love with one another. This was a super solid romance, and I highly recommend it to my fellow romance readers! (Open-door romance.)

The Long Way Home by Louise Penny (★★★★☆)

One-sentence synopsis: Gamache is back in Three Pines with a special request from his dear friend Clara.

I’m going to be very vague about the plot of this novel since this is the continuation of a series and a lot of things happened before this book that I don’t want to spoil for people who plan on reading the series! Suffice it to say, this book was excellent and everything I wanted after being away from this series for a while. (The last time I read this series was FEBRUARY!) I love books that feature Clara, as she’s one of my favorite Three Pines characters, and I was happy that Gamache’s wife, Reine-Marie, had such a prominent role in the novel (in comparison to the other books). While the mystery itself wasn’t too interesting to me, this book still gets four stars because I was just so happy to be with Gamache and crew again.

Hidden Valley Road: Inside the Mind of an American Family by Robert Kolker (★★★★☆)

One-sentence synopsis: A narrative nonfiction book about a family of twelve kids growing up in the 60s and 70s, six of whom were diagnosed with schizophrenia. 

This book felt like a slog at times and it took me nearly two weeks to read it (it was only 330 pages, but very dense). But I’m glad I powered through because it was a really great read, especially learning about the history behind schizophrenia treatment. It gave me new respect for science researchers who may spend their entire careers trying to solve one tiny issue, like what chromosome is affected by schizophrenia. This book has content warnings on content warnings, and I had to set it down many times because the subject matter was so difficult. I truly felt for all of the kids in this family, both the sick ones and the healthy ones, because they were all dealing with their own traumas in their own ways. I wouldn’t say this is a must-read, but it’s a very powerful book if you like narrative nonfiction and can handle lots of triggering subject matters.

40-Love by Olivia Dade (★★★★☆)

One-sentence synopsis: Celebrating her 40th birthday, Tess and her friend take a trip to a resort in Florida where Tess falls in love with a twenty-something tennis instructor.

Oh, how I loved this book! I loved the banter between the main characters, the sweet way they cared for one another, and the honesty in working through their issues together. Tess is fat and while her fatness is discussed, it is not made an issue, especially not with Lucas (the male protagonist). At times, I felt like Lucas was a little too perfect but perhaps that’s my own insecurities talking. Also, what’s better than a 40-year-old woman getting it on with a twenty-something stud? GET IT GIRL! Haha. All in all, it was such a great read and I loved every minute I spent with this book. I especially loved that there wasn’t some dramatic dark moment—both Tess and Lucas were so open and honest with each other that there were no miscommunications or hurt feelings that were never dealt with. I can’t wait to read more from this author! (Open-door romance.)

What I’m Reading This Week

  • Georgia Peaches and Other Forbidden Fruit by Jaye Robin Brown (audio) – YA love stories are my sweet spot and queer YA love stories? Even better. I’m loving this one so far!
  • The Family Upstairs by Lisa Jewell (print) – I plucked this book off my shelf to fulfill October’s category for the Unread Shelf Challenge. It should be a spooky read!
  • It’s In His Kiss by Jill Shalvis (e-book) – I’ll start this contemporary romance sometime this week. It should be a sweet one!

What are you reading?

Categories: Books

What I’m Reading (10.12.20)

My bookish moment of the week is my work book club meeting! There were only four of us on the call, but it was so fun to stop working for an hour to chat about the book. We read The Guest List by Lucy Foley and we all agreed it wasn’t very good, but we still had a really lively discussion about it (mostly about all the ways it sucked, haha).

In other bookish news, reading was a struggle this week. I think it probably had something to do with an anxiety episode I was working through, as I found it hard to focus on reading and couldn’t find a really good book to sink into. I kept starting and stopping books because nothing was grabbing my attention. As such, I only have ONE book review for this week! Crazy, huh? What a weird reading week for me!

Invisible Man, Got the Whole World Watching: A Young Black Man’s Education by Mychal Denzel Smith (★★★★☆)

One-sentence review: Mychal muses on the question “How do you learn to be a Black man in America?”

I really liked this memoir, as Mychal is vulnerable and honest about his life, his struggles, and his family. He discusses some of the key Black thinkers, writers, and rappers that helped him define Blackness in America. He also talks about his difficulty in connecting with his father and his anxiety and depression that led him to drop out of college. He’s also not shy about his criticism of Obama, which made me uncomfortable at times. (I just want everyone to love Obama as I did, but that’s not reality and it’s especially not reality for Black people.) All in all, a fantastic BIPOC memoir and one you should definitely add to your antiracism reading list.

What I’m Reading This Week

  • The Long Road Home by Louise Penny (audio) – I have a few hours left in this audiobook! I’m enjoying it, although the mystery isn’t as engaging as I wish and I find the discussions about art and muses to be a little mind-numbing, lol.
  • Man Down by Kate Meader (e-book) – I’m nearly finished with this hockey romance, but couldn’t get it done in time for this reading recap. It’s really good, though I expect nothing less from Meader!
  • Hidden Valley Road: Inside the Mind of an American Family by Robert Kolker (print) – I’m reading this for work book club. It was my suggestion, so I feel obligated to read the whole thing, even if it’s a slog. I’m only about 75 pages in (it’s 400 pages) and it’s fine so far. Nothing outstanding, though, and I’m hoping it starts to pick up.
  • What You Wish For by Katherine Center (e-book) – My hold just came in for this book – woohoo! This will be a good book to read alongside Hidden Valley Road. I have loved everything I’ve read from Center, so I’m really looking forward to diving into this one.

What are you reading?

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Welcome!

Welcome!

Hi, I'm Stephany! (She/her) I'm a 30-something single lady, living in Florida. I am a bookworm, cat mom, podcaster, and reality TV junkie. I identify as an Enneagram 9, an introvert, and a Highly Sensitive Person. On this blog, you will find stories about my life, book reviews, travel experiences, and more. Welcome!

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