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215 results found for "heartwarming"
- Review of Evvie Drake Starts Over by Linda Holmes
ICYMI: Evvie Drake Starts Over, by the author of Flying Solo, is sweet, with funny dialogue, surprises, best-friendship, and a Maine setting I loved. I recently read and loved Linda Holmes's Flying Solo, and I was reminded of how much I adored Holmes's novel Evvie Drake Starts Over. Evvie Drake has become something of a recluse in her quiet seaside Maine town ever since her husband's death in a car crash a year earlier. Her best friend Andy is doing his best to support her. while it seems Evvie is doing her best to bury her grief. Andy's childhood best friend Dean is a former Major League pitcher--but he has the "yips" and can't throw straight anymore. Dean's escape from media scrutiny leads him to rent Evvie's apartment for a time. And as the two become friends, they make a rule: Dean won't ask about Evvie's late husband, and Evvie won't ask about baseball. But having a listening ear in Dean, who is completely separate from Evvie's "before" life, means she might finally be ready to open up about what her relationship was like before she became a widow. And Evvie's ignorance about baseball means Dean can safely vent and maybe even figure out what's holding him back. They may be able to help the other find some version of peace, just by being there. Oh, this book! Linda Holmes's Evvie Drake Starts Over is sweet and funny and lovely. I listened to it as an audiobook while I gardened, and it was a perfect summer story. I loved Holmes’s writing and Evvie’s voice. Do you have any Bossy thoughts about this book? Obviously Evvie Drake Starts Over should be made into a movie. Click here for my review of Flying Solo, another book I loved. I'm in for whatever Linda Holmes writes next!
- Review of This Shining Life by Harriet Kline
Kline's poignant, lovely book explores a family's emotional missteps and enduring love after a painful loss, and their hard-fought resolutions and tentative steps forward. Young Ollie finds people confusing. They don't always say what they mean, and lately they're often crying. Harriet Kline's This Shining Life tracks Ollie's attempts to make sense of things after his father Rich's death from cancer; it follows his mother Ruth's adjustment to life without her free-spirited, joy-filled partner; and it tracks the grief and the resulting shifts within their close-knit extended family. Rich left small gifts to his loved ones, and Ollie becomes convinced that if he searches hard enough for meaning in these items, he'll uncover essential clues about the meaning of life and be able to understand what happened to his father. It's heartbreaking to witness various family members' attempts to do what they think is best for themselves and for others, often misreading what's needed or wanted. The examinations of mortality and of love and of living life fully are poignant and lovely, and the last ten percent of this book is so beautiful, it brought me to tears. Do you have any Bossy thoughts about this book? I received a prepublication digital copy of this book courtesy of Random House Publishing Group and NetGalley. This is Harriet Kline's first book.
- Review of Dear Emmie Blue by Lia Louis
Dear Emmie Blue is satisfying, heartwarming escapism without inspiring any irritation at too-convenient #heartwarming, #lightfiction, #fourstarbookreview
- Review of No Cure for Being Human (And Other Truths I Need to Hear) by Kate Bowler
No Cure for Being Human is beautiful, funny, heartwarming, practical, and Kate Bowler is so wise and
- Review of The Love of My Life by Rosie Walsh
In The Love of My Life, Rosie Walsh offers a twisty contemporary fiction novel and psychological thriller centered around a fascinating cast of characters, heartbreak, and hope. In Rosie Walsh's The Love of My Life, Emma is a marine biologist who's devoted to her husband Leo and their young daughter Ruby. Emma finds herself fighting aggressive lymphoma, and Leo, an obituary writer, privately copes with his pain by writing about Emma. Emma is recovering. But as Leo continues to dig into his wife's past to confirm details, he finds that the facts his beloved wife has told him don't add up. He doesn't want to upset Emma, so he does something he's never done: he goes behind her back, speaking to people from her past who can fill in the gaps. And he finds that almost everything Emma has ever told him about herself has been a lie. Walsh tells the story in two parts, alternating between chapters exploring Emma's young life (the true story) and chapters from the present (the unraveling of falsehoods). Through both timelines, Walsh slowly builds the true narrative while uncovering Emma's motivations, traumas, emotional state, and the outside forces at work, while also exploring weighty topics including mental illness and loss. The tone of this is more toward contemporary fiction, and the book offers satisfying character development, but The Love of My Life is also a psychological thriller with twists and turns. Without melodrama or a manipulative-feeling big reveal, Walsh surprised me with the real story and the reasons Emma kept her secrets. This wonderfully wrought page-turner is heartbreaking, hopeful, and masterfully crafted. Do you have any Bossy thoughts about this book? Rosie Walsh is also the author of Ghosted. For more mysteries and thrillers I've reviewed that you might like, click here.
- Review of Things You Save in a Fire by Katherine Center
#lightfiction, #heartwarming, #fourstarbookreview
- Review of The Soulmate Equation by Christina Lauren
The story is heartwarming, funny, with strong friendships, plus it's steamy and romantic at times without The heartwarming familial support isn't stereotypical in its structure, and imperfect, broken family
- Three Books I'm Reading Now, 6/8/21 Edition
The Books I'm Reading Now I'm reading what may be a perfect summer read with plenty of nostalgia; a dark, mythology-filled mystery; and an intriguingly odd collection of short stories. Which books are you reading and enjoying these days, bookworms? 01 Last Summer at the Golden Hotel by Elyssa Friedland Two families meet for the summer at their formerly sought-after resort in the Catskills, but the Weingold and Goldman families aren't as close as they used to be--and the resort itself is falling apart. Can the families come together to save their beloved sanctuary, or will the uncovering of secrets and lies, family drama, and powerful generational conflicts thwart any possible resolutions for the two clans? Is this book going to be Dirty Dancing meets The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel like I hope it will? It feels like a perfect book for summer reading. I received a prepublication digital edition of this book courtesy of NetGalley and Berkley Publishing Group. Friedland is also the author of The Floating Feldmans and other titles. 02 The Maidens by Alex Michaelides In The Maidens, the newest book by the author of The Silent Patient, to be published next week, Mariana, a group therapist coping with her own personal tragedies, becomes embroiled in trying to identify and catch a killer at her alma mater, Cambridge University. Mariana lost her husband a year ago in a holiday accident in her coastal Greek hometown, and she's still reeling. When her beloved niece Zoe calls from her Cambridge dormitory, frantic that her friend is missing, Mariana leaves her most problematic client and hops on a train to try to help. So far the male characters in this story are obnoxious, condescending, creepy, and generally problematic. Michaelides has woven Greek mythology, references to ancient ceremony, and superstition into this dark tale. I received a prepublication digital edition of this book, to published May 11, 2021, courtesy of Celadon Books and NetGalley. 03 Sarahland: Stories by Sam Cohen Cohen's debut, Sarahland: Stories, centers around characters who are mainly named Sarah. In the first story of the collection the Sarahs are college women, and Cohen takes tongue-in-cheek potshots at their various shallow, superficial behaviors and priorities--and presents disturbingly normalized patterns of sexual assault and exertions of male sexual power. In other stories, Cohen recasts Sarahs and explores various roles for women, different searches for self, and provocative circumstances and reactions. A Buffy the Vampire Slayer fan and a Bible-era trans woman are two of So far this is a weird and edgy and wonderful set of short stories.
- Review of The True Love Experiment by Christina Lauren
The True Love Experiment is a wonderful, romantic read about forbidden attraction and heartwarming vulnerability
- Review of Less (Arthur Less #1) by Andrew Sean Greer
ICYMI: This funny, wry, silly, sweet, heartbreaking story feels light on the surface but has deep meaning churning underneath. “I look at you, and you’re young. You’ll always be that way for me. But not for anyone else. Arthur, people who meet you now will never be able to imagine you young.” Arthur Less is about to turn fifty and is a novelist of limited acclaim. When his ex sends him a wedding invitation, Arthur panics. He can't attend, but he can't stay home. He decides to accept all of the random literary event invitations he's received and to put together a makeshift tour of the world, putting thousands of miles between him and his problems. Less is a surprisingly sympathetic character, and as he's using an unusual method to escape attending an ex's wedding he fumbles into figuring out his past and some of his future. Andrew Sean Greer offers a story of enduring love, loss, chance encounters, friendship, adventure, and wonderful realizations large and small. Greer describes small moments so fully, they feel like everything. I thought this was just great. Less is absurd, very funny, and a little heartbreaking--light on the surface but with plenty of meaning churning underneath. It was definitely the right book at the right time for me when I read it. I loved it. Oh, this wonderful book! Do you have any Bossy thoughts about this book? Andrew Sean Greer's sequel, Less Is Lost, is scheduled for publication this fall.
- Review of Flying Solo by Linda Holmes
sweet, funny dialogue; a complicated reunion between old flames; and a hometown return that's both heartwarming
- Review of The Girl with the Louding Voice by Abi Daré
Adunni is a tough young woman determined to have a voice and emerge from her oppressive situation, and she's wonderfully dogged, creative, and spirited. “My mama say education will give me a voice. I want more than just a voice, Ms. Tia. I want a louding voice,” I say. “I want to enter a room and people will hear me even before I open my mouth to be speaking. I want to live in this life and help many people so that when I grow old and die, I will still be living through the people I am helping.” Adunni is a young teen growing up in a rural Nigerian village where girls are often married off by age fourteen and are frequently made to stop attending school even earlier in life. She's curious, talkative, joyful, and full of song. Being thrust into a polygamous marriage with a husband twice her age--and the sense that she has been sold off by her widowed father for her dowry--isn't enough to break her. The deaths of the few people who show her love and affection slow her down but don't stop her. Being tricked into working as an unpaid, abused slave without freedoms or even time to sleep doesn't make her give up. Adunni just needs that one glimmer; a spark; a single kindness; one person who really sees her to inspire her to keep going, and against all odds she continues to find enough strength to get her through. Adunni experiences tremendous emotional, physical, familial, and societal hardships, yet she keeps her sights set on getting back into school and escaping the grim, constricting situations she's been forced into. She's a tough young woman determined to have a voice and emerge from her oppressive situation, and she's wonderfully dogged, creative, and spirited. My friend Kirstan recommended this book, and I listened to it as an audiobook, which I adored. “Who knows what else tomorrow will bring? So, I nod my head yes, because it is true, the future is always working, always busy unfolding better things, and even if it doesn’t seem so sometimes, we have hope of it.” Do you have any Bossy thoughts about this book? Abi Daré grew up in Lagos, Nigeria, and has lived in the United Kingdom for eighteen years. This is her first book, but hopefully not her last. I'd love to hear what you think about this book!
- Review of Beach Read by Emily Henry
#lightfiction, #heartwarming, #booksaboutbooks, #fourstarbookreview
- Review of The People We Keep by Allison Larkin
I did wonder at the omission of what felt like a key character who might have been an integral and heartwarming
- Review of Nothing to See Here by Kevin Wilson
This short book packs delightfully odd, satisfying, and sometimes laugh-out-loud-funny moments. When I heard its premise, I feared that this book might possibly be offbeat for the sake of being offbeat, or possibly lacking substance or characters' self-reflection, or that it might be interesting but otherwise potentially shallow. Which was rude of me, but I did wonder if the striking setup itself might be the most powerful element, with the writing potentially paling in comparison. But it was none of those things, and I just loved this. Nothing to See Here is a short book but it packs delightfully odd, satisfying, and sometimes laugh-out-loud funny punches. Kevin Wilson provides some heartbreaking disappointment about family members' emotional limitations and conditional loyalty, and I rejoiced when his characters crafted their chosen relationships into a satisfying pod that functioned like family. The story stars combustible children and the low-key, unambitious misfit who sticks with them, making them feel unequivocally safe and understood for the first time. Any Bossy thoughts about this book? Before I read this, I went with some members of my book club and other friends to hear Kevin Wilson speak at our local library foundation event. He was unassuming, charming, and quirky, so I knew I had to give this book a go. I haven't read any of his others yet, have you? This book was listed in the Greedy Reading List Six More Great Fiction Titles I Loved This Year.
- Three Books I'm Reading Now, 9/15/21 Edition
woman-centric account of events surrounding the Trojan War; and Under the Whispering Door, TJ Klune's upcoming heartwarming Whispering Door is by the author of The House in the Cerulean Sea, and here, TJ Klune offers another heartwarming
- Three Books I'm Reading Now, 9/10/21 Edition
The Books I'm Reading Now I'm reading The Guncle, Steven Rowley's sassy, heartwarming fiction about an 01 The Guncle by Steven Rowley In Steven Rowley's fun, funny, and heartwarming fiction The Guncle, aging
- Review of Norwegian by Night by Derek B. Miller
There's an unusual mix of adventure and heartwarming self-examination in this debut. #nordic, #heartwarming, #series, #fourstarbookreview
- Review of In Five Years by Rebecca Serle
#timetravel, #alternatereality, #heartwarming, #fourstarbookreview
- Review of The Unwinding of the Miracle: A Memoir of Life, Death, and Everything that Comes After
#memoir, #nonfiction, #heartwarming, #fourstarbookreview
- Review of The List of Things That Will Not Change by Rebecca Stead
#youngadult, #LGBTQ, #heartwarming, #fourstarbookreview
- Review of The Guncle by Steven Rowley
In Steven Rowley's fun, funny, and heartwarming light fiction story The Guncle, aging former sitcom star
- Three Books I'm Reading Now, 5/31/21 Edition
The Books I'm Reading Now Two of these books are largely about redemption, two focus on the twisted blessing-and-curse of technology, and all three touch on identifying some version of a new reality. Where's my Venn diagram to map out all of these intersecting themes? Which books are you reading and enjoying these days, bookworms? 01 A Beautifully Foolish Endeavor by Hank Green A Beautifully Foolish Endeavor is Hank Green's sequel to An Absolutely Remarkable Thing and the final book in his Carl saga. It features the fantastic characters from book one, and the plot picks up with a new version of the fight to save humanity from interfering extraterrestrials. Green tells his funny, poignant, tech-focused story through characters' alternating viewpoints, and it feels like April May--who died at the end of book one--may be about to reemerge. The characters' desires for reinvention and redemption are really interesting to me, as is the continued examination of the two-sided blessing and curse of social media and of technology in general. 02 A Song for the Road by Kathleen Basi Miriam lost her husband and teenage twins a year ago and, unsurprisingly, since then she hasn't been able to face any semblance of moving forward with her life. When she stumbles across her daughter's elaborate road trip plan she created for her then-soon-to-be-empty-nester parents, Miriam feels compelled to take the trip. She brings along her family members' musical instruments, envisioning a sort of musical pilgrimage, and she meets unexpected characters along the way, encounters dangerous weather, and begins to come alive again--despite her reservations and guilty feelings about breaking from her dedicated mourning. So far Basi is managing what seems like an incredible feat, as this is purely lovely and not maudlin or sappy at all despite the tragedy at the book's heart. I admit I Bossily feared that painfully sentimental tones might creep in, but in cases like this I love realizing that I'm incorrectly aiming my coldhearted prejudgment. I received a prepublication copy of this book, published May 11, 2021, courtesy of Alcove Press and NetGalley. 03 No One Is Talking about This by Patricia Lockwood No One Is Talking about This is fiction from Patricia Lockwood, the author of the memoir Priestdaddy. This book somewhat defies labeling--so far it's essentially a satire about media and society, and it's told in short snippets. In No One Is Talking about This, a social media darling undergoes an existential crisis and wonders if her thoughts are being controlled externally. She is compelled to continue trying to engage and often shock those reading her posts, and she frequently wonders what is real and what is constructed reality--and what it's all for, anyway. This feels like a book that will inspire a lot of spirited discussion and possibly passionate opinions.
- Review of Sorry I'm Late, I Didn't Want to Come: One Introvert's Year of Saying Yes by Jessica Pan
Pan is wonderfully honest, appealingly thoughtful, and often so so funny. I was so happy spending time in her point of view throughout this book. I loved it. Jessica Pan was an introvert out of a job. Her closest friends had moved away, and she found herself lonely, living in another country, and feeling too reliant on her husband for her entire social life. Although she wasn't trying to change her status from introvert to extrovert, she did want to open up to new experiences, broaden her horizons and meet new people, a few of whom she could hopefully in time call true friends. Pan decided to deliberately put herself into extremely uncomfortable social situations for a year, and she fully commits. She does improv, approaches strangers on the Tube, goes on friend dates, attends networking events, takes a vacation alone (to a destination she doesn't learn until she's at the airport), and more. She regrets her one-year plan almost instantly but feels compelled to continue her terrifying exercises. My book club is reading this book, and we were recently saying in anticipation of our upcoming discussion that Pan's concept reminded us somewhat of a book we read years ago, MWF Seeking BFF: My Yearlong Search for a New Best Friend (although that book had a premise that didn't really make sense, since the author seemed surrounded by family, friends, work friends, and didn't seem particularly lonely). Pan is earnest about and determined to see through her gutsy path, which is often horrifyingly frightening for her, frequently not at all what she bargained for, and which gradually pays off in fits and starts of personal growth that are meaningful for her. Her interviews and experiences with others who mentor her journey in different ways could have felt disruptive or jarring but didn't; they added a layer to her story that I found interesting and often revelatory. Pan is wonderfully honest, appealingly thoughtful, and often so so funny. I was so happy spending time in her point of view throughout this book. I loved it and I'd read another book by her in a second. Any Bossy thoughts on this book? Have you read this one? It was the right book at the right time for me. I'd happened to read multiple books in a row in which grim circumstances drove the plots, and this book felt like a breath of fresh air. I first mentioned this book along with The Exiles and The Comeback in the Greedy Reading List Three Books I'm Reading Now, 10/22/20 Edition.
- Review of In a Holidaze by Christina Lauren
In a Holidaze is a romantic holiday time twist with sexy interludes and a reliably happy ending. Twentysomething Mae is spending the holidays yet again with her parents' college friends and their families. She's not satisfied in her job, she's unwillingly single, she still lives with her parents--and she just kissed the wrong boy, the younger brother of her true obsession. In despair about having had a rotten holiday and realizing that future holidays at her favorite place in the world are now in jeopardy, Mae makes a plea to the universe to show her what would truly make her happy. Suddenly she's plunged back in time to begin the holiday anew and try to get things right, Groundhog Day-style. I fought a little irritation at the start with what felt like too-cute in-process inside jokes between the characters--I'd rather watch interpersonal intimacies unfold than be thrust into scenes serving as shorthand for "this is idyllic and you should love it." But I easily suspended my disbelief regarding Mae's being whisked through time, and I loved that the issues she explored about her life and how she wanted to live it were substantial, thoughtful, and interestingly complicated. The authors offer a brief but intriguing foray into faith and fate as well. I read In a Holidaze during Christmas week, and it was a romantic holiday time twist with sexy interludes and a reliably happy ending. Any Bossy thoughts about this book? I reviewed Lauren's The Unhoneymooners a couple of weeks ago. The author duo also wrote the fun and romantic Josh and Hazel's Guide to Not Dating as well as Love and Other Words and the lovely, lovely Autoboyography. I mentioned this book in the Greedy Reading List Three Books I'm Reading Now, 12/22/20 Edition.
- Six Fantastic Stand-Alone Young Adult Books
Aren't young adult books just the best? Young adult is one of my favorite genres to read for fun and to edit. The main protagonists are often figuring out the world, their place in it, and who they are and want to be. They're making mistakes and realizing where they draw their own lines in the sand. Things are big, and young people's feelings about all of it understandably vacillate between joy, dread, confusion, and wonder. I could have listed so many fantastic young adult titles here, but I picked these varied, wonderful six. Some other Bossy Bookworm Greedy Reading Lists you might like featuring young adult books: Six Royally Magical Young Adult Series, Six Magical Fairy Tales Grown-Ups Will Love, and Six Dystopian and Post-Apocalyptic Novels. You can search to find alllll of my young adult posts on this site--some are part of a series, others stand on their own--by going to the Bossy Book Reviews part of the site menu and then to Search by Category, then choosing Young Adult. What are your favorite young adult books that make you delight in feeling all the feelings? 01 Believarexic by J.J. Johnson I guess I should preface this glowing review by noting that I worked on this book before it was published. (And I had an uncharacteristically tough time noting any editorial issues because I was so captivated by the story and kept having to go back to force myself to read it with an editor's eye.) I also have a t-shirt with this book title on it. And I also adore the author. So why the Believarexic obsession? In Johnson's book, fifteen-year-old Jennifer struggles with an eating disorder and enters a residential treatment program to try to heal physically and emotionally. The center and its methods aren't what she'd imagined, and she must cope with more than she could have predicted, including accusations, stressors, confusion, the challenges and joys of various interpersonal relations, physical and emotional discomfort, and important realizations that come about in unexpected ways. Johnson transports you to her late 1980s teenage bubble and allows you to live through her sharply life-changing experiences alongside her. Her young voice is honest and lovely and funny and powerful. I wanted to abandon everything to tear through this book. Johnson also wrote the wonderful books The Theory of Everything and This Girl Is Different. 02 A Very Large Expanse of Sea by Tahereh Mafi It's been a year since the events of 9/11, and Shirin, a sixteen-year-old Muslim girl who lives in the United States, has been living with the uncomfortable, sometimes frightening fallout. She's judged and suspected everywhere she goes because of the way she looks. Shirin has learned to brace herself against prejudice because she wears a hijab, or because of her religion. She sticks with her brother, coping with her stress by break-dancing (this part is, of course, glorious) with her brother and focusing on music. But then Ocean James comes along. It's like Ocean is living in another world from Shirin, but he sees her, really sees her, and she finds herself wanting to let someone into her own world for the first time in a long time. Oh, I loved this book! Mafi provides such excruciating teen angst and an unfolding first love with rich layers of diversity--plus prejudice, fear, and ignorance that complicates everything. The ending felt rushed, but my love for this book outweighs any disappointment about the ending by a mile. 03 All the Bright Places by Jennifer Niven Violet is still reeling from her sister's death. She's eager to graduate from high school and escape her small Indiana town, but the days are interminably long. Theodore Finch considers his balance between life and death every day, weighing the factors that entice him to keep going and those that tempt him to stop. When Violet and Theodore encounter each other, they find that they can finally let down their guards, showing each other the good, the bad, and the ugly parts of themselves. Could what's between them even be love? Or are they simply linked by their pain and their honesty--and is that bond enough to bring them peace? In All the Bright Places, Niven offers a lovely, wonderfully odd, sometimes sad story, with vivid characters, hope, devastating loss, and love. (I see from the Netflix logo on the cover that this is a movie now! Have you seen it? Any thoughts?) 04 Far from the Tree by Robin Benway In Far from the Tree, Benway examines the pain of a young woman’s pregnancy and her permanently changed life; an emotionally barricaded, lifelong foster child’s involuntary and ongoing compulsion to sabotage familial stability; and the ambivalent search for a parent who left her children behind without any answers or history to help anchor them in the world. Some elements in Far From the Tree felt too unrealistically easy (although I admit that cruising along with the story made me happy at the same time): the lack of conflicts (or any real missteps) and the instant camaraderie between the stranger-siblings, the full parental acceptance of teen pregnancy, the maturity of the pregnant teen herself on all fronts, and my most nitpicky issue, which was admittedly tiny yet pulled me out of the story each time it occurred: the just-met siblings’ jarring (to me) use of nicknames otherwise only used by their intimate people. I know they yearned for connections with each other, but this didn't seem to fit. I loved the various nerdy parents the most. And I realize that I am therefore old. The premise, the discovery of family, the exploration of what "family" even means--I loved all of these aspects of Benway's novel. 05 Goodbye Days by Jeff Zentner Carver's life was rocked after he sent a text to his three best friends friends moments before the car they were in crashed, killing them all. Now everyone--Eli's angry twin sister with her attempts to freeze out Carver at school; Mars's father with his push for a criminal investigation-- seems to be blaming Carver for his beloved friends' deaths. But Carter is taking self-loathing to another level all by himself. Can a new therapist; an unlikely, grieving girlfriend; and Blake's grandmother help Carver come to terms with what's happened and help him find a way to move forward? In Goodbye Days, we get what feels like a genuine peek into the boys’ friendship via their really funny banter and their endearingly oddball, silly, spot-on, laid-bare-honest train-of-thought discussions, as well as through their plausible, Carver-imagined exchanges. I adored all of this. This isn’t the point, but I admit that I was distracted by no one even temporarily slinging some of the immense amount of potential blame toward the person who answers a text while driving rather the person that sent it. I expected this to be touched on, if only in the heat of the moment. When wild and awful, heartbreaking thoughts are flying after a tragedy, and when some people are focused on settling responsibility (and while Carver is being vilified), this felt like something that might come up. Carver’s plunge into the penance he feels he needs to experience, especially with Mars’s dad, slayed me. Goodbye Days is so very very sad and so very very funny. This is a gem from Zentner, who also wrote The Serpent King and Rayne and Delilah's Midnite Matinee. His book In the Wild Light, a book about best friends set in Appalachia, will be published in August. 06 Driving by Starlight by Anat Deracine Leena and Mishie are sixteen-year-olds living in Saudi Arabia. They listen to forbidden music, secretly wear Western clothing, and otherwise rebel in small ways against the Saudi cultural police. Driving by Starlight is a story about family, independence, gender inequality, and a youthful yearning for freedom. I loved the strong female protagonists and their fire and grit and growth. Both of the more modern-day storylines were wrapped up neatly with a bow. I would have been in favor of having the romantic element being tied up without the Eve aspect, or having neither of them tied up at all. The “end of movie”-type closure for both felt too convenient, and even a little dismissive of the complexities of the time and of the specific difficulties of the characters' situations. However, I love love loved this book. Driving by Starlight is a deep, lovely, meaningful story with a vivid Saudi Arabian setting and conflicts related to religion, friendship, gender, and family. With true friendship, loyalty, and fantastic, clever, clever ladies overcoming obstacles in their paths.
- Review of This Is All He Asks of You by Anne Egseth
#comingofage, #heartwarming, #faith, #nordic, #fourstarbookreview
- Review of What You Wish For by Katherine Center
#heartwarming, #lightfiction, #librarian, #Texas, #threestarbookreview
- Review of When We Were Vikings by Andrew David MacDonald
#comingofage, #siblings, #uniquePOV, #Vikings, #heartwarming, #fourstarbookreview
- Review of Here For It: Or, How to Save Your Soul in America by R. Eric Thomas
Here For It is refreshing and playful yet thoughtful. I loved spending time with the uproariously funny Thomas. In Here for It: Or, How to Save Your Soul in America, R. Eric Thomas, the creator of Elle's sassy and smart daily column "Eric Reads the News," shares his thoughts, experiences, and reflections about life and the world around us with honesty and humor. In essays that are sometimes heartbreaking, often inspiring, and that frequently made me laugh out loud, Thomas explores his sheltered youth, his growing realizations that he was different than most people he knew, his shame and fear about living as his authentic self, and his meandering path toward his current life circumstances, in which he is living as he once only dreamed: he is joyfully challenged professionally, he is unapologetically his own unique self, he is exploring his complicated relationship with religion, and he deeply loves and is loved by his (pastor) husband. I listened to this as an audiobook, and I adored hearing Thomas's voice take me through his essays. His voice and delivery are fabulous. Here For It is refreshing and playful yet thoughtful. I loved spending time with the uproariously funny Thomas as he recounts how he's navigated situations large and small in his life. Do you have any Bossy thoughts about this book? Thomas is also a host of The Moth storytelling podcast in D.C. and Philadelphia--and he certainly knows how to craft a compelling and full story out of a momentous moment. I mentioned this book (along with the new mystery The Wife Upstairs by Rachel Hawkins and the young adult book I'm reading with my book club for January, Today Tonight Tomorrow by Rachel Lynn Solomon) in my first Greedy Reading List of the year, Three Books I'm Reading Now, 1/1/21 Edition. My friend Katherine recommended this book to me last spring and despite how long it took me to get to it, I'm so glad she did!
- Three Wackily Different Books I'm Reading Right Now
#lightfiction, #heartwarming 02 Network Effect: A Murderbot Novel Boy oh boy, this fifth book in the
- Six Lighter Fiction Stories for Great Escapism
It all makes for a heartwarming read in which everyone is trying to love and live and be happy.
- Three Wackily Different Books I'm Reading Right Now, 9/3/20 Edition
#lightfiction, #heartwarming, #booksaboutbooks 03 A Good Girl's Guide to Murder It's been years since
- Six More Great Fiction Titles I Loved This Year
Heartwarming or quirky fiction are the types of books that have really been fitting the bill for me lately
- Review of Autoboyography by Christina Lauren
#youngadult, #LGBTQ, #heartwarming, #fivestarbookreview, #autoboyography
- Review of Pony Confidential by Christina Lynch
It's nominally a mystery, but it's mainly a heartwarming story about determination and honoring old loyalties a cute--at times a little too cute for my taste--tale that always seemed sure to be headed toward a heartwarming
- Six Captivating Nordic Stories
There's an unusual mix of adventure and heartwarming self-examination in this debut. #nordic, #heartwarming, #series, #fourstarbookreview 05 We, the Drowned I own this book.
- My Six Favorite Summer 2020 Reads
#comingofage, #heartwarming, #faith, #nordic, #fourstarbookreview What have been your favorite books
- Review of A Tempest of Tea (Blood and Tea #1) by Hafsah Faizal
in Faizal's Blood and Tea series offers intriguing secrets, a swirling mystery, terrible betrayal, heartwarming A Tempest of Tea layers heartwarming found family, heartbreaking emotional barriers, and reluctant vulnerability
- June Wrap-Up: My Favorite Reads of the Month
The men develop a tender, heartwarming friendship separate from class, background, intellect, and societal journey, inspired to travel by a sense that John was in danger--the resolution feels heartbreaking, heartwarming The story is a fascinating study of relationships, with heartwarming moments and heartbreaking developments In a fascinating, heartwarming, lovely account, Tomlinson spends three years traveling dog shows across Dogland is often fun, intriguing in its peeks behind the scenes, and heartwarming in the deep dog-human
- Review of Betting on You by Lynn Painter
Lynn Painter delivers funny, charming banter and an opposites-attract tension in this heartwarming rom-com friendship, plausible missteps that keep the couple apart, heart-wrenching moments of vulnerability, and heartwarming
- Review of The Island of Missing Trees by Elif Shafak
island community while illustrating the interconnectedness of grief, love, community, and nature in this heartwarming The ending section is lovely, with heartwarming promise, hope, resolution, and a fig-tree-related revelation
- Six Riveting Time-Travel Escapes
#timetravel, #alternatereality, #heartwarming, #fourstarbookreview 04 The Ten Thousand Doors of January
- Review of Clear by Carys Davies
The men develop a tender, heartwarming friendship separate from class, background, intellect, and societal journey, inspired to travel by a sense that John was in danger--the resolution feels heartbreaking, heartwarming
- Review of My Friends by Fredrik Backman
The current-day storyline is largely focused upon a clumsy, heartwarming, lovely coming-together of opposites I enjoy heartwarming, inexplicable connections and spot-on intuition, but in My Friends , overly convenient
- Six Illuminating Memoirs I've Read This Year
#memoir, #nonfiction, #heartwarming, #fourstarbookreview, #theunwindingofthemiracle 04 Maybe You Should
- May Wrap-Up: My Favorite Reads of the Month
island community while illustrating the interconnectedness of grief, love, community, and nature in this heartwarming The ending section is lovely, with heartwarming promise, hope, resolution, and a fig-tree-related revelation Lynn Painter Lynn Painter delivers funny, charming banter and an opposites-attract tension in this heartwarming friendship, plausible missteps that keep the couple apart, heart-wrenching moments of vulnerability, and heartwarming bonds deeper than either could have imagined; the love story between the bridge and Gore is strange, heartwarming
- December Wrap-Up: My Favorite Reads of the Month
beyond; a Norse-inspired fantasy saga; a fun young adult, queer, medieval adventure romance; and a heartwarming check out Not for the Faint of Heart . 06 We'll Prescribe You a Cat by Syou Ishida Ishida's offbeat, heartwarming My book club will be discussing this heartwarming novel next year. If you're looking for more heartwarming stories, you might like my Bossy reviews of books like these
- Review of The Wedding People by Alison Espach
like suicidal thoughts, grief, and loneliness with funny, quirky, poignant moments in this charming, heartwarming
- Review of In Memoriam by Alice Winn
pointless-seeming pushing onward toward mutual destruction--all of this serves as a backdrop for a heartwarming














































