The Business Trip by Jessie Garcia. Interesting premise and kept me turning pages. The twist wasn’t that shocking, but I also didn’t expect it. It almost seemed a bit over the top, but overall I think it worked.
Atmosphere by Taylor Jenkins Reid. I started reading this one in the library as soon as my hold came in and finished it the next day. Full review here.
Not Quite Dead Yet by Holly Jackson. Interesting premise but not my favorite of Jackson’s so far. I feel like the sentence structure got really repetitive and left me skimming a bit because everything felt too in Jet’s head and the thoughts were redundant. Full review here.
Five Survive by Holly Jackson. I think A Good Girl's Guide to Murder might be it for me re: Holly Jackson because I wasn’t impressed by Not Quite Dead Yet or Five Survive. I like the premise of both, and if they were each about 200 pages max, I think they’d be amazing. Full review here.
Woman on the Verge by Kim Hooper. This book had me hooked from the beginning. I love Hooper’s writing style. I picked up on two of the POVs fairly quickly and loved how that worked out. Once the diary came into play, I spent a portion of the book 90% sure Elijah and Nicole were half-siblings. His mom was a feminist professor, her mom left to pursue education… I was actually really interested in how that would play out, so the true resolution was a letdown. It felt like a cop out, like it was all just a dream. I don't think the real cause and "solution" were handled very realistically either. Overall, the writing made this book stand out to me. The way the author addresses caring for aging and dying parents, grief, mothering, mothering a husband, etc. It was all so spot-on and made me feel really understood. I’ll seek out more from her.
The Dime Museum by Joyce Hinnefeld. The Dime Museum is one of those rare collections that somehow manages to feel both expansive and deeply intimate. Each story stands beautifully on its own, yet as the book unfolds, you realize you’re also being drawn into something much larger: an intricate mosaic of intersecting lives. Read the full review here.
The Woman in Cabin 10 by Ruth Ware. Re-read this because I wanted it fresh on my mind as I read the second Lo Blacklock book. It wasn’t as bad as I had started thinking of it over the years (lumping it in with The Girl on the Train) but it didn’t stand out as very interesting, thrilling, or suspenseful to me on a re-read, either.
The Woman in Suite 11 by Ruth Ware. This was better than Cabin 10 in my opinion, but it took about ½ the book to make me think so. The beginning was really slow and I was worried it would just be a strange re-hashing of the first book because the same characters popped back up. Even the overall storyline seemed really similar, but since it focused on the same woman, I guess that can be excused. I wouldn’t re-read it, and I wouldn’t read a third Lo Blacklock book, but it was probably a satisfactory sequel for those who wanted it.
Great Big Beautiful Life by Emily Henry. I’m not a romance reader but I’ve appreciated the escape of Emily Henry books, so I figured I’d read this one and see what it was about. But oh my Taylor Jenkins Reid!! What was this??? Full review here.
The Ghostwriter by Julie Clark. I’ve read three other Julie Clark books and loved them and, as a ghostwriter myself, I was really looking forward to this one. Unfortunately, the best part about it was the design on the page edges. The story was boring and never grabbed me, so it seemed to slog through. The twists were somewhat revealed through other POVs before they had a chance to make a big impact, so the whole book felt rather dull to me. However, one I didn’t like compared to three I really did… I’ll definitely give her next book a chance and hope for the best.
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