Wednesday, September 17, 2025

Goodbye, Vitamin by Rachel Khong

Goodbye, Vitamin by Rachel Khong

This book gave me Shannon Olson and Melissa Bank vibes. Those books that are ambling thoughts, not a truly cohesive narrative, no definite ending, but you're so glad to be along for the ride. This book was especially poignant, with strong emotions relating to family, relationships, aging parents, and just being human.

One of my favorite quotes was:
You had the feeling that all the thoughts were in a box covered in tape, and the trouble was you didn't have the proper tools to access them---no scissors and no knife---and it was a lot of trouble---every day it was new trouble---trying to find the end of the tape.
Followed by...
...and here you were, now, unable to open a box that had been taped shut, a box belonging to you.

This fascinated me - what a great way to think of memory issues. I'm at that age where my parents are aging, and my friends' parents are aging, and we're talking about it, and I'm seeing different things in different relationships, and this book just put it all out there in a way that made me feel like I was reading a friend's journal. I'm glad it came onto my radar and will most likely read it again.

Monday, September 15, 2025

A Good Girl's Guide to Murder by Holly Jackson


A Good Girl's Guide to Murder by Holly Jackson. Going in, this one felt too familiar, like maybe I had read it and DNF before? But I couldn’t find proof of that, so I figured it just seemed similar to other YA true crime/cold case/podcast type books. I stuck with it and got completely obsessed. I thought one of the murderers was incredibly obvious and was surprised they weren’t a suspect all along, but the other took me by surprise. The ending was perfect and definitely made me eager to read the rest of the series.

Good Girl, Bad Blood by Holly Jackson. Second books usually feel like a placeholder between the first and third of a trilogy but this one held its own. I thought it was a really good mystery and I love how it pulled in some details from the first book that hadn’t even registered for me. For a teenager solving crimes the police can’t (or won’t), I feel like this is realistically written, especially considering emotions Pip feels after all she’s been through.

As Good As Dead by Holly Jackson. I thought this was a really satisfying end. The first third or even half maybe was VERY repetitive with what Pip was thinking and feeling regarding her trauma. I get that what happened is major and will change a person but for the sake of fiction, I think it could have been cut and handled better. It felt like Jackson was trying to meet word count with those sections. However, how Pip evolved feels really natural and I think the ending was just right.

The show was a slog for me to get through. I'll be honest and say movies are really hard for me to focus on. I usually wander away, either physically or mentally, about 30 minutes in. But shows, somehow, are easier for me to focus on. That wasn't the case here, though. Maybe because I'd already read the book and really enjoyed it, so I knew the story and the suspense didn't work on me?

Also, while I thought all the actors were just-right picks for the characters, Pip seemed a bit young in her actions on the show. In many scenes, it seemed like she was just bumbling along, stumbling upon things rather than following clues and leads like she did in the book.