Friday, September 19, 2025

The Westing Game by Ellen Raskin

The Westing Game by Ellen Raskin

This was recommended to me (by Josh Denslow - read Magic Can't Save Us!) after I reviewed the Winston Breen series, which involves figuring out puzzles to solve a larger mystery.

I liked the layers of mystery to this book: who was the “wrong” person, who was Barney Northrup really, who was the murderer, then the other mysteries that came up throughout the story.

The storytelling style definitely seems dated, but in a good way. It made me think of From the Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler, which is one of my favorite children’s mysteries. 

It was a little difficult for me to keep all the characters and backstories straight, so I sometimes had to flip back and forth to feel like I was keeping up and could try to solve the mystery along with the heirs. I think the flash forwards at the end were pretty cool, showing how things turned out for everyone involved. 

The best part is that my son is currently reading it in school so we can talk about it and I can test my own knowledge of the book with his quizzes, ha!

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.