I don’t remember adding this to my waiting-list-queue this summer and I didn’t remember what it was about when I checked it out from the library. But, I really enjoyed it so, good job, Past Kate on book selection!
Casey Fletcher is a character actor with two famous parents, a recently deceased husband, and a life made for tabloid fodder. Following an incident where she’s caught toasting the paparazzi with a double manhattan and getting fired from the play she is in, her mother banishes her to the family vacation home on Lake Green in Vermont. This is the worst place for her to be banished to alone as it is where her beloved husband was found dead a little more than a year before. One morning after arriving, she notices something in the lake and realizes she’s seeing someone drown. She rescues former supermodel/current philanthropist Katherine Royce. Katherine and her husband tech bro husband Tom have recently bought the house across the lake. Everything gets weirder and spookier from there.
This novel was part Rear Window, part ghost story, and part murder mystery in the best way. There were mysteries to solve and unexpected twists. This was a really entertaining novel. If you like unreliable narrators, not being sure whose side you should be on, and satisfying twists, I’d say give this a go.
This was so good I can’t believe it’s taken me almost a whole month to write this review.
Kara moves home to her uncle’s to help him run his Mystery Museum while he recovers from surgery and she decides what her life looks like post-divorce. One day in the museum, a customer tells her there’s a hole in a wall. She goes to investigate and discovers a mysterious hallway that could not actually be there. It physically makes no sense. She discovers the hole is a portal to other realities and meets ravenous creatures who appear to hear thoughts.
This novel was consuming. It was scary and thrilling and I needed to know what happened next. I liked the main characters and the relationships in the book and I devoured it in a day. Absolutely worth the read.
Since last summer, I have been having trouble starting things. This happened with books. It happened with music. It happened with TV shows. I ended up rewatching and relistening to the same things. My spotify wrapped podcast list is a monument to the harrowing amount of minutes of true crime and politics adjacent series’ with back catalogues I binged in the back half of the year.
I was hoping, when I started the new year by completing a book in a day that things were turning around. But since then, I’ve checked three things out of the library that expired before I made progress in them.
When the last of them expired, I looked at my waiting list queue and I made a decision. I’m only going to check out one thing at a time and I’m going to try and make a habit of listening to audiobooks when I cook. So, we’ll see if that is any help to getting me out of this slump.
Man, I really let the team down on reviews this year. It wasn’t that I wasn’t reading. It was that I felt like I forgot I’d read something two seconds after I read it. But that’s also not true, because I definitely had favorites this year that I still think about. Anyway, it’s been a busy, distracted year but here are 5 things I read and loved.
1. Highly Suspicious and Unfairly Cute by Talia Hibbert
This book was so great. The leads are high school students trying their best to secure a prestigious scholarship through a leadership program that involves being outdoors and being self-reliant. The characters were so likable that I just wanted them to succeed and I love it when I get to cheer characters on. The plot complications were good, the romance was good, the resolution was lovely.
2. Lone Women by Victor Lavalle
Set in the beginning of the Nineteen hundreds, the main character leaves her home in tragic circumstances and buys a claim in Montana. She’s hoping to disappear and settle someplace out in the wilderness where no one will ever discover her family’s terrible secret. You know what happens next, right? The story was compelling and I couldn’t put it down. There’s mystery, there’s sisterhood, there’s adventure, what more could you want in a book?
3. What Moves the Dead by T. Kingfisher
This novel is a retelling of the Fall of the House of Usher. The main character Alex Easton rushes to the Usher home when they hear a childhood friend has fallen ill and is dying. The tale spirals out from there. It is creepy and Alex Easton is an excellent narrator. I loved every stinking minute of this novel.
4. Halo-halo and Homicide by Mia P. Manansala
This is the second book in a series and I also read and loved the first book this year. The main character Lila is settling in to life back home. She returned in the first novel following a break up and now she’s decided to stay. These are cozy mysteries and they are great. There is enough intrigue to keep you interested and wanting to know more but nothing gory that might keep you up at night. Oh, and Lila is a pastry chef and is constantly putting a Filipino-American spin on classics and everything sounds so good. Mia P. Manansala has recipes from the novels on her website which is wonderful. I made her Lila’s ube crinkles and they were a hit at three different functions.
5. The Undertow by Jeff Sharlet
Part travelogue/messy reckoning with the fractured political landscape in post-2020 America, this book of essays follows a cross-country journey Sharlet took starting in the hometown of Ashli Babbitt, who was killed on January 6th at rhetorical Capitol. This was an interesting meditation on perspective, distrust, and social division. It left me with questions In still considering.
Man, I really let the team down on reviews this year. It wasn’t that I wasn’t reading. It was that I felt like I forgot I’d read something two seconds after I read it. But that’s also not true, because I definitely had favorites this year that I still think about. Anyway, it’s been a busy, distracted year but here are 5 things I read and loved.
1. Highly Suspicious and Unfairly Cute by Talia Hibbert
This book was so great. The leads are high school students trying their best to secure a prestigious scholarship through a leadership program that involves being outdoors and being self-reliant. The characters were so likable that I just wanted them to succeed and I love it when I get to cheer characters on. The plot complications were good, the romance was good, the resolution was lovely.
2. Lone Women by Victor Lavalle
Set in the beginning of the Nineteen hundreds, the main character leaves her home in tragic circumstances and buys a claim in Montana. She’s hoping to disappear and settle someplace out in the wilderness where no one will ever discover her family’s terrible secret. You know what happens next, right? The story was compelling and I couldn’t put it down. There’s mystery, there’s sisterhood, there’s adventure, what more could you want in a book?
3. What Moves the Dead by T. Kingfisher
This novel is a retelling of the Fall of the House of Usher. The main character Alex Easton rushes to the Usher home when they hear a childhood friend has fallen ill and is dying. The tale spirals out from there. It is creepy and Alex Easton is an excellent narrator. I loved every stinking minute of this novel.
4. Halo-halo and Homicide by Mia P. Manansala
This is the second book in a series and I also read and loved the first book this year. The main character Lila is settling in to life back home. She returned in the first novel following a break up and now she’s decided to stay. These are cozy mysteries and they are great. There is enough intrigue to keep you interested and wanting to know more but nothing gory that might keep you up at night. Oh, and Lila is a pastry chef and is constantly putting a Filipino-American spin on classics and everything sounds so good. Mia P. Manansala has recipes from the novels on her website which is wonderful. I made her Lila’s ube crinkles and they were a hit at three different functions.
5. The Undertow by Jeff Sharlet
Part travelogue/messy reckoning with the fractured political landscape in post-2020 America, this book of essays follows a cross-country journey Sharlet took starting in the hometown of Ashli Babbitt, who was killed on January 6th at rhetorical Capitol. This was an interesting meditation on perspective, distrust, and social division. It left me with questions In still considering.
I watched a Ryan La Sala instagram takeover and immediately put myself on the waiting list for this without knowing anything about it. The vibes just seemed right, like this is going to be the perfect first book of Fall (even though it is set at a summer camp).