Michelle



                               

5M4B disclosure

The Repeat YearOlive Watson did not have a good 2011.  She managed to break up with her boyfriend Phil whom she loved, be embittered at her mother’s remarriage, lose connection with her best friend since college, have affairs to forget, and more.  When she wakes up in 2012 and finds herself in bed with someone she doesn’t remember leaving the New Year’s party with, she panics.  When she discovers that it is her ex-boyfriend who had broken up with her the previous February, she panics even more.  Except Phil is happy to see her because in his mind, they never broke up and 2011 has only just started.

Thus begins, The Repeat Year, in which Olive has to somehow figure out how and why she is repeating 2011 and – she hopes – not repeat it again.  I’m fascinated by this concept created by author Andrea Lochen.  Nothing is clear for Olive.  Is there something she’s supposed to do?  Some action she’s supposed to take?  Some change she needs to make?  Her main goal is to not lose her boyfriend Phil, and she makes changes to herself to do her best to ensure he doesn’t break up with her.  However, part of the reason he’d broken up with her in the first place was because she had cheated on him that previous February when they’d been “on a break” and she struggles throughout the book with whether she’s lying to him by not telling him about what happened in her previous 2011 and deciding that there’s no way to tell him and she has to just make it up to him somehow.

Olive does run into a family friend, Sherri Witan, who is also someone who is repeating a year and has repeated years multiple times in the past.  You expect Sherri to be a mentor for Olive, but she really isn’t.  Instead, she’s battling cancer on her own and hiding out from the world for the most part.  As much as Olive vows to be there for her, she is a typical young woman who has other priorities and “forgets” her promise – frequently.

While Olive has good intentions, she still seems fairly shallow and selfish to me.  She isn’t making changes to be a better person or trying to make other people’s lives better, she’s doing it to ensure she doesn’t repeat a year.  And she doesn’t always do the best job of it.  She far more gracefully accepts her mother’s remarriage – although her brother turns into the obnoxious twit in her place –  which is touching to watch as it seems like Olive is truly growing there.

With Olive’s job as an intensive care nurse, there is plenty about her life that is stressful, and watching patients die – again – and console their family members – again – is a challenge that I wouldn’t want anyone to have to face.  Olive eventually breaks under the pressure and confesses about her repeat year to her best friend and roommate Kerrigan who doesn’t believe her at first but later does.  Relieved to have a confidant, Olive shares so much with Kerrigan, though perhaps too much, as Kerrigan is a mostly solid friend who still makes some poor decisions.

My favorite characters in the book were actually Kerrigan (through 90% of it) and Olive’s mom Kathy.  Kerrigan is a hoot and a half, especially when you hear about her and Olive’s history together.  Kathy, on the other hand, is the kind of mom I would want.  She’s there and loving and just so approachable.  There’s something about her that just tugs at my heartstrings.

The book, of course, essentially ends once you find out if Olive “successfully” navigated her repeat year and the plenty of surprises that were thrown her way.  There were bits and pieces of the book that I didn’t like, and I found myself not rooting for Olive as much as I wanted to because she seemed so shallow and selfish to me, but the concept is fascinating, and it was a highly entertaining book that I finished quickly.  Definitely keep it in your beach tote this summer, a fitting addition to the BookSparks Summer Reading Challenge.

We have a copy to give away to one of you! Just leave a comment and you’ll be entered to win (U.S. only).  We’ll announce the winner in our May 29 giveaway column.

Written by Michelle who has a few years she would love to be able to redo.  Except she balks at the potential for losing the happiness she has now.  She shares what makes her happy – and what doesn’t – on her blog Honest & Truly! or follow along with her on Twitter where she is also @HonestAndTruly.



                               

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A Case of Redemption

A Case of RedemptionDan Sorenson hasn’t quite hit rock bottom yet in A Case of Redemption by Adam Mitzner, but he’s pretty low.  He was a high profile partner in a Manhattan law firm and had just won an acquittal in a huge case when his wife and six year old daughter were killed by a drunk driver.  He resigned his partnership and spent the next eighteen months doing little other than drinking Scotch.

After attending a Christmas party he was guilted into attending by his wife’s best friends, he receives a call the next morning from another attorney who had apparently convinced him to take on a high profile murder case.

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Choke Point by Ridley Pearson

Choke PointChoke Point by Ridley Pearson (yes, the same Ridley Pearson who wrote the Kingdom Keepers books that Mister Man so loves) is a Risk Agent novel, featuring freelance operatives John Knox and Grace Chu.  It is the second novel in the series, following The Risk Agent.  Both novels feature the same main characters who have vastly different strengths that play off each other well.

The novel is a suspense and spy type thriller, with a lot of action and the expected twists and turns, with periodic violence and sex, although nothing graphic.  It takes place in Amsterdam where a journalist has accidentally discovered a sweatshop and published stories about it.

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Ultimate Nachos

Ultimate-Nachos_cover_11I love snack foods.  I am one of the people who frequently goes to a restaurant and orders appetizers for dinner.  What can I say, tapas is my thing.  And Ultimate Nachos: From Nachos and Guacamole to Salsas and Cocktails by Lee Frank and Rachel Anderson only feeds my obsession.  Frank and Anderson are behind Nachos NY, a blog dedicated to finding the best nachos in New York and more.

The book takes everything you think you know about nachos and turns it on its head.  I abhor the “pasteurized cheese food product” that is placed upon chips at ballparks and more and then called nachos, but Anderson and Frank take it well beyond that.

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Take, Burn, or Destroy

Take Burn or DestroyIt took awhile for me to get into Take, Burn, or Destroy by S. Thomas Russell.  I was looking forward to the novel set in 1794 that features Captain Charles Hayden aboard the HMS Themis out on orders from the British government to find and destroy a French frigate.  The story has amazing premise, but I slogged through the first six chapters and over 100 pages as it detailed the ship sailing through fog for three days trying to elude two French frigates tracking it.

The chapters were long, and it seemed to me that not much happened.  The boats played a very slow game of cat and mouse, Captain Hayden bemoaned what had happened to drive his love away from him, and that was about it.

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The Magician’s Tower

The Magician's TowerIn the second installment of the Oona Crate Mystery series, Oona is back to being the Wizard’s apprentice while still running The Dark Street Detective Agency, although with few cases, and none meaningful, in the three months she’s been open.  The Magician’s Tower instead presents Oona with a true challenge (Read my review of the first, The Wizard of Dark Street, here).

This second novel in the series by Shawn Thomas Odyssey focuses on a once every five years tournament held on Dark Street, a six mile stretch of road that keep the land of Faerie from the land of Man.

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The Wizard of Dark Street (Oona Crate Mystery series)

The Wizard of Dark StreetOona Crate is a twelve year old natural magician, definitely unusual even for so unique a place as Dark Street where she serves as the Wizard’s apprentice in The Wizard of Dark Street by Shawn Thomas Odyssey.  Dark Street is a six mile long street between the world of Faerie and the World of Man, separated from one by Glass Gates and from the other by the Iron Gates that open each night at midnight for just one minute in New York City.

Oona, however, detests magic and is in the process of resigning from her apprenticeship to her uncle, wishing to focus instead on the detective agency she wishes to open.

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New Lands, Chronicles of Egg Series

New LandsI wrote last month about the first book in the Chronicles of Egg series, Deadweather and Sunrise, by Geoff Rodkey.  Deadweather and Sunrise is now available in paperback, and better yet, the next installment of the series is out as of May 2.  New Lands picks up right where Deadweather and Sunrise left off with Egg and Guts on their way to Pella Nona where Natives (yes, capitalized) live who can hopefully translate the map that Egg now has memorized after destroying the original wall map in the first book.

Needless to say, this is not one of the series where each book stands on its own.

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Evidence Of Life

evidence-of-life-225There are some books that are gripping, even as they are sad and filled with the greatest fears a parent can face.  Evidence of Life by Barbara Taylor Sissel takes those fears and magnifies them with suspense and grief beyond what most people could bear.  Abby is your normal mother of two – one in college and one sixteen year old – married to a man who provides for them comfortably.

When Nick goes camping with their daughter Lindsay, leaving Jake behind because he has studying to do for finals, Abby is a little reluctant as she’s heard that bad weather is coming, but Nick brushes her off.

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Dangerous Refuge

Dangerous RefugeWhen Shaye Townsend discovers the body of Lorne Davis at his ranch, she’s more than just saddened.  She’s crushed that she’ll never get to make up for her boss Kimberli’s mistake with a contract to give the ranch to the Ranch Conservancy where she works.  The last she’d heard from Lorne Davis, prior to the opening of Dangerous Refuge by Elizabeth Lowell, was him cursing her duplicity.

Tanner Davis is Lorne’s nephew and has come to Refuge, Nevada to execute his uncle’s estate.  They’d been estranged for decades, since his father left the ranch when Tanner wasn’t out of high school.

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Lost In Suburbia {Review and Giveaway}

Lost in SuburbiaI’ve read the humor column of Lost in Suburbia: How I Got Pregnant, Lost Myself, and Got My Cool Back in the New Jersey Suburbs author Tracy Beckerman for a long time.  She’s a hoot to read and a hoot to talk to in person.  The (extended) title of the book pretty much sums up the content, and it’s told in quick bites with vivid pictures that frequently made me giggle while reading.

I adore the prologue, in which Tracy is pulled over for making an illegal left turn out of the school with her three year old in the back… while wearing her ducky bathrobe.

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And Then She Fell

I love it when I find an author who writes books I enjoy reading and is a prolific author, especially when the books are light reads.  Stephanie Laurens has been a favorite of mine since I found her when scanning through available titles on my online library.  Stephanie has created an entire population in London of heroes and heroines who find their true loves in the early 1800s in London.  And Then She Fell is the latest book following the Cynster clan where Henrietta finds her hero.

So yes, this is a romance novel.  And yes, I enjoy reading it.

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