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Month: May 2021

Firekeeper’s Daughter by Angeline Boulley

Firekeeper’s Daughter by Angeline Boulley

Firekeeper’s Daughter is an impressive debut from Angeline Boulley that I highly recommend. It is classified as YA, but aside from the 18-year-old protagonist, it reads like an adult novel. There is no magic, no supernatural creatures, no “chosen one” trope and certainly no love triangles. Firekeeper’s Daughter is very much grounded in the real world and in real-life situations and is a mystery/crime thriller rather than a fantasy novel.

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The Leavers by Lisa Ko

The Leavers by Lisa Ko

The Leavers is an interesting and compelling novel about living as an undocumented Chinese immigrant in America and about being caught between two cultural identities.

It is about Deming Guo and his mother, Polly, who is the undocumented Chinese immigrant. Deming was born in New York City, but his mother sent him to live with his grandfather in China when he was about a year old because she could not afford to work and take care of him at the same time. His grandfather dies when he is five, so he ends up back in New York, reunited with his mother. Deming has a close relationship with his mother; they live in a small apartment with Polly’s boyfriend, Leon, and Leon’s sister and her son, Michael, who becomes Deming’s best friend.

One day when Deming is eleven, his mother goes to work as usual at a nail salon, but never comes home. No one knows what has happened to Polly, not even Leon. Deming spends the next ten years of his life wondering if she abandoned him on purpose and where she might have gone.

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Things You Save in a Fire by Katherine Center

Things You Save in a Fire by Katherine Center

Things You Save in a Fire turned out to not be the book that I thought it was going to be, not that this is bad thing. I thought it would be a more serious family drama, along the lines of anything by Jonathan Franzen or even Little Fires Everywhere by Celeste Ng, but Things You Save in a Fire leans more towards rom com, so it is the perfect read if you are looking for something light and enjoyable that you could take with you to the beach.

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One of Us is Next by Karen M. McManus

One of Us is Next by Karen M. McManus

One of Us is Next is the sequel to One of Us is Lying. I read One of Us is Lying a couple of years ago. It has good reviews that make it sound like a twisty mystery that I would not be able to guess the ending of. It is about five high school students who are in detention together, and one of the students ends up dead. A gossip blog reveals secrets of the four surviving students that points to one of them being responsible for the death. I knew right away there was two possible explanations for what happened to the student that died, and the explanation I decided on turned out to be correct, so I was disappointed at how easily I figured it out. The surprising part of One of Us is Lying is not the whodunnit, but rather the motivation behind the death. The other thing I got from One of Us is Lying is how toxic of an environment high school is (I did not enjoy high school, but I really do not remember it being as bad as depicted in a lot of YA novels these days). McManus has another novel called Two Can Keep a Secret that I have read as well, but to be completely honest, I do not recall what happened, that is how memorable it is. So, you must be wondering by now why I would bother reading One of Us is Next. Well, first, I was trying to get free shipping at Book Outlet, and second, I was curious to know if McManus’ plotting had improved enough to keep me guessing until the very end.

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Where the Crawdads Sing by Delia Owens

Where the Crawdads Sing by Delia Owens

I am very late to the Where the Crawdads Sing party, but better late than never, right? After reading this novel, I can see why it was such a hit when it first came out. I really enjoyed reading it and had a hard time putting it down; I finished reading it in two days. I very highly recommend you read this novel if you are like me and are also late to the Where the Crawdads Sing party.

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Hench by Natalie Zina Walschots

Hench by Natalie Zina Walschots

Hench is an entertaining novel set in an alternate reality where some people are born with “superabilities” and they grow up to become either superheroes or villains. But Hench questions whether there is really a difference between superheroes and villains. Are superheroes really any better than villains, or are they just as bad, or worse, for society as villains?

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