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Small Town Big Magic

August 28, 2023 by Lindsey Castronovo

By: Hazel Beck
Published Year: 2022
Publisher: Graydon House
Pages: 411

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Summary (Provided by Goodreads): A witchy rom-com in which a bookstore owner who is fighting to revitalize a small midwestern town clashes with her rival, the mayor, and uncovers not only a clandestine group that wields a dark magic to control the idyllic river hamlet, but hidden powers she never knew she possessed.

Witches aren't real. Right?

No one has civic pride quite like Emerson Wilde. As a local indie bookstore owner and youngest-ever Chamber of Commerce president, she’d do anything for her hometown of St. Cyprian, Missouri. After all, Midwest is best! She may be descended from a witch who was hanged in 1692 during the Salem Witch Trials, but there’s no sorcery in doing your best for the town you love.
Or is there?

As she preps Main Street for an annual festival, Emerson notices strange things happening around St. Cyprian. Strange things that culminate in a showdown with her lifelong arch-rival, Mayor Skip Simon. He seems to have sent impossible, paranormal creatures after her. Creatures that Emerson dispatches with ease, though she has no idea how she’s done it. Is Skip Simon…a witch? Is Emerson?

It turns out witches are real, and Emerson is one of them. She failed a coming-of-age test at age eighteen—the only test she’s ever failed!—and now, as an adult, her powers have come roaring back.

But she has little time to explore those powers, or her blossoming relationship with her childhood friend, cranky-yet-gorgeous local farmer Jacob North: an ancient evil has awakened in St. Cyprian, and it’s up to Emerson and her friends—maybe even Emerson herself—to save everything she loves.

First Impressions

I went into the library to pick up a few books I had on hold and decided to make a pass through the romance section. This book immediately caught my eye on the shelf, so obviously made a great first impression. I love the cover and the title is super cute. It helps that we’re entering into fall so I enjoy reading more magical novels and that probably caught my eye.

What I thought

This book was so fun! I don’t know if I would necessarily categorize it as a romance but it did have some romance within it.

Emerson has lived in the same small town her entire life. Now, at 28, she runs the business commerce and lives in her family home with one of her best friends. She and the mayor have always had a rivalry, but when he tries to kill her with magical creatures, it goes too far and awakens the power within her. With this power awoken, she discovers that the town she has loved is a town of witches (including her friends) and that her mind was wiped at 18 when she didn’t show enough power. Now she has to learn how to be a witch, navigate her life in secret, and save the town.

Like I said, the romance side of it was a bit meh for me. I didn’t feel the chemistry between Emerson and Jacob. There was a lot of history that their connection was supposed to have been built on so maybe not getting that in the story made it harder to feel it in the present day. I didn’t mind them getting together and I didn’t mind their love story as it progressed, but it wasn’t one that jumped off the page and definitely felt secondary to everything else going on.

The Witchlore on the other hand I loved. I loved learning about the town and the way their witch government worked. Emerson rediscovering magic was so fun. I also liked the mystery of why Skip, the mayor, was trying to kill Emerson in addition to whether or not they’d be able to save their town. It’s this storyline that has me jumping to read the next one which comes out in late August.

The only other thing that had me sometimes annoyed was Emerson and her feminist views/language. I loved that she believed in strong women and that was essential to her personality and her strength. However, sometimes it got to be a bit much. Like, every comment she would make would be like “because of the patriarchy” or “what you think women can’t do that?” I just wish it had been edited down a tiny bit.

This is a solid 3.5 stars for me. I loved the witchy storyline, felt a little meh about the romance story line. I also felt like it was simultaneously too long and too fast. I would’ve preferred if the final conflict had been given a little bit more time than some of the slower stuff in the middle. I immediately put the next book on hold at the library and am curious to see what happens next!

August 28, 2023 /Lindsey Castronovo
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The Bandit Queens

August 21, 2023 by Lindsey Castronovo

By: Parini Shiroff
Published Year: 2023
Publisher: Ballantine Books
Pages: 352

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Summary (Provided by Goodreads): Geeta's no-good husband disappeared five years ago. She didn't kill him, but everyone thinks she did--no matter how much she protests.

But she soon discovers that being known as a "self-made" widow has some surprising perks. No one messes with her, no one threatens her, and no one tries to control (ahem, marry) her. It's even been good for her business; no one wants to risk getting on her bad side by not buying her jewelry.

Freedom must look good on Geeta, because other women in the village have started asking for her help to get rid of their own no-good husbands...but not all of them are asking nicely.

Now that Geeta's fearsome reputation has become a double-edged sword, she must decide how far to go to protect it, along with the life she's built. Because even the best-laid plans of would-be widows tend to go awry.

First Impressions

This colorful cover immediately caught my eye. The summary made it sound like a fun mystery about a group of older, underestimated women in an Indian community taking down the abusive men. I saw this book all over online, and it made a very strong first impression, jumping to the top of my 2023 TBRs.

What I thought

Um, well, this book wasn’t quite as lighthearted as the cover makes it seem.

Geeta has been a “widow” for 5 years. Her abusive, alcoholic husband disappeared, but her community believes that she murdered him. When one of the other women in her community comes to her to ask for help to kill her own husband, Geeta is thrown off and finds herself sucked into a world that she never wanted to be a part of.

I feel like this book didn’t get goofy enough. I don’t know if it was the fact that Geeta was just kind of dumb and whiney, or if it was the seriousness of the abuse that happens within the Indian state and community, but it just felt darker and heavier than I expected. At first, Geeta’s naiveté with Farah is a little silly, but then it continues and just got annoying.

I liked seeing Getta realize that she needs her friends and then women in her community to be a stronger person. A lot of how she ended up where she was, was due to isolating herself. It was a struggle to read about the reality of the different Indian caste systems, even though I think it was important and eye opening to read.

There are parts of this book I enjoyed because I felt there were a lot of important lessons within this book. But then sometimes it still felt like it was supposed to be goofy and funny and it took away from some of this seriousness.

Overall, I think this book didn’t know what it wanted to be. On the one hand, I think it wanted to be a mystery/thriller, on the other, I think it wanted to be a contemporary fiction teaching about the Indian communities and their struggles. Unfortunately, I think it just ended up being a bit blah by falling in the middle. I didn’t mind the story and I wouldn’t discourage anyone from reading it. however, I think the writing is a bit lackluster, so I don’t think I’d read more by Shiroff in the future.

August 21, 2023 /Lindsey Castronovo
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Rock Bottom Girl

August 14, 2023 by Lindsey Castronovo

By: Lucy Score
Published Year: 2019
Publisher: That’s What She Said Publishing
Pages: 532

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Summary (Provided by Goodreads): Downsized, broke, and dumped, 38-year-old Marley sneaks home to her childhood bedroom in the town she couldn’t wait to escape twenty years ago. Not much has changed in Culpepper. The cool kids are still cool. Now they just own car dealerships and live in McMansions next door. Oh, and the whole town is still talking about that Homecoming she ruined her senior year.

Desperate for a new start, Marley accepts a temporary teaching position. Can the girl banned from all future Culpepper High Homecomings keep the losing-est girls soccer team in school history from killing each other and prevent carpal tunnel in a bunch of phone-clutching gym class students?

Maybe with the help of Jake Weston, high school bad boy turned sexy good guy. When the school rumor mill sends Marley to the principal’s office to sign an ethics contract, the tattooed track coach, dog dad, and teacher of the year becomes her new fake boyfriend and alibi—for a price. The Deal: He’ll teach her how to coach if she teaches him how to be in a relationship.

Who knew a fake boyfriend could deliver such real orgasms? But it’s all temporary. The guy. The job. The team. There’s too much history. Rock bottom can’t turn into a foundation for happily ever after. Can it?

Warning: Story also includes a meet-puke, a bouffanted nemesis, a yard swan and donkey basketball, a teenage-orchestrated makeover, and a fake relationship that gets a little too real between the sheets.

First Impression

This book had a solid first impression. It caught my eye while I was walking through Target and then I bought it on Independent Bookstore Day. I had never heard about it before but the colors and the fact that it was a book about soccer immediately launched it to the top of my list.

What I thought

This book was so fun!

Marley has moved back in with her parents after being let go from her job and being broke up with. She left her small town immediately after high school because of senior year drama and has been avoiding being back since. When she accepts a temporary position as girl’s soccer coach and gym teacher at her old high school, she discovers her old crush Jake is a beloved teacher at the school and also that her biggest high school nemesis lives next door to her parents. In her cluelessness, she and Jake find themselves in a fake dating/real coaching situation.

This is a longer book so it allowed for a lot of details and character building which I loved. There was a lot of growth in the characters and it made me feel like I got to know them and really connect with them. I am a huge soccer fan so I greatly enjoyed those storylines. There were some small inaccuracies in the soccer facts but they were small so I was able to forgive them.

Marley took a little while to grow on me just because she was so hung up on her high school past. In the book, she’s 38, but I felt like her story would’ve worked better if she was 28. I understand though that at 28 you wouldn’t have any of your high school peers having high school aged children that you would be teaching. However, the level of concern and the interactions with some of her old classmates felt a little immature to me.

I adored Jake and Marley’s chemistry though. I thought they had some very good banter and Jake’s maturity balanced out where Marley was immature. I also loved her friends and her family. I felt like no one was painted as old and crotchety. People were still fun, even when they were parents and I feel like often that is not shown in these types of book.

This was a solid 4.5 stars for me. It’s the first Lucy Score book that I read and I got completely drawn into the world. I would love to return back to this town and these characters. The ending was so fun and there were a few twists in the storyline that I didn’t expect which I enjoyed. I found myself laughing out loud while reading this book multiple times. I definitely will be looking into more of her books in the future!

August 14, 2023 /Lindsey Castronovo
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Deaf Utopia

August 07, 2023 by Lindsey Castronovo

By: Nyle DiMarco
Published Year: 2022
Publisher: William Morrow
Pages: 317

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Summary (Provided by Goodreads): A heartfelt and inspiring memoir and Deaf culture anthem by Nyle DiMarco, actor, producer, two-time reality show winner, and cultural icon of the international Deaf community.

Before becoming the actor, producer, advocate, and model that people know today, Nyle DiMarco was half of a pair of Deaf twins born to a multi-generational Deaf family in Queens, New York. At the hospital one day after he was born, Nyle “failed” his first test—a hearing test—to the joy and excitement of his parents.

In this moving and engrossing memoir, Nyle shares stories, both heartbreaking and humorous, of what it means to navigate a world built for hearing people. From growing up in a rough-and-tumble childhood in Queens with his big and loving Italian-American family to where he is now, Nyle has always been driven to explore beyond the boundaries given him.

A college math major and athlete at Gallaudet—the famed university for the Deaf in Washington, DC—Nyle was drawn as a young man to acting, and dove headfirst into the reality show competitions America’s Next Top Model and Dancing with the Stars—ultimately winning both competitions.

Deaf Utopia is more than a memoir, it is a cultural anthem—a proud and defiant song of Deaf culture and a love letter to American Sign Language, Nyle’s primary language. Through his stories and those of his Deaf brothers, parents, and grandparents, Nyle opens many windows into the Deaf experience.

Deaf Utopia is intimate, suspenseful, hilarious, eye-opening, and smart—both a memoir and a celebration of what makes Deaf culture unique and beautiful.

First Impressions

I don’t remember how I heard about this novel but as soon as I did I wanted to read it. I am a speech pathologist and so I’m very interested in Deaf culture from that perspective. It was pretty much all I needed to know.

What I thought

This book was fabulous.

Nyle DiMarco is a winner of America’s Next Top Model and Dancing with the Stars. I have watched both of these shows, but not the seasons that he was in. This memoir is the story of his childhood, experience as a member of the Deaf community, and his experiences with reality TV.

Nyle does such an amazing job explaining the Deaf culture. He splices in history about the culture, Gallaudet, and the Milan Conference. I learned so much about the Deaf school systems as well as some perspective of speech therapy from someone who is profoundly deaf and in a deaf family. I think that his perspective and experience alone makes this book worth a read. He comes from a family of deaf individuals, so just that alone is fascinating to learn about.

In addition to his Deaf experiences, Nyle talks about his struggles and growth with his sexuality. At the end of this book, he identifies as Queer, but at different points in the book he identifies as straight and as sexually fluid. His perspective about his changing sexuality was explained so well and really interesting to me. I am straight and always have been. I’ve never doubted my sexuality. But hearing someone explain how they could grow up thinking they were straight but then realizing there had bene an underlying attraction to the same sex all along was eye opening.

If you are reading this book because you’re a fan of his reality TV show appearances, you won’t be disappointed. He walks the reader through his experiences so thoroughly. I often feel like when I’m reading a memoir that they don’t go into enough depth or detail about a movie or a TV show of theirs that I loved. Nyle walks you through his season of ANTM as though you’re watching the show. It was so well don’t and so interesting.

The other part of this book that I loved was the way that both English and American Sign Language were incorporated. Because ASL is Nyle’s first and dominant language, it is hard to translate it to the page but they do a great job. The grammar of ASL is different from English and I think it’s important to show the conversation told in that language structure to maintain the truth and authenticity of Nyle’s experiences and his own language.

I adored this book. I was sucked in from the first page and I think there is something in it for everyone. Not only is it eye opening for the Deaf culture, but for the LGBTQ culture as well. In addition to that, Nyle’s experiences on reality shows will suck you in from the entertainment culture side. This is definitely up there for one of my favorite reads of the year.

August 07, 2023 /Lindsey Castronovo
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The Princess

August 04, 2023 by Lindsey Castronovo

By: Wendy Holden
Published Year: 2023
Publisher: Berkley
Pages: 416

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I received a copy of this book in exchange for an honest review. This in no way shape or form influenced my opinion of this novel.

Summary (Provided by Goodreads): Princess Diana was the most famous woman in the world, celebrated across the globe for her poise and glamour. But before stepping out of the royal carriage at St. Paul's Cathedral she spent nineteen years as the shy, awkward Lady Diana Spencer. How did the aristocratic ugly duckling become a beautiful royal swan?

Bestselling author Wendy Holden explores the astonishing backstory and young adulthood of the ultimate royal celebrity.

Britain, 1961: A bouncing blond baby is born to Viscount Althorp, heir to the Spencer earldom, and his wife Frances. Diana grows up amid the fallout of her parents' messy divorce. She struggles at school. Moving to London, she takes menial jobs as a cleaner and nanny. Her refuge throughout is romantic novels. She dreams of falling in love and being rescued by a handsome prince.

In royal circles, there is concern about the Prince of Wales. Nearly 30, Charles remains unmarried; the right girl needs to be found, and fast. She must be young, aristocratic and come to the royal family without any past liaisons.

The eighteen-year-old Diana Spencer is just about the only candidate. Her desperation to be loved dovetails perfectly with royal desperation for a bride. But as the ruthless Palace machine starts up, there are challenges for Diana to face plus mysteries she can't fathom, from the strangeness of life within the palace walls to a certain Mrs. Parker Bowles. Can her romantic dream survive the forces that shape her into a global icon?

First Impressions

I have been enjoying some more recent historical fiction, so when I saw this one I was intrigued. I’ve read about strong historical female figures in the 50s, 60s, and 70s, so reading about Princess Diana seemed like a solid next step. I haven’t read the other Royal Outsider books by Holden, so this was my first experience.

What I thought

This book follows Princess Diana from childhood and up to the 1990s. She had a close friend named Sandy in elementary school and when her world starts to fall apart, she reaches out to her to tell her all about how she truly ended up as princess.

Being completely honest, if I wasn’t reading this book for review, I wouldn’t have finished it. It was slow to start and then by about half way I hated everyone. Granted, I’ve never liked Prince Charles but this book made me really dislike him. I was never one who knew a lot about Diana, since I was young when she was around, but always had positive feelings about her. This book made me dislike her too.

I don’t know if part of my issue was that I knew what was coming or just the way it was formatted. I thought at first it was going to be told through the eyes of her fictional friend Sandy. But instead, it was told from everyone’s perspectives. When Diana starts to share with Sandy how she was manipulated to marry Charles, the perspective switches to Charles’ valet Stephen, and then to the Queen Mother, and to Charles at one point, and even some other minor characters. It felt very disjointed and I never connected to anyone. Then it would jump back to the 90s and you’d have Sandy’s perspective again.

This book made Diana sound so dumb and whiney. I know she was 20 when she got married and 18/19 when they started dating, but this book makes her seem incredibly immature and naiive. I think it’s supposed to make you feel sympathetic but the book also has a ton of her friends telling her how dumb she’s acting and she chooses to ignore them.

I enjoyed the earlier years because I didn’t know much about Diana’s childhood or family life and that made me sympathetic. Considering how negatively this book paints everyone, I’d be shocked if it gets sold in the UK. Not to say they don’t deserve it or it’s not true, but wow. Holden does not like the Royal Family, that’s for sure.

I pretty much skimmed the last 40% of this book, so take my review with a grain of salt. I felt like it was slow, poorly organized, and not entertaining. I don’t think I’d read an other books by Holden because I wasn’t a fan of the writing style. I think there are much better books out there with modern historical fiction.

August 04, 2023 /Lindsey Castronovo
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You, With a View

July 31, 2023 by Lindsey Castronovo

By: Jessica Joyce
Published Year: 2023
Publisher: Berkley
Pages: 352

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I received a copy of this book in exchange for an honest review. This in no way shape or form influenced my opinion of this novel.

Summary (Provided by Goodreads): Two weeks on the road... stuck in a car with your high-school enemy.

Noelle Shepard is grieving the loss of her beloved grandmother when she discovers decades-old photos and letters that hint to a forbidden love in her gram's past. Needing to know the full story, she creates a TikTok video appealing for information - and it goes viral.

Through her video, she manages to track down her grandmother's secret love, Paul, who offers to take her on the honeymoon road-trip he and Gram planned but never got to go on.

Noelle jumps at the chance to make this one last connection with her grandmother. There's just one problem - Paul's grandson is Noelle's frustratingly handsome high-school rival Theo.

And Theo has to come, too.

It's only two weeks. Surely Noelle can survive that long? But with one car between them - and often only one bed - it doesn't take long for things to heat up...

First Impressions

I love this cover. It immediately caught my eye on a list of books coming out this summer and added it to my list after reading the summary. Shortly after that I received the opportunity to read it for review and was very excited. Very good first impression.

What I thought

This was a cute romance and I enjoyed the travel aspect of it a lot.

Noelle is at her lowest point, 6 months after her grandmother passed away. She has no job, is living at her parents’ home, and is unsure where to go with her life. Her grandmother was her best friend and when she discovers an old love letter from a man she never heard her grandma mention before, she makes a TikTok to find out who he is. When she meets the mystery man, she learns he’s the grandfather of her high school rival Theo. The three of them decide to go on a road trip that her grandmother and past boyfriend had planned for their honeymoon that never happened.

I am a sucker for road trip novels. I think this one could have done that aspect a little bit better. I thought that the destinations and adventure were going to be a little more central to the story. Instead, it was a backdrop with the relationship between her grandmother and Paul and the love story between her and Theo.

I think that Joyce did a great job telling the story of two people struggling with finding themselves after the lives they imagined at 18 did not come to be at 28. Your late 20s can be difficult, especially when it’s not what you pictured it would be. I wish I had read this novel when I was 28. It was interesting to see how differently Theo and Noelle handled their issues as well. Joyce did a great job explaining the background and reason for why they reacted the way they did.

Noelle and Theo did have instant chemistry and I enjoyed their banter a lot. I do wish there had been a little bit more dislike from Noelle at the beginning, considering how much she disliked him growing up. But that’s just because I’m a sucker for enemies to lovers. I pretty much loved every relationship Noelle had. She had great family interactions and beautiful interactions with Paul as well.

The third act break up wasn’t even bad. It wasn’t a true third act break up which I appreciated. There was a conflict but it felt like it was handled realistically and not a dumb “just talk to each other!” type of conflict.

I enjoyed Noelle’s journey of growth. The romance was just a bonus. I think this is a great romance/fiction novel for people to read in the late 20s or at a time where your life is not moving the way you thought that it would. This is a very strong debut and I look forward to Joyce writing more. It wasn’t perfect for me, but it was still a fun and enjoyable read.

July 31, 2023 /Lindsey Castronovo
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Hello Stranger

July 24, 2023 by Lindsey Castronovo

By: Katherine Center
Published Year: 2023
Publisher: St. Martin’s Press
Pages: 336

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I received a copy of this book in exchange for an honest review. This in no way shape or form influenced my opinion of this novel.

Summary (Provided by Goodreads): Love isn’t blind, it’s just little blurry.

Sadie Montgomery never saw what was coming . . . Literally! One minute she’s celebrating the biggest achievement of her life—placing as a finalist in the North American Portrait Society competition—the next, she’s lying in a hospital bed diagnosed with a “probably temporary” condition known as face blindness. She can see, but every face she looks at is now a jumbled puzzle of disconnected features. Imagine trying to read a book upside down and in another language. This is Sadie’s new reality with every face she sees.

But, as she struggles to cope, hang on to her artistic dream, work through major family issues, and take care of her beloved dog, Peanut, she falls into—love? Lust? A temporary obsession to distract from the real problems in her life?—with not one man but two very different ones. The timing couldn’t be worse.

If only her life were a little more in focus, Sadie might be able to find her way. But perceiving anything clearly right now seems impossible. Even though there are things we can only find when we aren’t looking. And there are people who show up when we least expect them. And there are always, always other ways of seeing.

First Impressions

I love Katherine Center. I have enjoyed every single one of her books since reading Happiness for Beginners. I like the color of this book, but I do kind of wish she had stuck with the various colorful floral covers rather than adding cartoon people.

What I thought

Sadie is an artist who just won a spot in a prestigious portrait painting competition when she finds out that she has a malformed blood vessel in her brain resulting in a need for immediate brain surgery. After her surgery, she has brain swelling that leads to (hopefully) temporary face blindness. Not only does this impact her participation in the competition, but it throws her life upside down. She ends up falling in love with two different men and dealing with an evil stepsister.

This book is so weird but in the best way possible. The idea of temporary face blindness as a romance trope is just wild enough that it works. I think Center did a nice just of explaining face blindness and the emotional impact without making it seem rude. Sadie has a lot going on in her life pre-brain surgery and it just gets even more intense afterwards. She hasn’t had a relationship with her dad or step-mom since she was a teenager and she has a step-sister who makes it her life mission to make Sadie’s life miserable.

My one issue with this book was Sadie’s continued participation in the portrait competition. I understand it’s important to the story and her growth, but no one in her life thinks to suggest she reach out to the judges and organizers, explain what happened, and ask to be deferred to the next year? Like, she can’t see faces! Why would she think it’s a good idea to continue in this competition??

I adored the romance in this story though. Joe and Sadie were so cute. It was very interesting to read a book where the lead male’s face was never really described. She ogles his torso a little bit, but it was kind of fun to read a romance where the physical aspect wasn’t the leading factor. Even though her interest in her vet was a little bit physical because she was attracted to his gait.

It was fascinating to see Sadie grow and deal with her emotional issues. I would’ve liked if we could’ve had a few more of her therapy sessions and delved a little deeper into the grief with her mom. I also wouldn’t have minded a little bit more of the happily ever after because I wanted more of Sadie and the man she got together with.

I rated this book 4 stars but it’s definitely closer to a 4.5 It was unlike any romance novel I had read before and I really enjoyed it. Sadie and Joe were so cute. Center does a good job of writing romance novels which mix heavier topics with romance, but I do think she could’ve gotten into it a little more. I will always add Center to the top of my to-read list. This may not be my favorite of hers, but it’s very high up there. I like it more than The Bodyguard from last year and would highly recommend checking it out.

July 24, 2023 /Lindsey Castronovo
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I Wish We Weren't Related

July 17, 2023 by Lindsey Castronovo

By: Radhika Sanghani
Published Year: 2023
Publisher: Berkley
Pages: 400

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I received a copy of this book in exchange for an honest review. This in no way shape or form influenced my opinion of this novel.

Summary (Provided by Goodreads): After a shocking phone call from her mother, Reeva Mehta’s life starts to sound like the plot of a Bollywood drama. From the outlandishly funny author of 30 Things I Love About Myself comes a hilarious, heartwarming novel about love, family, and new beginnings.

Thirty-four-year-old Reeva thought her life couldn’t possibly get more complicated, until her semi-famous Bollywood mother calls to tell her that she’s been lying to her daughters for decades—the father they thought died thirty years ago has been alive this whole time. Only now he actually is dead. Worse? His dying wish was for Reeva and her sisters Sita and Jaya to attend his funeral prayers—which means spending a fortnight together at his house, surrounded by relatives they never knew existed.

Reeva already has more than enough going on in her life. She’s an overworked London lawyer, her hair is falling out due to stress-induced alopecia, she can’t decide if her new boyfriend, Nick, is really as wonderful as he appears to be, and her brand-new cat is playing hard to get (even for a cat). And now she has to spend two weeks with the sisters she hasn’t spoken to since Jaya stole her boyfriend and Sita took her side.

But as Reeva slowly learns more about their father and his life—with the help of his sister, aka her new, wise Satya Auntie—she starts to uncover the complicated truth of their past…and realizes she needs Jaya and Sita more than she ever could have imagined.

First Impressions

This book sounded interesting. I had never read a book about a Hindu funeral before let alone one with a twist. The summary was what won me over more than the cover, though the cover isn’t bad.

What I thought

I enjoyed the first 75% of the book but then the last 25% kinda dropped it a little bit.

Reeva is the eldest of 3 daughters. She lives in London and is a divorce attorney. She hasn’t spoken to her sister in about 4 years, since her youngest sister cheated with Reeva’s boyfriend at the time and her middle sister stood by the youngest. Their father has been dead for 30 years, or so they thought. When he actually dies their mother informs them that he’s been alive for their whole lives and in order to get their inheritance they have to participate in the 14 day Hindu funeral prayers.

There is so much that goes on in this book that I don’t even know where to start. I enjoyed the story about sisters who haven’t talked getting back together. I thought it was interesting to see how they worked through their issues and see their relationship grow. The whole dad being alive and not really dead and the trauma behind that didn’t really end up being my thing.

Without spoilers, I found the reason that this mom faked his death for 30 years to be a bit extreme. Which I guess was kind of the point. But then Reeva reacts as thought the reason makes sense? She gets super mad at her dead dad for something that happened 30 years ago that she repressed.

Reeva did honestly get on my nerves by the end of the book. I think the fallout of so many of her relationships showed that she wasn’t a very good or likable person. I also got irritated by the self-help vibe towards the end of the book. She had one conversation with her aunt and one hypnotherapy and all of a sudden was like “I know exactly how to be a better person now!” I mean, she still admitted she had a lot of work to do but she was immediately making big changes. Also, her supposed best friend was terrible.

Basically, I enjoyed the sister aspect and learning a little bit about Hindu funerals. I didn’t love the friendship, love, or mystery aspect. Like I said, the first 75% of the book was interesting and enjoyable. The last 25% left a little bit of a sour taste in my mouth. It wasn’t a bad book but it will definitely be one that’s forgettable in a week or two.

July 17, 2023 /Lindsey Castronovo
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