This past week I finished three books. Let's take a look!
I imagine being kissed about a hundred times a day. ~ Opening of Fat Chance, Charlie Vega
Fat Chance, Charlie Vega by Crystal Maldonado
Holiday House, 2021; YA Romance, 352 pgs
A sensitive, funny, and painfully honest coming-of-age story with a wry voice and tons of chisme, Fat Chance, Charlie Vega tackles our relationships to our parents, our bodies, our cultures, and ourselves.Fat Chance, Charlie Vega was this month's Diverse Romance Book Club selection. Contemporary YA Romance is not one of my usual go to genres, but I liked the group's last YA pick and was open to trying another. I took to Charlie instantly. I could relate to her on so many levels, from her love for writing, body image issues, insecurities, an overly critical parent, and wanting to fit in. Perhaps not so much the longing for romance part, but that is okay. Charlie's best friend Amelia is everything she is not: athletic, thinner, lighter skinned, and with supportive parents (not to mention having a love life). Charlie had been very close to her father, and he was the glue of the family. Since his death, life has not been the same. Charlie's mother, once overweight herself, is now thin and trying to live her best life, dating and wishing for Charlie all the things she longs for herself. Charlie only wants to be accepted for who she is. She is happy in her own skin and wishes others, especially her mother, could see and accept that too.
In Paris, a child goes missing. ~ Opening of The City of StardustThe City of Stardust by Georgia Summers, narrated by Kitty Parker
Redhook, 2024; Fantasy, 13 hours, 6 minutes
A young woman descends into a seductive magical underworld of power-hungry scholars, fickle gods and monsters bent on revenge to break her family's curse in this spellbinding contemporary fantasy debut.The City of Stardust was this month's Science Fiction/Fantasy Book Club Selection. I decided to listen to the audiobook due to time constraints.
The author brought the settings alive with her writing. The world she created is complex and multilayered, a mix of modern and fantastical. A generational curse has long plagued the Everly family, and Violet will be the latest victim if she isn't able to break the curse.
When the novel opens, Violet is a young girl, being raised by her uncles. She remembers well the visit from the mysterious woman and the boy, but her uncles keep the secret of the ultimatum--10 years to find Violet's long absent mother or Violet will become Penelope's instead--until time is nearly out. And now Violet is an adult and realizes she must search for her mother on her own if she is to try to find out more about the curse and how to break it.
I was taken with the the author's writing and the descriptions of the places and world Georgia Summers had created. The villain of the novel, Penelope, intrigued me the most of all the characters, and I wanted to know more about the mystery of this curse she cast almost as much as Violet did. Penelope is beautiful and frighteningly powerful and cruel, a goddess who walks among the people.
I would have liked if the author had written more about Violet's time among the scholars and her attempts to find her missing mother. Perhaps the author did not feel it was worthwhile since just about every avenue Violet tried was met with a door slammed in her face, but I felt like it might have only made the novel even better and added more depth to Violet's character. Not to mention I wanted to know more about the scholars in general. Alas, this was not their story.
The second half of the novel was stronger than the first, I thought, as the pieces of the puzzle came together and tensions grew even higher. Violet is a capable and resourceful woman. Aleksander, who is studying to be a scholar, is an interesting character in his own right. Throughout much of the novel, the reader is left wondering whether his intentions are good or evil. It is obvious Violet and Aleksander share a connection, but is it in Violet's best interest? Like Violet, I wanted to trust him, but I was not sure we should. One of my favorite characters in the novel was Caspian, a bit of a rogue, and the son of a well respected and affluent family. He doesn't get nearly enough page time, in my opinion.
Kitty Parker's narration hit all the right notes, drawing me into the world created by Georgia Summers. Overall The City of Stardust was an enjoyable fantasy novel. While this is a standalone, should the author ever want to revisit the world she's created here, I would consider reading it.
It wasn't even ten yet, and the cicadas were already screaming in the hot, muggy air. ~ Opening of Trouble with the Cursed
Trouble With the Cursed (The Hollows #16) by Kim Harrison
Ace, 2022; Fantasy, 464 pgs)
Rachel Morgan, witch-born demon, has one unspoken rule: take chances, but pay for them yourself. With it, she has turned enemies into allies, found her place with her demon kin, and stepped up as the subrosa of Cincinnati—responsible for keeping the paranormal community at peace and in line.It is always a pleasure to spend time in the Hollows. In this 16th book of the series, Rachel's new position of subrosa of Cincinnati is threatened when an old dead vampire from D.C. comes to town to question who is really in charge. And then there is the little problem of Hodin, the demon Rachel vowed to protect from the other demons. He appears to be up to something, even though he denies he has any ill intentions.
As often happens when I read one of the Hollows' novels, once I hit the half way mark, it's next to impossible to put the book down. Rachel, as always, finds herself in over her head, juggling too many crises at once. Let's not even mention that she let Vivian, the head witch of the Coven of Moral and Ethical Standards, talk her into teaching a demonology class at the local university. Her friends seem to have their own problems to take care of and so she seems to be on her own, but she is nothing if not determined and this way they will be safe. Don't fret though! There's plenty of Jenks, Trent and Al. Ivy is back too, but not as much, sadly. And Pike, who is growing on me, is back too. In Trouble with the Cursed, we get to know more about what caused the rift between Al, Dali and the other demons and Hodin. The odds may not be in Rachel's favor as she tries to hold onto her city, but if anyone can do it, Rachel can.
Action packed, full of magic, and a bit of mischief, Trouble with the Cursed was a satisfying and entertaining addition to the series. This is a series best read in order.
Catching up from the the week before:
The Berry Pickers by Amanda Peters, narrated by Aaliya Warbus and Jordan Waunch
Recorded Books, 2023; Historical Fiction; 8 hours, 44 minutes
A four-year-old Mi’kmaq girl goes missing from the blueberry fields of Maine, sparking a tragic mystery that haunts the survivors, unravels a community, and remains unsolved for nearly fifty years.The year is 1962 when four year old Ruthie goes missing while her family picks blueberries during the summer season. Like so many migrants, her family travels each year from Nova Scotia to Maine for the work. Six year old Joe, Ruthie's brother had been the last to see her. While the local authorities shrug off the disappearance of the young girl, the migrant community rallies together to search for her only to come up empty handed. The Berry Pickers is told from the alternating perspectives of Joe, the brother who blames himself for his sister Ruthie's disappearance, and Norma, raised by a distant father and an overprotective mother, both of whom seem to be keeping secrets from her. I listened to the audiobook, narrated by Aaliya Warbus and Jordan Waunch, both of whom did a great job of bringing their characters to life.
For Norma's part, I felt a great sadness for her as well a sense of loss. Her memories are few and were so often dismissed when she was a child that she believes they were just dreams. For many years, she doesn't really realize all she lost, but the reader knows, and, in her own way, she senses it. Every time she asked about the past, why her skin is darker than her family's and about her memories, they come up with a ready excuse. She is robbed of her culture and identity and of a family that loves her. I have probably said too much, venturing into spoiler territory.
- Drop Dead Punk (Coleridge Taylor Mystery #2) by Rich Zahradnik
- Little Black Lies by Sharon Bolton
- Paris Time Capsule (Secrets of Paris #1) by Ella Carey
- Death in Brittany (#1) by Jean-Luc Bannalec
- Wet Silence: Poems About Hindu Widows by Sweta Srivastava Vikram
- The Girl Who Ignored Ghosts (The Unbelievables #1) by K.C. Tansley
- The Girl on the Train by Paula Hawkins, narrated by India Fisher, Clare Corbett, Louise Bradley
- The Society (#1) by Lilith Saintcrow