Saturday, August 25, 2012

Everyday by David Levithan

**Disclaimer: I received this book as an Advanced Reader Copy for free from the publisher. The fact that I did not pay for this book will in no way influence my thoughts on the book.**




Goodreads Summary:

Every morning, A wakes in a different person’s body, a different person’s life. There’s never any warning about where it will be or who it will be. A has made peace with that, even established guidelines by which to live: Never get too attached. Avoid being noticed. Do not interfere.
It’s all fine until the morning that A wakes up in the body of Justin and meets Justin’s girlfriend, Rhiannon. From that moment, the rules by which A has been living no longer apply. Because finally A has found someone he wants to be with—day in, day out, day after day.

With his new novel, David Levithan has pushed himself to new creative heights. He has written a captivating story that will fascinate readers as they begin to comprehend the complexities of life and love in A’s world, as A and Rhiannon seek to discover if you can truly love someone who is destined to change every day.

My Thoughts:
This book hooked me from the first page, which is rare for me to not have to warm to a book at least a little. The concept of this book is awesome. I have never thought about what it would be like to wake up in a different body every day. This book challenges what we think about gender identification and sexuality. The character A is neither male nor female as A has lived as both and felt equally comfortable and uncomfortable in both.

In my gender classes in college we talk about what it means to be a man or a woman and what if you don't fit into those molds. A does not fit into either mold, A loves Rhiannon the same no matter what sex A wakes up as. Rhiannon finds a way to try and look past the physical with A and love A for the person. I really liked the message of this book and I love that it is geared for the YA audience. I think too often people get stuck in "doing gender" they forget they can just be for a while.

The concept of someone taking over my life, for even a day is both interesting and terrifying. Could this explain those days where I just seemed kind of out of it and didn't have much memory of the day? Most likely not, but it is fun to think about. That is the thing I liked most about this book, it made me think. I also really liked that A never felt too sorry for him/herself. This book I am pleased to say did not fall into the whiny teen book category.

I would recommend this book to everyone, but particularly those in Gender Studies classes. I really liked this read. Excellent character development and over all great writing.

While writing this review I was listening to Annie Lennox.

Sunday, August 12, 2012

The Day I Shot Cupid by Jennifer Love Hewitt




Goodreads Summary:

For any woman who has ever bought a self-help book and wondered why she bothered. (P.S. Now that I know he's just not that into me, where do I go from there? Yeah, thanks for that advice.) Jennifer Love Hewitt is a self-proclaimed "love-aholic" and hopeless romantic (her middle name is Love, after all ). She has been lucky and unlucky in love, and lived to tell--and she's done it all in the spotlight. Much has been written about her love life--some true, most made up to sell magazines. Now Hewitt shares the real story of what she's learned navigating the dangerous dating waters.

In The Day I Shot Cupid, Hewitt offers her hard-won wisdom and tells us how to embrace love with both feet on the ground. First, we have to shoot Cupid. We have to believe that happily-ever-after is hard work--it's not all flowers and symphonies and floating hearts.

Wise and wry and refreshingly honest, Hewitt talks about how to pick the right guy and how to know when to let the wrong ones go free, and she offers some surprising truths about the opposite sex.

From twenty things to do after a breakup, to ten things to do before a date, to the perils of text flirting (Note: You are waiting. By the phone. For his response.), Hewitt uses stories and dating secrets to illustrate the idiotic, romantic, crazy, depressing, hilarious, awkward, glorious moments we all experience in relationships. Funny, quirky, and empowering, The Day I Shot Cupid deserves a place on every woman's nightstand, bookshelf, or coffee table, or tucked inside her over sized designer handbag.

My Thoughts:
I have always liked Jennifer Love Hewitt. I can't say that I think she is an awesome or actress. I can't say that her book was even that great. But I can say I just want to go to drinks with her and hang.

So her book had funny bits, I liked that Jamie Kennedy likes big butts. His section of talking about what he likes about women was funny and sweet. I would not say this book is groundbreaking. I don't think that it was really helpful to anyone other than the author. Which isn't to diminish the obvious growing experience that Love went through. I just think that since it was marketed as a self help book there should have been more helpful bits other than the over used, love yourself and others will love you. I did like that she had a couple of to do lists for raising self esteem. I think a couple of her suggestions were pretty valid.

This was a crazy fast read and I don't regret reading it. I don't know that I would recommend this to anyone other than a broken hearted friend.

While writing this review I was listening to the Sons of Anarchy Season 4.

Saturday, August 11, 2012

Must Love Dogs by Claire Cook


Goodreads Summary:
Forty-year-old preschool teacher Sarah Hurlihy thought she'd set herself up for a great life. She'd married the man she loved. They bought a house, decorated it, and then sat, looking at each other, trying to remember why they'd gotten married in the first place. But Sarah didn't have to wonder for long; her husband took up with a younger woman, sounding the death knell for their marriage, and propelling Sarah back into singlehood -- at the same time as her newly widowed father.

Thrown unwillingly into the suburban dating pool alongside her dad, Sarah is ambivalent about the whole process, despite her ticking clock and thoughts that she might enjoy a child of her own. But Sarah's large, loving Irish clan comes to her rescue -- her married sister placing a personal ad in her name and regularly monitoring Sarah's dating progress; and her brother, Michael, helps her feel lovable when he seeks out her comfort and advice while riding out his own rocky marriage.

In Must Love Dogs, Claire Cook ably captures the pitfalls of the midlife singles' scene, with a generous dose of humor and a heaping portion of characters who know better than to take themselves too seriously.

My thoughts:
When I saw the movie, I had not realized it was based off of a book. I haven't seen the movie in a really long time so they are separate in my mind and shall remain that way.Though I will say, I hate when they (publishers) release a mass market paperback with the movie poster as the cover. I think they really should keep the movie and book distinct in what they are. That being said I liked this book. It was not your run of the mill pink book. Yes, our main character is looking for love and yes she learns to love herself like most pink books. However, the story of how Sarah comes into her own skin and learns to live again is nice in that it isn't because of one man sweeping her off her feet.
What I really liked about this book is how likable Sarah is, even with being so boring and kind of sad. I think she is your average 4o something divorcee who has to figure out what her next step is while trying to find the energy and motivation to change out of her grey sweats and do something.

I would recommend this book to pink book lovers or anyone looking for a fast fun read. I finished this book in about two days without a lot of time dedicated to it.

While writing this review I am listening to my upstairs neighbor stomp around while crashing into only god knows what.

Friday, August 10, 2012

One Day by David Nicholls




Goodreads Summary:

Emma and Dexter meet for the first time on the night of their graduation. Tomorrow they must go their separate ways. So where will they be on this one day next year? And the year after that? And every year that follows? Twenty years, two people, ONE DAY.


My Thoughts:

I liked a lot of this book, particularly the Emma segments. She was thoughtful and very normal over all with some slight quirks. Dexter was the typical shitshow that bachelors sometimes are when they have no idea who they are or what they want. It was interesting to get snap shots in time with two very different, yet similar characters. What I didn't like about this book was some of the Dexter sections, I didn't like them because it was hard a lot of the time to like Dexter. When I read something I want to be able to relate to and like a character. I couldn't relate to a lot of what Dexter was going through. I didn't like the person he was for most of the story.


This being said I think this book was incredibly well written and an awesome idea. I didn't feel like I had read the same book previously. Sometimes it feels like writers just switch names of characters with each others books. This book didn't feel familiar which in my world is awesome.


I would recommend this book to most people, though there is a really sad bit toward the end so I wouldn't read it if you don't want to be sad.


While writing this review I was listening to Massive Attack.

Thursday, August 9, 2012

Comfort Food by Kate Jacobs


Goodreads Summary:
Shortly before turning the big 5-0, boisterous party planner and Cooking with Gusto! personality Augusta “Gus” Simpson finds herself planning a birthday party she’d rather not—her own. She’s getting tired of being the hostess, the mother hen, the woman who has to plan her own birthday party. What she needs is time on her own with enough distance to give her loved ones the ingredients to put together successful lives without her.

Assisted by a handsome up-and-coming chef, Oliver, Gus invites a select group to take an on-air cooking class. But instead of just preaching to the foodie masses, she will teach regular people how to make rich, sensuous meals—real people making real food. Gus decides to bring a vibrant cast of friends and family on the program: Sabrina, her fickle daughter; Troy, Sabrina’s ex-husband; Anna, Gus’s timid neighbor; and Carmen, Gus’s pompous and beautiful competitor at the Cooking Channel. And when she begins to have more than collegial feelings for her sous-chef, Gus realizes that she might be able to rejuvenate not just her professional life, but her personal life as well. . . .

My Thoughts:
Over all I really liked this book. This was a really good choice for a light summer read that isn't centered around a teen aged girl. Gus is older and has a life that is complicated but not hard to believe. The only part of this book that kind of let me down was toward the end. Sabrina, Gus's daughter, rushed into planning a wedding for the cooking channel. This section of the book seemed out of place with the rest of the book in that every character and their actions were slowly built and explained. This portion was not slowly planned, it felt rushed and that annoyed me. I will say that the actual ending of this book did not let me down, even though it was predictable. It was the kind of predictable that you smile about not roll your eyes about.

I would recommend this to fans of Kate Jacobs (she wrote the Friday Night Knitting Club) and anyone looking for a summer read.

While writing this review I was listening to the morning news.