Showing posts with label the spine breakers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label the spine breakers. Show all posts

Friday, August 24, 2018

The Two Family House by Lynda Cohen Logiman -- Battle of the Book

Hello Deweys!
I stole this picture from Jillian's post...

We did not meet with the Spine Breakers this month for a & I'm behind on my book club books for work, so Jillian agreed to let me read a book that's my next book club choice for work and that she has already read.  Thank God.

Which brings us to tonight's review of Lynda Cohen Logiman's novel The Two Family House. & OMG this book is just wow.  I wasn't sure what I was digging into when I picked it up.  I just know that everyone that has read it has LOVED it, and now I know why.

So a bit about this book.  This book is about, you guessed it, a two family house.  The house is owned by two brothers who live there with their wives and children.  Mort and his wife Rose have all daughters, and Mort isn't the nicest or most affectionate husband.  Mort seems to always be bothered, and Rose thinks that if she could give him a son that things might start to be better in their home life.  Abe and Helen have all boys.  Helen desperately wants a daughter and I think her husband does too, but unlike Mort, Abe is affectionate, loving, and happy.  Miraculously, the two sister-in-laws get pregnant around the same time by accident.  

Then one night when the brothers are away on a business trip,  both sisters go into labor during in a terrible blizzard.  They can't get to the hospital, but a midwife happens to be in the area delivering a neighbor's baby.  One woman gives birth to a boy and the other to a girl.....and you can probably guessed what happened.

This novel is about motherhood, connection, relationships, love, and ultimately about forgiveness.   & It's safe to say that if you read this book, you won't be disappointed.  

So Dewey Readers I leave you with a rating of 5 out of 5 Coffee Beans.

Until the next read!
~Jessica 

P.S. Check out Jillian's review here. 

Thursday, July 19, 2018

The Perfect Couple by Elin Hilderbrand- Battle of the Book

Okay, so I finished the last Spine Breaking book a while ago, and I forgot to write the review.  Our next meeting isn't for a couple of weeks. I really hope I don't forget the book by then!

So for July we read Elin Hilderbrand's latest novel The Perfect Couple.  Hilderbrand is the QUEEN of the summer beach read.  It is not summer unless I have a Hilderbrand novel in my hand.  I love the way that she writes so authentically in her own voice while conveying the voices of her multiple characters.  I also love how she gives the Island of Nantucket it's own character perspective and voice.  It's just perfectly well done.

So unlike her other novels, this novel opens up with pure thriller drama.  A body was found in the ocean!  It's very Spine Breaker's-esc. But this body...It was the body of the maid of honor in a wedding that was supposed to happen that very day.  The woman who pulled the body out of the ocean?  That was the bride.  Hildebrand's novel delves into the whodunnit, while exploring family relationships, romantic relationships, life, death, and summertime.  If that doesn't make you want to read this book, I don't know what will.  

I give it 5 out of 5 Sizzling Coffee Beans.  

~Jessica   

P.S.  My Grandma read this book and LOVED it as well.  She probably gives it 100 and 1/2 Coffee Beans.  I'll have to ask her.  

P.S.S.  I wrote this review maybe a week or two ago and forgot to post it.  

The end. 



Sunday, July 1, 2018

The Wife by Alafair Burke- Battle of the Book

What's up everyone? 

I hope all is well!

The June book for The Spine Breakers was The Wife by Alafair Burke

Yes, another psychological thriller.  This book club group seems to be following the theme.
That being said The Wife was definitely the psychological thriller that I enjoyed the most. 

Angela (nee Mullen) Powell's husband, Jason is accused of rape and sexual misconduct toward two women.  

Burke's story follows Angela has she discovers his husband's infidelities and how her past that she worked so hard to keep buried in the past, might come to light. 

Is Jason innocent? Did he really do the things that he's being accused of? Will Angela always be faithfully by his side? 

In between character narratives and flashbacks, Burke weaves in emails and police reports to help tell this story. 

Burke made sure that the story wrapped up nicely at the end. (Which, is a big thing to me!).  I saw a few people on Goodreads had asked questions about if there would be a sequel.  I gotta be honest, I don't think that I would want there to be a sequel.  I liked it just the way it ended. 

Bookpage conducted an awesome interview with Alafair Burke.  You can check out the interview here

The Wife tackles topics that are very irrelevant for 2018.  Which, to me at least, kicks it up a notch. 

Jessica read the book before I did and I remember texting her being like "Colin did it, didn't he!?".  Followed up with "NO! It wasn't Colin.... It WAS Jason!"  I was all over the place with my guesses but that's what made it fun.  Trying to figure out what happened and the who done it.  I'm sure for some people, it's going to be totally obvious who did what - but for me, I had no idea. 

I definitely think that The Wife qualifies as a beach read. I give The Wife 4.5 coffee beans out of 5.  It was a definite page turner.  I liked how the ending played out and I thought it was well written and that it brought to light a topic that is very much real and happening in 2018. 

~JB

Monday, June 25, 2018

The Wife by Alafair Burke -- Battle of the Book

Hello Deweys!  And now for a short spine breaking review.....

The Spine Breakers Book Club chose The Wife by Alafair Burke as their latest selection.  I was apprehensive.  I'm starting to not find the thrillers so thrilling anymore.  But this book was different, it was fresh, and I liked it.

So rather than a thriller that centers so heavily of the psychological aspect of the novel, or on strange murders, this novel uses a marital relationship between two people.  So, your wife or your husband...How much can you really trust someone?  And how well do you really know your loved ones?  

So you can probably guess that this book centers around suspected infidelity at the fault of the husband of course.  *(Inset emoji with two hands up in the air here!)* But how far over the line was this infidelity? Was it flirtation?  Was it an affair?  Was it sexual harassment of the workplace? Was it rape?  So yeah, the novel does center around murder, disappearances, and "thrilling" thriller things, but it also centers around something which is so prevalent relationships, trust & cheating,  which makes the novel as a whole more believable.  

But, I didn't like the end.  I could do without the "twisty" endings.  It would have been more spine breaking without it.  

So Dewey Readers, I give you a rating of 4 out of 5 Coffee Beans. Let's see what Jillian thinks! 

~Jessica  

P.S.  I returned my copy to the library before I could take a #Bookstagram :(   

Sunday, April 15, 2018

The Woman in the Window by A.J. Finn - Battle of the Book

Hello everybody.

April's battle of the book is here!!

This month we're gonna be talking about The Woman in the Window by A.J. Finn.

I'm hoping that this month, you guys will find this battle a little more interesting than last month's.

Jess's review can be found here.

I'm going to jump to my feelings on this book. 

(But for those who haven't read Jess's review yet; the book is about a woman who has PTSD induced acrophobia. Anna can't leave her house- so she watches her neighbors out of her window. With her Nikon camera. While she's drunk and high on her meds... Yeah.)

I give this book a 3.5 coffee beans out of 5.  (If you check out my account on Goodreads- you'll see I gave it a 4 because there are no halves there!)

Why?

I didn't like the story. 

I thought that it was VERY slow to start.  There were moments when my heart hurt for Anna. I found the story of what happened to be sad and I did hurt for her.  

But the rest of the book...? I didn't like it.  I didn't find it to psychological or to be a thriller.  It was just there.     

I was frustrated by Anna. A lot.  

I know that in order to accept help and move forward, you need to admit to yourself that you have a problem and want to make those changes.  I understand that her past was very big to her and that she wasn't able to move forward right away.  But her character did grow and I was proud of that.  Even if it was basically at the end of the story. 

I felt like the book did wrap up at the end though and that there weren't any loose ends.  

I was surprised by the character who committed the murder.  I wasn't expecting that to happen! 

The way that the murderer had approached Anna and, for lack a better word, "played" her - really WAS creepy! 


I will admit that the book was a page turner for me.  For most of the book, I kept turning the page for more.  It was just that that "more" wasn't really there. 

But it was such a short time frame for the psychological thriller part of the book.  It wasn't very satisfying, if you will.  There was such a slow and prolonged buildup to that WOAH moment in the story- that I felt like it fell short. 

If you're looking for a real thriller, I would recommend The Perfect Stranger by Megan Miranda.  I thought that was creepier and more twisted. 


~ Jillian

Saturday, April 7, 2018

The Woman in the Window by A.J. Finn - Battle of the Book

Hello Dewey Readers!

As we've mentioned before, Jillian and I are in a book club called The Spine Breakers.  We break spines...book spines.  Our second book club selection was The Woman in the Window by A.J. Finn.  We were both disappointed with last month's selection, The Lying Game by Ruth Ware, and Jillian didn't seem like she was in love with this novel either (she read it before I did) so I wasn't sure what to expect.  (You'll have to read her review to see her thoughts.)  So, I went into this novel half thinking that I wasn't going to enjoy it and that it would be draggy.  However, I was pleasantly surprised.  

This novel is a psychological thriller about a woman named Anna who has agoraphobia caused by the result of a traumatic experience.  What was this traumatic experience?  We're not quite sure, but we do know that she won't leave her house...she can't leave her house.  However, just because Anna can't leave her house does not mean that she doesn't know what's going on in her neighborhood.  She sees into other people's homes from the safety of her front window.   

Now, Anna is heavily medicated with anti-anxiety medications that should not be mixed with alcohol, that being said, Anna is also an alcoholic. So one day when Anna claims that she saw her neighbor get stabbed, not only dos the reader begin to wonder if Anna is hallucinating, but the characters and even Anna herself do as well.  

Now without giving too much away...
What I liked about this novel:  
-It was fast paced with REALLY short chapters which made me read faster
-Anna's mind was... interesting 

What I didn't like: 
- The ending of the novel seemed too...theatric and even borderline cliche... I wanted something else.  

In comparison to last month's read, where I walked around wondering "wtf did I just read?"  to the point where I didn't even remember it, this novel kept me interested and wanting to find out more.  I read this book in about two days, and for that fact alone, I am going to give it 4 out of 5 Coffee Beans

~Jessica