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1059 results found for "rom com"

  • Review of Like a Love Story by Abdi Nazemian

    In a way, this feels like a complementary read to Rebecca Stead's The List of Things That Will Not Change

  • Review of Things You Save in a Fire by Katherine Center

    Although you can see some of the big plot events coming, Center makes the journey so enjoyable that you to be upended so that Cassie is forced to alter her plans and careful schedule and figure out how to come Although the reader can see some of the big plot events coming in Things You Save in a Fire, Center makes firefighting, with one notable exception, but many other firefighter duties, training, and chains of command

  • Review of The Winter of the Witch by Katherine Arden

    Set in fourteenth century Russia, complete with rich folklore, conflicts between those who follow the

  • Review of A Good Neighborhood by Therese Anne Fowler

    gossipy neighbors' thoughts, some omniscient revelations, and that hints extensively at trouble to come

  • Review of Godshot by Chelsea Bieker

    during times of desperation, but the presentation of each element of Vern's rule and followers and community

  • Review of books 1-3 of the Murderbot series by Martha Wells

    When it's drawn into complicated situations, Murderbot shows a reluctant, grumpy ability to care for

  • Review of What You Wish For by Katherine Center

    There are not many surprises here, but Center offers great escapism into a close-knit Galveston, TX, community of beloved teachers, students, and friends with an ending you can see coming but are glad to see take How do you think this one compares?

  • Review of So You Want to Talk About Race by Ijeoma Oluo

    So You Want to Talk About Race is based on promoting conversation and communication, and Oluo aims to own, and becoming informed about the many issues that affect race relations--including the numerous complicated She notes that "almost nothing is completely about race" but that race is an "interwoven...piece of the There are, necessarily, some common threads between this and White Fragility by Robin DiAngelo; for example

  • Review of The Half-Drowned King by Linnea Hartsuyker

    The Half-Drowned King by Linnea Hartsuyker is the first in a completed trilogy of the same name that

  • Review of The Mercies by Kiran Millwood Hargrave

    of daily life (and almost-claustrophobic interconnectedness) within a tiny, very northern Norwegian community

  • Review of Utopia Avenue by David Mitchell

    Marinus and Jacob de Zoet make appearances, and the links to other books felt cozy, like I was coming

  • Review of The Bone Clocks by David Mitchell

    This was strange and compelling. What did you think? Mitchell is one of a kind, and I love it. Another book I loved of his was Utopia Avenue, and it was completely different in tone but also wonderfully

  • Review of The Ten Thousand Doors of January by Alix E. Harrow

    Harrow has another amazing-sounding book coming out in October 2020, The Once and Future Witches.

  • Review of In Five Years by Rebecca Serle

    it’s a romance, but it’s really a story about loyalty and devoted friendship without easy or saw-it-coming

  • Review of Blacktop Wasteland by S.A. Cosby

    This is a fantastic blend of realistic complications, mistakes, adjustments, and spunk. But competition for his business is pinching his ability to help support his family, and some old, bad-news Blacktop Wasteland took a little while to get going for me, but just shy of halfway through, the setup is complete This is a fantastic blend of realistic complications, mistakes, adjustments, and spunk. It seems like it would be difficult to write those descriptions compellingly, but S.A.

  • Review of Exit Strategy (Murderbot #4) by Martha Wells

    I knew interpreting the emotional subtext in the speech and appearance of real humans was completely (For one thing, the shows and serials were trying to communicate accurately with the viewer.

  • Review of Shiner by Amy Jo Burns

    her family are surrounded by a cast of mountaintop characters intent on avoiding the constraints (and comforts everything begins to unravel for the family, including long-held secrets that threaten to upend their lives completely Burns's Shiner were over-the-top dramatic, but the events within the faith-healing, folklore-driven community The community's unfailing allegiance to a personality-over-substance faith leader reminded me of Godshot

  • Review of The Boy on the Bridge by M.R. Carey

    There's a character in common between this and Carey's The Girl With All the Gifts; this person appears

  • Six Fantastic Dystopian and Postapocalyptic Novels

    may be no law left except what you make of it, but if you steal my dog, you can at least expect me to come One is that an order might issue from the palace, a command unto the people saying “It is thus.” There's a character in common between the two books; this person appears at the end of The Boy on the

  • Review of The Vanishing Half by Brit Bennett

    Bennett explores the complicated implications of perception as reality when it comes to race and its returns to the girls' hometown and shakes things up by bringing her very dark-skinned daughter to a community She makes no apologies and emerges as a fixture of the community. The book explores the complicated implications of perception as reality when it comes to race and its

  • Three Offbeat Series I Just Started and Love

    visit our world, although humans are generally unaware of this; and someone with power and greed is compromising

  • Review of Home Before Dark by Riley Sager

    A compelling Gothic suspense story with supernatural elements that keeps you guessing. Eeeee! Sager has crafted a compelling Gothic suspense story in which we're along for the ride as Maggie, a young I've heard this one compared to The Haunting of Hill House, but I haven't read that one (or watched the

  • Review of Burn Our Bodies Down by Rory Power

    There was some unhinged behavior on one character's part, but the damaging of photos and off-kilter comments

  • Review of Dear Girls: Intimate Tales, Untold Secrets, & Advice for Living Your Best Life by Ali Wong

    reflections on growing up, the influence of her Asian culture, and starting out and making her way in comedy Wong’s reflections on growing up, her Asian culture, and on starting out and making her way in comedy And I do love hearing the stories of women in comedy.

  • Review of The Light After the War by Anita Abriel

    Vera and Edith are such a complementary WWII partnership, and I loved spending time with these strong I was completely engrossed. Vera and Edith are such a complementary partnership, and I loved spending time with these strong young

  • Review of Long Bright River by Liz Moore

    When her sister Kacey disappears and a string of murders rock the community, Mickey's need to solve the When Kacey disappears and a string of murders rock the community, everyone is suspect and Mickey's desire It's a smart, compelling story that totally had me hooked. Yes to this.

  • Review of The Dutch House by Ann Patchett

    by their stepmother after their father's death, and they spend the rest of the book experiencing and communicating The end 10% or so allowed for some character development and brief emotional complexity not present earlier

  • Review of The Midnight Line (Jack Reacher #22) by Lee Child

    The story involved a satisfying set of Reacher-figured-out-a-plan moments, along with somewhat of a commentary Child has been writing Jack Reacher novels since 1997, so whether you're committed to the series or you

  • Review of 142 Ostriches by April Davila

    Tallulah comes to some late and potentially illuminating conclusions about her grandmother’s parenting

  • Review of Djinn Patrol on the Purple Line by Deepa Anappara

    Anappara, a journalist, captures the myriad sights, sounds, smells—and complicated network of politics

  • Review of Fragments of Light by Michele Phoenix

    Then he comes back. (Who does this guy think he is?) all we've seen Nate do is leave our vulnerable protagonist, and in a way I was hoping for a painful comeuppance I received a complimentary copy of this book. Opinions expressed in this review are completely my own. What did you think? The combination of the WWII setting and my mixed feelings remind me a little bit of Sarah's Key, which

  • Review of In Pieces by Sally Field

    found Sally Field's discussion of her "craft" and how she grew and changed as an actor to be the most compelling found Sally Field's discussion of her "craft" and how she grew and changed as an actor to be the most compelling Therapy (and her acting as a sort of therapy) eventually allowed Field to come into her fully realized

  • Review of The Hunting Party by Lucy Foley

    Foley kept me guessing about the details, although a comeuppance was clearly coming. College friends who have drifted apart somewhat (for some of the characters, more than they realize) come When they are snowed in, truths begin to come out and uncomfortable confrontations erupt. the spot for my reading mood and kept me guessing about the details, although I could predict that a comeuppance was coming.

  • Review of The List of Things That Will Not Change by Rebecca Stead

    Change is a perfect shallow dive into a wonderfully imperfect character, Bea, and her increasingly complicated

  • Review of Pretty Things by Janelle Brown

    Brown kept me happily turning the pages to see who would get what was coming to them. socialite—and one of the cons aims to right some wrongs in two of the characters' shared (but mysterious and complicated yet Janelle Brown kept me happily turning the pages of Pretty Things to see who would get what was coming

  • Review of Where the Forest Meets the Stars by Glendy Vanderah

    adrift after her mother's death, and she disappears into the constant attention her ornithology research commands

  • Review of Catch and Kill by Ronan Farrow

    fears of those who can corroborate events and the threats to reporters who are trying to help the truth come It was ‘a consensus of the comfort level of the organization moving forward’ that bowed to lawyers’ threats It was ‘a consensus of the comfort level of the organization moving forward’ that protected Harvey Weinstein

  • Review of A Curious Beginning by Deanna Raybourn

    Veronica finds herself entangled in a dangerous set of circumstances, complete with intrigue, a traveling

  • Review of Tombstone: The Earp Brothers, Doc Holliday, and the Vendetta Ride from Hell by Tom Clavin

    Tombstone is Tom Clavin's comprehensive account of the lives of the Earp brothers (and also includes tensions and factors (including Western justice and on-the-fly policing; varied and horrific atrocities committed

  • Review of Hard Cash Valley by Brian Panowich

    Mountain, which was practically claustrophobic—and fittingly so—in its close exploration of a family and a community (Also, Panowich commented on my Goodreads review of this book! Eek! And yay?)

  • Review of Chosen Ones by Veronica Roth

    Roth could have potentially pulled back on the messy, complicated, partial resolution among multiple

  • Review of The Last Magician by Lisa Maxwell

    , but others wrapped up frustrating revelations-come-too-late (the identification of her parents; the

  • Review of The Eighth Detective by Alex Pavesi

    permutation of the elements of victim/detective/suspect and their overlapping Venn diagram possibilities and combinations Are the strange components intentional? Are they connections to a real-life murder from the past?

  • Review of The Southern Book Club's Guide to Slaying Vampires by Grady Hendrix

    employers to help focus police and media attention on a terrifying child-focused crisis in the black community and significant conflicts of the story when a mysterious stranger worms his way into the heart of the community pressures here: responsibility and risk; following gut feelings over worrying about propriety; the complications

  • Review of The Happy Ever After Playlist by Abby Jimenez

    It's an excellent setup for a romantic comedy of a book with enough heartache that your teeth don't hurt

  • Review of A Woman Is No Man by Etaf Rum

    “Where I come from, we’ve learned to silence ourselves. Where I come from, we keep these stories to ourselves. cruelty of her female characters against their daughters, daughters-in-law, and other young women in the community—in

  • Review of This is How You Lose the Time War by Amal El-Mohtar and Max Gladstone

    One warring creature comes from a technologically based world; the other is from a world of gardens and Seeker who appears at the end of each action scene to ingest the remains of the outlandish modes of communication The premise was completely up my alley.

  • Review of My Name is Lucy Barton by Elizabeth Strout

    stays in the room around the clock, catnapping, gleefully gossiping about the many marriages in their community In response to her mother's comment, Lucy says: But really, the ruthlessness, I think, comes in grabbing

  • Review of Say Nothing: A True Story of Murder and Memory in Northern Ireland by Patrick Radden Keefe

    the web of motivations and passionate beliefs behind the conflicts so that an outsider can begin to comprehend For me, this was nonfiction that was so compelling it read like fiction.

  • Review of The Family Upstairs by Lisa Jewell

    The letter inspires varied and complicated questions about the possibly disturbing events that transpired

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