![Perfect Lives](/uploads/profile_image/536/ad0251b8-4eb5-46bb-aff6-deb52b021536.jpg?m=1522358220)
Perfect Lives
Book
In an English seaside town, lovers and children, young men and middle-aged women weave in and out of...
![40x40](/uploads/profile_image/08d/974cbbfa-30e2-4ef8-9312-c609eb77508d.jpg?m=1522330819)
Alison Pink (7 KP) rated The Visionist in Books
Jan 15, 2018
One quote stands out to me as a good summary of the story as a whole. Urquhart wrote, "But this, this love lifted from the ashes, abused, abandoned, afraid, misread, discarded, half-dead - like those who enter into it, it is broken. Yet beautiful, so very beautiful."
![Die drei !!! – Skandal im Tierheim](/uploads/profile_image/23f/45f91422-9b79-4592-936b-8faf6d80a23f.jpg?m=1522337498)
Die drei !!! – Skandal im Tierheim
Games and Entertainment
App
Spendendiebstahl im Tierheim! Ist Praktikantin Zoë wirklich eine Diebin? Hilf Kim, Franzi und...
![The Blue Guitar](/uploads/profile_image/9fb/b0be13f1-428c-4c7d-a44f-a02103c9b9fb.jpg?m=1522340648)
The Blue Guitar
Book
From John Banville, one of the world's greatest writers, comes The Blue Guitar, a story of theft and...
![Dismembered: Why the Assault on the State Harms Us All](/uploads/profile_image/08d/04938ba0-02b5-40b0-99c1-04af3708c08d.jpg?m=1522330822)
Dismembered: Why the Assault on the State Harms Us All
David Walker and Polly Toynbee
Book
From the bestselling authors of Cameron's Coup comes a devastating critique of our current...
Politics
![Girlfriends - Series 1](/uploads/profile_image/060/dcddcd6b-f23d-4230-be32-9b46fa468060.jpg?m=1546424725)
Girlfriends - Series 1
TV Show
Girlfriends follows the lives of three middle-aged women who have been friends since their teenage...
Drama
![40x40](/uploads/profile_image/9ac/12f75c60-bc28-43de-bc92-2daaffcfc9ac.jpg?m=1586738828)
Ivana A. | Diary of Difference (1171 KP) rated The Plus One in Books
Oct 21, 2018
I love romance, and chick-literature. I love fast reads, and enjoyable nonsense. The cover looked so cute, and when I got approved the ARC on The Plus One from Sophia Money-Coutts on Netgalley, I was excited to read it. And then, it all started going downhill…
The Plus One is a book about Polly Spencer. She is thirty, single and works for Posh! Magazine. I didn’t like the Poly Spencer of now, and I thought, this might be a book where the main character is a lady with no self-respect, gets dumped, doesn’t have any ambition in life, and that’s okay.
People learn, people change, or if people don’t change, they start to be happy in their own world, without bothering what others think about it.
But Polly - she is all of these things, and on top of that she is not a happy bunny. She keeps complaining about things without trying to act on it, and her day consists of her checking if the phone has a message of her ‘crush’, and asking herself eighty-six times whether to send a message first or not.
I usually love these types of books, but not in cases where the character is just so… I don’t even have the words to explain.
And the book is full of words used too often (Shenanigans is such a lovely word, and Sophia destroyed it for me), lame pick up lines (‘I carry farm animals. I can manage you.’ - WHO SAYS THAT?), dialogues and useless waste of pages with people deciding what to eat:
‘So let’s get some onion bhajis to start. And then I’m going to have a butter chicken. And it comes with popadoms, right?’
‘Yes’ - I said, taking the menu from him.
‘And I’ll get the chicken jalfrezi. And plain rice. Mums, do we have any chutney?’
And it goes on…
At 42%, I decided to store this is my DNF stack. I really wish I had loved it, and I am so sad I didn't.
But life is too short to read the books you don’t like...
![The Leavers](/uploads/profile_image/11d/717fe195-31ab-4642-beb8-dd7268c0a11d.jpg?m=1522360850)
The Leavers
Book
One morning, Deming Guo’s mother Polly goes to her job at the nail salon and never comes home....
Fiction
![The Sliver Shadow (True Colors #11)](/uploads/profile_image/0be/f5f2cb32-06f4-41d2-a63f-c5d4e6ce00be.jpg?m=1618904196)
The Sliver Shadow (True Colors #11)
Book
Fiction Based on Strange, But True, History True, riveting stories of American criminal activity...
Adult Fiction Crime True Crime History
![40x40](/uploads/profile_image/aed/1dc76c8c-bdad-4a22-855a-b9a7ab564aed.jpg?m=1549652028)
Rachel King (13 KP) rated Blue in Books
Feb 11, 2019
What I could not predict was how absolutely fascinating the world of Tamarisk is. I actually thought about researching all of the made-up names of the plants, animals, and geology before I completely realized the depth of creativity to which Becky and her father Chris went in the creation of this fantasy world. What began as a coping mechanism for a young child going through the rigors of chemotherapy became a world in an alternate universe that existed with its own laws of physics. I was completely enthralled by this unbelievable world of blue foliage, black dirt, microfarming, moldable crystal, smelling of chocolate and raspberries, and featuring transportation in the form of giant flying birds - and that is only the beginning of all that this world holds to tantalize the senses and ignite the imagination. Becky's voyages into Tamarisk alone are enough to fill countless children's stories that would hold any grown adult rapt with wonder.
On the alternate side of this fantastic world is the grievous reality of the ongoing feud between Chris and Polly, Becky's divorced parents. Even though Polly has remarried, she still harbors intensely negative feelings towards Chris. In addition, Chris's whole life is about finding ways to connect with Becky better, as the reader watches him fail at blind date after blind date. Becky wants so badly to hang onto her life that she lives in denial of her increasingly-severe symptoms. My heart went out to all of the characters at different points as I connected with the different emotions and situations. As a mother, I can not even fathom one of my children going through the horrors of childhood cancer, and as a wife, the thought of abandoning my spouse is inconceivable, especially during such a difficult time. My heart broke for Becky's best friend Lonnie, and I felt the awkward sadness of Becky's stepfather Al. These characters are as real as if this story were not fiction, but a memoir or biography.
I could not help noticing the parallels between belief in Tamarisk and the beliefs of Christianity. Polly either could not or would not believe in Tamarisk, and many of her arguments against it matched the common ones against a belief in the existence of God and Heaven.
The ending was bittersweet, but light on bitter and rich on sweet. I shed a tear, but Chris's perspective was very fitting for how I felt about this conclusion. This was a very, very good read that would enrich any reader's book collection. What I gained from this book will stick with me for a long time to come.