Review: Stars Over Sunset Boulevard by Susan Meissner

This is a novel that I liked so much more than I expected to. I love when books do that!

I’ve read a ton of books this year that have been set in the 1920s and 1930s eras, some with the glitz and glamour of old Hollywood as a backdrop. So many books in fact that I am getting a little tired of the era.

So when I picked up this book, I wasn’t sure what to expect and how I was going to feel about it. As soon as I started the book and found out the backdrop was not just old Hollywood but also had hints of the movie Gone with the Wind, I was immediately caught up in this story!

Flash forward to modern day Los Angeles. When an iconic hat worn by Scarlett O’Hara in Gone With the Wind  ends up in Christine McAllister’s vintage clothing boutique by mistake, her efforts to return it to its owner take her on a journey more enchanting than any classic movie…

The books then takes us back to Los Angeles, 1938.  Violet Mayfield sets out to reinvent herself in Hollywood after her  dream of becoming a wife and mother falls apart, and lands a job on the film-set of Gone With the Wind.

Continue reading “Review: Stars Over Sunset Boulevard by Susan Meissner”

Special Feature: RE JANE by Patricia Park

RE JANE: A Novel (Penguin Books ; On-sale: April 19, 2016; $16.00; ISBN: 978014310794) by Patricia Park is a fresh, contemporary retelling of Jane Eyre and a poignant Korean-American debut novel that takes its heroine Jane Re on a journey from Queens to Brooklyn to Seoul—and back.

For Jane, a half-Korean, half-American orphan, Flushing, Queens, is the place she’s been trying to escape from her whole life. Sardonic yet vulnerable, she toils, unappreciated, in her strict uncle’s grocery store and politely observes the traditional principle of nunchi (a combination of good manners, hierarchy, and obligation).

Desperate for a new life, she’s thrilled to become the au pair for the Mazer-Farleys, two Brooklyn English professors and their adopted Chinese daughter. Inducted into the world of organic food co-ops, and nineteenth-century novels, Jane is the recipient of Beth Mazer’s feminist lectures and Ed Farley’s very male attention. But when a family death interrupts Jane and Ed’s blossoming affair, she flies off to Seoul, leaving New York far behind.

Reconnecting with family, and struggling to learn the ways of modern-day Korea, Jane begins to wonder if Ed Farley is really the man for her. Jane returns to Queens, where she must find a balance between two cultures and accept who she really is.

Perfect for readers of Ruth Ozeki, Chang-rae Lee, Allegra Goodman, and—of course—Charlotte Brontë, RE JANE is a bright, comic story of falling in love, finding strength, and living not just out of obligation to others, but for one’s self.

Continue reading “Special Feature: RE JANE by Patricia Park”

Review: The Winemakers by Jan Moran

Caterina Rosetta has got some big time choices to make in her life but her options are limited.

She’s had a daughter out of wedlock with a man who she thinks has abandoned her….and since it’s the 1950’s, having a child out of wedlock basically means social suicide.

She hasn’t told her mother about the baby because she knows her mother will basically disown her so she needs to give the baby up for adoption…..but she can’t bring herself to do that either.

Her mother basically raised her all on her own, so why can’t she raise her daughter by herself? Caterina is an accomplished sommelier who has grown up in a family of winemakers. She is sure she can support herself in some way.

On a fateful trip to visit her mother, she confesses that she has a child and after a row between the two, Caterina is not sure what to do about her situation. Then a man shows up at the vineyard looking for Caterina.

Continue reading “Review: The Winemakers by Jan Moran”

Review: Lies and Other Acts of Love by Kristy Woodson Harvey

I don’t typically read a lot of ‘Southern fiction’ or women’s fiction, but there was something about this intriguing cover and description that lured me in.

After sixty years of marriage and five daughters, Lynn “Lovey” White knows that all of us, from time to time, need to use our little white lies.

Her granddaughter, Annabelle, on the other hand, is as truthful as they come. She always does the right thing—that is, until she dumps her hedge fund manager fiancé and marries a musician she has known for three days. After all, her grandparents, who fell in love at first sight, have shared a lifetime of happiness, even through her grandfather’s declining health.

But when Annabelle’s world starts to collapse around her, she discovers that nothing about her picture-perfect family is as it seems. And Lovey has to decide whether one more lie will make or break the ones she loves.

Continue reading “Review: Lies and Other Acts of Love by Kristy Woodson Harvey”

Special Feature: 13 Ways of Looking at a Fat Girl by Mona Awad

Since the book, 13 Ways of Looking at a Fat Girl, has been released at the end of February it’s been on everyone’s lips not to mention all over social media!

From People, Washington Post, Chicago Tribune, Huffington Post to magazines such as O to Cosmo and Marie Claire, pretty much anyone who has picked it up has been blown away. Roxane Gay has even called the book “necessary” and “Beautiful” and just this week highlighted it in a recommendation list for iBooks.

People are saying that it’s one of the most powerful novels they have read. Many are saying that author Mona Awad is saying things that have been in the heads of readers all over and they find camaraderie and comfort in her latest novel.

Awad tells the story of Lizzie March in a series of vignettes, starting with her awkward teenage years palling around the suburban town she calls “Misery Saga” with her best friend Mel. She navigates friendships, dating, and fraught relationships with both of her parents, constantly seeking confidence and acceptance.

When she leaves high school she begins, through a course of extreme deprivation, to lose the weight, until she can squeeze into the tight dresses she covets. But being thin doesn’t fix everything—in fact, her relationships with her mother, her husband, and her friends are only further complicated by her new physique, and all the complex feelings that surround it.

13 Ways of Looking at a Fat Girl may focus on Lizzie’s particular issues around body image and self-acceptance, but anyone who has ever felt the angst and alienation of growing up, who has ever felt inadequate or wished to be something other than what they are, will see themselves in this book.

Beyond that, this book is about female friendship, mother-daughter relationships, romantic relationships, and the relationship we have with ourselves.

With a book that is sending this powerful message and discussing these important issues that many women feel……I don’t expect the conversation about this book to die down anytime soon.

The folks at Viking/Penguin have created a stunning book club kit that includes playlists, movie lists, recipes, recommended readings, as well as discussion questions and an author Q & A. I highly recommend checking out the kit as well as the book! I am so bummed I couldn’t fit it into my review schedule for March but I am hoping I can swing a review later this spring or early summer!