OYENTE

Maryanne T.

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  • 157
  • votos útiles
  • 339
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Over the top twists

Total
2 out of 5 stars
Ejecución
2 out of 5 stars
Historia
2 out of 5 stars

Revisado: 04-16-25

2.5 stars for Saltwater. I liked the Capri setting and the premise but the twists were so over the top it broke my believability scale. If you don't need your twists to be believable (and I mean - in any way) then you will probably enjoy this mystery about a woman who is murdered on the Italian island of Capri and 20 years later her daughter is there with all of her rich entourage trying to finally figure out who killed her mother.

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mostly enjoyable

Total
3 out of 5 stars
Ejecución
5 out of 5 stars
Historia
3 out of 5 stars

Revisado: 04-09-25

3.5 stars for I See You've Called in Dead. This was a mostly enjoyable and quick read by John Kenney about "Bud" an obituary writer who is going through a rough patch and doesn't see the beauty in life anymore. One night after a bad blind date he gets drunk and writes his own obituary. As he has broken company policy he is immediately put on leave with the likelihood he will be fired. During this hiatus from work, Bud spends time with his best friend and landlord, Tim, who is a parapalegic with a much more optimistic outlook on life. At his ex wife's mother's funeral he meets a woman who goes to the wakes and funerals of people she doesn't know as a way to keep her invested in the life she has. So, Bud and Tim start joining her. The friendship between these two is genuinely touching and the author actually gets high praise for all of his characters who I found authentic and endearing. The witty banter and dialogue is also really well done. I think the story loses a little bit of steam with the continuous death theme that even when handled well is heavy. I liked it but was honestly ready for it to end and then I had issues with the ending itself that seemed a bit manipulative. Emotionally, that is. Would recommend if you are feeling introspective and considering the meaning of life or if you like witty narration with a continuous funeral heavy plot!

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genuine characters

Total
5 out of 5 stars
Ejecución
5 out of 5 stars
Historia
5 out of 5 stars

Revisado: 04-09-25

Welp, Annie Hartnett is probably going to be an auto buy author for me after this. 5 stars for Rabbit Cake. I adored her last book Unlikely Animals and that was also 5 stars for me. This was not quite as good but the voice was just so authentic and the characters were so deeply but endearingly screwed up I could not begin to give it anything but 5 stars. It's the story of sweet little Elvis, a 12 year old in Alabama whose mom has drowned and whose dad now walks around in her make up and night gown to keep her close. Her older sister alternates between sleep eating at night and trying to kill her dad's new parrot that talks like their dead mother during the day. She treats Elvis meanly as is any big sister's right to do so. And, while you spend most of the book reading about how this family is falling apart the real story is how they make it back to each other. Hartnett writes genuine characters struggling through their grief albeit dysfunctionally that you truly care about. Loved.

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5 stars for setting and voice

Total
4 out of 5 stars
Ejecución
5 out of 5 stars
Historia
4 out of 5 stars

Revisado: 04-09-25

3.75 stars rounded up to 4 stars for the voice in this unique fairy tale-esque story, Black Woods Blue Sky by Eowyn Ivey. This book is hard to review because while the writing in it is really good and the voice is superb - I got mad about one part and can't let it go. I am not going to spoil anything so I will just say, if you don't mind a little (ok, a lot) of magical realism in your dysfunctional family drama set against the stunning and wild landscape of Alaska - this book is for you.

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Climate fiction, mystery, romance and family drama

Total
5 out of 5 stars
Ejecución
5 out of 5 stars
Historia
5 out of 5 stars

Revisado: 04-09-25

5 stars for Wild Dark Shore by Charlotte MCConaghy! This book grabs you from the first paragraph and does not let go. It's equal parts climate fiction, dysfunctional family drama, mystery-suspense and a little bit of a love story, too. I thought the setting was so well portrayed - this remote research island off the coasts of Tasmania and Antarctica where the Salt family live as caretakers to the lighthouse and the "seed vault" that houses the most valuable seeds in the world, preserving them from fire and flood with the intent to save mankind. I tend to steer away from climate change and climate apocalypse fiction as it is just so depressing and so close to home (I live in a state which has "fire season.) But the conservation theme was just so beautifully played in this story of a family who finds a woman washed up on their shores and the mystery begins as to why she is there. As the storms rage and the waters continue to rise, time is running out for this dysfunctional little family of four - a widowed dad, Dominic, and his teenage son, Raff, his teenage daughter, Fin, and the youngest child, Orly, who is 9. The arrival of the half drowned/dead woman, Rowan, is met with suspicion by Dom and enjoyment by his children. In particular, the youngest boy, Orly, develops an attachment to Rowan that becomes an important thread in the plot. I found the mystery aspect of the story kept me engaged and appreciated the care in character development, although I did think that each of the children's unique connection to nature was a bit overdrawn. I think if you like a messy family and a bit of a mystery - with some climate change sprinkled on top, you'll enjoy this book immensely!

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Best book of 2025

Total
5 out of 5 stars
Ejecución
5 out of 5 stars
Historia
5 out of 5 stars

Revisado: 04-09-25

5 stars for Broken Country by Clare Leslie Hall. Loved this genre mashup of mystery and ill fated love and dysfunctional family drama with super strong character development and brilliant writing to boot! I know there is a lot of hype about this book, but, to be fair, it deserves it. It's just great storytelling! It begins in 1968 on a farm in North Dorset. Caught in a spider web of love, lies and murder, the main character, Beth, is at the center of it all. She is married to a good man whom she loves deeply, Frank, and is a well respected and liked pillar of her rural community. In spite of suffering a horrendous tragedy, Frank and Beth have managed to preserve their carefully woven lives on the farm without so much as a loose string until someone from Beth's past returns home and everything begins to unravel quickly. Gabriel, a famous writer and Beth's childhood love, has returned with his son, a boy who Beth befriends in spite of her gut instinct that she needs to stay as far away from this family as possible. The author takes her time traveling between the three timelines so that you are not sure until almost the very end who is on trial for whose murder. There are multiple jaw dropping moments and I advise you to read very little about this book so you don't spoil it for yourself. It's a complicated story about family and love and loss and all the ways your heart can bend and break and be put back together again. I loved it!

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Pool reading

Total
3 out of 5 stars
Ejecución
3 out of 5 stars
Historia
3 out of 5 stars

Revisado: 04-09-25

3.25 stars for The Snowbirds by Christina Clancy. This was yet another book following the trend of middle aged women at that intersection of life's less traveled path and continuing on with what you've done forever even though it is not satisfying or exciting or what you really want to do. In this story, Kim and Grant move to Palm Springs for the winter for a change from their cold midwestern life that has stalled out and Kim begins to question everything from her relationship to Grant to who she wants to be when she "grows up." Grant, who never wanted to move to Palm Springs in the first place, goes for a hike and just disappears. It is equal parts slow burn mystery about what happened to Grant as well as a woman transitioning to mid life and trying to decide how she wants to spend it. I found the constant internal analyzing of Kim's world to be a bit redundant and even annoying. She wasn't necessarily a super likable character, either. I also found the Palm Springs tropes to be over played. But it was a quick read and probably perfect for a pool day.

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fun, quick read

Total
4 out of 5 stars
Ejecución
4 out of 5 stars
Historia
4 out of 5 stars

Revisado: 04-09-25

3.75 stars for Blob by Maggie Su. This was a fun and quick read about a down on her luck young woman who takes home a "blob" and turns it into her dream man. It is quirky and heartwarming and all the things you sometimes need in a book! I loved the voice and the characters and the unique premise. Believe it or not, you won't have any trouble buying it!

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gorgeous

Total
5 out of 5 stars
Ejecución
5 out of 5 stars
Historia
5 out of 5 stars

Revisado: 03-03-25

4.5 stars for The Sentence rounded up to 5 stars because ~ Louise Erdrich! This is yet another gorgeously complex character study for Erdrich. Tookie is a young Indigenous woman who does a very stupid thing and ends up in prison. While in prison she develops a love of reading and words themselves. I shied away from this well loved novel of Erdrich's at first because of the prison trope. That is not this story, though. The real story is about Tookie's life and her relationships after she gets out of prison. With only her passion for books and whip crack memory, Tookie takes a job at a local bookstore that specializes in Indigenous literature and forms friendships with an entire cast of characters - each developed with the loving care that have made Erdrich my go to author for literary fiction. Tookie's job at the bookstore becomes challenging when Flora, an annoying- in-life patron becomes an even more annoying-in-death ghost patron. Flora, who died on All Saints Day reading a stolen Indigenous manuscript, claimed that Tookie was her best friend. Tookie, on the other hand, was not fond of Flora and is even less so after she begins haunting the bookstore. While the colorful bookstore crew try to come up with ways to send Flora off for good, other events are even more upsetting at home and locally when George Floyd is murdered by a police officer and video of it is shown in real time across the world. The subsequent outrage and riots and fires and destruction were worked seamlessly into this story of community, racism, and all of the ways human beings can tear each other apart and come together to heal. At the same time, Tookie's trying to come to terms with her husband who was the police officer who actually arrested her years ago and her wayward stepdaughter who she hasn't talked to in months but has now returned home with her newborn baby. Set during the pandemic, there is also an intricate sub plot of families forced together and the introspection of isolation. At times this book was compulsive- almost edge of your seat suspenseful and at other times it lagged momentum a bit. So I am detracting (theoretically) a half star for pacing. But with all Erdrich accomplishes in this novel, I absolutely feel it deserves the 5 star rating. There are themes of the value of language and the written word and how reading can actually save a person and cultural themes dealing with both micro aggressions of Native Americans in Minnesota as well as much bigger issues like the theft and repatriation of sacred Indigenous bones. And, as always, Erdrich seemingly without effort includes sub themes like climate change and how we are all connected whether we want to acknowledge it or not. I respect this author so much and will read anything she writes. Her characters are messy and lovable and quirky but brilliant and she spares no love on any of them. Even characters who never make it out of the first chapter are so colorfully written, you feel like they've lived next door to you for twenty years. Erdrich is a power house. Highly recommend in spite of a few pacing speed bumps.

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First chapter was SO creepy!

Total
4 out of 5 stars
Ejecución
5 out of 5 stars
Historia
4 out of 5 stars

Revisado: 03-03-25

3.75 stars rounded up to 4 stars for this really clever and easy read, We Are Watching by Alison Gaylin. This book hooked me very quickly. There is a truly disturbing scene in the very first chapter that was so creepy and unexpected! I absolutely LOVE books that grab you in the first chapter especially when they hang on for the entire read! The story centers around a mother and adult daughter in the weeks after a tragic accident as they try to regroup and go on with their lives. The mother owns a book store in the small town and the daughter is at home after the accident delayed her college entry. Strange things start happening pretty much right away in this suspenseful little story and there is a consistent feeling of unease that swells until bursting at the end. The town itself is full of quirky characters you aren't sure you can trust and I was honestly quite surprised at the ending. The plot is a bit out there - I suggest you go with it. Would recommend this book to anyone who likes to be immediately engaged and for readers who enjoy a unique premise and can suspend disbelief just a bit.

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