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Saturday, May 2, 2020

The Girls in the Garden by Lisa Jewell

Review by Mrs. O'Dell

The Girls in the Garden, after finally getting into it, ended up being a page-turning, suspenseful,  phycological thriller.  I struggled at first because there were so many characters to keep straight.  I didn't know who was trustworthy and who was the antagonist.  It took until the last page to figure those two things out, and that is why this novel is a must-read. 

Grace and Pip move to a unique neighborhood with their mother Clare.  Here they try to start over after a house fire caused by Grace and Pip's father (Clare's husband) has a schizophrenic break.  The teenage girls have to start a new school and make new friends - and in this neighborhood, there are strong alliances already formed.  Getting into the clique takes some uncharacteristic behaviors for Grace and Pip; Grace conforms quickly while Pip is more hesitant.  The sisters actually draw farther away from each other as Grace makes friends (and secures her first boyfriend) during the summer.  But the Fourth of July neighborhood party turns into a crime scene, and everyone is a suspect. 

I certainly did not see the ending turning out the way it did, and I loved that about this book. 

- 5 stars!  (Another British author: tea, pounds, etc.)

The Death of Mrs. Westaway by Ruth Ware

Review by Mrs. O'Dell

The thrilling mystery, The Death of Mrs. Westaway, contained red herring after red herring, throwing me off during most of the climax and conflict resolution.  I thought I had it all figured out until another clue was introduced.  I believe I was just as confused and on-edge as Hal, the narrator.

Hal Westaway was at rock bottom.  She was only twenty-one, living alone, in debt up to her ears.  Now, the "broken teeth...broken bones..." (Ware 222) debt collector was on her case.  Not only was she not going to be able to pay back this loan or make rent, she couldn't afford to eat.  And just when it looks like she was going to have to take drastic measures to stay afloat, she got a letter saying she was to inherit some money.  This would have been the answers to her prayers, except...well, she wasn't related to Mrs. Westaway.  Hal had to decide whether or not she was going to lie to these people and take the money or to tell the truth. 

With the help of her mother's diary, a family photo album, and some recalled facts from the help long ago, Hal is able to put the pieces together.  The antagonists are not exactly who she thought they were, nor were her allies.  All of these conflicts provide a chilling mystery and intense conclusion. 

- 5 stars!  (Note: Ruth Ware is a British author.  Beware some terminology that may be tricky.)

Regretting You by Colleen Hoover

Review by Mrs. O'Dell

Regretting You really contains two plots: one, the story of Morgan, a stay-at home mother, and the other, Clara, the teenage daughter.  The narration went from Morgan in one chapter, to Clara in the next.  Usually when I read novels narrated like this, I tend to enjoy one narrator better than the other, but Hoover is too good at her job for me to favor one over the other.  Both of their stories had me hooked.

Morgan and her high school sweetheart, later her husband, had their daughter Clara when they were teenagers.  Morgan stayed home with the baby while her husband went to college and began a career.  When their daughter is sixteen, there is a crazy car accident, one that leaves both her husband and her sister dead.  The circumstances of why her husband was with her sister is a mystery, and Morgan tries to solve it alone, leaving Clara in the dark.

Clara's story is that of a normal teenage girl but with the added grief of the loss of two of the most important people in her life.  She is forbidden to date the one person who may help her cope, and she begins to make mistake after mistake.  Not knowing her mother is keeping detrimental secrets from her to protect her, Clara rebels in uncharacteristic ways.

Eventually, both characters come to an understanding, but only when all the cards are on the table.  The ending is very satisfying, with a combination of acceptance, forgiveness, humor, and love.

- 5 stars!

Dear Evan Hansen by Val Emmich with Steven Levenson, Benj Pasek, and Justin Paul

Review by Mrs. O'Dell

This novel presents some scary topics, like mental health and suicide, but the authors create a narrator that is totally believable and universal.  Although some of the decisions Evan Hansen makes are quite questionable, he eventually makes things right.  Readers can learn many lessons from Evan's snowballing lies.

Evan is struggling, socially and emotionally.  His mom gets him some help, but the doctor that he sees requests that Evan write an optimistic letter to himself everyday.  These letters begin "Dear Evan Hansen, Today is going to be an amazing day, and here's why...".  One day he is running late, so he prints his letter at school, where it is intercepted off the printer by Connor Murphy.  Later that night, Connor commits suicide, and his parents find Evan's letter thinking it is Connor's suicide note.  Evan then makes the decision to pretend to Connor's parents that the two were best friends.  And this is where the snow-balling begins.  One lie leads to another and another, but Evan, the once anxiety-ridden loner, is now confident and popular, and the truth gets farther and farther away from him.

As a mother and teacher, this novel makes me cringe, not because it is poorly written and unbelievable.  Quite the opposite actually.  I cringe because I could see this scenario playing out in reality, and it is terrifying.  The moral of the story here is to tell the truth, always, and to be kind to everyone. 

- Four stars

Sunday, April 5, 2020

Educated: A Memoir by Tara Westover

Review by Mrs. O'Dell

This memoir was not at all what I expected it to be.  The cover of the book, at first glance a giant red, sharpened pencil, gives the impression that the topic is about school, maybe opinions of public education.  And although the author details her educational path, this memoir is much more about abuse, neglect, violence, brainwashing, and mental health than the author’s rise from all of it (through her education). 

Tara Westover was born into a Mormon family in the mountains of Idaho.  She had six brothers and sisters.  Her father was obsessed with preparing for the End of Days: digging a cellar in a hill and stocking it with canned peaches, storing a huge gasoline tank underground, and stocking up on guns and ammunition.  He put his kids to work scrapping in his junkyard, a dangerous task for anyone, let alone small children.  Tara’s father taught her that doctors and medicine were sinful, education was sinful, and a woman’s place was in the home.  She thought she was homeschooled, but her mother’s version of homeschooling was handing out textbooks and sending her kids to their rooms for an hour.  Tara flipped through fifty pages of a math book, then report back to her mother that she had done fifty pages of math.  The truth was she had no idea what she was looking at.  When Tara reported that she wanted to go to school, her father convinced her that the Lord would provide and there was no need for school.  So, Tara spent her days helping her mom with her herbal remedies and her father in the junkyard.  It wasn’t until one of her brothers, Shawn, became super verbally and physically abusive that Tara made the decision to leave the mountain life.  She taught herself math and took the ACT, without any schooling, and earned a high enough score to get into BYU. 

She was very much a fish out of water at BYU.  Tara struggled in her first semester, socially and in class.  She didn’t know history.  She had never even heard of the Holocaust.  Through determination and hard work, Tara fought her way through poverty and being an underdog student.  But a life altering lecture in psychology opened her eyes to mental health disorders, including pi-polar disorder and schizophrenia.  She started to understand her father. 

Educated is the true story of Tara Westover’s internal conflict between her father’s anti-main-streamed, anti-government, “head for the hills” lifestyle and her own ideas and perspectives.  The problem was that her father would not allow her to have her own opinions; if she didn’t agree with him, then she was cut-off from the family.  You will have to read for yourself how things turn bout for Tara. 

-Five stars! Two-thumbs up! A must-read for any human who seeks a greater knowledge!



Friday, April 3, 2020

Forever Safe by Jody Hedlund

Review by Thela Preisman 

Forever Safe is about a young woman named Victoria, who doesn't really know what's going on in her life. She has left two men waiting for her down the aisle, and has a fiance right now. She has a bodyguard named Tom who thinks taking her to his parents house will keep her safe from the person trying to kill her. Tom promises her father that nothing will happen between them even though they are married only in name, but Victoria is almost needing Tom. She doesn't realize her fiance isn't for her. At the end though, Victoria realizes what she needs in life, but almost leaves Tom until he finds her and realizes why she's scared to get married. She's afraid of her future, since it happened to her mother. 

Thursday, April 2, 2020

In Five Years by Rebecca Serle

Review by Mrs. Lehman 

Don't we all wish, at one time or another, we could see a glimpse into our future for just a moment? That is the premise for the book, In Five Years. The endearing main character, Dannie Kohen, plans everything. She is in full control of her career as a corporate lawyer, and lives in a great apartment with her perfect boyfriend, David. She always knows what to expect and has made all the right choices for a wonderful future. One night in particular, though, Dannie has a dream, a vision, of one night in her life five years from now...and it is not at all what she has planned. In Five Years, is the story of how Dannie's life unfolds with David, her best friend, Bella, and her promising career in the five years after her dream. Even with all of her careful planning, can she keep the vision from coming true? Does she even want to change it? 

Readers will quickly be drawn into Dannie's internal and external conflicts. Serle also takes readers on a final twist at the end. I enjoyed this book, and wanted to keep reading to see how the plot would turn. I would give it 4.5 stars.