Tag: 1980s

Book Review: I Would Die for You, by Sandie Jones

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Title: I Would Die for You (audio)  
Author: Sandie Jones        
Genre: Mystery/thriller
Rating: 4 out of 5

Now: Nicole Forbes lives a quiet life in a small seaside Californian town with her husband and daughter. She is not expecting a writer to knock on her door asking for her personal insight into the downfall of the biggest British band of the 1980s—unveiling the threads of a life she put behind her years ago. The same day, her daughter goes missing and the school claims her aunt picked her up . . . but she doesn’t have an aunt. Convinced of a link between the two, Nicole is forced to revisit long-abandoned memories from her past to protect everything she now holds dear.

1986: Sixteen-year-old Cassie is obsessed with the hottest band in London, Secret Oktober. Harboring an intense crush on the leading man, Ben Edwards, she will do anything she can to capture his attention among the throngs of groupies at the band’s scandalous backstage parties. But when Ben discovers her older sister Nicole singing at a local bar one night, he can’t help but feel drawn to her, setting in motion a collision course that could tear their family apart.

I listened to the audio version for this, and I enjoyed it. The narrator did a good job and kept me engaged. I liked 1980s Nicole more than I liked sort-of-present-day Nicole, and the way her entire life/marriage fell apart in slow motion was hard to watch. I felt horrible for past Nicole, but the misunderstandings back then were next level.

I did not care for Cassie at all. She was delusional, self-absorbed and selfish, manipulative, a pathological liar….AND psychotic. Her behavior was completely off the rails, and she never showed an iota of remorse. She made the hair on the back of my neck stand up, honestly.

Sandie Jones is a bestselling author. I Would Die for You is her newest novel.

(Galley courtesy of Macmillan Audio in exchange for an honest review.)

Book Review:   Our Little World, by Karen Winn

Image belongs to Penguin Group Dutton.

TitleOur Little World     
Author:  Karen Winn  
Genre:  Fiction  
Rating:  3.8 out of 5

July 1985. It’s a normal, sweltering New Jersey summer for soon-to-be seventh grader Bee Kocsis. Her thoughts center only on sunny days spent at Deer Chase Lake, evenings chasing fireflies around her cul-de-sac with the neighborhood kids, and Max, the boy who just moved in across the street. That and the burgeoning worry that she’ll never be as special as her younger sister, Audrina, who seems to effortlessly dazzle wherever she goes.

But when Max’s little sister, Sally, goes missing at the lake, Bee’s long-held illusion of stability is shattered in an instant. As the families in her close-knit community turn inward, suspicious, and protective, things in Bee’s own home become increasingly strained, most of all with Audrina, when a shameful secret surfaces. With everything changed, Bee and Audrina’s already-fraught sisterhood is pushed to the limit as they grow up–and apart–in the wake of an innocence lost too soon.

This was definitely not a light and fluffy read. I found it pretty dark. Part of that could be that my younger brother was diagnosed with type one diabetes in 1988—about two years after Drina was—and the issues Drina had with her disease felt so, so familiar. Even leaving that out, Bee is not a happy narrator, and I felt that on every page.

Karen Winn lives in Boston. Our Little World is her debut novel.

(Galley courtesy of Penguin Group Dutton in exchange for an honest review.)