Monday, April 30, 2018

Review: The Amateurs by Liz Harmer

Title: The Amateurs
Author: Liz Harmer
Genre: Science Fiction
Pages: 336 (Harcover)
Publisher: Knopf Canada
Publication date: March 21st, 2018

Synopsis from The Amateurs' Goodreads page

PINA, the largest tech company in the world, introduces a product called port. These ports offer space-time travel powered by nostalgia and desire. Want to go back to when your relationship was blossoming? To when your kids were small, or when your parents met? To Elizabethan England? To 1990s Seattle? Easy. Step inside the port with a destination in mind, and you will be transported. But there is a catch: it's possible that you cannot come back. And the ports are incredibly seductive, drawing in those with weaker wills...
Nearly everyone buys the ports, and soon, nearly everyone is gone. Those who are left attempt to sort out how to survive in this world nearly devoid of humans. Animals are increasing in numbers, roads are degrading, the Internet is down, and gasoline is running out. The survivors are also left with numerous unguarded ports, which are as mysterious as they are threatening.
In this world we follow a motley crew camped out in the abandoned mansions and stately church of a former steel-town that has seen its own share of collapse and growth. The group of about thirty adults and children are looting and surviving on what food they can find. But the harsh winter is fast approaching--do they make the choice to head south as a group, or wait to see if their loved ones will return through the ports?
The Amateurs focuses on a thirty-something artist and shopkeeper, Marie. She has never gotten over her ex-husband, Jason, and stubbornly hopes he'll return to her from his new marriage and from the world beyond the port. Meanwhile, in California, life at PINA is breaking down. Brandon, the former head of PR and right-hand man to Albrecht Doors, the mad genius who invented the ports, decides to get out while he still can. He steals a solar-powered car and drives north-east, where he hopes to find his missing mother, and start a new life, maybe a family. And there he meets Marie.



THOUGHTS

I received a finished copy from the publisher in exchange for an honest review -- Thank you Penguin Random House!!

I was SO insanely excited for this book when I saw the possibility of getting a copy for review. I'm a massive science fiction nerd and when I read the synopsis for this book, I was SUPER excited. Not only that, but it takes place in Canada, in Southern Ontario, which is where I'm from! Nothing is cooler than going into a book and when the characters talk about streets and roads and being able to picture them perfectly because you have been to the city multiple times (it takes place in Hamilton!). So that made me have really high expectations, and although I enjoyed the book, it did have some flaws in my opinion.
The Amateurs takes place in the not so far future, and makes the reader contemplate what every character in the book contemplates - if you could go anywhere, any time, where would you go? and, WOULD you go? This book really makes the reader question their beliefs and their values, and that is really refreshing in a science fiction book.
I really enjoyed a lot of the aspects of the story. I loved the setting of the story because I was so easily able to connect with it, because I've been to Hamilton. I loved the way that the author was so descriptive of the buildings and the escarpment, how even little details were very well described, which made it really easy to picture.
I also really enjoyed how the author made some outlandish ideas seem just commonplace. All the tech, PINAphones and other tech devices, were spoken of as though they exist in the real world and we should know exactly what they are. The only qualm I had about this is I wish that she had described them a little better - there were some things I was a little confused about, and other things that my nerdy self wanted a bit more detail of.
I also enjoyed the characters themselves. There were not too many in the story, so it was very easy to keep them all straight and to remember which ones are which. I loved how they all fought and bickered and communicated, but were still families and still were able to work together.
The only problem that I had with the characters were that they didn't seem to develop a drastic amount. I found that only the main male and the main female character developed in any truly noticeable way, and even then, it was really only one major decision by either of them that showed any true development. I wish there had been a bit more from them; I feel like the story could have gone in so many more directions if there had been more monumental moments and decisions from the two main characters.
The plot itself I enjoyed, and the idea of the story itself I absolutely loved. I just wish that there had been more of the time during which the ports were being created and going around the world, when the population had been drastically dropping. The book itself takes place completely after the world's population has been demolished by the ports, and I feel like if there had been more talk and more flashbacks of the time during the ports that more could have happened in the book itself.
Overall, I thought that the book was dark, but enlightening, and that it was bold and one of the most creative books that I have read in a long time!
Overall - ★★★

Thursday, April 26, 2018

Review: Other People's Houses by Abbi Waxman

Image result for other peoples housesTitle: Other People's Houses
Author: Abbi Waxman
Genre: Realistic Fiction
Pages: 352 (Paperback)
Publisher: Berkley Books
Publication date: April 3rd, 2018


And now the author of The Garden of Small Beginnings returns with a hilarious and poignant new novel about four families, their neighborhood carpool, and the affair that changes everything.

At any given moment in other people's houses, you can find...repressed hopes and dreams...moments of unexpected joy...someone making love on the floor to a man who is most definitely not her husband...

*record scratch*

As the longtime local carpool mom, Frances Bloom is sometimes an unwilling witness to her neighbors' private lives. She knows her cousin is hiding her desire for another baby from her spouse, Bill Horton's wife is mysteriously missing, and now this...

After the shock of seeing Anne Porter in all her extramarital glory, Frances vows to stay in her own lane. But that's a notion easier said than done when Anne's husband throws her out a couple of days later. The repercussions of the affair reverberate through the four carpool families--and Frances finds herself navigating a moral minefield that could make or break a marriage.
THOUGHTS

I received a finished copy from the publisher in exchange for an honest review -- Thank you Penguin Random House!

I have heard a lot of buzz around this book, especially from a lot of book bloggers and booktubers in the US, because it was featured on Book of the Month a few months ago. Ever since I heard of it, I was instantly interested in getting my hands on it!
Other People's Houses is about how one single decision can ruin more than one person's life, and ruin it to the point of no repair. It was so sad but also so funny, however this book is definitely for a more mature audience!
There were so many different characters in this book, so many crazy kids, so many out-there parents, that there was always something crazy going on throughout the entire story. That was an aspect of the book that I really enjoyed - that everyone got an equal amount of time in the story, and how every group of people had their own problems and how they were each just trying to live their lives and work through it. I really enjoyed the kind of "secret look" into each and every married couples' lives, and I thought that it was really interesting how they each had their own problems.
Also being said about the characters, is that they were all different and they were all unique in their own way. With a book this length with the amount of characters that there is, I was really expecting to struggle keeping up with all of the characters and how they were all connected. But each one of them had some either redeeming quality or some quality that drove me CRAZY, so it was easier to keep them straight than I thought it was going to be!
Another thing that I really liked about the book was how everyone had something either bad or just difficult happening in their lives. I don't want to say that I like bad things happening to characters that I like, but it makes them easier to connect with if they have something bad happening in their lives that impacts them in some way. Seeing characters struggling to deal with things, in my opinion, makes it easier to like them and easier to see parts of yourself in them as well. Having each character dealing with something made the story itself more realistic.
I did have a few issues with the story, however. Personally, I didn't like the ending, because to me it seemed a bit rushed and a bit unrealistic given what happens to the characters throughout the story. I found it to be a bit rushed and a bit forced, and that made the book not quite as good as it had been to me.
Overall I did enjoy this book! The characters were realistic, the plot was easily followed and the story line was quirky and interesting!
Overall - ★★★☆☆.5

Tuesday, April 3, 2018

Stacking the Shelves (2): So Many Books

Hello everyone!
Image result for great aloneStacking the Shelves is a tag that I've seen around the book world, where people talk about the books and bookish things that they've acquired over the last little while.
Since the stack of books on my desk has gotten fairly large, I figured I'd do another one!
These are all the books I've gotten recently!

Adult books:

  1. The Great Alone by Kristin Hannah
  2. Bachelor Girl by Kim Van Alkemade
  3. I Found You by Lisa Jewell
  4. The Light We Lost by Kill Santopolo
  5. War at the Edge of the World by Ian Ross
  6. City of Brass by S.A. Chakraborty
  7. Emma in the Night by Wendy Walker
  8. All the Missing Girls by Megan Miranda
  9. Local Girl Missing by Claire Douglas
Teen books:
  1. The Marrow Thieves by Cherie Dimaline
  2. History is All You Left Me by Adam Silvera
  3. A List of Cages by Robin Roe
  4. The Beauty That Remains by Ashley Woodfolk
  5. I Have Lost My Way by Gayle Forman
I'm super excited to get to all of these books!