Tuesday, December 31, 2019

2019 Reading Wrap Up!

**2019 Reading Stats**

Number of Books I Read: 165
Number of Re Reads: 9


1) Best Book I Read in 2019?

 

2) Book I Was Excited About and Thought I Was Going to Love More But Didn't?


3) Most Surprising (In a Good Way) Book I Read?


4) Best Series I Started in 2019?


5) Best Book From a Genre I Don't Typically Read/Was Outside My Comfort Zone?


6) Most Thought-Provoking/Life Changing Book of 2019?



7) Book I Can't Believe I Waited Until 2019 to Finally Read?


8) Shortest Book I Read in 2019?


103 pages

9) Longest Book I Read in 2019?


720 pages

10) Book That Shocked Me the Most?


11) My OTP (One True Pairing) of the Year?


Alex & Henry

12) My Favorite Non-Romantic Relationship of the Year?


The Super Six (Alex, Henry, Bea, Pez, Nora, and June)

13) Best 2019 Debut I Read?


14) Hidden Gem of the Year?



I was so lucky to have read so many great books this year, too many to give recognition to in this entry-here's to another great reading year in 2020!








Monday, December 30, 2019

Review: Paw of the Jungle


I received an ARC of this book from the publisher in exchange for an honest review. This did not affect my opinion of the book or my review itself.

As a dog mom, I'm always intrigued by any cozy mystery featuring a dog, especially one that is helping solve the crime.

But unfortunately Paw of the Jungle, though having a kick butt dog named Brigit featured, was merely a meh read.

Most importantly for me, there wasn't enough mystery. There was absolutely no way for the reader to figure out who was taking the exotic zoo animals, which took a lot of the fun out of reading. The secondary subplot mystery about stolen rings was actually much more intriguing, and I was really excited to solve it right before the main character did.

There were too many points of view used, and I found it especially strange when the author chose to have certain small chapters from the dog's point of view. These chapters typically added nothing to the storyline, and simply described actions the main character could have described.

I really liked the romance between the main character and her firefighter boyfriend, and the ending almost tempted me to try the next book in the series to see where their journey took them, but I know that there wouldn't really be anything else to keep me turning pages.

Saturday, December 21, 2019

A Good Girl's Guide to Murder



This book is so good. Just so so good.

The protagonist is Pip, who, for her final school project, has chosen to reexamine an infamous cold case that happened in her hometown. While everyone around her believes what the official police investigation stated-that Sal Singh killed his girlfriend Andie Bell and then killed himself-Pip believes there's something more there. As she digs deeper into the secrets and lies, Pip discovers that someone doesn't want her to keep looking-and that finding answers could be more dangerous then she ever imagined.

This book has everything I love-a twisty mystery, secrets from the past, a romance I rooted for from the start, unique characters, a strong female narrator, use of unique formats, suspense, and surprises. The comparisons to Serial (Season 1) and Making a Murderer (both of which I also loved) are spot on, but this is also a book that more than stands on its own.

A Good Girl's Guide to Murder is one of my favorite reads of the year. Get your hands on a copy as soon as possible and make it one of yours as well!


Saturday, December 14, 2019

COYER Winter with Friends Sign Up!

Better late than never! I always love COYER, and while this has been such a busy time for me, reading is always so wonderfully cozy and relaxing.

I'm mostly focused on clearing physical books from my TBR shelves, but I also have a lot of ARCs on my Kindle that I want to read as well, so those eARCs will be for regular COYER!

I don't plan to do any Buddy Reads, but I love Readathons!

My reading recommendation is for a book by a lesser known author who I absolutely love. Both his books are great, so I highly recommend both, but I will pick Dominance by Will Lavender as my recommended read. It's an amazing literary thriller I've re read many times.

COYER:
1)


FFS, I Suffer From FOMO Readathon (December 15th-28th)
1)






Sunday, December 8, 2019

Review: The Family Upstairs



I received an ARC of this book from the publisher in exchange for an honest review. This did not affect my opinion of the book or my review itself.

Title: The Family Upstairs
Author: Lisa Jewell
Publication Date: November 5. 2019
Genre: Psychological Suspense
Recommended If You Like: twisted family stories, secrets from the past

The Book:

When Libby turns twenty-five, she receives the documents she's been waiting for-papers with the identity of her birth parents, and the announcement of the empty mansion she has now inherited. She also finds out that even though she was found as a happy healthy baby in the upstairs of the house, downstairs three people were dead and the other children had vanished. As Libby explores her past, she finds it colliding into her present in ways she never expected.

What I Liked:

This book kept me guessing from the very start! Just when I thought I had something figured out, Jewell completely turned everything on its head. I startled my dog a few times by gasping out loud. Despite being completely exhausted, I curled up on my couch reading for hours to finish this book, because I had to know where everything was going.

Anything I Didn't Like?

At first, I found the jump in perspectives a little confusing. But this didn't last long, and didn't affect my enjoyment of this book.

So...?

Definitely read this book! I might recommend a hard copy edition so you can flip back and forth in the beginning if you get confused a little, but a few chapters in you will not be able to put this book down. And that last sentence...it still gives me chills.