Tuesday, January 10, 2017

The Memory Book by Lara Avery | Book Review

The Memory Book by Laura Avery


Reading Group: High School+

Personal Rating: 5 out of 5 Stars

Given Summary: They tell me that my memory will never be the same, that I'll start forgetting things. At first just a little, and then a lot. So I'm writing to remember.

Sammie McCoy is a girl with a plan: graduate at the top of her class and get out of her small town as soon as possible. Nothing will stand in her way--not even the rare genetic disorder the doctors say will slowly steal her memories and then her health.

So the memory book is born: a journal written to Sammie's future self, so she can remember everything from where she stashed her study guides to just how great it feels to have a best friend again. It's where she'll record every perfect detail of her first date with longtime-crush Stuart, a gifted young writer home for the summer. And where she'll admit how much she's missed her childhood friend Cooper, and the ridiculous lengths he will go to make her laugh. The memory book will ensure Sammie never forgets the most important parts of her life--the people who have broken her heart, those who have mended it--and most of all, that if she's going to die, she's going to die living.

Cover: I really like the cover of this book.  It's Sammie, but it's almost like she's fading away.  Similar to how her memory is slowly being lost.

My Review: I'm going to apologize now that the first two books I have reviewed in the new year are a little sad/depressing.  But neither of them are sad in the standard way in my opinion.  They were both sad in a way that you saw coming so you were able to prepare yourself for it when it actually hit.  Having time to prepare yourself for the sadness doesn't make it less sad, but it does make you have less of a reaction I think.  Obviously, in Thirteen Reasons Why the reader knows right off the bat that Hannah is dead and in this book it was pretty clear (to me at least) that Sammie's disease was going to cause her to die young.  Yes, there were moments that Hannah said it wasn't going to stop her and that she was going to go off to college, but even reading it I could tell it was a pipe dream.  It was great that she was so optimistic, but her disease was really serious.  It was sad to go through it with Sammie as she documented her good days and bad.  All that being said I really enjoyed this story.  I liked the idea of Hannah writing down her days, even the ones that didn't seem that important so that she could look back and remember them.  For me, it really hit home because that's essentially what I am doing with this blog.  If I ever wanted to, I could go back and read about what I did during any given week of 2015.  
I also loved Copper and Hannah because they shouldn't have worked out the way they did.  If Cooper were a stranger at the beginning of the novel, Hannah wouldn't have liked him.  He was a popular stoner who cheated his way through high school, and Hannah was a nobody on the debate team and valedictorian of her graduating class.  The reason they worked so well was that they grew up together.  A lot of people have friends like that.  The ones who you stick with because you know every side of them and you remember the time (s)he tripped and cried on the playground in third grade or some unimportant thing.  Heck, Style and I always tell each other that at this point in our lives we've simply known each other too long to give up on our friendship.  Plus, Hannah needs the history she has with Cooper because her memory is failing.  She needs someone who can tell her stories about herself from the past and make new memories with her in the present.  
This book was really interesting... I know that term may make you feel like it's some type of informational pamphlet, but that's a good word for it because I have never read anything like it.  
Sure, I've read books about teenagers dying from all sorts of different diseases, but this one was different.  I feel like I always personify diseases when I read books that have to do with teenagers with different illnesses, but I have to say that although any disease is awful, one that takes away your thoughts is just such a low blow.  To me, losing a leg or your hair to a disease is awful and takes away from the individual, but losing your memory is a new level.  Maybe you guys disagree, but I would rather lose a leg than forget where I am at any given moment.
Check this book out if you get the chance.

Smile!  I'll talk to you soon!xxx

Did this book remind anyone who's already read it of the movie "50 First Dates" because that was all I thought about the whole time I was reading it?              


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Tuesday, November 15, 2016

Gemini by Carol Cassella | Book Review

Gemini by Carol Cassella  




Reading Group: High School+

Personal Rating: 5 out of 5 Stars

Given Summary: Gemini is an unforgettable novel—a morality tale, a mystery, and a love story that will leave readers breathless” (Maria Semple, New York Times bestselling author of Where’d You Go, Bernadette).

As should be the case with any memorable love story, the first time Raney Remington saw Bo she hated him. 

When the skinny kid from the city first arrives in her Pacific Northwest hometown, Raney doesn’t quite know what to make of him. Yet her intense dislike of the know-it-all bookworm softens as Bo latches on to Raney, eager to learn about the Washington island he’s been sent for the summer. 

Decades later Dr. Charlotte Reese finds herself fighting to keep an unconscious ICU patient stable while also unwrapping the mystery of the unconscious woman, the victim of a hit-and-run. Consumed by questions about the woman’s identity, Charlotte enlists Eric, her journalist boyfriend, to investigate. Their search for answers brings them to heartrending truths about Jane Doe―and themselves.

In beautiful interwoven storytelling, master of medical drama Carol Cassella presents two women—lifetimes apart—who face the inescapable forces shaping their lives. Filled with stunning medical detail and set against the breathtaking backdrop of the Pacific Northwest, Gemini is a vivid novel of moral complexity and emotional depth that “is just what the doctor ordered” (People).


Cover: The cover of this book shows two women looking at each other with the forest overlayed on their faces.  It looks like the woman looking down has her eyes open and the woman facing up has her eyes closed.  This could represent Charlottle looking over Raney in the hospital and trying to figure out what was best for her.

My Review:  I bought this book because it was less than $5 at Barnes&Noble, but let me tell you this book was great.  It was unlike most books I've read before because it was so medical, but not confusingly so and it didn't sound like a research paper either.  Charlotte was Raney's doctor so she had to deal with all of the things that came with that and, of course, that means medical terminology that I don't know very well, but through the context of the book I could figure out enough to not have to look it up online.  
This book was crazy in the way it all worked out and how all of the characters were connected to each other.  Eric was in love with Raney, but the timing was never right for them and he was sick and never called her back so she got married.  It was interesting because breaking up with someone can be good, bad, or neutral and it's so different for everyone.  Eric was able to move on and he found Charlotte, but it took him some time to fully commit to her because he knew his future was uncertain.  Raney married Cleet and then David and her life seemed to go downhill after Eric left for good.  Except for Jake, who was her entire world.  I liked Charlotte and Eric together, but it made me a little sad to think of what could have been.
And then the whole Chimera thing that totally blew my mind and made me automatically think of Teen Wolf.  So I guess that means Jake was 50% Raney, 25% Cleet, and 25% Eric (?) or something like that.  It was amazing because I knew Eric had to be Jake's father because of his disease and physical resemblances, but his dark skin tone threw me for a loop and I was trying to figure out how they were all connected.  Who knew that something like this could happen outside of a laboratory?!
I definitely recommend this book, and I also encourage you to look through the sales bin at whatever bookstore you shop at and find something new! 


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