This week, I finished The Hike (I honestly don’t know what genre to consider this), and I started The House on Half Moon Street (a Victorian era Historical Fiction).
Let’s chat about ’em.
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Just Finished
Title: The Hike | Author: Drew Magary | Genre: Fantasy ? Bizarro ?
Synopsis: We follow Ben, a married man and father of 3, who is away on business.
After checking into his hotel, Ben wants to go for a walk in the lush landscape. There’s a trail behind the hotel that suits his purpose, so he takes it.
This trail leads him to a strange, new reality where the rules of time and logic are upended.
His only chance of survival is to stay on The Path. But it’s fraught with perilous obstacles.
But Ben, wanting to return to his family, is determined to endure.
Could you love someone who seems unlovable? Even when they spurn your care? What about if they’re young, rich, and famous yet have no one who loves them?
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Allison, a woman, wife, and mother of three relocates from Texas to New York after her husband gets a promotion.
Soon after she arrives, she hits a car while dropping her son off at school, but the owner is nowhere to be found.
She leaves her contact information instead.
Days later, Allison receives a call, the voice on the other line demanding she drop off her insurance information to an address on Central Park West.
When she gets there, she discovers it’s the home of young, famous, pop-star: Carter Reid (her daughters’ favorite heartthrob).
But Carter isn’t all bubblegum and sunshine. He’s a mess who’s lacking love and guidance, as those around him take advantage. This concerns Allison.
Soon thereafter, she takes a job as his Personal Assistant.
Can Allison and her family make the adjustment to New York living? Can she help Carter get on a better path? Make better decisions? Not ruin his career? Trust again?
Strong characterization. Take Carter, for instance. He was so expertly portrayed that I forgot he wasn’t a real person. His thoughts, actions, and motivations were so spot-on given his backstory. I felt like I knew him, and eventually felt an affinity towards him.
We have 4 different books and 4 different genres: Women’s Fiction; African American Historical Fiction, Contemporary Romance, and a YA Fantasy Fiction.
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Disappearing Earth (Julia Phillips)
Disappearing Earth is a Literary Fiction, Women’s Fiction, novel that hits shelves on May 14, 2019.
Two sisters, ages 8 and 11, vanish off of a remote peninsula in Russia.
The police investigate the disappearance but nothing turns up.
Told during the course of a year, one months at a time, we heard from those affected by the disappearance: a neighbor, a detective, a witness, a mother.
Synopsis: Riley Ellison has just moved back to her small town home after breaking up with her boyfriend of 7 years.
After she returns, she decides to re-connect with her childhood best friend, Jordan. There’s just one problem: Jordan died by suicide a few days earlier.
Not fully believing Jordan’s death was a suicide, and also being asked by Jordan’s mother to write her obituary, Riley begins to look into the matter.
Did Jordan actually die by suicide? Was it foul play? If so, who would want Jordan dead, and why?
Unless you’ve been hiding under a rock, you’ve heard of Agatha Christie. Fun Fact: She’s one of the best-selling authors of all time. And she wrote over 70 novels, during her lifetime, all of which are still in print.
Now, shall we get into the synopsis? Spoiler-free, of course.
Heads up: Affiliate links ahead, which means I could earn a small fee if you make a purchase using one of these links.
Synopsis
The Orient Express is en route to London when a passenger is found stabbed to death inside his cabin. By chance, world renown detective, Hercule Poirot, is aboard. We follow Poirot’s investigation as he searches for clues, collects his evidence, and ultimately learns the killer’s identity.
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