Maybe Matilda: February 2016 Reading Recap

Wednesday, March 2, 2016

February 2016 Reading Recap

Thank you all so much for your kind words about our new house! We're so excited about it, and it's so fun to have you share our excitement, too.

I know you were probably expecting to see more house pictures today (sorry, I didn't mean to be a tease with only one photo in the last post), and I'm planning to get to that Friday.

But today, I've got to wrap up my month of reading for February. I'm sorry to say that this wasn't my most successful month of reading -- there was only one book out of this bunch that I really loved and would be happy to recommend to you!

book review of because of mr terupt
Because of Mr. Terupt by Rob Buyea

This middle grade novel about one classroom of 5th grade students is told from the points of view of seven different students, showing us how their dynamic young teacher, Mr. Terupt, changes each of their lives. It's rated very highly on Goodreads, and I chose it to fill a category on my Worthington Ave. 2016 reading challenge: a book that's set where you were born (Connecticut).

I thought it was cute, and can imagine myself loving it back when I was an elementary school kid. As an adult, it was fine, but nothing life-changing.


Shadow and Bone by Leigh Bardugo 

The once-great nation of Ravka has been torn in two by the Shadow Fold, a mysterious darkness filled with lethal monsters. When her best friend is attacked, unremarkable Alina discovers a power with the potential to destroy the Shadow Fold forever.

This trilogy is very popular and I've heard a lot of praise for it. I enjoyed it, but the world-building and characters felt weak to me -- I never felt like I understood the world, or the magic, or even the characters themselves. I started the second book, hoping for more substance, and quickly abandoned it. Not for me.

Enchantment by Orson Scott Card

Another book chosen to fill a Worthington Ave. reading challenge categoy, this time "a book based on a fairy tale." I chose this modern retelling of Sleeping Beauty, despite not being Orson Scott Card's most devoted fan. As a child, Ivan stumbled onto a clearing in a forest where he found a beautiful woman sleeping on a pedestal, guarded by a magical force. After pushing aside the memories for a decade, he returns to make sense of what he saw, and is drawn into a centuries old fairy tale. I thought it was creative, but it was a major chore for me to finish it.


The Last Anniversary by Liane Moriarty

I really enjoy Liane Moriarty (my other favorites are Big Little Lies and The Husband's Secret), and this one was an absolute delight, too. Sophie Honeywell unexpectedly inherits the home of her ex-boyfriend's elderly aunt on a quiet island that is home to an unsolved mystery. She moves to the quiet island and learns that everyone there seems to be hiding something. It's fast and enjoyable and funny without ever feeling too 'fluffy.' Chapters are alternately told by different characters, and the parts told by a new mother going through postpartum depression made me absolutely ache. They hit a bit too close to home for me. Loved it all, though.

night film book review
Night Film by Marisha Pessl

24-year old Ashley Cordova's death is ruled a suicide, but an investigative journalist suspects there is more to the story than meets the eye -- Ashley's father is a reclusive cult-horror-film director whose dark and gritty films seem perhaps too horrifying to be entirely fictional. The story only becomes more strange the deeper he digs, and family secrets come to light.

There were parts of this book that I loved, and ideas in it that I thought were really interesting. But overall, it felt too long and, in the end, totally underwhelming for me. Womp womp.


What have you read recently?

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