Monday, July 10, 2023

Ten Rules for Faking It


 Ten Rules for Faking It
by Sophie Sullivan, 2020 St. Martin's Griffin

     Everly enjoys her position as a producer at a mid-level radio station. She works with her best friend who drives her to try getting out of her own comfort zone. Stacy is the voice of their radio program and opens the story by trying to make her best friend's thirtieth birthday special. Chris Jensen is the son of the station's new owner and put in charge as a single hoop in a series. Mr. Jensen sees the station as another toy to make him more money, but Chris sees the people. He sees the opportunity to grow the station and create a business which is more than just profit. 

     Unfortunately, Everly had just discovered her boyfriend in bed with his personal assistant and it was the frosting on the top of a series of terrible birthdays. When her explosion hits the airwaves Everly receives both an outpouring of support and the most terrifying series of events in her life. 

     When the owner sees Everly's on-air tirade as a reason to raise the system and sell it off piecemeal Chris tries to keep the crew together by offering the listeners a version of the Bachelorette. Everly agrees, with Stacy's help and support, and the station is able to leverage the success and listener engagement into a bond that ties the crew together and Chris to the crew. 

     Everly challenges her social anxiety to grow closer to the rest of the station's employees, including Chris. But the connection with her boss is more than just co-workers, or even friendship. The growing attraction between Chris and Everly forces each of them to question everything they've ever believed about their futures. But will it be enough? 

     The contemporary romance is the first in a series about the Jensen brothers as they find themselves and their partners. The first is a workplace romance dealing with parental expectations, mental health, and creating the future. Chris and Everly's story is a new adult contemporary romance. 

Saturday, July 1, 2023

The Midnight Library

 The Midnight Library by Matt Haig, 2020 Viking

     Nora Seed wants to die. She doesn't feel like her mediocre life is worth living anymore after her cat dies, she loses her job, and she doesn't have a clear way to achieve any of her dreams. Late on that fateful Tuesday night, Nora takes too many pills and finds herself in the Midnight Library. 

     In the midnight library it is always midnight: it is a place between life and death, a sort of Schrodinger's Cat in the plurality of worlds where the Librarian helps Nora chose a book--a life--to try out while she's in between. Nora begins with lives where she made the other choice: stayed with swimming and became an Olympic champion; continued on to study glaciers and join a research team in the Arctic; stayed with her ex, got married, and lived out his dream of owning a pub; or joined her best friend on an adventure in Australia. 

     Each life shows her a new way she could have lived, but there's always a sense of displacement - as if she's joined the race partway through. When she becomes disappointed in her life Nora returns to the Midnight Library and the Librarian. With each new life comes the possibility of perfection, but each life is shown to have it's own disappointments. When Nora experiences motherhood in one of her lives she discovers she does want to live. 

     But is the desire to live enough to keep her alive? Haig's thought experiment about what happens after death is a poignant look into regret, despair, and hope. With suicide at the center of the tale this story is appropriate for adults and mature readers.