For readers around the globe. :)

Sunday, February 28, 2021

A Good Girl's Guide to Murder

Was I unsure about this book when I started reading it? Yes.
Did I end up pre-ordering the second book about halfway through? Yes.
Did I get a little annoyed with the elaborate guilty confessions that were told to a high school student? Oh, yeah.
 
But this was a book that actually kept me up all night.
 
A Good Girl's Guide to Murder started as a senior capstone project for Pippa Fitz-Amobi. What started as a teenage murder/suicide soon became a double homicide in Pip's eyes. The whole town believed Sal Singh was behind the disappearance and murder of his girlfriend Andie Bell. They believed when he took his life several days later it was directly related to the guilt he felt. But Pip just can't take that story at face value. I mean, no one has ever even found Andie's body.

Pip is determined to find the truth. She speaks with many of Andie's and Sal's friends and families. She spends months investigating the secret life Andie was living; a secret older guy, drugs, late night hotel meet ups. There were so many questions that needed answers.

What I liked about this book was that a lot of what Pip and Ravi were doing for this project could have actually happened. With internet sleuthing on the rise, they genuinely could have found incriminating pictures on Facebook that would have proven Sal's innocence. Many cold cases are being solved this way, so I definitely enjoyed this line of investigating.
 
But, I did not enjoy Pip and Ravi breaking into someone's house to find a burner phone. I've said it a thousand times, you cannot break in and then take the evidence to the police. That literally ruins so much of the investigation. I also found it incredible annoying that several of the people involved just spill all their secrets to Pip in a several page long confession. That just.....no. It doesn't ever work like that.
 
But regardless, I'm obsessed with this series and cannot wait for Good Girl, Bad Blood to come in the mail!
 
Looking for the rest of the series?

Thursday, February 25, 2021

Unfinished

 
I heard Priyanka was writing a book and immediately pre-ordered it.

I first met Priyanka through her breakthrough character, Alex Parrish on Quantico. I was then quickly caught up in her whirlwind romance with Nick Jonas, aka my fav JoBro. I spotted her again starring alongside her brothers/sister-in-laws, in the Jonas Brothers comeback music video, Sucker.

Needless to say, I've been enthralled.
But I hardly knew anything about her.
 
In her memoir, Unfinished, Priyanka leads us through her entire life. She grew up traveling around India, went to an all girls boarding school, moved to America for high school, and somehow ended up back in India....where she went on to win Miss India AND Miss World WHEN SHE WAS ONLY SEVENTEEN. She details every second of that incredible feat in this book. It was a rollercoaster of emotions and we were right there for the journey. We saw her thriving in her Indian film career, becoming an international sensation, landing the lead role in an American television series, losing her father, channeling that anger into an amazing role, meeting the love of her life, and becoming an ambassador for UNICEF.

Her entire story is filled with hard work and load of encouragement from those closest to her. She was acutely aware of how different her life was compared to other young girls in India. She knew she was loved and cherished while others were going without medical care, being forced out of school, and becoming child brides and homemakers. That alone drove Priyanka to make a difference in the lives of young women around the globe. Everyone deserves a chance to live out their dreams and she's determined to show these girls everything they can be.

Sunday, February 21, 2021

Cracked Up to Be

I think Courtney Summers is going to be my new auto-buy author.

I debating reading her earlier work because I was afraid it wouldn't hold up compared to Sadie. I'm honestly amazed at how much I enjoyed Cracked Up to Be, which happens to be her debut novel.

As you all know, I'm a sucker for teen angst.
Now, this book was not all teen angst, it definitely deals with some hard-hitting topics such as alcoholism, drug abuse, suicide, rape, even murder. When you take those topics and set it in a Catholic high school and make the main character an ex-cheerleader? Oh yeah, I'm going to devour it.

Parker Fadley wanted to be perfect, people expected her to be perfect. But after a wild night, that all changes. Parker begins showing up to class drunk, stop turning in assignments, even attempting suicide. Her weekly meetings with the school counselor, Grey, don't really seem to be helping. Parker thinks she can pull one over on her friends and families, even Grey. But in reality they all saw through her bullshit. Everyone just wanted the best for her but she didn't want it for herself.

Since I bought the re-released copy of Cracked Up to Be, I got to read Courtney Summers' authors note. She talked about how she never felt the need to shy away from tough topics. She had to fight for Parker to be as unlikable as possibly. But I never really saw Parker that way. Parker has a darkness, a bitchiness if you will. But the facade she puts up is obviously not her. I don't think she's unlikable, I think she's misunderstood. However, all of her friends cherished her. I think the true unlikable traits were what Parker felt about herself.

I love reading the lives Courtney Summers' complex characters.
I love that she has stayed true to her characters across all of her books.
I loved this.

Looking for other books by Courtney Summers?

Friday, February 19, 2021

Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil

I have no idea why I waited so long to actually read this fantastic true crime book. I completely understand how and why it spent FOUR YEARS on the New York Times Bestseller List.

My friend loaned me her copy, just in time for me to move to Savannah myself.
I had been told many, many times that the first part of the book is incredibly dry and just sets the stage for the montage of people John Berendt meets his first year in Savannah. But my friend described it differently.... she said "It's kind of like the 'Southern Hello' where you can only say 'Hey, how's it going!' so many times before you're like 'oh my god why am I still greeting people.'"

Anyway, I made it about halfway through the book before I started asking myself when the true crime aspect of the book was going to start. Now, there are a few petty crimes mentioned beforehand. For instance, Joe Odom is a squatter and literally jumps from house to house giving tours, raking in money, and never paying a cent to live there. Oh, and he consistently writes bad checks and leaves parking tickets unpaid. But the best part of Joe's story? He's a lawyer.

But the main focus of the story was Jim Williams and Danny Hansford.
There's no question about it, Jim shot Danny. The question then becomes, was it self defense or premeditated? Was it a fight between friends or a lovers quarrel? There are so many questions that I don't believe we'll have answers to. Yet, after four trials, Jim Williams was finally found not guilty.

Honestly, the true crime aspect of the book was not near as entertaining as the rest of the book. John Berendt created a masterpiece based strictly on the types of people he met while living in Savannah for eight years. It was amazing seeing all of the different ways of life in such a small city. But what was even more amazing is that John somehow inserted himself into all of their lives. He was getting literally every side of the story and crafting this memoir turned true crime.

I'll definitely be getting myself a copy for my personal library!

Looking for other books featuring John Berendt?