Colleen27
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Mar 31, 2007
- Messages
- 24,190
#13/156 - Scavenge the Stars by Tara Sim
I don't read much YA since my reader-daughter has gone off to college, but this one popped up on the featured page on Scribd and looked interesting enough to pick up. Billed as a gender-swapped retelling of the Count of Monte Cristo, the story centers around a young woman who was sold into indentured servitude as a child and has returned to her home city in a new identity, as a wealthy countess, to get revenge against those who profited from her labor and that of the other mistreated children on the ship. It was a quick, engaging read with interesting and likable characters and a plot too big to wrap up in one story, and I'm looking forward to picking up the sequel when it comes out.
#14 - Why We Can't Sleep by Ada Calhoun
Non-fiction about Gen X women as they face mid-life, this one was a bit of a miss for me. Some parts of the narrative, which wove together all of the social, economic and cultural forces that have put the women of this generation in a uniquely challenging position as they try to balance work, home and family with the expectations they were raised with, resonated deeply. Other parts seemed shallow and more than a little whiny. And taken as a whole, the book reinforced my inability to relate to the struggles of Gen X, to which I nominally belong.
#15 - Written on Your Skin by Meredith Duran
A rare miss by an author that is usually one of my go-tos for a light, romantic read. The story centers around a former spy who finds himself inheriting a title he never expected to claim and a woman who saved his life when he was on an assignment investigating her step-father, but neither of the characters was rendered in a particularly sympathetic way and the romance between them felt sort of lukewarm and at times mercenary, not the sort of overwhelming love-conquers-all story she usually weaves.
#16 - She Explores: Stories of Life-Changing Adventures on the Road and in the Wild by Gale Straub
A collection of short essays about travel, exploration and the outdoors, by women who have contributed to the blog/website of the same name, interspersed with photographs of some of the people and places written about, I had hoped for more from this. Most of the essays were short and to-the-point, not as reflective or narrative as I expected from the title, and could have done with more depth. But some stories were rather inspirational, and taken together, the book did a good job of spanning the range of unconventional ways that women are finding to interact with the larger world.
#17-18 - Heart of the Fae and Veins of Magic by Emma Hamm
A two-book series retelling of the Beauty and the Beast story, set in a world inspired by Celtic mythology where all manner of faeries populate the world, this was a really fun read that I didn't want to put down. The first book was stronger than the second, containing the heart of the classic fairy tale, but both were full of vivid descriptions and colorful characters and both adventure and romance. The series continues on with other fairy tale retellings centering around supporting characters in this story, and I've already downloaded the next one on Kindle to read when I get through the stack I picked up from the library this week.
I don't read much YA since my reader-daughter has gone off to college, but this one popped up on the featured page on Scribd and looked interesting enough to pick up. Billed as a gender-swapped retelling of the Count of Monte Cristo, the story centers around a young woman who was sold into indentured servitude as a child and has returned to her home city in a new identity, as a wealthy countess, to get revenge against those who profited from her labor and that of the other mistreated children on the ship. It was a quick, engaging read with interesting and likable characters and a plot too big to wrap up in one story, and I'm looking forward to picking up the sequel when it comes out.
#14 - Why We Can't Sleep by Ada Calhoun
Non-fiction about Gen X women as they face mid-life, this one was a bit of a miss for me. Some parts of the narrative, which wove together all of the social, economic and cultural forces that have put the women of this generation in a uniquely challenging position as they try to balance work, home and family with the expectations they were raised with, resonated deeply. Other parts seemed shallow and more than a little whiny. And taken as a whole, the book reinforced my inability to relate to the struggles of Gen X, to which I nominally belong.
#15 - Written on Your Skin by Meredith Duran
A rare miss by an author that is usually one of my go-tos for a light, romantic read. The story centers around a former spy who finds himself inheriting a title he never expected to claim and a woman who saved his life when he was on an assignment investigating her step-father, but neither of the characters was rendered in a particularly sympathetic way and the romance between them felt sort of lukewarm and at times mercenary, not the sort of overwhelming love-conquers-all story she usually weaves.
#16 - She Explores: Stories of Life-Changing Adventures on the Road and in the Wild by Gale Straub
A collection of short essays about travel, exploration and the outdoors, by women who have contributed to the blog/website of the same name, interspersed with photographs of some of the people and places written about, I had hoped for more from this. Most of the essays were short and to-the-point, not as reflective or narrative as I expected from the title, and could have done with more depth. But some stories were rather inspirational, and taken together, the book did a good job of spanning the range of unconventional ways that women are finding to interact with the larger world.
#17-18 - Heart of the Fae and Veins of Magic by Emma Hamm
A two-book series retelling of the Beauty and the Beast story, set in a world inspired by Celtic mythology where all manner of faeries populate the world, this was a really fun read that I didn't want to put down. The first book was stronger than the second, containing the heart of the classic fairy tale, but both were full of vivid descriptions and colorful characters and both adventure and romance. The series continues on with other fairy tale retellings centering around supporting characters in this story, and I've already downloaded the next one on Kindle to read when I get through the stack I picked up from the library this week.