Relativity - Antonia Hayes

RATING: ★

Relativity

I received this book from the publisher in exchange for a honest review. This in no way influenced my opinion of the book. 

Relativity by Antonia Hayes is the story of a broken family that is connected by their love and knowledge of the planets and physics. Ethan is raised by his mother Claire and knows absolutely nothing about his father. However, a decade later his father, Mark, reappears in Sydney and due to a complicated connection of events, he attempts to reconnect with his family.

Relativity switches between the perspectives of Ethan, Claire and Mark throughout the novel. I really enjoyed this aspect because it helps the story unfold in layers and as a reader you constantly change your perspective and ideas on what exactly is happening. There are also time jumps in the novel that kept me interested in the plot and wanting to find out what is going to happen next.

To say I am not a physics expert is an understatement. I about failed every single science-y course in high school. This meant that Relativity was a challenge for me at times. Ethan, and his father, are very interested in planets and the concepts of physics. While Antonia Hayes does a good job explaining these concepts, I sometimes did not understand how they fit into the story. There were pages of physics talk that I did not understand and I wish I was able to connect them to the story better.

The story overall was really interesting. I won't really talk about the big events that reconnect Mark to his family, because it is really exciting to see them slowly unfold on paper when you have no clue what is about to happen. Antonia Hayes is very successful in combining a character based story with an interesting and original plot. While I found the pacing often too slow for my liking, the story was gripping enough that I couldn't put the novel down.

Overall, Relativity is an original story, especially because it has an interesting and unconventional ending. I enjoyed reading this story and I would recommend it for people with an interest in our cosmos and physics. That knowledge will probably help you connect certain concepts better with the story, but even without it, it is still an enjoyable and emotional read.

Another Brooklyn - Jacqueline Woodson

RATING: ★

Jacqueline Woodson is a household name in YA, known for writing amazing books that are different from the majority out there right now. Up until last week, she was one of those authors that I knew I was supposed to have read, but never did. When I saw the cover of her gorgeous new novel, Another Brooklyn, I knew I had to read it. Technically, this book isn't sold as YA, but I'm pretty sure that any reader from 14 to 100 can enjoy and learn from this novel.

Another Brooklyn is the story of August coming of age. As August tells the reader at the beginning of the story: 'I know now what is tragic isn't the moment. It's the memory.' While this is August's story, it is also an ode to memories, tragic and not, and how our remembrances can shape us. August is an adult, thrown back into Brooklyn due to a tragic event, and tells the reader about her youth. She isn't reliable, but she is so lyrical and honest, that this book is a joy to read.

August grew up in Brooklyn with three close friends, Gigi, Sylvia and Angela. Throughout the novel, the backstory of all girls is revealed and their mutual, and very different, struggles are displayed next to each other. The book is an ode to the strength of girls, even if everything and everyone is against them.

There are a lot of time jumps in Another Brooklyn and the writing isn't a straight forward narrative. Things are left out or only alluded to, left there for you to fill the gap. However, that is what makes it so powerful. Filling the gap with an endless list of what possibly could have happened makes you relate to the characters so much more. The beautiful writing, mostly poetic throughout the story, makes it easy to relate to the girls.

I finished this novel in a day, but the story still hasn't left me. I want to know more about August. I want to hug her and Angela, Gigi, Sylvia. I want to crawl into the story and prevent certain things from happening. I want to protect them, but also experience with them. Another Brooklyn is unlike other books with its focus on memory and lyrical writing, but it is beautiful and I'm so glad Jacqueline Woodson shared this story with the world.

The Mothers - Brit Bennett

RATING: ★

I'm in America again!! This means that I will basically live at Barnes and Nobles for six weeks and in my first few days, I've already found some amazing new releases. I started reading The Mothers first, because I heard so many positive things about it. Even though usually books don't live up to their hype, this is one novel that I couldn't put down and I am so happy that Brit Bennett's story is out there.

The Mothers is the story of three African American teenagers growing up in California. Nadia Turner's mother recently committed suicide and Nadia is figuring out how to to deal with that while also deciding about her future and what to do after high school. She meets Luke, who is twenty-one and was a talented football player who had to retire because of an injury. He is the son of the local pastor and is waiting tables while trying to find a new dream. Another fixture in the church is Aubrey, who one day just wandered into the town looking for salvation. She lives with her sister and hides a traumatising past. 

As the title suggests, this is a book about mothers, but on more levels than I ever thought possible. It is clearly about Nadia's mother, who committed suicide for reasons no one seems to know. It is about Aubrey's mother, who is far from ideal and has put her child in some very harmful situations. It's about Luke's mother, who is a role model for the whole community and wants her son to be one too. However, it is not just that simple. Motherhood comes in many forms in this novel. Without spoiling it for any future readers, every single event that unfolds shows that motherhood is more complex than most people ever hold possible.

Besides a very strong theme, this is also just a very strong story. Nadia, Aubrey and Luke are all realistic characters with their own struggle who intertwine and relate on many unexpected novels. It's a story about growing up, and more specifically growing up African American in a society where your choices can be limited by your race. Just like Ruby, this book was an eye-opener for me to the specific challenges that seem so far from mine as a white European. This book doesn't lecture, this book shows and makes you feel everything every single character is feeling, even though it might be completely unknown to you before this story.

The writing is absolutely beautiful with every character having a distinct voice that transports you easily into their head. While I usually dislike changing perspectives, Brit Bennett does it so effortlessly that it makes the story only better.

No review will do this book justice, because it is an emotional story that stays with you long after you finished it. This isn't just about reading, this is about experiencing and I won't be able to stop recommending this book for a very long time.

The Night Circus - Erin Morgenstern

RATING: ★

I'm out of my reading slump! After a solid two months of barely any reading, I finished three books in one week! There's no better feeling than finally returning to so many books and stories and to be able to really enjoy reading them. The first book that I read is The Night Circus by Erin Morgenstern. Now I know the hype train for this book is long gone (if you read the book, you'll catch the joke!), but I couldn't resist finally reading it too. 

The Night Circus is the story of a circus that travels around the world and is only open at night. However, this is not a normal circus. It always shows up unexpected, is completely black and white and contains many tents with wonders so magical that you can't be sure if they aren't true magic. 

What I loved about this story is the originality. Everyone has some memory of childhood that includes circus and how magical they are. I remember that I always felt like they just showed up, as in the story, and were completely unannounced. While that certainly wasn't true, I like that the book played with that element. As a child, everything in a circus seems magical and I love the idea of a place like that for adults.

Even though the book is about the circus, the key plot line is a romance story. Both Celia and Marco are magicians, trained from childhood to compete with each other in a battle that can only have one of them win. Their playground? The circus. The complication? They love each other.

Both Marco and Celia are well-rounded characters and very enjoyable to read. Throughout the story, we work towards one big climax and in the beginning this was a little confusing. There were many characters that seemed vague and unnecessary, but it all tied in in the end. The only real complaint I can have about this book is that the real plot twist could be spotted from a mile away and thus made some of the emotions of Marco and Celia fall a little flat. When they found out and were all shocked, all I could think was 'but they MUST have known this, right?'. They didn't.

But if I nitpick about something like that in my review, it can only mean one thing: I really enjoyed this story. The setting and descriptions were amazing and though I'm not as entranced as some other readers by the love story, I did genuinely enjoy reading about Celia and Marco and their relationship. It's not always straightforward and its complexity is a thing of beauty.

 

 

Update!

Hi everyone,

sorry I've been SO quiet! I moved from London to Belgium, I'm finishing my thesis and I'm trying to still vlog every now and then. I never expected vlogging to be such a great break from all the writing and academic reading! So though I've been quiet here, I have been busy!

My newest video are two mini reviews! I wanted to write these, but I really enjoyed talking about them, so let me know how my video reviews are!

 

Here's my summer bookhaul!

The mid-year book freakout tag!

The Life of the World to Come: A Novel - Dan Clunchey

Rating: ★

GOODREADS

FIVE MOST IMPORTANT POINTS

1. Amazing writing

2. Philosophy all around

3. 500 Days of Summer romance

4. Death row lawyers!! 

5. A tad overdramatic at times

I received this book from Netgalley in exchange for a honest review. This in no way influenced my opinion of the book. 

I wasn't sure what to expect from The Life of the World to Come by Dan Clunchey. For once, this wasn't a cover-download, but I just really liked the synopsis of the story. Leo Brice, a law student, meets Fiona, a Marilyn Monroe-esque girl who takes him on a crazy roller coaster during their time together. But like all good things, this ends too and Leo is left to pick up the pieces of their relationship and his life.

What I loved most about this book is the amazing writing. On the one hand, this is a novel about first loves and how they can take a piece away from us. On the other hand, it's about Leo's law studies and how he deals with having to represent a client on death row. Though these two things might seem completely unrelated, Dan Clunchey ties them together beautifully with a narrator whose voices I absolutely loved.

At its core, this is a book about death. Death of friendships. Death of love. Death of justice. Death of certain people. This sounds terribly pessimistic and dark, but it somehow isn't. Leo at his core loves life, and though he might forget it at some points, his voice always carries a certain optimism with it. And if it doesn't, there are other characters who fulfil that role in the novel.

Overall, The Life of the World to Come is an easy and amazing read. What makes life worth living? You leave the novel knowing what Leo would say, but you will continue thinking about your own answer for a long time after finishing this novel. If you love lawyers, doomed romances and/or philosophy, you cannot miss this stunning novel. 

The Summer That Melted Everything - Tiffany McDaniel + Q&A!

Rating: ★

GOODREADS

FIVE MOST IMPORTANT POINTS

1. Paradise Lost references in chapter titles and plot

2. Well-rounded characters

3. Amazing setting descriptions

4. Well working plot

5. Grab you tissues

I received this book from Netgalley in exchange for a honest review. This in no way influenced my opinion of the book. 

The Summer that Melted Everything is the debut novel of Tiffany McDaniel. She has also made a great trailer where you can see exactly how much other people have loved this novel too!

So don't just take my word during this review: trust other people who love books too! And because Tiffany is amazing, she always answered some questions for you readers. Read those first and then my thoughts about the novel below!

Q.  Tell us a little about yourself.

A.  I’m an Ohio poet and novelist who wishes I could ride the back of Moby Dick across the great Atlantic, make a web with Charlotte, and shoot the breeze (but no mockingbirds) with Atticus Finch.  I want to spend every summer bottling Dandelion Wine with Ray Bradbury, and spend all my Octobers haunting around and checking sugar for arsenic with Shirley Jackson.  

Q.  What inspired you to write The Summer that Melted Everything?

A.  When I was twenty-eight I felt like I was melting.  It was one of those Ohio summers that just about turned me into a puddle of myself.  Thus the title was born.  As far as what inspired me to write this story, I always say what inspires me always are the characters themselves.  My characters feel very real to me, as if at some point I will actually meet them in full presence, if not here in this world, perhaps in the one after.  They exist and in their existence they inspire me to tell their story as honestly as I can.  

Q.  The story is really very sad. As a writer, did you ever want to stop and turn away from the world you created?

A: I’ve always said I’m drawn to the crash, not the landing.  I want to explore the wreckage, the broken fragments, the things that which were once whole and are now scattered upon the ground.  I never have that urge to stop or turn away because to me these moments that test us emotionally are moments we’re closest to the truth of our own infinite selves.

Q.  Is your book based on personal experiences? 

A.  While the story itself is not based on personal experience, the landscape certainly is.  The story takes place in the fictional town of Breathed, Ohio, which is a landscape very much reflective of my childhood summers and school-year weekends spent in southern Ohio, where the hills speak, the creek paces in its own good time, and the roads are dirt-laid and grass-lined. That wildflower song, front porch chatter, and southern twang has shaped me as a writer. Having spent my childhood summers down-home was like being one of the rolling hills, forever rooted in rust and dirt and moon-shine magic.  

Q.  Do you have anything you would like to say to readers?  And where can readers find you?

A.  I would like to say to readers that without you, there are no novelists to be had.  Readers give meaning to an author’s words.  So if you like a book, tell everyone you know.  Be that book’s champion because if you do, you’re being a champion for the author herself.  My only hope is that readers like what I’ve written.  That they can count on me to deliver a story that is worth both their time and their hard-earned money.  Nothing would make me happier than to know a reader has finished one of my books with the pleasure of having read it.  That’s what I strive for as an author.  To be someone’s favorite author as so many authors have been mine.  

As far as where readers can find me, I’m not on social media, but they can jump on to my website here at www.tiffanymcdaniel.com

Readers can also connect with me directly through my website.  That connection to readers is very important to me.  As I’ve said, they’re the ones who determine an author’s entire career.  How can I not give them some of my time, when they’ve given me some of their time reading my book?

My review:

The novel is set in Ohio in the 1980s and starts off with Autopsy Bliss putting an add in the newspaper inviting the devil into his town. The devil shows up in the shape of a homeless black boy, who is the same age at Autopsy's son Fielding. Fielding find the devil, who calls himself Sal, and brings him back home. This does not only send the whole town into a heath wave, but also triggers the start of many bad events in the town.

Tiffany McDaniel tells this story in a surrealistic way, reminiscent of Paradise Lost by Milton. This is referenced by her starting each chapter by a line of two of the novel. Though you don't have to read Paradise Lost to understand this novel, the writing style becomes a lot clearer when you do. This is not just a real story about a family taking in a black boy. This is almost a Biblical story about who the devil is and how he can hide in the people we least expect it from.

What I thoroughly enjoyed while reading this was the coming of age element. Fielding is a young teenager in a white family. When Sal comes in, he is suddenly confronted with racism and discrimination. People already hate the devil before they even know who he is. Though Fielding tries to help Sal, we also see how young he is and how he's unable to resist the influence of certain people. I loved how Fielding isn't just an upright, always smart kid. He's growing up and discovering himself and his world and he hits a few serious bumps along the way in figuring that out.

This book is so much more than I can do justice to. It's about religion, race, love, family, abuse, death and so much more. All these themes are interwoven beautifully by McDaniel and you'll breeze through this novel on any hot summer day.