windycitysarah TBR'd a book

The Good House
Tananarive Due
windycitysarah is interested in reading...

The Winter People
Jennifer McMahon
windycitysarah TBR'd a book

Rebecca by Daphne Du Maurier (2006-09-05)
Daphne du Maurier
windycitysarah TBR'd a book

The Book of Night Women
Marlon James
windycitysarah created a list
She gets it from her mama
Generational trauma, timeline jumping, different POV
0






windycitysarah wrote a review...
God this was so bad. This is the Ryan Murphy of books. All the twists, none of them land, and the real twist is obvious before you even hit page 100.
windycitysarah TBR'd a book

The Great Alone
Kristin Hannah
Post from the Sarah's Key forum
I generally love multi-timeline/POV but I wish the author wouldn’t switch between the two narrators every chapter. This chapter would’ve been the perfect time to start Sarah’s story - ie. Julia the first third, Sarah’s story the middle and converge the two stories at the end.
windycitysarah started reading...

Sarah's Key
Tatiana de Rosnay
windycitysarah DNF'd a book

My Friends
Fredrik Backman
windycitysarah commented on trishjgibson's review of My Friends
windycitysarah commented on alienromancefreak's review of Vladimir
If I am ever in danger of caring about men this much I'll adopt another cat lmao
windycitysarah wrote a review...
This book made me realize that I should probably give all books under 3.5 ⭐️ a chance. With the current booktok obsessions, I’m convinced that anything not written in YA style with nuance is automatically going to be higher rated. Loved the storytelling style, loved the narrator grappling with her life + feelings. It was all just amazing.
windycitysarah commented on a post
I read it a few years ago, and the synopsis of Half his Age sounds eerily similar, so I was wondering if I should expect anything original.
Post from the My Friends forum
“Right before the out throwing in question, she painted the guard, which doesn’t mean that she paints a guard on a wall, but actually paints the guard himself. Unfortunately, of course, the guard does not give the impression that he is the sort of person who appreciates symbolism of that sort, he just rushes over, as angry as a wild boar that’s been given a habanero suppository, and grabs her so hard that she screams. Shortly after that, he screams too.”
I fear this may be a DNF for me - so much description to the point of trailing off. It’s like listening to the one friend try to tell a story that ends up going in 90 different directions because they think every detail is important when it’s not. I’m all for rich storytelling and painting a picture but there comes a point where it’s rambling - why did the above need an entire paragraph when it could’ve ended at the first sentence? I know this must be plenty of people who enjoy this type of writing but nothing infuriates me more than an author who thinks the reader needs an entire scene literally spelled out for them. Not throwing in the towel yet but morale is low 😂
Post from the My Friends forum
Gosh I love it when authors of long novels have short chapters! I feel like it makes it so much easier to get through the book - I hate stopping in the middle of chapters + I usually read at night, so if I know I can’t make it through 20 pages, I just won’t even start.
windycitysarah started reading...

My Friends
Fredrik Backman
windycitysarah TBR'd a book

Dark Sisters
Kristi DeMeester