Monday, July 22, 2024

She Started It by Sian Gilbert




Hello everyone.  I hope you are having a great day.

I'm so lucky.  Our wedding was beautiful.  Small and sweet.  We had it in upstate New York, several of hubby's southern friends attended.  My parents took care most of the major arrangements, since we were 500+ miles away.  They talked to the church.  You had to attend multiple counseling sessions and had to agree to have no booze at the reception.  That was a deal breaker for my parents.  Instead, we got married in a little white church we had passed for years.  Built in the 1800's it was exactly what you picture when I say, "little white church".  The female minister was wonderful.  We had one counseling session, which was not only enjoyable but actually really helpful and at that point we had already been together for six years. Then there were the bridesmaids.  Four with an addition of a maid of honor.  That maid of honor and I were ready to leave for the church when she discovered she has lost my husband's wedding ring, of which she had been the custodian.  Mass panic ensued.  Me racing around the house, fully dressed in the poofy dress, vail flying everywhere.  Five women in full pink taffeta dresses and white gloves, scouring my parents' house for the ring while the limo waits to take us to the church. Did you ever see the movie "Clue" where they are all running around like nuts...that was pretty much it.  Only add my frantic parents, grandparents, cousin and photographer. When we were finally at the church waiting to go down the aisle when one bridesmaid announced when she saw my husband to be show up.  By that time, his attendance was the least of my worries!

I recently read She Started It by Sian Gilbert. This is the first book for this author, hopefully not the last.  I picked this out of my tbr pile, intending just to flip through it.  I was pulled into the story immediately.  This is about a group of girls who, as children, tormented another child named Poppy.  Years have passed and currently the girls are all grown women with careers and families.  Out of the blue, the tormentors as grownups received invitations to be Poppy's bridesmaids.  To start the festivities, they are invited to a hen party...an American version would be a Bridal Shower.  They are all invited with a first-class plane ticket to a private island, where everything will be luxurious. Suspicious but unable to resist a free trip, they all go. While the women attempt to not only figure out why Poppy would include them, they also try to move past previous deeds.  The reader becomes anxious to know when these mean girls did, which is discovered through Poppy's journal entries showing us their school days.

This book not only drew me in, but it surprised me.  This is the second "island" book I've read back-to-back.  I literally groaned when I realized the setting, yet I kept reading. There is a big twist at the end, which you may or may not see coming. I didn't.  What this book does that is so interesting is that it changes who you root for, sometimes back and forth.  Not necessarily easy especially when doing it by showing deeds of the past and present. I'm tempted to say more, but fear it is a bit of a spoiler.  The story while interesting and amusing from the very beginning, the pleasing part for a constant thriller reader will be the misdirection.  Done through the passage of time, and not unreliable narrator, it is an enjoyable read.

Friday, July 12, 2024

One Perfect Couple by Ruth Ware



Hello everyone.  I hope you're having a great day.

Have you ever been asked one of those "if" questions?  I'm sure you have.  One of the most popular is: "What would you take if you were on a deserted island?"  People always say something stupid, like my curling iron or my boyfriend or chocolate.  Ask me.  Go ahead.  Ask me.  "April, what would you take on a deserted island?"  A BOAT! Hmmm maybe a satellite phone, water, food, tools.  I shouldn't make fun of how people answer.  If you asked my nerdy but hunky husband, he would take his model trains and relish the idea of finally having peace and quiet to run them. Now THAT is the way to clean out a bunch of the house in one shot!

I recently read One Perfect Couple by Ruth Ware.  I've been a big Ruth Ware fan.  I've read everything she has written and liked almost all, in fact, one of my all-time favorite books is The Death of Mrs. Westaway.  However, I realllllly disliked One by One. Thankfully, that was a fluke with me and my affection for Ruth Ware continues. 

One Perfect Couple is about couples that are going to a private island that is being made into a resort.  It hasn't opened yet and the structures and infrastructures aren't completed. Still, it's isolated and the tropical setting is considered optimal for a reality tv show. While the contestants don't really know what to expect, they are excited and happy to get started.  Everything appears bright as they are moved to the island on a yacht, then begin to experience the stunning island.  

The location quickly loses its beauty when a terrible storm hits, causing injuries and damage.  Suddenly the contestants find themselves cut off from any contact with the outside world.  The yacht with the production crew on board can't be found.  Their cell phones and all electronics had already been confiscated for the show.  Isolation quickly becomes very real, so does the need not to become a TV star but to actually survive.

While this book has a gracious plenty of characters, we begin by following, scientist, Lyla and boyfriend, actor, Nico.  The reader sees their audition process and their interworking as a couple.  While you might think the story as a whole has too many people to keep track of, don't.  You get the feel for who is who very quickly, as the characters are pretty unique from each other. The story moves quickly and like The Death of Mrs. Westaway, the setting becomes the biggest character.  Ware places you there giving just enough description to allow you to make the location your own, drawing you back into the story every time you stop reading.

A fun, gasp worthy book. Perfect for summer vacation, particularly a trip to the beach.