Category: Book Reviews

Review: Luckiest Girl Alive by Jessica Knoll

Review: Luckiest Girl Alive by Jessica Knoll

By the end of it all I just assumed no one ever told the truth, and that was when I started lying too.

I have been stuck in a reading rut for a little over a month now. I wanted to read but couldn’t tell what I was in the mood for and none of the books on my shelves appealed to me. Finally, a walk around a book store and picking up a book with a cute cover brought me back to reading. Luckiest Girl Alive caught my eye. The cover said it is soon to be a movie from Reese Witherspoon and I love me some Reese. This book is a good fit for a reading rut because it isn’t a difficult read. I got through it pretty quickly and it’s set in New York. For some reason I love books and shows set in NYC, even though I have never visited.

Luckiest Girl Alive tells the story of TifAni FaNelli (weird name I know). She is a woman living in New York who works as an editor at The Women’s Magazine, a thinly veiled version of Cosmo. She will soon marry a rich, handsome blue blood. Although she seems to have it all, Ani has a tragic past involving her attendance at the private Bradley School more than a decade before. Her past threatens to ruin her carefully crafted perfect life. The book explores those secrets she tries to hide.

I liked this book. It isn’t the best book I’ve read by any means but it has a generally good pace and a few good plot points that kept me interested. But, the characters fell a little flat. While there is a bit of a twist I expected something bigger and more shocking toward the end. Instead the book just ended, leaving me wanting. Ani is not a likable character, in fact she is a rather superficial mean girl. This doesn’t bother me as much as it does others. Honestly, we don’t get enough viewpoints from characters that aren’t likable. The problem with Ani is that she has legitimate reasons for being the way she is. But the author tends to gloss over some of her deeply ingrained insecurities. This leaves us with a surface view of Ani as a person. This is bothersome because the book is from Ani’s perspective. Even if the other characters don’t get to see her real inner turmoil, the reader should. There were glimmers of deeper characterization but the writing never quite got there.

Despite some flaws, the writing is decent. The events are tragic and I didn’t see them coming right away, although the hints spread throughout the book come off as a bit too deliberate. This is a good summer read for when you want to read but aren’t in the mood for difficult dialogue or complex characters. The addition of an essay written by the author about her real life experience, which informed a heavy event in the book, moved me more than the entire book that preceded it. Originally published in Lenny Letter, I recommend giving the essay What I Know by Jessica Knoll a read even if you don’t pick up her book. Luckiest Girl Alive is a good simple read as long as you don’t expect too much from it.

Unpopular Opinion: Ready Player One is Decent At Best

Unpopular Opinion: Ready Player One is Decent At Best

I’ll preface this review by stating that I am not a gamer in any sense of the word. Many people have tried for years to get me to like video games and no one has been successful yet. That being said, Ready Player One is a gamer geek’s wet dream. I picked up the book thanks to the recommendation of a friend and the hype surrounding the new movie. I wanted to love this book but alas I’ll call the book decent at best.

Ready Player One tells the story of Wade Watts, a teenager in a dystopian future. The world has exhausted it’s resources and people have given up trying to save it. Their only escape is inside a virtual reality world known as the OASIS. As the economic center of this world, the OASIS provides both livelihoods and entertainment. The stage is set after the game’s creator, James Halliday, dies and leaves a hidden Easter egg inside the OASIS. The first person to find the egg inherits Halliday’s entire fortune and a controlling interest in his company, Gregarious Gaming Systems (GGS). Wade and other ‘gunters’ are pitted against the Innovative Online Industries (IOI) corporation, who seek to win the egg and take control over Halliday’s company.

The book is filled with a plethora of (mostly 80s) pop culture references. These references are the soul of the book. To find the hidden egg, Wade must sort through Halliday’s obsession with the pop culture of his childhood. The references point to three hidden keys and gates that will unlock the egg. Characters constantly make off hand references to all things pop culture. You’ll find everything from Monty Python to 80s music and old arcade games. As more of a literary nerd myself, a lot of the references flew over my head while still managing to be a bit too in your face. It felt a bit like a pop culture test that I was failing. The heavy handed use of pop culture could inspire interest in readers to do some research. Research is necessary because it is unlikely anyone below the age of forty knows most of this stuff. But it feels more like the author tries to show how vast his knowledge of the 80s is rather than inspire others. It may have come across a little better if the references were fewer and better integrated. Often it felt like the references were thrown in for fun with no actual benefit to the storyline. The references did inspire me to find a YouTube playlist with every song mentioned in the book. I listened to the music while reading and it set the mood and I got a better idea of the scene the book was setting.

As for the storyline itself, it falls a little flat if you remove the pop culture references. The idea of people living inside a game has promise, but the execution leaves something to be desired. Wade (gamer tag Parzival) is struggling to find the egg and prevent IOI from taking control of the OASIS. IOI seeks control of GGS because to them the OASIS is chiefly a moneymaking operation. They believe the OASIS is wasting its’ potential by offering free access. Payment is still required within the game so the OASIS isn’t exactly an egalitarian haven either. IOI isn’t actually explained enough to be anything other than a big bad. This storyline has interesting parallels with the current debate over net neutrality but the story never fleshes it out. IOI is only one example of a novel whose characterization isn’t as complete as it needs to be. I never actually cared enough about any of the characters to be invested in the story.

The story tries to leave with the takeaway that “reality is the only place you can find real happiness”. Unfortunately, the entire book shows the exact opposite. The romance plot thrown in to illustrate this point rang hollow to me. The main character getting the girl at the end exists as the sole evidence of a better reality. The female character exists solely as a trophy for Wade to win at the end (a myriad of problems with this, but I digress). It felt contrived. The entire book exists inside the OASIS. Then the reader must believe reality is better when at the end of the book, the world is still in shambles. For me, the struggle for the OASIS against IOI had the most potential. It is wasted in favor of a romance that fails to prove its point. In the end, Ready Player One is a fun read with promise, but falls short of the sci-fi novels it often references.

Review: Bossypants by Tina Fey

Review: Bossypants by Tina Fey

You’re nobody until someone calls you bossy.

I might just have to get this quote put on a t-shirt. As a woman who has often been called bossy since childhood, that quote alone spoke to me enough to pick up this book. Lucky for me, the book as a whole has even more to offer. Bossypants by Tina Fey is a fun, hilarious book of solid life advice with everything from improv tips to (sarcastic) beauty advice.

I flew right through this book. It grabs you and entertains the whole time. I am a lover of sarcasm. It is the brand of humor closest to my heart and quickest to my head. Bossypants is a sarcastic ride through Tina’s life and career. The book made me laugh aloud at least once a chapter with its quick sarcastic humor that accurately portrays the plight of women in the workplace. It might seem odd to find good life and career advice from a comedy writer, but this book is full of gems that any woman can use in her own life. Fey includes advice for work, management, acting, motherhood and everything in between. The humor makes you feel comfortable reading about Fey’s personal details without feeling like you’re prying. After this book I am not sure even TMZ could bring Tina down.

Fey makes her own life feel relatable to the reader despite being a mega successful star. She grew up in a small town in Pennsylvania. She had self esteem issues and boy trouble and a crappy job after college. But it is the way she talks about her awkward self that makes you almost forget you are reading the words of an Emmy award winner. Her take on her own life makes you feel like if someone as silly and awkward as Tina can make it, then why can’t I? I am not usually a fan of self-deprecation but this book might just change my mind. She is delightfully self-deprecating when it comes to her looks and smarts and how she managed to be this successful. Hitting the right amount of self-deprecation while still acknowledging your own success is hard to do, but she manages to make you laugh with her and at her at the same time.

Within all of the witty banter and humor are some seriously good tidbits of advice. One of my personal favorites is her advice to collaborate instead of compete. She states that as a woman in any business people will try to make you feel like you are in competition with the other women, but this perception isn’t true. This is great advice because so often we are made to feel like we must be better than everyone around us to get ahead. Especially as there are fewer women in power positions it gives the perception that only a certain number of women will make it, when in reality we can collaborate to help each other out. Our success does not diminish the success of those around us. I also enjoyed her advice to “do your thing and don’t care if they like it”. Fey doesn’t have to specify who the “they” is for the reader to come up with their personal version. All of us have a “they” at some point in our life that will try to keep us down or stop us from being ourselves. In the end, it is “doing your thing” that will lead to a fulfilled life and Fey is a testament to that truth.

I would recommend this book to anyone who is looking for good life advice in a book that is sure to make you laugh. Fey shows how staying true to yourself and not being worried about what other people think just might be the key to a successful life and career.