One thing I really love about this time of the year, are the "Best Of" lists. The radio is counting down the best songs of the year. MTV and VH1 are playing the best videos of the year(Wait?!? Do they still play videos on these channels?). The news is showing the top stories of the year in varying categories. Facebook is giving you your "Year in Review". Instagram and Twitter show you your most liked, retweeted and shared content. My favorite by far though is the lists made by my fellow book lovers, publishers and writers on the Best Books of 2015. There hasn't been a book that I have given a 5 star rating on as of yet this year, so this list is comprised of my highest rated books.
I have reviewed several lists that have come across my email, Oprah's Bookclub, Goodreads, BookRiot.com, and The New York Times; and I have compared their list with my Goodreads Read 2015 list and here are my best of 2015.
First, I'm going to start with Harper Lee's Go Set a Watchman. This was one of the most anticipated works of literary fiction for the year. We hadn't heard anything from Ms. Lee since To Kill A Mockingbird some 55 years earlier. For me this book was just alright. I gave it three stars. It didn't live up to all of the hype that it has been receiving up until its release.
Next, The Girl on the Train by Paula Hawkins another highly acclaimed book for this year that didn't disappoint, but wasn't as great as I was anticipating. Think about how many pictures you saw this year with girls on a train reading The Girl on the Train.
Another book that made the top of my list this year is The Murder House by James Patterson. James Patterson is one of my favorite authors. Every year he releases several new books and this one by far is one of my favorites by him in a very long time. It is a standalone and an outstanding read.
This year I was introduced to several new authors, thanks in part to this blog and groups I am a part of on Goodreads. Here are some that I highly recommend:
H.N.Wake--I was given her book, A Spy Came Home in exchange for my honest review. This is the first book in her Mac Ambrose series. Deceits of Borneo is #2 in the series and that is waiting patiently for me on my Kindle now for a read and review.
Vince Milam--His book Evil Runs was a very interesting religious themed thriller.
Libby Fischer Hellmann-- She has written several books, but she is a new author to me. I was given her novella, The Incidental Spy as a part of her Review Crew and I am looking forward to reading all that she has written.
This year, I also was much more involved with NetGalley and First To Read(a program through Penguin). Here are some of the books, I received from these services that are on my best list:
Don't Fail Me Now by Una LaMarche
In Search of Sam by Kristin Butcher
The Mask by Taylor Stevens -- This is #5 in her Vanessa Michael Munroe series, but this is the first one I read.
Eight Hundred Grapes by Laura Dave
The Underwriting by Michelle Miller
The Sound of Glass by Karen White
Eeny Meeny by M.J. Arlidge
The Truth and Other Lies by Sascha Arango
So here is my list. Some of these books are included on the lists mentioned above. But this is what I liked. Please share with me your favorite books of 2015 and/or what you are looking forward to reading in 2016(I will have a blog post of that at the beginning of the new year).
Showing posts with label Una LaMarche. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Una LaMarche. Show all posts
December 11, 2015
September 30, 2015
Review-Don't Fail Me Now by Una LaMarche
Don't Fail Me Now by Una LaMarcheMy rating: 4 of 5 stars
Michelle Devereaux in a police department with her younger siblings Cass and Denny waiting with a social worker for their aunt to pick them up. Their mother has been arrested. Unfortunately, this is not the first time this has happened. Her mother has been in jail several times and she hasn't seen her father in several years. When Michelle finds out that her father is dying in California and may have something for her, she sets out on a journey that will hopefully end in a windfall for her and her siblings.
This was a great YA Novel. A book about love, family and adventure. Michelle and her siblings are black kids from Baltimore, Maryland. Michelle knows that she and Cass have a half-sister, Leah, that is white, and that is about all the know about her. Until she shows up with her step-brother at Michelle's job with information about their father. With this new information and the current state of affairs, Michelle decides now is a good a time as any to drive across the country to see her father before he is no longer there.
Five kids, in an old station wagon are heading across the country without any of their parents being aware. They have very little money and barely more than the clothes on their back, but they are determined to find Buck Devereaux and collect whatever it is he has for them.
Their adventure is not without some complications. Will they make the journey successfully? Will these siblings, Michelle, Cass, and Leah be able to build a relationship? Will they reunite with the father they barely know? How will this trip change their lives for the future?
One of the things that drew me to this book where the characters. They were characters I could relate to, when I was that age and the kids are all from Maryland where I live. Plus, who doesn't love a good road trip. All of these factors made this an excellent book and something I would recommend to young adults from mixed racial backgrounds and diverse family dynamics.
**I received this book from the FirstToRead program through Penguin Books in exchange for an honest review.**
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