In case you're curious, the number of times this author references that her husband was a Navy SEAL is 4, although it feels like more. The number of times she says she lives in Carmel/NorCal/by Big Sur is.... too many to count (I counted, it's at least 12).

DIdnt realize this was christian, yikes.

This has u/iia vibes. A NoSleep story turned novel. I hated every minute of it. Fantastic.

Ghostwritten, unfortunately.

5 stars for Kamala as a human, 2 stars for using ghostwriters (PLURAL) to write your memoir, 4 stars for the competent job those ghostwriters did at making it sound like Kamala wrote this. Averaged out to 4 stars.

This is the stupidest fucking book I've ever read.

The sheer volume of fake reviews here is funnier than anything Gelman managed to write in this book.

Stunning historically accurate information and a captivating plot. Heartbreaking and heartwarming at the same time.

Really thought-provoking, sparse and hard-hitting. I wish the stories were a little more concise and shorter, there was a little too much exposition for a short story collection.

Beautiful art and a really intriguing plot. I would have loved a little more character development and less insta-love with Goldie and Violet, but the overall atmosphere and pacing were perfect.

Complex and interesting. I loved how much time this spanned and how intertwined the characters were. A wonderful compelling narrative with fun Easter eggs throughout.

This book had a really strong premise and plot, but the characters felt two-dimensional and there was no real resolution or settling, it just felt cut off.

I love a novel about someone's life spinning out of control, and this scratched that itch perfectly. The descriptors were perfect, the plot was tense and pulled you in, and the characters were all flawed and human. Minus one star for food poisoning/a vomiting scene right at the end.

Really well written and approachable exploration of censorship and the power of activism. I would have loved more information about the dad character, as I feel like A. S. King's normal exploration of mental health topics was lacking here.

Smart and ruthless, I loved the style of writing here and the different perspectives. The chapter structure with different people's narratives really worked for me, I enjoyed this a lot.

Interesting commentary but hard to follow with too many characters and no character development throughout the story. A “meh” 3-star read, minus one star for food poisoning/eating rotten meat.

This book was a wild ride. The characters and politics were super interesting, and the descriptions were fantastic and lush. It felt a little slow paced and had a lot of characters, but was still a really good time.

Would have loved more pictures, and the way the recipes were laid out really didn't help my to visualize the dishes and flavor profiles. But really interesting ideas!

This is the weirdest shit I've ever read and I'm in love. One of the best books of the year (and maybe ever) for me.

Interesting concepts but I felt that this went way too broad and kind of all over the place, and didn't dive deep like I wanted it to into gender and sexuality binaries. It is definitely educational, but not what I was hoping for.

For a middle grade/young teen novel, this was really solid. I would have loved more character development but the plot was fantastic and the world was really interesting.

Some of these stories were just okay, but I really enjoyed The Starlight on Idaho (5 stars) and Strangler Bob (4.5 stars). ‐1 star for including a food poisoning scene.