Added to listAudiobooks Readwith 150 books.
Three witch sisters run a tea shop specializing in reading tea leaves. They grew up together and are very close, and all live together in a house that just wants the best for its inhabitants. Unfortunately this closeness starts to chafe, as they're given a seemingly impossible task to complete by the council of witches, or else their shop will be taken away. Suddenly a very close bond between the three of them starts to unravel, as each gets tempted away from working together by the promise of something more than reading fortunes.
This was a perfectly acceptable book, but not deep in any way. It's definitely a cozy read, doesn't require a lot of the reader to keep going, and doesn't overstay its welcome. I thought maybe the plot point revolving around uncovering the witchs' tasks was resolved a bit too quickly/easily relative to how important it was made to seem. It almost felt like the book went in just a few too many directions all at once, between (mild plot spoilers here) the witchs' tasks, the curse, and the three sisters' secrets they were keeping from each other. I was puzzled at points in the book at which was the 'main' threat and what was just plot filler.
But it was a cute book, if nothing else. Cozy and quick, I guess is what I can sum it up as.
Three witch sisters run a tea shop specializing in reading tea leaves. They grew up together and are very close, and all live together in a house that just wants the best for its inhabitants. Unfortunately this closeness starts to chafe, as they're given a seemingly impossible task to complete by the council of witches, or else their shop will be taken away. Suddenly a very close bond between the three of them starts to unravel, as each gets tempted away from working together by the promise of something more than reading fortunes.
This was a perfectly acceptable book, but not deep in any way. It's definitely a cozy read, doesn't require a lot of the reader to keep going, and doesn't overstay its welcome. I thought maybe the plot point revolving around uncovering the witchs' tasks was resolved a bit too quickly/easily relative to how important it was made to seem. It almost felt like the book went in just a few too many directions all at once, between (mild plot spoilers here) the witchs' tasks, the curse, and the three sisters' secrets they were keeping from each other. I was puzzled at points in the book at which was the 'main' threat and what was just plot filler.
But it was a cute book, if nothing else. Cozy and quick, I guess is what I can sum it up as.
Added to listSci Fiwith 66 books.
"Everyone thinks they know what's best for the moons. Schoolkids, senators, farmers, factory workers. But so many of them disagree in their answer to one question: Who's human to you?"
Ver and Aryl work in the same science lab, when their mentor, Cal, is mysteriously killed in a variation on a locked-room mystery. The two girls are framed, when neither of them are the ones who did it. Despite being from very different backgrounds and not really knowing the other all that well, the two band together to clear their names, but end up becoming closer as well, as they navigate Ver's wasting disease she was attempting to cure, and Aryl's dream of being a dancer.
It wasn't a bad book, but I felt like it was lacking something to make me feel more for the characters. Ver's chapters, in particular, are written in a certain style to drive home that she's from a different background with different views. I like the science-y factoids/ruminations her chapters open with, but the rest of her chapters were very clinical, like how someone deep in the science world would think. Aryl, in contrast, is very flip, unpredictable, and kind of a party girl in the beginning, despite having lofty goals for herself.
I feel like the relationship that develops between these two needed more time to cook for it to feel authentic. As it is, beyond a few throwaway lines about being impressed by the other, noticing the other being a bit attractive, and silently respecting the other's intelligence, nothing is really expanded on until a switch flips and they're overtly in love with each other. It all felt very instalove-y, which was a bit grating.
Finally, while I liked the undertones about social divides and living with disability in the beginning, it felt increasingly heavy-handed as the book went on. The author has talent in painting the world this book exists in and the society issues it has, but what started subtle and left to the reader to infer ended as a blunt hammer to the head by the end, and I kind of didn't like that.
Still, it was a bit cute, and I did really like the world as depicted by the author.
"Everyone thinks they know what's best for the moons. Schoolkids, senators, farmers, factory workers. But so many of them disagree in their answer to one question: Who's human to you?"
Ver and Aryl work in the same science lab, when their mentor, Cal, is mysteriously killed in a variation on a locked-room mystery. The two girls are framed, when neither of them are the ones who did it. Despite being from very different backgrounds and not really knowing the other all that well, the two band together to clear their names, but end up becoming closer as well, as they navigate Ver's wasting disease she was attempting to cure, and Aryl's dream of being a dancer.
It wasn't a bad book, but I felt like it was lacking something to make me feel more for the characters. Ver's chapters, in particular, are written in a certain style to drive home that she's from a different background with different views. I like the science-y factoids/ruminations her chapters open with, but the rest of her chapters were very clinical, like how someone deep in the science world would think. Aryl, in contrast, is very flip, unpredictable, and kind of a party girl in the beginning, despite having lofty goals for herself.
I feel like the relationship that develops between these two needed more time to cook for it to feel authentic. As it is, beyond a few throwaway lines about being impressed by the other, noticing the other being a bit attractive, and silently respecting the other's intelligence, nothing is really expanded on until a switch flips and they're overtly in love with each other. It all felt very instalove-y, which was a bit grating.
Finally, while I liked the undertones about social divides and living with disability in the beginning, it felt increasingly heavy-handed as the book went on. The author has talent in painting the world this book exists in and the society issues it has, but what started subtle and left to the reader to infer ended as a blunt hammer to the head by the end, and I kind of didn't like that.
Still, it was a bit cute, and I did really like the world as depicted by the author.
"Everyone thinks they know what's best for the moons. Schoolkids, senators, farmers, factory workers. But so many of them disagree in their answer to one question: Who's human to you?"
Ver and Aryl work in the same science lab, when their mentor, Cal, is mysteriously killed in a variation on a locked-room mystery. The two girls are framed, when neither of them are the ones who did it. Despite being from very different backgrounds and not really knowing the other all that well, the two band together to clear their names, but end up becoming closer as well, as they navigate Ver's wasting disease she was attempting to cure, and Aryl's dream of being a dancer.
It wasn't a bad book, but I felt like it was lacking something to make me feel more for the characters. Ver's chapters, in particular, are written in a certain style to drive home that she's from a different background with different views. I like the science-y factoids/ruminations her chapters open with, but the rest of her chapters were very clinical, like how someone deep in the science world would think. Aryl, in contrast, is very flip, unpredictable, and kind of a party girl in the beginning, despite having lofty goals for herself.
I feel like the relationship that develops between these two needed more time to cook for it to feel authentic. As it is, beyond a few throwaway lines about being impressed by the other, noticing the other being a bit attractive, and silently respecting the other's intelligence, nothing is really expanded on until a switch flips and they're overtly in love with each other. It all felt very instalove-y, which was a bit grating.
Finally, while I liked the undertones about social divides and living with disability in the beginning, it felt increasingly heavy-handed as the book went on. The author has talent in painting the world this book exists in and the society issues it has, but what started subtle and left to the reader to infer ended as a blunt hammer to the head by the end, and I kind of didn't like that.
Still, it was a bit cute, and I did really like the world as depicted by the author.
"Everyone thinks they know what's best for the moons. Schoolkids, senators, farmers, factory workers. But so many of them disagree in their answer to one question: Who's human to you?"
Ver and Aryl work in the same science lab, when their mentor, Cal, is mysteriously killed in a variation on a locked-room mystery. The two girls are framed, when neither of them are the ones who did it. Despite being from very different backgrounds and not really knowing the other all that well, the two band together to clear their names, but end up becoming closer as well, as they navigate Ver's wasting disease she was attempting to cure, and Aryl's dream of being a dancer.
It wasn't a bad book, but I felt like it was lacking something to make me feel more for the characters. Ver's chapters, in particular, are written in a certain style to drive home that she's from a different background with different views. I like the science-y factoids/ruminations her chapters open with, but the rest of her chapters were very clinical, like how someone deep in the science world would think. Aryl, in contrast, is very flip, unpredictable, and kind of a party girl in the beginning, despite having lofty goals for herself.
I feel like the relationship that develops between these two needed more time to cook for it to feel authentic. As it is, beyond a few throwaway lines about being impressed by the other, noticing the other being a bit attractive, and silently respecting the other's intelligence, nothing is really expanded on until a switch flips and they're overtly in love with each other. It all felt very instalove-y, which was a bit grating.
Finally, while I liked the undertones about social divides and living with disability in the beginning, it felt increasingly heavy-handed as the book went on. The author has talent in painting the world this book exists in and the society issues it has, but what started subtle and left to the reader to infer ended as a blunt hammer to the head by the end, and I kind of didn't like that.
Still, it was a bit cute, and I did really like the world as depicted by the author.
"Everyone thinks they know what's best for the moons. Schoolkids, senators, farmers, factory workers. But so many of them disagree in their answer to one question: Who's human to you?"
Ver and Aryl work in the same science lab, when their mentor, Cal, is mysteriously killed in a variation on a locked-room mystery. The two girls are framed, when neither of them are the ones who did it. Despite being from very different backgrounds and not really knowing the other all that well, the two band together to clear their names, but end up becoming closer as well, as they navigate Ver's wasting disease she was attempting to cure, and Aryl's dream of being a dancer.
It wasn't a bad book, but I felt like it was lacking something to make me feel more for the characters. Ver's chapters, in particular, are written in a certain style to drive home that she's from a different background with different views. I like the science-y factoids/ruminations her chapters open with, but the rest of her chapters were very clinical, like how someone deep in the science world would think. Aryl, in contrast, is very flip, unpredictable, and kind of a party girl in the beginning, despite having lofty goals for herself.
I feel like the relationship that develops between these two needed more time to cook for it to feel authentic. As it is, beyond a few throwaway lines about being impressed by the other, noticing the other being a bit attractive, and silently respecting the other's intelligence, nothing is really expanded on until a switch flips and they're overtly in love with each other. It all felt very instalove-y, which was a bit grating.
Finally, while I liked the undertones about social divides and living with disability in the beginning, it felt increasingly heavy-handed as the book went on. The author has talent in painting the world this book exists in and the society issues it has, but what started subtle and left to the reader to infer ended as a blunt hammer to the head by the end, and I kind of didn't like that.
Still, it was a bit cute, and I did really like the world as depicted by the author.
"Everyone thinks they know what's best for the moons. Schoolkids, senators, farmers, factory workers. But so many of them disagree in their answer to one question: Who's human to you?"
Ver and Aryl work in the same science lab, when their mentor, Cal, is mysteriously killed in a variation on a locked-room mystery. The two girls are framed, when neither of them are the ones who did it. Despite being from very different backgrounds and not really knowing the other all that well, the two band together to clear their names, but end up becoming closer as well, as they navigate Ver's wasting disease she was attempting to cure, and Aryl's dream of being a dancer.
It wasn't a bad book, but I felt like it was lacking something to make me feel more for the characters. Ver's chapters, in particular, are written in a certain style to drive home that she's from a different background with different views. I like the science-y factoids/ruminations her chapters open with, but the rest of her chapters were very clinical, like how someone deep in the science world would think. Aryl, in contrast, is very flip, unpredictable, and kind of a party girl in the beginning, despite having lofty goals for herself.
I feel like the relationship that develops between these two needed more time to cook for it to feel authentic. As it is, beyond a few throwaway lines about being impressed by the other, noticing the other being a bit attractive, and silently respecting the other's intelligence, nothing is really expanded on until a switch flips and they're overtly in love with each other. It all felt very instalove-y, which was a bit grating.
Finally, while I liked the undertones about social divides and living with disability in the beginning, it felt increasingly heavy-handed as the book went on. The author has talent in painting the world this book exists in and the society issues it has, but what started subtle and left to the reader to infer ended as a blunt hammer to the head by the end, and I kind of didn't like that.
Still, it was a bit cute, and I did really like the world as depicted by the author.
"Everyone thinks they know what's best for the moons. Schoolkids, senators, farmers, factory workers. But so many of them disagree in their answer to one question: Who's human to you?"
Ver and Aryl work in the same science lab, when their mentor, Cal, is mysteriously killed in a variation on a locked-room mystery. The two girls are framed, when neither of them are the ones who did it. Despite being from very different backgrounds and not really knowing the other all that well, the two band together to clear their names, but end up becoming closer as well, as they navigate Ver's wasting disease she was attempting to cure, and Aryl's dream of being a dancer.
It wasn't a bad book, but I felt like it was lacking something to make me feel more for the characters. Ver's chapters, in particular, are written in a certain style to drive home that she's from a different background with different views. I like the science-y factoids/ruminations her chapters open with, but the rest of her chapters were very clinical, like how someone deep in the science world would think. Aryl, in contrast, is very flip, unpredictable, and kind of a party girl in the beginning, despite having lofty goals for herself.
I feel like the relationship that develops between these two needed more time to cook for it to feel authentic. As it is, beyond a few throwaway lines about being impressed by the other, noticing the other being a bit attractive, and silently respecting the other's intelligence, nothing is really expanded on until a switch flips and they're overtly in love with each other. It all felt very instalove-y, which was a bit grating.
Finally, while I liked the undertones about social divides and living with disability in the beginning, it felt increasingly heavy-handed as the book went on. The author has talent in painting the world this book exists in and the society issues it has, but what started subtle and left to the reader to infer ended as a blunt hammer to the head by the end, and I kind of didn't like that.
Still, it was a bit cute, and I did really like the world as depicted by the author.
"Everyone thinks they know what's best for the moons. Schoolkids, senators, farmers, factory workers. But so many of them disagree in their answer to one question: Who's human to you?"
Ver and Aryl work in the same science lab, when their mentor, Cal, is mysteriously killed in a variation on a locked-room mystery. The two girls are framed, when neither of them are the ones who did it. Despite being from very different backgrounds and not really knowing the other all that well, the two band together to clear their names, but end up becoming closer as well, as they navigate Ver's wasting disease she was attempting to cure, and Aryl's dream of being a dancer.
It wasn't a bad book, but I felt like it was lacking something to make me feel more for the characters. Ver's chapters, in particular, are written in a certain style to drive home that she's from a different background with different views. I like the science-y factoids/ruminations her chapters open with, but the rest of her chapters were very clinical, like how someone deep in the science world would think. Aryl, in contrast, is very flip, unpredictable, and kind of a party girl in the beginning, despite having lofty goals for herself.
I feel like the relationship that develops between these two needed more time to cook for it to feel authentic. As it is, beyond a few throwaway lines about being impressed by the other, noticing the other being a bit attractive, and silently respecting the other's intelligence, nothing is really expanded on until a switch flips and they're overtly in love with each other. It all felt very instalove-y, which was a bit grating.
Finally, while I liked the undertones about social divides and living with disability in the beginning, it felt increasingly heavy-handed as the book went on. The author has talent in painting the world this book exists in and the society issues it has, but what started subtle and left to the reader to infer ended as a blunt hammer to the head by the end, and I kind of didn't like that.
Still, it was a bit cute, and I did really like the world as depicted by the author.
Added to listMemoir Biographywith 48 books.
Added to listAudiobooks Readwith 149 books.
Okay, going into this, you have to realize that this is very much a Japanese book about a guy who does nothing. That literally means that not a whole lot happens in this book, but it's still quite charming. Our Rental Person is an unassuming guy who found himself unsuited for Japanese corporate life, and wondered if 'doing nothing' could have some sort of social significance. Thus, he rents himself out to people who need someone along who does.....nothing. All he asks is for his travel and expenses to be covered, and you have yourself someone who will listen to your problems without comment, who will attend events and do nothing in the audience, who will eat with you at a restaurant without comment, any number of things.
Whether or not you agree with him and his thinking here aside, I actually enjoyed this book. Rental Person seems to be quite conscientious about having as little impact as possible in other people's lives, and yet still manages to be of service. It's kind of a meandering book, where requests quoted from Twitter are posted alongside his social media commentary tweet about the job, and then the author comments on his particular thoughts about the job. There's not a lot of deep insight here, and especially his thoughts on doing literally nothing are reiterated a ton, but as a surface level story about the myriad strange requests someone gets to do nothing, I thought it succeeded well.
Just a short, sweet book about doing nothing.
Okay, going into this, you have to realize that this is very much a Japanese book about a guy who does nothing. That literally means that not a whole lot happens in this book, but it's still quite charming. Our Rental Person is an unassuming guy who found himself unsuited for Japanese corporate life, and wondered if 'doing nothing' could have some sort of social significance. Thus, he rents himself out to people who need someone along who does.....nothing. All he asks is for his travel and expenses to be covered, and you have yourself someone who will listen to your problems without comment, who will attend events and do nothing in the audience, who will eat with you at a restaurant without comment, any number of things.
Whether or not you agree with him and his thinking here aside, I actually enjoyed this book. Rental Person seems to be quite conscientious about having as little impact as possible in other people's lives, and yet still manages to be of service. It's kind of a meandering book, where requests quoted from Twitter are posted alongside his social media commentary tweet about the job, and then the author comments on his particular thoughts about the job. There's not a lot of deep insight here, and especially his thoughts on doing literally nothing are reiterated a ton, but as a surface level story about the myriad strange requests someone gets to do nothing, I thought it succeeded well.
Just a short, sweet book about doing nothing.
Added to listFictionwith 90 books.
Added to listSci Fiwith 65 books.
Added to listAudiobooks Readwith 148 books.
I spent the entire book rooting for the Glimmer, if that tells you anything.
These are all deeply unpleasant people thrown together for a dinner event Britta, social media influencer and overuser of hashtags, is putting on to curry favor with some brand she wants to partner with. But her marriage is failing, her kids are more props to her than people, and her friends just don't understand how important this dinner is to her. Liz is also there, shepherding her own failing marriage for not caring about social standing like her husband does, who goes batshit crazy once the Glimmer hits and everyone is stuck in Britta's basement. Every chapter of hers is about how she misses her kids and has no faith in either them or their babysitter to do anything right, and even sets a fire in the basement as a last resort to try and get emergency services to come during a lockdown. Padma is there too, but exists more as a plot device about needing to pump, giving Liz an excuse to rob Britta's house under the guise of looking for a pump, and mastitis. Mabel rounds out the cast of women here, but all the book cares about her is that her husband cheats on her repeatedly and she takes it. There's guys there too, but the book doesn't really care about them beyond being drama fountains.
You never find out what the Glimmer actually was (alien? plague? pathogen?), so all you're really here for is to follow the drama this group of rich people contrive for themselves. The book also moves at a breakneck pace, never really allowing a reader to orient themselves in a scene before blowing onto the next drama plot point. I rolled my eyes more than a few times at how contrived some of the scenes were. Spoilers here: Liz is conveniently a writer for a dystopian TV show and has a bunker and months of supplies in her basement. Britta's husband has a car that has a bio filter, armored like a tank, and allows anyone driving it to instantly become a stunt driver without training. Britta's house has everything from breast pumps to a massive basement so there's never really any threat to our characters, but no antibiotics for Padma because we need her to be sick. There's more examples, but you get the idea.
A quick read, but a disappointing one.
I spent the entire book rooting for the Glimmer, if that tells you anything.
These are all deeply unpleasant people thrown together for a dinner event Britta, social media influencer and overuser of hashtags, is putting on to curry favor with some brand she wants to partner with. But her marriage is failing, her kids are more props to her than people, and her friends just don't understand how important this dinner is to her. Liz is also there, shepherding her own failing marriage for not caring about social standing like her husband does, who goes batshit crazy once the Glimmer hits and everyone is stuck in Britta's basement. Every chapter of hers is about how she misses her kids and has no faith in either them or their babysitter to do anything right, and even sets a fire in the basement as a last resort to try and get emergency services to come during a lockdown. Padma is there too, but exists more as a plot device about needing to pump, giving Liz an excuse to rob Britta's house under the guise of looking for a pump, and mastitis. Mabel rounds out the cast of women here, but all the book cares about her is that her husband cheats on her repeatedly and she takes it. There's guys there too, but the book doesn't really care about them beyond being drama fountains.
You never find out what the Glimmer actually was (alien? plague? pathogen?), so all you're really here for is to follow the drama this group of rich people contrive for themselves. The book also moves at a breakneck pace, never really allowing a reader to orient themselves in a scene before blowing onto the next drama plot point. I rolled my eyes more than a few times at how contrived some of the scenes were. Spoilers here: Liz is conveniently a writer for a dystopian TV show and has a bunker and months of supplies in her basement. Britta's husband has a car that has a bio filter, armored like a tank, and allows anyone driving it to instantly become a stunt driver without training. Britta's house has everything from breast pumps to a massive basement so there's never really any threat to our characters, but no antibiotics for Padma because we need her to be sick. There's more examples, but you get the idea.
A quick read, but a disappointing one.