Ratings174
Average rating4.1
i loved this because it truly was about loneliness and acceptance. it was just so wholesome
Such an endearing story and this made me realize found family is probably my favorite trope. ❤️
A bit predictable, but I really liked the development of the main character.
3.5 stars.
probably my favorite read this year so far. quite fun and was actually good (meaningful). solid audiobook performance as well.
This book was hilarious and heartfelt and I think I'm going to end up recommending it to a lot of people. I'd maybe lean closer to 4.5/5 but the stars are a silly rating system any so who really cares?
Yeah, great book club pick and I look forward to hearing what people have to say about it. Probably not a book for everyone but I really liked it!
This was so fun, I'm actually sad it was so short. Loved the characters, loved the relationships. Bummed at the bittersweet ending. If Wilson ever wanted to write a sequel I'd eat that thing up.
STFU I LOVED THIS SO MUCH, audiobook HIGHLY recommended!
I thought this book would, at the very least, be funny, but never expected it to tug on my heartstrings as well. for anyone who's working through the traumas of their childhood and wondering if they'll ever heal from it, this book is for you
A simple story, elegantly plotted, keeps you wanting to read on. It has one magical element, but it is also about families and healing. A very nice read.
This review is published on my blog: https://literaryquicksand.com/2022/02/what-we-read-in-january-2022/
Need some cute quirkiness in your reading life? I highly recommend Nothing to See Here! This book was recommended to me by multiple people on bookstagram, so I finally picked it up off my shelf. Man, it was so good! The story is similar to The House in the Cerulean Sea, except there's a lot more swearing and the kids are human, with a slightly fantastical element: they can burst into flames. This book was so fun and entertaining. Put it on your list right now!
I somewhat liked the writing style? But I felt like it was trying to be really deep when it should've taken a more fun route. Like the ending felt very cheesy and some of the dialogue felt unnatural. And, don't get me wrong, I love fiction that has weird dialogue but I don't think this is the genre or book for that. I wish the twins weren't perceived so closely together all the time. They ate and thought the same things, burst at the same time, even spoke in unison (literally all the time??). It just didn't make sense. These are super amazing and rare kids. let them have their own identities.
Onto the positives, it moved pretty fast and was an easy read! I loved Carl! Almost wanted him and Lillian to raise the twins as coparents or something. Carl was just such an amazing and nuanced character to me. And the relationship between Madison and Lillian was cool too. Genuinely love this wlw arch. And I really like that it goes unexplored and unanswered at the end. It just feels realistic.
Although I did have some eyebrow raisers and small things I'd change, I did really like this. I think it's a good book if you're just getting back into reading novels OR you want something that's very low pressure (not too much adventure/action, pretty PG?). I also very rarely give anything below 3 stars so 4/5 for me :)
Despite its flaws, I really enjoyed this book! It was weird in an absurd way, it was funny, but most importantly, it was really understandable. There are characters who aren't good people, but they know who they are and what they want, and I respect that they weren't forced to go through some sort of dramatic growth arc. The main character is kind of a mess. She gave up on her goals after a road block, and became a cycle of self-loathing. She was smart but also stunted and
I don't think that this book was flawless, and I can easily see why some readers would feel unsatisfied. The ending was pretty rushed and left you wanting more of a conclusion (please don't get stuck in this dumb valley town!), all of the emotional development was basically two sentences long, and a lot of character's decisions didn't really make sense. But the story was fun and quick, and I'd recommend it.
I really enjoyed this one.
It's a heartwarming found family story with delightful characters.
Very funny book, I laughed quite a few times. It's also got some depth and takes a look at family, loneliness, judgement, and love in a very unique way. LOVED the audiobook. The narrator was stellar.
Honestly, the book was just kind of a fun quick read (finished it in two reading sessions). There could have been a lot more, but it was nice where it ended. It was a satisfying ending and an amusing premise.
Pretty good read
I enjoyed the book. It was a fast read and not overly heavy. Sometimes you just need a light read and this is a good light read.
I loved it. So funny and touching. The overarching, suggested metaphor of fire - when and how it came, what it meant - was simple but actually complex in it's simplicity. Lillian, Bessie and Roland are great characters. If I have any complaints, I wish I could have spent more time in their world.
Reread in March 2022. Such a wonderful novel.
I enjoyed this, but thought so much more could have been done with the premise, which felt (no pun intended) half-baked.
Lillian Breaker doesn't have a lot going on. She's working two cashier jobs and smoking weed in the attic of her mother's house. So it's not like she's going to say no when an old friend reaches out for her help. Especially considering how ridiculously wealthy said friend is. What's even better is the favour amounts to taking care of 10 year old twins who just happen to spontaneously combust.
There are tropes aplenty that stretch the bounds of reasonable believability. Of course outsider Lillian would befriend upper crust Madison. That a shared love of basketball is enough to bridge a massive class divide and maintain a long distance friendship over the years. That Lillian taking the fall for Madison and getting expelled from school, dashing any hope of reaching escape velocity from her fabulously crappy life, isn't enough to dent this bond. Meanwhile, Madison, still incredibly rich, has married a senator with aspirations to the presidency. I mean this what your teen movie nemesis origin story looks like, this is how you play up the villain not how you set up Lillian to start babysitting Madison's husband's little fire children.
But then I'm warmed by Lillian with the kids. I mean none of us are truly up to the task of raising children and are bound to fail miserably in countless ways everyday. Children are incredibly unstable and volatile things prone to violent outbursts and flaming tirades. But at the same time “Maybe raising children was just giving them the things you loved most in the world and hoping that they loved them, too.” That it takes nothing to be a parent but everything to try and be a good one.
But then this is all blunted by the fact that raising children is perhaps easier when it comes with a perfect little cottage to call one's own, filled with books, toys and access to any number of servants, a pool, basketball court and anything else money can buy. I get it, money a good parent does not make, but boy does a generous sprinkling of it make everything better.