December 31, 2019

Monthly Book Review: December 2019 + Year in Review

The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo by Taylor Jenkins Reid - Monique is plucked from journalistic obscurity by iconic actress Evelyn Hugo to write her biography. Why? What events transpire to warrant seven marriages? Who was the love of Evelyn's life? Evelyn is obviously heavily inspired by Elizabeth Taylor. The "behind the scenes" look into rivalries, friendships and beards (gay people marrying to appear straight) was interesting. Two twists I never saw coming made this an excellent vacation read. A-

The Golden Hour by Beatriz Williams - Like Kate Morton, Williams is all about rich character development and details so her books are long, very long. This tells the stories of German Elfreide and English Wilfred at the beginning of the 20th century alternating with American Lulu in 1944 Bahamas. The intersection is punctuated by an "interesting" storyline about the Windsor's. B-

Talking As Fast As I Can by Lauren Graham - It's hard to imagine Lorelai Gilmore being played by anyone other than Graham - like her Gilmore Girls character she is fast talking, witty and quirky. I loved Graham in GG and Parenthood and she describes her experiences on both. No spoilers.
I read 24 books this year - I slid in that last one at only 4.5 hours - plus three in which I made a significant investment (looking at you with major side-eye Circe). I moved and got married this year so priorities, but definitely want to up my game for 2020.

My top 5 favorite books of 2019 in order:
I liked The Graveyard Book so much that I'm going to go re-read The Ocean at the End of the Lane by the same author. I gave it two thumbs down in September 2016, but admitted then it may have been over my head.

Queue (there was a sale on Audible, hence I loaded up):
  • American Royals by Katherine McGee
  • The Year of Living Danishly by Hellen Russell
  • The Gown by Jennifer Robson
  • The Forgotten Garden by Kate Morton
  • The Kept Woman by Karin Slaughter
  • The Starless Sea by Erin Morgenstern
  • Winter Solstice by Rosamunde Pilcher

No comments:

Post a Comment