5/6 for fall (46/24 for the year) - Selling Sexy, Sherman & Fernandez. Thanks to @netgalley and @macmillan.audio for the ARC audiobook in exchange for an honest review.
This book was clearly very thoroughly researched. The author definitely did her homework on the history of Wexner and LBrands, to the point where it was almost like a history textbook of the company.
The book doesn’t really live up to the title. It was purely the factual account of the building of the LBrands empire and Wexner’s life. There was also a fair amount of discussion of competitor companies that seemed a little disjointed from the rest of the book.
This could definitely use some editing down, as the book was so long that I sped it up to 2x speed to get through it. I don’t think it was a bad book. It was just a lot of statistics and names and recounting of information that is already public. I don’t think this book covers anything that isn’t really already known or knowable about the company. 3 ⭐️
This was a beautifully written book about a young autistic boy who is navigating life and the country to visit his father, who is being treated for a TBI. He loves birds and birding, and he sets out to find all the birds on a list that he and his father created - the someday birds.
On the trip, he comes across a bird journal, written as a child by his hero - a well-known scientist who studies birds to predict behavior in both birds and humans, and he sets out to return it.
The author does a really good job of capturing autistic thoughts and behavior in a very respectful and not stereotypical way. This was a beautiful story.
Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated
3.0
I mostly enjoyed this story as an idea, which follows Ada a young woman who cannot get pregnant with her husband after a year of being married. She is a midwife apprentice, learning from her mother. She is accused of being a witch and putting a curse on other women in her town, making them barren. She leaves her home before they can put her to death and ultimately ends up joining a group of women outlaws who were thrown out of their homes by husbands for not producing a child. It’s a (white) feminist twist on a Wild West story.
I agree that parts of this could’ve been better written, and maybe that’s why I had a hard time rating it.
This was another great story by TJR. In the same-TJR-universe 4 book series, I would rank this 3rd.
Carrie Soto is a retired tennis great, having won a record-breaking 20 grand slam titles. After 6 years into her retirement, she decides to make a come back because a young, rising tennis star matched her record on her way to passing it.
The story follows Carrie’s career and shows her determination, grit, and her close and sometimes complicated relationship with her father/coach. I loved how well TJR incorporated real tennis greats into the book and used retired tennis stars’ accomplishments and personalities in her creation of her characters. Loved it.
I discovered after I started reading this that 4 of TJR’s books are all in the same universe - AND, I happened to have read the first three in the right order: The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo; Daisy Jones & The Six; Malibu Rising; and Carrie Soto is Back.
I enjoyed the stories of Evelyn Hugo & Daisy Jones more, but this was a really great read. The first part of the book alternates between the MC’s (Nina) POV and her mother’s POV as a young woman. That approach lets readers in on background information related to how Nina and her siblings grew up, and how that history impacted their present. The story is largely about family dynamics, but also about how to care for yourself and learn about your own needs.
I thought this started off a little slowly, but by about halfway through, the pace picked up. This story was important to tell, as it provides insight to a topic that isn’t widely known.
The storytelling focus on the relationship dynamics between Lily and Kath, as well as Lily’s relationships with her family and Chinese friends, was very well done. It showed how conflicted and frustrated Lily was with her feelings toward Kath and how her parents’ and family’s opinion of her changed.
This was obviously very well-researched and meaningful to the author. I appreciated this story being written.