Showing posts with label Cici Curran '20. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cici Curran '20. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 9, 2017

Readers United Book Reviews | If I Was Your Girl

CiCi Curran '20 returns with a romance that does not shy away from difficult topics. This book will tug at your heartstrings and is sure to keep you interested the whole way through.


If I Was Your Girl by Meredith Russo



At the start of every school year, there is always a new girl or boy. Faced with immediate judgment, they either make friends or fall into the background of high school. In If I Was Your Girl, by Meredith Russo, Russo tells the story of Amanda Hardy, a transgender girl who's been through it all. She’s attempted suicide, been beat up, and can barely remember a time when she wasn’t bullied. Amanda switches school to have a new start, a new start where nobody knows about her secret. Things start well for Amanda. She manages to fit in by making friends, reconnecting with her dad, and catching the attention of guys.

Right off the bat, Amanda makes new friends and meets Grant.  Kind, socially smart, and athletic, Grant is the perfect guy for Amanda. Naturally, she finds herself falling love. There’s just one problem: how do you fall in love and have a relationship with someone you can’t tell everything?

Faced with the choice between telling Grant the truth and potentially ending their relationship or lying and being forced to live with herself, Amanda finds herself unable to make a decision.

Unlike other authors, Russo doesn't filter any aspect out no matter how dark. Amanda soon discovers that the truth demands to be known, whether she likes it or not.

Verdict​: Read If I Was Your Girl if you're in the mood for a romance that also addresses issues affecting our society every day. You won’t be able to put this story down until you know how Amanda's story ends.

Sunday, April 2, 2017

Readers United Book Reviews | 99 Days and The Regulars

This week, Cici Curran '20 shares two novels about lessons learned from indulging in guilty pleasures.


99 Days by Katie Contungo


What can a year do to you? How do you come back after burning every bridge you made? 99 Days by Katie Cotungo answers both of those questions with a unique romance story. She adds twists and turns to 
the classic coming of age novel to create a novel you simply cannot put down.

Cotungo tells the story of Molly Barlow, a recent high school graduate, who returns to her hometown of Star Lake for the summer. Molly doesn’t exactly receive the typical welcome home—rather, she receives nasty notes, she is fat-shamed, her car is keyed, and more.

The reader learns that prior to her departure, Molly’s deepest secret was revealed, causing her to lose her best friends, the Donnelly brothers. A year later, she is forced face the decision she fled: which of the two Donnelly brothers does she love more? One is her first love, while the other her most passionate love. And a
s if life weren’t already hard enough, she also has to put up with their sister, who is convinced Molly is the reason why her family is falling apart. 

In the face of the ghosts of her past, Molly begins to stand up for herself and go after what she wants. She consistently finds herself wondering why everything is her fault, but eventually Contungo brings in the question: “Is Molly really the only one to blame?”

Verdict: Pick this up if you want a more atypical romance novel that not only provides an appealing plot, but also relevant life lessons.

The Regulars by Georgia Clark


Nobody ever said being an adult was easy. The glamorous lifestyle you imagined having when you were eight? Yeah, it’s not like that. 
The world is harsh and tiring, but what if you could have the one thing that would make your dreams come true? Author Georgia Clark tells the story of three best friends who discover their dreams aren’t at all what they thought they were. 

Though writer Evie, artist Willow, and model Krista are adults, their lives are a mess. Single and writing for a magazine that goes against everything she stands for, Evie finds herself bathing in low self-esteem and despair. 

Meanwhile, Willow, constantly feels self-destructive, and she begins slowly drifting away from everyone she loves, including her boyfriend. However, she finds herself unable to bring herself to do anything about it. 

Finally, there’s Krista, a “pretty, but not gorgeous” model, who dropped out of law school. The most disorganized of the three, she finds herself unable to stick to her job, yet she does not give up hope for her big break, even as she starts a downward spiral.

During these low points in their lives, all three of these women find the Pretty, a magical potion that makes you drop-dead gorgeous. All three quickly find themselves following the paths that they always wanted to, but soon they discover that being pretty can’t solve all of their problems. They soon discover that their old lives weren’t all that bad, but is it possible to get back to their old lives after the trail of destruction they left follows them?

In this absorbing tale about beauty, both literal and metaphorical, Clarke teaches several valuable lessons to readers everywhere about how things aren’t always what they seem.

Verdict: Pick this up if you want a novel full of a little bit of everything. The Regulars will teach you to love yourself and what you have because you never know when you’ll lose it forever.

Monday, January 30, 2017

Readers United Book Reviews | The Girl on The Train and Hidden Figures

It is amazing how many people we pass daily, on our way to classes or sports or clubs, and it is even more amazing to think of how everyone, from the girl sitting next to you in math class to the teacher who scanned you in before school meeting, has a lively, elaborate life story of their own. Cici Curran '20 reviews two novels with protagonists that have much more complicated stories than it may initially seem.


The Girl on The Train by Paula Hawkins


A change from the everyday mystery novel, The Girl on the Train recounts a refreshingly twisted tale that 
consistently challenges your moral compass. Though the use of three perspectives, Hawkins makes it confusing for you to determine who exactly is the “good guy," and who exactly can be trusted. 

As its title implies, The Girl on the Train is centered around a middle-aged woman named Rachel Watson, who is a severe alcoholic, recently unemployed, and divorced. She is in a downwards spiral, seemingly harassing her ex-husband and his new family. Rachel also pretends she still has a job, continuing her daily routine of riding on the train to London, where she observes the seemingly perfect lives of her ex-husband, his new family, and their neighbors. Throughout the story, you are left constantly wondering if you can trust an alcoholic, a liar, or an obviously biased narrator.

Rachel’s husband, Tom, has moved on and now lives with his new wife, Anna, and their daughter, Evie. Anna is assisted in caring for Evie by Megan. Anna lives a seemingly perfect life with Tom, to the point in which she intentionally brags to Rachel that while her life has gotten better, Rachel’s has fallen apart. While Anna may have relished it in the moment, her actions spur Rachel to escalate her harassing, to the extent that Anna feels that she should begin reporting these incidents to the police.

In addition, Rachel's life intersects with Megan's. Megan also seems to lead a perfect life, but hides many secrets from her past and present. Once Rachel discovers Megan’s secrets, she sets off a cascade of events that eventually lands her into the middle of a serious investigation. Rachel begins to discover that no life is perfect and no person is without flaws. 

Verdict: Pick this up if you want a fresh start on a murder mysteries. With twists and turns on every page, you absolutely won’t be able to pu​t T​he Girl on the Train down.



Hidden Figures by Margot Lee Shetterly


Based mainly around the lives of the 'human computers' of NACA (which later became NASA), Hidden Figures brings you into the lives of the women who broke color and sex barriers as they worked tirelessly to help the United States triumph in the Space Race. In a time when women were expected to stay in the domestic sphere and raise the children, and when African Americans couldn’t vote, Shetterly introduces us to some spectacular women. 

First, you have Dorothy Vaughn, a genius who limited herself to the profession she thought was all she had, teaching. However, when she saw the opportunity to do something more with NACA, she went for it. Defying the odds, she started a new life, moving to a new place alone and leaving all her family and friends behind. She didn’t shy away from any task at NACA, even if that meant forcing her way into meetings she felt she belonged in. Vaughn quickly climbed the ranks.

Another example of a strong woman is Katherine Johnson (originally Goble). She attended West Virginia State college and later became one of the three African-American students, and the only African-American female, to desegregate the graduate school at West Virginia University. Like Vaughn, she climbed the ranks at NACA. Johnson also held together her household after her spouse's death, balancing both her work and home life. 

These two women represent only a fraction of the women who worked day in and day out on getting the first man on the moon while managing their households. The stories of these many different women show how each and every one of them broke barriers in some way or another before most even realized the fact. Shetterly shows us how us how artificial many of limitations imposed based on race and gender were, proving that if you have the talent, you can do anything. 

Verdict: If you can get past the dense reading and the many tangents and footnotes thrown at you, you’ll find yourself quickly entangled in the stories of these inspiring women. Pick this up to entertain yourself with the spectacular and intriguing lives of these 'hidden figures.'