Saturday 16 May 2020

Review: Red, White and Royal Blue by Casey McQuiston


My rating: ⭐⭐⭐


This book was a bit of a disappointment. It struggled between being a romance and a political thriller with a foot not far enough into each realm to make it worth it. The building up of the romance from hate to them getting together felt too rushed and then quickly became a play by play of ‘Henry and Alex did this, Henry and Alex did that’. Adding to that the fact that I’m not invested enough in American politics to fully comprehend the campaign and the role of each of the ‘White House Trio’ in that, it made what should have been a fun and interesting read into less of that.

Having said all that, this book was not awful. There were some funny moments and I believed in the love between Alex and Henry. The email chains later in the book also highlighted the struggles of long-distance relationships that I feel are very applicable in the current situation.

Unfortunately though, I feel that this book will quickly fall into a pile with others that I have forgotten the plot of and for which I don’t care about the characters in.


[Goodreads parallel]

Monday 11 May 2020

Review: This is Going to Hurt by Adam Kay


My rating: ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐


This is one of those books that I went into with slight worries because of all the amazing reviews I had read previously, but I need not have had them. This book made me laugh, it made me cry (if you want to know exactly when it was the end of section 9 and start of section 10) and it made me value the NHS even more. To hear how long these problems have been going on with no solution is heart-breaking and I know I’ll now be looking for more ways to help as well as making sure I treat every junior doctor, though I have to admit I don’t remember interacting with any since my early teens and I hope I was kind then, with more respect. It’s the least they deserve.

Sunday 10 May 2020

Review: Little Women by Louisa May Alcott


My rating: ⭐⭐⭐


I tried to read this book months ago, got 60 pages in and then didn’t pick it up for months. I think you have to be in the right headspace to read this book; you have to be prepared to read something very dense because even though in the version I read there were 396 pages, the text was small and the pages were large. On my second attempt, I think I got past those first 60 pages because by that point I had watched the 2019 film adaptation and therefore knew what was coming. Without that knowledge, apart from what had been spoiled years before in a Friends episode, I think it would have taken me even longer to read this book or I might not have even been able to finish it.

Having said that, and comparisons will be made to that film adaptation because I have little else to go off, I cared much more for Beth upon reading the book and may have been tempted to shed a tear. I enjoyed the playfulness of the friendship between Laurie and Jo and found the descriptions in the book really pleasing to read because in most other classics that I have read most of the text is speech and to me the story has less effect because of that. Contrary to a lot of opinions I have heard, I really liked the relationship between Amy and Laurie. As sad as it was that he and Jo weren’t together, I could also completely understand it; if their relationship had been allowed to continue there would have been a severe disbalance in romantic love between the pair and therefore Amy and Laurie were presented in the later chapters as a much better match.

Aside from the density, there were other downsides to the book. I didn’t like Meg as a character, especially after she got married. Obviously, times were different but her role entirely being encompassed by children and housekeeping while her husband went to other places for entertainment made me equal parts angry, that he shouldn’t have more of a role, and bored, because it seemed nothing of real substance. Also, the end of the book seemed to race through events far too quickly. In comparison to the earlier chapters which had taken their time, before you knew it, Amy and Laurie were married, then Jo and Mr Bhaer were and then suddenly they were running a school for boys. If the rest of the book had matched that pace it would have been fine but because the rest of the book took its time, it felt like a rushed job.