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Always Packed for Adventure!

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Book Review: Jessamine Chan's The School for Good Mothers

Thank you to NetGalley and Simon & Schuster for providing me with a copy of Jessamine Chan’s The School for Good Mothers.

Frida is beyond exhausted. She is newly divorced and struggling to achieve perfectionism, while caring for her eighteen-month old daughter and working full-time. Her mind is preoccupied with her ex-husband Gust, who has moved on to a new life with his much younger new wife. Not only is the new wife the woman Gust cheated on Frida with, but now Frida must share custody of Harriet with them.

During one of Frida’s weeks caring for Harriet, Frida makes a life-altering decision. While Harriet is napping, Frida decides to go on a quick errand to her office, where she is feeling the pressure of deadlines and trying to not have single-motherhood impact her career. Harriet will never even know that her mother was gone. Frida’s exhaustion makes her forgetful and the quick trip takes longer than she originally planned. By the time she returns home, the police have been notified about her neglect.

The consequences are severe. If Frida would like to maintain a relationship with her daughter, she must attend a year-long education camp, where mothers who have been neglectful, abusive or otherwise “unmotherly” are trained to be “good mothers.” They mothers are psychologically punished for their bad choices and must pass a series of tests where the odds of passing are low. Even if they survive the year at camp, if they do not pass the tests, their parental rights will be severed. During her time at the camp, she has limited contact with Harriet and during those calls, Frida is tormented to see her daughter increasingly look towards Gust’s new wife, as a mother figure.

The stakes are raised when realistic robots, robots that mimic the features of the mother’s own children, are assigned to each mother. The robots are new and experimental, but have been designed to calculate the emotions, including the range of love and tenderness in which each mother is capable. The mothers will be evaluated not only by their harsh human guards, but also by these previously untested robots.

The School for Good Mothers is a phenomenal debut novel. I was hooked from the first chapter and horrified by the content. It’s very much in the vein of Margaret Atwood or the television show Black Mirror. It has strong feminist themes, taking a deep dive at how women are carry unfair burdens in society and how expectations of how women should behave, especially stereotypes of motherhood, can be very detrimental.

I read this book a few months ago and I think it is especially timely with the latest threats to Roe v. Wade. Both the recent court news and this book, highlight the ways in which American society does not support women, even when women have children and need help. The School for Good Mothers shows the contrast in which women and men are treated. Gust behaves poorly, but is treated like a saint. He can leave his former wife struggling and move forward with zero repercussions. The women in the school know that there is a nearby school for fathers, but they learn that the fathers are not given the same level of punishment that the mothers are given. Women should know better and a woman who is not judged to be appropriately motherly is damaged. The men are allowed freedoms and access that the women are not permitted and their tests are not are dire. The women are facing judgement, while the men are biding their time.

The School for Good Mothers is a powerful and gut-wrenching read that I recommend to everyone. It’s fiction, but it reads like a terrifying, near-future reality.

tags: Simon & Schuster, NetGalley, Jessamine Chan Author, The School for Good Mothers Book Review, Jessamine Chan Book Review, Jessamine Chan The School for Good Mothers, Best Books 2022, Best Debut Novels 2022, Roe V. Wade, Feminist Novels, Like Margaret Atwood, Like Black Mirror, Near Future Science Fiction, Double Standards for Men and Women, What it Means to be a Mother, Stories with Artificial Intelligence
categories: Book Review, Read
Sunday 05.08.22
Posted by Karen Lea Germain
 

Book Review: Lisa Jewell's The Night She Disappeared

Thank you to NetGalley and Atria Books for providing me with an advanced copy of Lisa Jewell’s The Night She Disappeared, in exchange for an honest review.

On the outside, it appears that despite being a young mom, Tallulah has her life on the right track. She lives with her mom, Kim, who helps with childcare, allowing Tallulah to attend classes at a local college. Zach, the father of her baby is attentive to his child and wants to marry Tallulah. No one notices how possessive Zach can be and that Tallulah is not interested in pursuing a relationship with him.

At school, Tallulah meets Scarlet, a rich and troubled classmate who lives in a creepy mansion at the edge of the village. Tallulah and Scarlet begins a secretive and unlikely friendship. Tallulah and Zach attend a party at Scarlet’s mansion and go missing the following morning. A missing person’s case, turns into a cold case, leaving Kim bereft, yet holding out hope for any information about her daughter.

A few years later, Sophie, a crime writer moves into a cottage of a nearby boarding school with her fiancé, a professor at the school. On a walk of the grounds, she finds a mysterious note to dig in the ground, where she unearths an engagement ring. The ring and a series of other mysterious notes clearly intended for Sophie, lead her to begin to pice together the puzzle of Zach and Talulah’s disappearance.

I’m a huge fan of Lisa Jewell and i’ve read most of her novels, so I was very excited to have the opportunity to read her latest. I enjoyed The Night She Disappeared and it was a quick read, but from a mystery stand-point, it wasn’t as strong as some of her other novels. The character of Sophie and her solving of the mystery was almost too convenient and therefore, the less interesting aspect of the story.

The strongest and most dynamic aspect of the story was the relationship between mother and daughter, Kim and Tallulah. Tallulah’s relationship woes and path of self-discovery as a young twenty-something were very relatable and made me connect to her character. I’m forty-four, but it brought me back to that time in my own life. Initially the intrigue and mystery surrounding Scarlett and her gothic mansion were engaging, but as more of her was revealed, it was less interesting.

Although this wasn’t my favorite of her novels, I’m still a huge fan of Jewell and recommend her books to anyone looking for a good mystery.

tags: Lisa Jewell Author, Lisa Jewell British Author, Lisa Jewell Atria Books, Atria Books, Netgalley, Bookseller Recommendation, Mysteries 2021, Mysteries Set in England, The Night She Disappeared Book Review, The Night She Disappeared Lisa Jewell, British Mystery Writers, Novels About Cold Cases
categories: Book Review, Read
Saturday 05.07.22
Posted by Karen Lea Germain
 

2022 Resolutions

Normally, about a week before the end of the year, I would have written a well thought-out post detailing my 2022 resolutions. This year, I just didn’t have the same excitement or energy to complete them in time. I was wrapping up my difficult 2021 fall semester of classes and working retail during the holiday season. My energy was zapped. I did write this post a few days ago and it got erased. Is the universe trying to tell me that resolutions are futile? I refuse to believe it!

I’m going to plunge into 2022 resolutions, without reflecting on 2021, as I have done in previous years. Here we go…

  1. Finish my AA degree. I have four more classes to go, two in the spring and two in the fall. I want to maintain my 4.0 gpa. I will be taking two semesters of Spanish. Foreign languages are my nemesis and I barely passed two years of high school Spanish. I will be proud of myself if I can complete these courses and be able to have a basic communication with a Spanish speaker.

  2. Finish my manuscript or start a new project. This is long over due and I have many ideas on how to accomplish this. It may need to primarily be done between school semesters, but after classes, this is my next biggest priority. Working at a bookstore has provided motivation too.

  3. Reading Goals, I have three. The first is to read a minimum of 50 books, which I listed as my goodreads challenge. The second is to clean up my TBR list of book commitments on Netgalley and to be caught up in the new year. The third is to start a “Read Around the World” challenge. This will take multiple years, but the concept is to broaden reading horizons by reading a book by an author from each country in the world. I want to start with Spanish speaking countries as a cultural tie in to my language classes.

  4. Exercise routine - this is a big one. We have a home gym, so there are no excuses. I also have an upcoming doctor’s appointment with a blood test, where I’m pretty sure I’m going to be told that I need to make changes to my diet too. In the past, I’ve completed many endurance races, such as 1/2 marathons ( and nearly the entire LA marathon), but I’ve primarily walked. I’d love to be able to run a solid mile in a decent time and maybe work up to a 5k.

  5. Travel to a new country, state or major city.

  6. Catch up on blogging. My blogging was essentially dropped due to my school schedule, but I’d like to write at least once a week to keep it going. I have many travel posts and book reviews to catch up on!

tags: New Year's Resolutions, 2022 Resolutions, My 2022 Reading Resolutions, 2022 Travel Resolutions, 2022 Writing Resolutions, 2022 Goodreads Book Challenge, 2022 Fitness Resolutions
categories: Life
Thursday 01.20.22
Posted by Karen Lea Germain
 
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