Books

Book Review: Pretty Things

 
Photo from Amazon

Photo from Amazon

 

Description from the publisher for Pretty Things, by Janelle Brown:

Two wildly different women—one a grifter, the other an heiress—are brought together by the scam of a lifetime in a page-turner from the New York Times bestselling author of Watch Me Disappear. This dazzling, twisty, mesmerizing novel showcases acclaimed author Janelle Brown at her best, as two brilliant, damaged women try to survive the greatest game of deceit and destruction they will ever play.”

*****

What happens when personal histories, family fortunes, and con artists collide? Add mystery and social commentary and you've got Pretty Things. It's a doozy.

Good lord! This book! It has been a long time since I stayed up way past my bedtime reading, and I did it more than once with this page-turner. I couldn't put it down. It came everywhere with me. Riveting, juicy, and fun. Every time I thought I knew where it was going, I was wrong. I am a sucker for a heist-y plot and social commentary, and this has it all. Mystery, intrigue, people doing crimes, and that thing were all the characters are so human, you relate to them and love them despite knowing they’re terrible (or are they?). And while a lot about this is maybe not necessarily suuuuper realistic, there was nothing that ever really took me out of the story and the moment. I devoured it whole. Mark my words, Pretty Things is going to be the hot book of the summer. If you have a vacation coming up or some free time, bookmark this one. And if you read it, I'd love to hear about it!

Thank you, NetGalley and Random House for the advance review copy!

Book Review: The Positive Shift

 
Photo from Amazon

Photo from Amazon

 

Description from the publisher:

“It’s the reason why spending time on Facebook makes us feel sad and lonely. Why expensive name-brand medicines provide better pain relief than the generic stuff, even if they share the same ingredients. And why a hospital room with a good view speeds up recovery from surgery. 

The truth is, the way we think about ourselves and the world around us dramatically impacts our happiness, health, how fast or slow we age, and even how long we live. In fact, people with a positive mindset about aging live on average 7.5 years longer than those without. 

That might sound alarming to those of us who struggle to see the bright side, but the good news is we can make surprisingly simple changes or small shifts to how we think, feel, and act that will really pay off. 

Combining cutting-edge research from the fields of psychology, neuroscience, and medicine, as well as vivid real-world examples of the power of mindset, The Positive Shift gives readers practical and easy strategies for changing maladaptive thought patterns and behaviors so they can live longer, happier lives.”

****

How much can friendships, nature, exercise, and even the language you use and hear impact your outlook, world view, and ultimately your happiness? Quite a lot, it turns out.

I first cracked The Positive Shift last year when I won a copy from BenBella Books. I loved it so much I kept interrupting my reading to post quotes on my Instagram stories. It was blowing my mind. So when we needed a speaker for a retreat at work, I knew just who to suggest. Here now almost a year later, I have listened to The Positive Shift on audio, read it on the page, and been lucky enough to attend a full-day workshop with Catherine Sanderson (I’m on the committee that planned it, and am proud to say it was the most well-received department retreat to date—for 70 people!—in case you need more than just my endorsement). She is that good and her messages are that stunning.

This book really influenced how I view the world around me, and how much control we have over our own happiness, even in the most dire circumstances. We have so much more control over our lives—even the length of our lives—than we think. For instance, at the mere mention of words like 'old' 'slow' etc., people leaving a test will walk more slowly to the elevator. At the mere suggestion that older people can't remember things as well, they will perform worse on memory tests. The power of suggestion is no joke, and how you frame things matters.

Sanderson shows through science that happiness is something we have control over in ways we probably never realized. Surrounding yourself with friends can make you live longer. Getting outside—even bringing a plant into your office or walking by a park or a tree in the city—can make you happier. Comparison is truly the thief of joy. Appreciating what you have, moving your body, getting more nature in your life, focusing on experiences rather than stuff, and investing in healthy relationships will literally make you live longer. Science says so.

And if you ever get a chance, get Catherine Sanderson to come to your retreat!

PS—How much do you love the cover? My favorite part about it is that Dr. Sanderson did not like it, but the marketing focus group loved it, and she trusted the experts. I see it getting commented on all the time online.

I look forward to continuing reading about this topic in my next reading choice, Viktor Frankl’s famous Man’s Search for Meaning, about how even in the most dire circumstances (in his case, in Nazi death camps, including Auschwitz), what we need to thrive is purpose.

If you like this, I think you’ll also like Burnout: Secrets to Unlocking the Stress Cycle.

Book Review: The Water Dancer

 
Photo from amazon.

Photo from amazon.

 

It’s hard to know how to rate this book. Ta-Nehisi Coates is an excellent and important writer. If you haven’t discovered his nonfiction yet, don’t waste another second. Between the World and Me made me uncomfortable, and then it made me better. The Water Dancer is his first novel, and it’s a mystical take on the Underground Railroad. It feels important—especially coming from him, especially given his other writing. It was literary, spooky, gripping to start. I never knew where it was going. I wanted to know what happened.

Yet it took me a bit to get into. It picked up the pace and then slowed down again. It was so slow in the last third, it took me over a month to finish. I didn’t care that much by the end. Everything felt very much at arm’s length. But the thing is, the whole time I kept wondering if it was me? I think it was styled that way on purpose. Coates is an incredibly deliberate and intelligent writer and it makes me think that I just didn’t understand everything in this book, and what it has to say. I want to. I want to attend a class on it, read every article and interview to get my head around it and figure this out!

Have you read this? I’m so curious to hear what other people think.

Thank you to NetGalley and Random House for the ARC!