REVIEW: A Dozen Second Chances by Kate Field

[I received an electronic review copy of this book from Netgalley and HarperCollins in exchange for an honest review. All opinions are my own.]

Summary


When Eve’s sister Faye died, Eve was at the start of her dream life. She had archaeology and her geeky passion for history. And she had Paddy and their plans for a life together.

After Faye died, Eve took in her orphaned niece, Caitlyn, only a toddler at the time, to raise. She put aside her professional dreams, willingly. And Paddy was on board – initially. But when he left, Eve and Caitlyn were both devastated. Eve decided then and there that she would never let a man into their lives again who could break their hearts.

Caitlyn’s grown now and ready to spend a year in Paris as an au pair. She makes Eve promise she’ll do things to pamper herself as she moves into this empty nest stage of life. She even gives Eve 12 decorated certificates to fill out and mail her, saying what Eve is doing to treat herself.

In the quiet of Eve’s life after Caitlyn leaves, she is forced to take a close look at her life. She’s almost 40 and in a job she chose so she could be close to Caitlyn as she was in school. Without her niece, and with a new, awful boss, is this job really where she wants to stay? Eve’s been dating a guy for a couple years. But he’s never introduced her to his kids, and she realizes he is more around as a distraction than someone she really cares for.

Before she can even think about making any changes, though, Paddy shows up in her life again, reminding her of the dreams she once had. Is it possible to start over, here and now, and reclaim some of those dreams?

Summary


From the first page, I clicked with the empty nest/where-does-my-life-go-now aspect of Eve’s story. I was sad over all the ways she seemed to settle for whatever was readily available rather than pursuing what she wanted. So I loved that Caitlyn’s gift gave Eve permission – and a push – to re-examine her life and her choices.

I read a lot of books for kids and teens, so I’m familiar with the coming-of-age novel, the stories of identity formation, and the books that look at the transitions common to young people. I’ve not read as many “middle age”/empty nest novels with those same themes, but after this I am here for as many of them as I can find. Thankfully this mid-life crisis book doesn’t involve an affair or demolishing a quarter-century marriage or any of those common pieces, because I would not have liked that sort of tale nearly as much. This is more introspective and identity focused. It’s more about Eve’s feelings and about pursuing the dreams she set aside for Caitlyn. And it was great.

There are some nice plot twists in this to ramp up the tension and keep the characters interesting. And it all wraps up in a satisfying way in the end. Be sure to check this one out. (Some language, off-page sex)

Rating: ♥♥♥♥

BONUS REVIEW: The Nobodies by Liza Palmer

[I received an electronic review copy of this book from Netgalley and Flatiron Books in exchange for an honest review. All opinions are my own.]

Summary


When Joan was 17, she broke her first big story. So she skipped college and went straight into journalism, expecting it to be her career for the rest of her life. But in the current market, more and more newspapers are closing, and layoffs are happening. Joan’s been job hunting now for nine months.

It’s making her question everything. Did she peak too early? Is she even a good writer? She’s questioning her identity and her future. At 36 years old she is living at home again. Joan needs to find a job!

One of the many jobs she applies for is a junior copywriter position at a tech start up called Bloom. It’s staffed by 20-somethings and hits many of the start-up cliches – fancy in-house coffees, open work spaces, and quarterly Q&A meetings overflowing with beer and pizza.

But Joan’s been in the real world long enough to take Bloom in with a more critical eye. What do they even do? Why is every speech a set of rehearsed statements, tons of words that say nothing? Maybe Bloom is hiding something. Maybe Joan’s days as a journalist aren’t over after all!

Review


This story tries to be both an exploration of a character’s identity crisis and also a suspenseful look at a company that might be hiding some big secret. I’m not sure it did well on either of those goals

I was more interested in the tech side of the story. And I enjoyed it. The crew Joan builds at Bloom is fun. The investigation was a fun story line. And it’s not over. There will be a sequel that will have to deal with what is going on at the start up.

The identity struggle and introspection that Joan is going through makes complete sense. She’s having something of a mid-life crisis. But her self-abuse and self-reflection bogged the story down. I didn’t  really like Joan, so I also didn’t sympathize with her. I generally love a good identity story, but this didn’t click for me.

Joan’s co-workers and her family were my only favorite parts of the story. I’m not sure if the secondary characters will be a big enough draw to get me to try out the sequel. (Language, off-page sex)

Rating: ♥♥♥