wrap up

November 2021 Wrap Up and TBR

I cannot believe weโ€™re almost at the end of the year. Is it just me or did this year seem both really long and pretty short at the same time? Is that just me?

Either way, I hope November treated you all well. I feel like all I did was work, but I also got the chance to dye my hair and go to the orchestra reopening with a friend.

Reading wise, itโ€™s been an okay month. Iโ€™m loving the audiobooks Iโ€™m getting into and it makes certain reading experiences so much more enjoyable! Iโ€™m happy I gave it a chance. In other news, my bookstagram reached a milestone and I hosted a giveaway there recently. If weโ€™re not friends yet on that platform, I would love to make your acquaintance and follow you there as well!

What did I read this month?

Most outstanding: These Violent Delights blew me away. This was a joint buddy read with Kaya @ A Fictional Bookworm and our reviews will be individually posted on our respective blogs tomorrow, so keep an eye out! I loved the history, the ingrained cultural aspects and the wonderful enemies to lovers romance. It has a little bit for everyone, and is deservedly a NYT bestseller.

ARC shoutout: A Psalm of Storms and Silence (review here) was an okay conclusion and follow-up to an outstanding first novel. I had higher hopes for it, but I am grateful I got to read it early.

Not my cup of tea: Last Chance Books and The Liars Beneath (review here) were both not what I expected or lacked crucial elements I wanted to see in the book. Might work for some people, but just not exactly for me.

New author alert: I really am enjoying Chelsea Bobulskiโ€™s All I Want for Christmas series and cannot wait to finish the rest of them in time for the holidays!

Anticipated sequels: I wanted to badly like While We Were Dating but something fell flat for me, particularly the characters. I missed the cute parts of a relationship and felt like it was only oozing sexual chemistry. Not that thatโ€™s a bad thing, but I just want a little something more, you know?

Ratings:

4 Potions

  • These Violent Delights by Chloe Gong

3.5 Potions

  • All I Want for Christmas is the Girl Next Door by Chelsea Bobulski

2 Potions

  • A Psalm of Storms and Silence by Roseanne A. Brown
  • Last Chance Books by Kelsey Rodkey
  • While We Were Dating by Jasmine Guillory

1.5 Potions

  • The Liars Beneath by Heather Van Fleet

Current reading list

  • All I Want for Christmas is the Girl in Charge by Chelsea Bobulski
  • Not Here to Be Liked by Michelle Quach
    • currently adoring the Asian representation and the premise on feminism
  • A Kingdom of Flesh and Fire by Jennifer L. Armentrout
    • yes, Iโ€™m still on this oneโ€ฆ

TBR list

  • All I Want for Christmas is the Boy I Canโ€™t Have by Chelsea Bobulski
  • Loveboat, Taipei by Abigail Hing Wen
  • The Love Hypothesis by Ali Hazelwood
  • Anatomy: A Love Story by Dana Schwartz

Thatโ€™s it for November! I canโ€™t wait for Christmas and will definitely be sharing some Christmas-related things in December.

3 star, YA

Review: Somewhere Only We Know by Maurene Goo

10 00 p.m.: Lucky is the biggest K-pop star on the scene, and she’s just performed her hit song “Heartbeat” in Hong Kong to thousands of adoring fans. She’s about to debut on The Tonight Show in America, hopefully a breakout performance for her career. But right now? She’s in her fancy hotel, trying to fall asleep but dying for a hamburger.

11 00 p.m.: Jack is sneaking into a fancy hotel, on assignment for his tabloid job that he keeps secret from his parents. On his way out of the hotel, he runs into a girl wearing slippers, a girl who is single-mindedly determined to find a hamburger. She looks kind of familiar. She’s very cute. He’s maybe curious.

12:00 a.m.: Nothing will ever be the same.



Does anyone else just have the song Somewhere Only We Know stuck in their heads whenever you see this title? No? Just me?

I had the pleasure of reading this book as an audiobook during some down time, which definitely enhanced the experience in my opinion. Otherwise, this rating may have dropped by 1.

Somewhere Only We Know is reminiscent of Gayle Forman’s Just One Day type of romance wherein our protagonist sets out on some wild one-day adventure with someone new generally across a wonderful locale. Mix into this is the celebrity meets ordinary citizen trope and that seemed like the perfect combination in a relaxing read.

And for the most part, it was. Lucky was a character I could sympathize with as she struggled with anxiety while juggling the demands of a successful K-pop career. The K-pop industry is known for its intensive training to shape their stars – aka investments – into a marketable star. Lucky was in the midst of this, about to embark on the next frontier in her career – America.

But then she meets savvy Jack, just trying to survive and figure things out in his life after high school. Having moved to Hong Kong with his family for his dad’s work a year ago, he found himself doing well in celebrity tabloid work in this city that still felt new to him in some ways. What were the odds he’d bump into an actual celebrity without maneuvering himself into such a situation?

The premise was cute. You know things will go down weirdly once Lucky found out her identity as a K-pop star was blown and she’s not just a fun, ordinary girl Jack decided to show around the city. But it sure took a long time to get there. The buildup was almost too long because Jack figured out who she was fairly early on in the book, and we’re just left feeling sorry for poor naive Lucky as Jack continued with his deception.

The romance that also builds as the two went around exploring Jack’s favourite places was also a little hard for me to always believe. I understand the connection for Lucky as this was the first guy she ever really got to interact with outside of her management’s scrutiny. There’s this newfound freedom that’s exhilarating and can easily be transferred to the person who brought such a gift to her. For Jack? Was it just because she was famous? I don’t think so, yet her excitement over absolutely everything didn’t make her personality shine through as much when this overshadowed everything else about her.

What I will say that really saved the story comes down to two things:

  1. I absolutely adored the locale in this book. There aren’t any YA books I’ve found that feature Hong Kong so prominently. As this is where my family is from, reading the descriptions of the food and tourist areas Jack brought Lucky to was an excruciating yearning to revisit this wondrous city. If Hong Kong is known for anything, it’s the amazing variety of foods. I loved listening to the book describe in detail things I remember from my past visits that it almost felt like I was back there.
  2. The other thing is the ending. Once you hold out for the climax when the other shoe finally drops, it’s totally worth it. I loved the way the author chose to deal with the aftermath of what you’d totally expect is going to be a messy fall out. It wasn’t prettily wrapped up in a bow, but it also brought a sense of joy and realness to this story.

While there were clearly pros and cons to this book, I still had a good experience with it. I love travel escapism books and this totally delivered, especially in a city that most YA never gets to see up close and personal. The Asian culture shines through in implicit ways because it is literally the backdrop of everything happening. It makes me feel proud to see my city represented like this, and I’m so grateful to Maurene Goo for writing it. I would still tell you to give this novel a chance. You never know if it’s the next read you’ll fall in love with. And maybe want to book a ticket to Hong Kong right away (when it’s safe to).

Overall Recommendation:

Somewhere Only We Know was an ode to Hong Kong, my family’s city, that made me want to be there with our protagonists as they embarked on a one-day wild trip around all the wondrous sights and foods. Lucky was a sweet but naive girl who struggled secretly on her own as she put on a different persona for her fans as a wildly popular K-pop star. When she finds the one boy who didn’t seem to know who she was, she obviously uses this newfound freedom to explore. While the premise was fun and cute, the execution could’ve been a little faster paced as we’re always left waiting for the other shoe to drop from near the beginning once Jack, our love interest, couldn’t keep up his deception. The ending was worth the wait though, and this book overall was entertaining and full of book escapism at its best.

top ten tuesday

Top Ten Tuesday: Characters Iโ€™d Love an Update On

Top Ten Tuesday was created by The Broke and the Bookish in June of 2010 and was moved to That Artsy Reader Girl in January of 2018. It was born of a love of lists, a love of books, and a desire to bring bookish friends together.


Have you ever connected so much with certain characters that you felt like they were people you not only could be friends with, but also was your friend? No? Or is that just me?

Either way, this weekโ€™s TTT only makes sense if youโ€™ve developed strong feelings for certain characters in books that make you feel invested in them long after their story (and the last pages of the book) has closed.

While I couldnโ€™t quite reach 10, unless you count the different groups/couplings of characters as individuals, I hope if youโ€™ve read these books, these people have impacted you in some way, shape or form as well.

Letโ€™s begin!

1. Brendan & Cameron

I read this book this year and I absolutely fell in love with this โ€œmeanโ€ girl and the geeky loner boy she unwittingly fell for even though he had every right to hate her for the horrid nickname she gave him that unfortunately stuck throughout the years. I loved their chemistry, how they made each other better in some ways by challenging one another while allowing them to each grow and be themselves. I wouldโ€™ve totally loved to see how they could make their relationship work as they are such different people on paper.

Continue reading “Top Ten Tuesday: Characters Iโ€™d Love an Update On”