Wednesday, February 19, 2025

Sara and Melissa Talk About...How We Read

We've been running a column series to get more personal with our readers. We are now into our sixth year!

This month, we are talking about how we read, whether it's the format of the book, where we do our reading, any reading habits we have, etc.

We're always open to topic suggestions, so please don't hesitate to share those in the comments. We'd also love to know if you can relate to anything we've said or hear your own thoughts on the topic. So don't be shy. :) We look forward to getting to know you as much as we're letting you get to know us. You can find our previous columns here, in case you missed them. 

Melissa Amster:

I came up with this topic when thinking about my reading habits and routines. I think a friend had asked me how I'm able to get any reading done during the week, especially with a job and kids. My kids are teenagers now, so they entertain themselves. However, I was able to get in a lot of reading even when they were little. 

After I had my second child, I learned how to multitask books. I had a couple due at the library at the same time, so I decided to read them at the same time, spending different times of day on each of them so as to not get them mixed up. This skill came in handy when I started reading ebooks shortly after CLC took off. I'd spend some parts of my day reading the ebooks and some parts reading print books. The ebooks were originally just on my Kindle for PC, so I could only read those at home. I took a print book to work to read at lunchtime. I also only read print books on Shabbat and Jewish holidays that are observed similarly to Shabbat, since we don't use electronics. I eventually got a Kindle Paperwhite (in 2015) and started changing when I read on that vs. print. Like I would use my Kindle while exercising when I used to read print during that time. (Yes, I read while on the treadmill.)

In 2016, I started listening to audiobooks on my commute to and from work, as well as during the workday if I was doing a mundane task like stuffing envelopes. (My older son thought that was the only thing I did at work.) With this new medium, I was able to read three books at a time! This went on until early 2020, with the pandemic keeping me at home most of the time. I couldn't just sit and listen and I would get more distracted with everyone else in the house. So I basically gave up audiobooks. I miss the experience of reading that way. 

As mentioned before, I read during my morning workout. I also read during breakfast and lunch. Sometimes I'll read in the evening if I need to settle my mind or if I'm really absorbed in a book. I also get in about 20 minutes each morning while my youngest is getting ready for school. And I often read a lot during Shabbat each weekend. 

I have a system for deciding which books to read next, at least in print: My five book pile (this is the latest one featured at my Bookstagram). Every time I take a book off the pile, I add another one to the bottom. Sometimes I deviate from the pile if I have a library book, something from book club, or something I really have to read right away (such as the T.J. Klune book I got a couple weeks ago). For my Kindle queue, I keep a list in email and continuously re-send it to myself. Sometimes I'll deviate from that list for blog tours or if something else comes up that I need to read right away.

In regard to where and how I read, I'm happiest on this one cozy chair in my living room. (When my daughter isn't "stealing" it from me. 😂) There's a lamp right next to it and a bookshelf on the other side. I usually have a soft blanket and some water or tea. This is usually how I read on Shabbat, since I'm at the kitchen table during the times I read at breakfast and lunch. However, I'll also read over there on weeknights when I'm in the mood. I got my husband back into reading before the pandemic started, so he's been at it for a while now. I'm glad because he doesn't complain when I'm reading on Shabbat and sometimes he'll be the one saying "one more page."

My cozy reading nook


Sara Steven:

For a very long time, the only way I’d read a book consisted of holding a “real” book in my hands. I’d heard something about this thing called an eReader, but I was a die-hard book fan. I needed to feel the paperback or hardcover in my hands, and if the pages produced that coveted paper smell, even better.


But times change, and with it, I had to compromise a little. So many of the books I review for Chick Lit Central are sent to me in an epub or mobi file. I have a Kindle reader, and I can’t imagine where I’d be without it. I take it everywhere with me. It’s small enough to fit in my purse, so if I’m sitting in a waiting room or in the car or in any situation where I have to wait for someone (or something), I can read whatever I have loaded up on my Kindle.

Where I get the bulk of my reading done is in bed–if I wake up in the middle of the night and have a tough time getting back to sleep, I read. When I’m officially up for the day, I’ll take some time to read, and I almost always get some reading done when I go to bed, too. Holding the Kindle is a lot easier for me to do in bed than balancing an actual book–I do a lot of side lying and turning pages can get a little awkward with a paperback or hardcover. 

One of my favorite places to read is outdoors, and although I don’t get to do that as often as I like to, sitting under the gazebo in my backyard is a very relaxing, enjoyable experience. It doesn’t matter if it’s on Kindle or any other form–the fresh air and sounds of the neighborhood and nature adds a nice ambiance to my reading experience.  

How do YOU read?

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Book Review: To Sicily, With Love

By Allyson Bales

Aurora York had it all together: loving parents, a steady relationship, and a promising career. But after she loses both parents unexpectedly, she can’t seem to stay on track any longer. Lonely and lost after a public meltdown that threatens her professional credibility, she’s shocked when DNA test results show a blood relative in Sicily. When her cousin reaches out online and begs her to come to Italy to meet everyone in person, Aurora makes the leap.

Aurora arrives in Sicily for a month, and there she meets a colorful, dynamic family steeped in tradition. The younger generation is fascinated by her social media fame in America, and even though her grandparents have more traditional viewpoints, Aurora begins to heal from her grief…and enjoys the attention of a kind and handsome Italian man.

But when the summer ends, a new opportunity calls her back to the States and her old habits threaten to reemerge. Will Aurora leave everything in Sicily she loves behind, or take the chance on a whole new future? (Synopsis courtesy of Amazon.)

Jennifer Probst has a knack for taking her readers to beautiful places with characters you grow to love!

To Sicily with Love is book four in the Meet Me in Italy Series and I think it is my favorite one! All the women in these books are struggling with something hard and embark on a journey of self discovery to Italy.  In this story we get to meet Aurora.  She has just lost her mother, and her father five years before and is drowning in grief.  Aurora is a character I immediately connected with and I think you will too.  She is fierce and vulnerable, soft and hard, and looking for what we all are looking for, people to love and support her no matter what.  One lonely night she decides to do a DNA swab test to see if she has any other family out there and what she finds is so much FUN!

Probst brings us to Sicily in this story and I really, really felt like I was there with Aurora, hanging out in her beautiful apartment overlooking the marina or driving down the crazy Italian streets or having a drink with her in Bar Sciacca.  The way Probst describes her locations transports the reader right there!

Probst also crafts all the intricacies of family dynamics beautifully.  Aurora is struggling with so much heartbreak but there is so much hope in this story.  So much fun and messiness, honesty and realness.  I wanted to be a part of this story so much!

This is the perfect read to get you out of a slump and not feeling those winter blues!  I really enjoyed this one so much! 

Thanks to Berkley for the book in exchange for an honest review.

More by Jennifer Probst (from Meet Me in Italy):

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Tuesday, February 18, 2025

It's a fine life for Lindsay Hameroff...plus a book giveaway

Introduction by Melissa Amster

We are so excited to have Lindsay Hameroff back at CLC today to celebrate the publication of her sophomore rom-com, Never Planned on You! I loved this story and even cried from it. I will be reviewing it soon, but you can see my initial thoughts at my Bookstagram. It was also one of my top ten picks at my Bookstagram last year. When I reviewed her debut, Till There Was You, I was floored when she gave one of my casting picks a shout-out! I hope to do her current novel justice when I cast it in my upcoming review. I had fun chatting with Lindsay again and, of course, talking about Newsies: The Musical, which inspired the title for Never Planned On You. Thanks to St. Martin's Press, we have one copy for a lucky reader!



Lindsay Hameroff is a writer, humorist, and former English teacher raised in Baltimore, MD and based in Harrisburg, PA. Her writing has been featured in McSweeney’s Internet Tendency, The Belladonna, Weekly Humorist, and other outlets. She also co-edits Frazzled, a parenting humor site. She is also the author of Till There Was You, her debut novel. Visit Lindsay at her website and on Instagram.


Synopsis:
Ali Rubin has a reputation for spontaneity. Like that time she made a drunken bet in London that led to matching tattoos with a stranger. Her joie de vivre is one of her best qualities; she lives every day to the fullest and follows her dreams wherever they take her. And now, they’re taking her from her career as a chef in New York City back home to Baltimore, where she’s interning as a wedding planner.

Despite the occasional fantasy about her British tattoo twin, Ali never expected to see Graham again. So no one is more surprised than she is when he turns up in Baltimore, ordering a latte at her favorite cafe. When they reconnect during an enchanting evening together, Ali can’t help but wonder if Graham might be someone special.

At the same time, she's desperate to succeed in her new career and prove that she isn’t the family flake. When she gets a job planning a high profile wedding at a historic hotel, it seems like things are finally falling into place. That is, until Graham turns out to be the groom.

Graham’s family owns the once-grand, now struggling Black-Eyed Susan, and he’s returned to Baltimore to help his grandmother get it back on its feet. He’s certain that hosting a wedding at the hotel is just the publicity boost it needs. Ali’s boss agrees, and promises Ali a full-time gig if the affair goes off without a hitch. Unfortunately, Ali and Graham can't seem to ignore their rekindled chemistry, especially when it’s revealed that Graham and his fiancée are planning a marriage of convenience. Still, staying away from each other is the best thing they can do, since giving in to their growing feelings might cost them everything.

"A delicious Baltimore snowball of a novel about juggling family, career, love, and sassy grandmothers, Never Planned on You is the perfect romantic comedy." 
–Sara Goodman Confino, bestselling author of Behind Every Good Man

"I’m never forgiving Lindsay Hameroff because I stayed up way too late reading Never Planned On You when I absolutely could not put it down. I cackled with laughter, swooned for all the pining, and loved every minute of this delectable treat of a book (that should come with a sleep warning hazard)." 
–Ali Rosen, bestselling author of Alternate Endings

"There's no sophomore slump here...Refreshingly smart, fun, and sexy, Hameroff writes a pitch-perfect love story of fate and second chances."
–Rochelle B. Weinstein, bestselling author of What You Do To Me

What is a favorite compliment you have received on your writing?
I love it when people tell me that my writing made them laugh out loud. I was primarily a humorist before I wrote romance and the jokes and banter in my novels are my favorite things to write. I take the “com” part of rom-com seriously, so when readers are laughing, I feel like I’ve succeeded in my mission!

If you could tell the debut novelist version of yourself one thing, what would it be?
I would give myself the same advice every seasoned writer gives: don’t read your reviews! For me, this has always been easier said than done. The problem is that even the nice reviews can get in your head and mess with your process. After the debut of Till There Was You, I would read the five-star reviews only, but when I would see something like, ‘this book has such funny supporting characters’ or, ‘I love the combination of humor and grief,’ I would think, well Never Planned on You doesn’t have those things! Does this mean people won’t like it? Once you start thinking this way, you start writing what you think people want to read and that never ends well. Really, the best thing is to write what you want to read. You can’t please everyone and trying to do so takes all the joy out of writing.

If Never Planned on You were made into a movie, what songs would be on the soundtrack?
There is a soundtrack! You can access it here

I have a few favorites from this list. Every time I write a book, I get obsessed with a Stephen Sanchez song and play it on repeat for months while I’m drafting. For NPOY, that song was “The Pool.” I think it totally captures the way Ali and Graham felt drawn to each other, but were simultaneously afraid of what would happen if they gave into their feelings. Ali in particular was worried about ‘falling’ in love and having no one to catch her.

I didn’t put it on the list but I think “Accidentally in Love” by the Counting Crows is fitting and would be so much fun in a movie montage. And of course you need a song by The Beach Boys for Graham. I love “Don’t Worry, Baby” for the ending scene, but that could just be because I am obsessed with that scene from Never Been Kissed

What is your favorite line from Newsies? (I figured your favorite song is obvious. 😉 )
“Never fear: Brooklyn’s here!” I saw Newsies three times on Broadway when I was living in Brooklyn, and every time Spot Collins and his gang showed up, I’d kick my feet with glee. It’s such a satisfying moment in the plot and as a (temporary) Brooklynite, I was like, my people are here! We’ve got this! 

“I Never Planned on You” is actually not my favorite song from Newsies! I think my favorite is probably “Once and For All.” I love that  “we’re going to band together and overcome the obstacle together” moment in a musical. But my favorite Newsies song to watch is “Seize The Day.” The dancing is top-notch and I’ll never tire of watching those newsboys do their flips!

If we were to visit you, what are some places you would take us to see?
I live in Harrisburg now, but since the book is set in Baltimore, I assume you mean there! 

I wrote all of my favorite spots into Never Planned on You, so the book itself could serve as a tour guide.

First, we’d go to Goldberg’s Bagels in Pikesville for tuna salad on a toasted, whole wheat everything bagel. It is so insanely good. Or we could grab lunch downtown at The Papermoon Diner, which is trippy and eclectic and absolutely captures the artsy vibes of the city. 

Before dinner, we’d spend time walking around W. 36th Street in Hampden. It is my favorite neighborhood and we’d spend time checking out all the quirky stores. We would stop by Charlotte Elliott and The Bookstore Next Door, which is a combination used book and antique store. I went there when I was doing research for Never Planned on You and found a cookbook called Jewish Festival Cooking, which was so charming and well-loved that I wrote it right into the book. Then we’d stop for pre-dinner drinks at The Blue-Bird Cocktail Lounge, which I also picked as a first date spot for Ali and Graham!

There’s nothing but good options for dinner. Baltimore City is a microcosm of world cultures and you can get anything you want to eat: Greek, Italian, Japanese, Middle Eastern. The list goes on and on and it’s all delicious! However, getting a crab cake seems pretty essential. There are lots of good options downtown, but my family is partial to Pappas, which is in Cockeysville. 

Finally, we’d end the night with a snowball. It’s a Baltimore staple made of finely shaved ice that’s packed into a styrofoam cup and coated in syrup. Chocolate with marshmallow sauce is my favorite!

What is the last movie you saw that you would recommend?
To no one’s surprise, I was obsessed with Wicked. I saw it three times. I haven’t seen a movie in the theater multiple times since Titanic came out in 1997. Also, it’s not a movie but my husband and I just watched Severance and I am recommending it to everyone. I’m addicted to the theories board on Reddit!

Thanks to Lindsay for chatting with us and St. Martin's Press for sharing her book with our readers.

How to win: Use Rafflecopter to enter the giveaway. If you have any questions, feel free to contact us. If you have trouble using Rafflecopter on our blog, enter the giveaway here

Giveaway ends February 23rd at midnight EST.

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Monday, February 17, 2025

Book Review: Their Double Lives

By Melissa Amster

A down-on-her-luck waitress at a posh New Jersey country club, Kim Valva couldn’t be living a more different life from the carefree socialites she serves. Her live-in boyfriend recently cheated on her, her social life is in shambles, and her dog needs a life-saving surgery that she can’t afford. Then her luck seems to change when a mysterious figure identifying themself only as The Stranger contacts her with an offer she can’t refuse: Put a pill in the new member’s drink and, when he dies, she’ll have enough money to fix her dog and her life.

Her target turns out to be Tony Fiore―Kim’s bad boy ex-boyfriend from high school. Fifteen years have passed, and he now goes by Anthony Fuller. He’s cleaned up, made tens of millions, and his gorgeous fiancée, twenty-two-year-old PJ Walsh, is on his arm.

PJ had her own agenda from the second she met Anthony. Find him, trick him, marry him, kill him. It was supposed to be easy, but she finds that while living her double life, the lines blur between who she is and who she’s pretending to be.

Stunned to see Tony again, Kim can’t bring herself to go through with spiking his drink. Instead, it is PJ who dies horrifically at the table just as dinner ends. Was someone else at the club―member or worker―tasked with poisoning PJ just as she had been instructed to do to Tony? Who would want both of them dead? With no one to trust and The Stranger to answer to, Kim must peel back the layers of deceit to reveal a deeply buried truth, more shocking than she could ever imagine… (Synopsis courtesy of Amazon.)

Jaime Lynn Hendricks is one of my go-to psychological thriller authors, and Their Double Lives is currently my favorite of her deliciously suspenseful novels!

I was totally engaged by this cat and mouse game and couldn't put the book down. It kept me guessing as to who The Stranger could be and I was so nervous for Kim the entire time. I loved the flashbacks to PJ's story and she was just as much a sympathetic character as Kim was. I was equally nervous for her! It was really easy to visualize people and places without details taking away from the narrative. There was just a nice balance of description and plot.

There is a lot going on in this novel and I don't want to say too much so as to not spoil anything. It's definitely a page-turner and one you won't want to miss when it hits shelves in mid-May. 

Side note: There's a minor character whose name made me contact the author to tell her about a coincidence in my life. If you've known me for a long time, you'll recognize the name right away!

(Trigger warnings below.)

Movie casting suggestions:
Kim: Monica Barbaro
PJ: Gus Birney
Matt: Jordan Doww
Anthony: Christopher Abbott
Carla: Samaire Armstrong
Maddy: Nichole Sakura

Thanks to Thriller Book Lovers the Pulse for the book in exchange for an honest review.

More by Jaime Lynn Hendricks:

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TW: Animal being really sick, witnessing a disturbing death, death of parents (one by murder)

Friday, February 14, 2025

Book Review: The Uninvited Guest


By Sara Steven

Megan Lewis is ready for her big day, but when an unexpected guest crashes her hen weekend, her perfectly curated world unravels.

Beth, claiming to be Jamie’s cousin, quickly charms the group. But when she gets close to bridesmaid Lauren, things take a dark turn, and a game of truth or dare exposes secrets from Megan’s past, shaking her world.

As the wedding nears, Megan realises Beth isn’t who she says she is — but she may be her only ally.

When you can’t trust anyone, not even your fiancé, who can you turn to? (Synopsis courtesy of Goodreads.)

The Uninvited Guest starts with fear and uncertainty, when Megan tries to figure out why someone would send her a funeral bouquet to her parent’s home. That central theme of fear and uncertainty continues on through most of the book, particularly due to constant upsets like the funeral bouquet–dead animals, hand-written scary messages, funeral wreaths, and text messages that threaten the worst, all in an effort to scare Megan off. 

She doesn’t know who to trust anymore. The friends she felt she could lean on the most become number one suspects, and the stranger who shows up unexpectedly at her hen weekend (Beth) soon becomes the most reliable safeguard during moments of upheaval and chaos. Beth claims she’s innocent and honest, but Jamie tells Megan not to trust Beth. Given Megan’s own experience with Jamie, there could be a lot of truth to Beth’s warnings. It’s enough to make the reader unsure of who to trust, let alone Megan’s trust in her allies!

I knew that something sinister was on the horizon–as each chapter passed and the threats thickened, I had a feeling everything would be revealed (and unravel) on the wedding day. Suddenly, people go missing and there are no breadcrumbs left behind to decipher what’s really going on, leaving Megan feeling lost and terrified. Who would want to hurt Megan or the people she loves most? And most importantly: Why?

I really enjoyed the psychological thriller aspect to this story. I had my suspicions on who I thought was the culprit, and while I was right, for the most part, there were still some twists and turns that made the eventual unveiling exciting and unexpected. There were a couple of inconsistencies here and there that I snagged on, but it didn’t take away from the overall experience of the book and its thriller elements. I think The Uninvited Guest was engaging and kept me locked in on trying to figure out who's out to get Megan and what would happen next, every step of the way.     

Thanks to Rachel's Random Resources for the book in exchange for an honest review.

Purchase Links:
Amazon US * Amazon UK * Kobo

Ruby Speechley
is a bestselling psychological thriller writer, whose titles include Someone Else’s Baby. Previously published by Hera, she has been a journalist and worked in PR and lives in Cheshire.

Visit Ruby online:
Website * Facebook * Instagram * X 

Sign up for Ruby's newsletter.


Visit all the stops on Ruby's blog tour:

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Thursday, February 13, 2025

A great escape with Juliette Sobanet...plus a book giveaway

We're excited to have Juliette Sobanet back at CLC today. Her latest novel, Story Island, sounds like so much fun! The cover is gorgeous too. She's here to tell us more about it and she has one print copy and one ebook to give away!

Juliette Sobanet is the award-winning author of sixteen books, including the bestselling Midnight Train to Paris and All the Beautiful Bodies. A French professor and writing coach, she holds a B.A. from Georgetown University and an M.A. from New York University in Paris. Juliette has lived all over the U.S. and France, so she is hesitant to commit to a location in this bio, knowing it will likely change. Wherever she resides, she lives there with her adorable cats.

Visit Juliette online:
Website * Facebook * Instagram * X

Synopsis:
What if every book ever written created a world of its own? And what if an author could travel into that world and write the story from the inside out?

When celebrated New York City-based author, Katerina Joyce, finds herself facing a brutal, love-induced case of writer’s block with only three weeks to turn in her next book, she flees Manhattan in search of inspiration on the Big Island of Hawaii. A series of mystical encounters on her first night transports her somewhere entirely unexpected: straight into the world of her own book.

All Kat knows about her story is that her main character, British veterinarian Evie Willcox, wakes up on a magical and (nearly) deserted island with no memory of getting there. Oh, and at the end of the book, Evie Willcox will die. But when Kat wakes up on the same deserted beach in the body of Evie, the journey she faces is much more harrowing than a simple, blank page: Kat must now write her story from the inside out, facing her heart-wrenching past and all her worst fears along the way—not least a blood-thirsty great white shark and that treacherous love triangle she can’t seem to escape.

Can Kat rewrite Evie’s destiny, and perhaps her own as well, as she struggles to uncover the island’s secrets? More importantly, can she find a way to survive the mysterious and perilous world of her own imagining? Or will her own writer’s pen be the killer she ultimately fears?

Story Island explores LGBTQ themes while diving into the emotional depths of life-long friendships and soulmates, the complexities of grief and loss, and the ever-complicated and timeless love of mother-daughter relationships—all interwoven with a splash of island magic and the mysterious currents of time travel. (Courtesy of Amazon.)

What is a favorite compliment you received on your writing?
I love when readers tell me that they lost sleep because they couldn't put my book down at night. Not that I want anyone to be sleep-deprived, but if it's because they're enjoying my writing, that does make me really happy (and it means I'm doing my job!).

What is one thing you would tell the debut novelist version of yourself?
I would tell her that this writing journey is going to be a long, unexpected journey that will take you places you never would have imagined, and that it will humble you in many ways, too! I would tell her not to worry so much about how the books sell--but instead to focus on the passion you have for your stories, and to keep the focus there. That is where the gold lies.

If Story Island were made into a movie, who would you cast in the lead roles?
Such a fun question! I would cast Alexandra Daddario as Kat, our main character. I can totally picture her leading us on this wild, island adventure. I would cast Zachary Levi as Ian, the doctor, and Kat's best friend from long ago. Ever since I saw Zachary Levi play a doctor in The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel, I knew he'd make the perfect Ian. 

If you could escape into the world of any book, what would it be and why?
I'd have to go with The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe. I have always adored this magical story, and Story Island is a modern-day take on Narnia. I love the idea of normal people tripping through time and space, and somehow entering into magical realms. Sign me up!

What is the most memorable Valentine's Day experience you've ever had?
This Valentine's memory goes all the way back to junior high! My boyfriend in eighth grade gave me one of those red heart-shaped boxes that is typically filled with chocolates. But when I opened up the box, I found that he had counted out the number of days we had been "going together" at that point, and he had filled the box with one Hershey's Kiss for every day we had been together. He had written a note on the inside of the box explaining the gesture--it was absolutely adorable and it has always stuck with me.

If your life was a TV series, which celebrity would you want to narrate it? 
I always love a British narrator (I just love that sophisticated accent), so I would want Emma Thompson to narrate. I love her voice!

Thanks to Juliette for chatting with us and for sharing her book with our readers.

How to win: Use Rafflecopter to enter the giveaway. If you have any questions, feel free to contact us. If you have trouble using Rafflecopter on our blog, enter the giveaway here

Giveaway ends February 18th at midnight EST.

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Wednesday, February 12, 2025

Book Review: The Moonlight Healers

By Jami Denison

The horrors of World War II are so vast, most genres of fiction have grappled with its impact. In her debut novel, The Moonlight Healers, author Elizabeth Becker crafts a World War II/present day tale that combines magical realism, romance, and historical fiction. It’s a powerful story about love, family, and the gifts and costs of magic.

Louise and Peter have been best friends almost since they were in diapers. But with Louise about to leave for college in New York and Peter stuck in their hometown of Richmond, Virginia, their days together are nearing an end. At a party, Peter drunkenly confesses he loves Louise, but in the car the next day, he can’t remember. Distracted by their discussion, Peter veers into oncoming traffic. When Louise regains consciousness, Peter is on the road. He flew out the windshield and broke his neck. Heartbroken, Louise performs CPR on him anyway. A mysterious energy flows out of her hands, and somehow Peter comes back to life, and the injuries on him disappear. 

When Louise tells her mother Bobbie, a former nurse, the truth about what really happened to Peter, Bobbie confesses a long-held secret: All the women in their family are healers, and Louise must talk to her grandmother Camille about how to live with her newfound knowledge. Bobbie and Camille have been estranged for years, for reasons they won’t tell Louise. But Bobbie takes Louise to Camille’s orchard in Appalachian Virginia so Camille can train her.

The story also takes place in 1943 France, as Camille’s mother Helene works as a nurse in an occupied hospital run by a convent. Unlike Louise, Helene has grown up with her healing abilities and a mother who encourages them. She’s called to the hospital by her cousin, who shares the abilities but tells Helene it’s an affront to God to use them. When Helene falls in love with a recovering soldier, her abilities and convictions are tested.

The Moonlight Healers moves seamlessly between the love stories and fantasy aspects of the novel. The car accident starts the story with a literal bang, and Louise takes readers on a compelling journey as she navigates her new powers, the muddy relationship between her mother and grandmother, her feelings for Peter, and her plans for her future. The plot and tone are light, similar to the TV show Pushing Daisies. In contrast, the chapters with Helene feel heavy and dark, as the author gets into questions about the nature of evil and what limits a healer should put on herself.

There’s a good twist about two-thirds of the way through the book that heightens the stakes and gives Louise a personal investment in her abilities and their limitations. Still, her story pales in comparison to Helene’s travails—a dilemma all authors face when alternating a World War II story with a present-day tale. 

With all the elements that Becker packs into her story—the mother-daughter drama, the friends-to-lovers trope—the magic does not dominate the narrative as I had hoped it would. I wish Becker had explored some of her paradoxes more; why can Louise literally bring Peter back from the dead, but not cure cancer? 

Still, The Moonlight Healers balances the different requirements of its genres adeptly. I wanted the book to be longer, so Becker could have really dug into all of her subplots, but as a debut author, she was probably limited in word count. There’s plenty of story left for a sequel, so perhaps Becker and her readers will get to see more of Louise. I certainly hope so. 

Thanks to HarperCollins for the book in exchange for an honest review.

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