Miracle

After Life by Gayle Forman is about second chances and how life connects us in unexpected ways.

Amber was killed by a hit and run driver when she was seventeen. Seven years later she returns home feeling as though it’s an ordinary day.

Learning about her accident sets her off on a mission to make sure her life had meaning. Her first impulse is to see her high school boyfriend. This encounter does not go as Amber expected. Neither does her mom’s reaction to seeing her.

The story comes together through multiple viewpoints at different times before her death: Amber’s, her younger sister, her parents, her boyfriend, a teacher and her former best friend.

This story is well written and thought provoking. It had me reaching for tissues by its conclusion.

Earth Protector

The Life Impossible by Matt Haig (same author as The Midnight Library) is a science fiction-type tale with philosophical thoughts about appreciating life, fortitude through trauma and care for the environment.

Retired teacher Grace gets a letter from a former student who is going through a tough time in life. She uses the opportunity to share her own story with him in hopes of providing encouragement.

Grace is a somewhat recent widow who also lost her nine(?)-year-old son to a bike accident years earlier. She has existed in a world of depression and guilt ever since. Drastic changes are in store when she receives word that a former coworker named Christina left her a home in Ibiza.

Grace decides to go to Ibiza to find out what happened to Christina. In doing so, she finds herself part of a plot full of magic stemming from an otherworldly energy in a protected area of the ocean.

This energy is called La Presencia. Grace’s encounter with it gives her superhuman abilities which she now must consider using to fight the evil force that is determined to destroy Ibiza’s protected areas.

Through her time in Ibiza she meets new friends while discovering Christina’s fate, fights against negative forces, and learns to truly live again.

Night Walker

The Night Guest by Hildur Knűtsdőttir is a fast-paced thriller taking place in Iceland that left me with so many questions.

Iðunn has been waking up every morning feeling as though she ran a marathon. She is sore and completely fatigued. Some mornings she wakes with unexplained bruises, substances or blood.

Doctors are unable to help beyond recommending psychiatric help or sleeping pills. The latter seems to work at first until she begins noticing increased signs of violence. A tracking device reveals that she is walking to a particular spot every night.

Iðunn is afraid of the person she becomes once she falls asleep. Her sister’s death from two years earlier may be the cause, and it seems that it’s her sister creating the mayhem. She begins falling into a muddled state of sleeplessness as she traverses her days and interactions- trying to avoid sleep.

Spoilers ahead – I’m not sure if something is lost in the translation, but I finished this book with so many questions. I’m not sure why cats were the night person’s early targets. It was also unclear to me whether her sister killed herself or was drowned. Finally, the ending had me floundering- is she seeing her sister’s ghost, a hallucination or is it meant to be symbolic of the weight she’s felt since her passing. Did she kill her?

This book has a great concept and successfully showed its narrator’s disjointed state of mind.

Writing His Story

James by Percival Everett is getting a lot of great reviews. It provides an alternate view of Huckleberry Finn, namely from slave Jim’s perspective.

I vaguely remember reading pieces of the adventures of Tom Sawyer and Huck Finn as a girl (maybe grade school?), and I wasn’t sure this book would capture my interest. I couldn’t be more wrong. I devoured it in two days.

Jim is a highly educated slave, and has raised his young daughter and other slave children to read and write too. He also taught them how to behave as slaves in speech and behavior when around white people for their own protection.

Jim decides to run away when he discovers that he is going to be sold. Huck ends up with him since he is escaping his own issues, primarily an abusive father.

Jim hopes to find someone who can help buy his wife and daughter so they can be together again. Traveling down the Mississippi as a wanted, runaway slave with a white boy leads to many challenges. The two experience danger and violence (toward Jim and other slaves) in their quest for survival.

A couple of incidents include being stuck with a pair of white conmen, traveling with a white singing troupe that perform in black face and being sold to a vicious owner (among many other incidents).

As word of a civil war begins circulating, Jim decides he must return to save his family on his own. When he discovers that they’ve been sold, he sets off again.

Jim confronts his adversaries and shows his true self. He is not the acquiescent slave Jim. He is a strong, courageous, intelligent man. He is James, and he has a story to share.

There are so many other important moments and details throughout this book. I read voraciously to know Jim’s story and in hopes of justice. I closed this book feeling its story resound in my mind. Knowledge and words are powerful.

Silence is Violence

Kneel by Candace Buford is my final 2025 high school Nutmeg nominee. It’s a racially charged book taking place in a Louisiana town.

Russell and his football team have the potential to have a great senior year. That is until their toughest rivals from the neighboring white school instigate a fight during one of their first games.

Russell’s town lost a teen to police brutality. A terrible case in which the officer faced no charges. Rampant racism continues as Russell’s teammate faces charges for the fight while the instigator gets off with a slap on the wrist.

Russell is pressured to decide between activism or staying quiet to ensure looks from D1 colleges. His decision will potentially affect his ability to play, his relationship with teammates and his parents. His love interest is also part of the decision.

Events build to a boiling point at a peaceful protest that is portrayed as a riot.

Russell is able to make a final decision that brings needed attention to the horrific racism and inequality in their town.

Behind Closed Doors

The Housemaid by Freida McFadden is a page-turning read. It is book one of three.

The book starts with reference to a crime scene. Then it jumps back to Millie being hired as the affluent Winchester family’s maid. She feels fortunate to get the job considering she was previously in jail and is currently sleeping in her car. The job seems great until her boss, Nina, begins showing signs of a mental break. Nina seems determined to drive Millie away.

Meanwhile, Millie is becoming infatuated with her boss’s husband, Andrew. When it seems that he may feel the same, the story jumps to Nina’s perspective.

Some spoilers ahead-

Nina’s point of view reveals how she met and married Andrew, as well as how their relationship took a drastic turn into abuse. This twist reveals Nina’s plan to safely leave Andrew, while possibly putting Millie into jeopardy.

More detail is revealed about Millie’s criminal past which leads to a pretty satisfying conclusion.

I picked up this book out of curiosity knowing that it’s been made into a movie. While I’m not sure I’ll read books two and three, this book definitely kept my attention and has my interest to see how it will be transitioned to the screen.

Finding Color

As Long as the Lemon Tree Grows by Zoulfa Katouh is a high school Nutmeg nominee.

Salama works in a Syrian hospital during the uprising. She is faced with death on a daily basis. Her struggle is whether to stay and continue helping, or to follow her brother’s last request to get his pregnant wife Layla out of Syria.

Added to her decision is a new love interest who plans to stay in Syria (with his younger brother and sister) in order to continue sharing its stories with the world.

Through the story, Samala’s PTSD from losing her family (different scenarios) has her talking to an invisible male figure named Khawf. But this voice becomes more important than she could realize.

This book reveals details about potentially unknown events. It reveals the strength of character needed to endure hardship and the ability to find glimmers of light in darkness.

Serving Time

Allegedly by Tiffany D. Jackson was a wild ride. I would not recommend it for sensitive readers but I really enjoyed it.

Mary Addison was accused of killing a three month old baby, Alyssa, when she was only nine years old. There is detail surrounding the baby’s death (and other scenes of violence) that could be upsetting to some.

She was sentenced to “baby jail” and spent years locked up. It seems as though her mother may have forced her into this horrible situation in order to save herself since she was babysitting at the time.

Now Mary is sixteen and living in a group home with other female criminals. She becomes pregnant and decides she wants to keep her baby and further her education. The only way to do this is by fighting her conviction while trying to survive among girls who are out to get her.

Her mother still visits every couple weeks which adds to her psychological load. Mary’s dysfunctional upbringing is slowly revealed along with snippets from various reports and books about her.

The book’s subplot includes the potential flaws within the justice system when it comes to children and their safety. Mary has been abused emotionally or physically by most of the adults in her life.

This was a page turner because of nonstop episodes of suspense and surprises throughout the book.

Wrong Move

Kala by Colin Walsh is a suspenseful mystery taking place in Ireland.

Kala went missing as a teenager. The events leading up to her disappearance made a profound impact on her friend group. They witnessed criminal activity while hanging out together, which changed their group dynamic. Meanwhile, Kala was in the midst of her own personal revelations when she went missing.

Years later, Kala’s body is discovered at a construction site. A picture of Kala and her friends is found with her remains. Its discovery prompts her friends to reflect on their interactions leading up to her final night.

Present day and flashbacks slowly piece together these interactions from multiple perspectives. Helen, now a writer in Canada, was new to the area. She recounts first seeing Kala with her friend Aoife and being fascinated with them. Over time, she becomes close with them, especially Kala. She is back in town because her father is getting married.

Joe was Kala’s boyfriend and son of a police officer. He became a famous musician who now struggles with alcoholism and self absorption. Mush is the only one who stayed in their hometown of Kinlough. He works in his mom’s coffee shop, hiding his facial disfigurement. His aunt is marrying Helen’s dad.

There is a constant undercurrent of crime, secrets and sadness through the story which is compounded by the sudden disappearance of Mush’s twin teen-aged cousins.

The Irish terms gave me a little trouble at first, but before long I was thoroughly immersed. Walsh did an amazing job of weaving different perspectives of events through past and present in order to slowly reveal everything.

Family Secrets

The God of the Woods by Liz Moore is a twisty whodunnit.

Each chapter focuses on a different character during his or her pertinent year(s) in a timeline of events.

In the “current” year of 1975, a camper goes missing overnight. Her name is Barbara Van Laar and her family owns the land overseeing the campgrounds. She is a rebellious teen, and is often at odds with her parents. Her disappearance is even more disquieting considering her older, much-loved brother, Bear, went missing many years earlier when he was eight.

Chapters focus on Alice (Bear and Barbara’s mother), the head camp counselor, Tracy (a fellow camper) , the female investigator and other people of interest during Bear’s disappearance.

Pieces of the puzzle come together, gradually revealing the actual events surrounding both Van Laar children’s whereabouts. This book is well-written and definitely kept me guessing throughout.