Friday, October 9, 2020

Catching Up

I have read a few books since I last posted. I want to share with you three of them today.

  • Athena's Choice by Adam Boomstrom
  • Tomorrow Will Be Better by Betty Smith
  • Leave the World Behind by Rumaan, Alam
Although when looking at the titles and reading the blurbs one would think these books have nothing in common, especially when you consider the Tomorrow Will Be Better (by the same author as A Tree Grows in Brooklyn) was first published in 1948. This new edition was released in early May by Harper Perennial Modern Classics. However, after thinking about the three titles to review here, I realized they all are truly coming of age books but in very different manners and circumstances.

Tomorrow Will Be Better



Tomorrow Will Be Better tells the story of Margy Shannon, a young woman growing up in Brooklyn in the 1920s. We learn of her early years in a small cramped apartment the only child of a hard-working yet stoic father and a mother, his complete opposite. Margy has found new friendships in a recently acquired job she enjoys and yearns for a husband and children of her own. The book begins with a young woman striving for independence and ends with a woman who has found everything she was ever wanted, but realizes it is not what she anticipated. 

I hate to admit it, but I have never read A Tree Grows in Brooklyn (1943), but the descriptions I have read seem very similar to Margy's story. I truly enjoyed seeing the development of Margy from a young child playing with a clothespin in the corner of the cramped kitchen, to the good wife she desperately wants to be to her Franky. The setting, New York - specifically the Williamsburg and Bushwich sections of Brooklyn, in the 1920s, provides the reader historical context for which most readers will not have an understanding of the time frame or the area.

Athena' Choice

Athena's Choice by Adam Boostrom is a stark contrast. This dystopian novel takes place in 2099. All men have been eradicated from society by a virus known as the Y-Factor. The women in the current civilization are divided. One group strongly opposes the return of men because they believe the world to be more civilized without them, and the other (the Lonely Hearts) who are want to have men returned. The book centers around the stolen Lazarus Genome which will save the male species. Athena Vosh, a 19-year old living in the Algonquin Forest Zone of the North American Union, has been summoned to Chicago by the Public Safety Headquarters to assist in the investigation.

I was so intrigued by the manner in which Boostrom shared the history of the Union through Wikipedia entries. It was a very clever way to convey the timeline of the story. I also loved the many innovations he developed in the book. Those who love fashion will want to have the ability to choose the clothing for the next day and it will be designed specifically for them and ready to wear the next day. It can also be recycled so new outfits can be worn every day. Foodies will enjoy the food printer allowing you to select and print the food you want to eat. Although in order to have higher in foods, you must purchase a more expensive model.

I am usually not a fan of dystopian novels, but this one caught my attention and I simply could not wait to find out the ending. The coming of age part of this novel is about Athena and the choices she makes throughout the book which shows her growth from a free-spirited teenager to a young woman who must put her life on the line.
Leave the World Behind

In a previous review of this book, I wrote that this is one of those books that makes you want to go "hmmmm". I am definitely stretching the theme of coming of age for this book, but I think once you finish reading, you will also see the growth, actually of more than one character. This book moves along very innocently and then it takes a very sharp turn and you are on a downhill rollercoaster you might not find stopping any time soon. I felt like I was watching (or listening to) an M. Night Shymalan movie. The characters are well developed and the plot very intriguing. Clay, Amanda, and their children experience the same isolation of those who are facing quarantine during the COVID-19 pandemic, yet they are far outside of the city with no contact with the outside world.

All three of these books are VERY different but seem to have an underlying sense of a coming of age story. Again, like I said before, I might be stretching it a little, but I can see a small connection.

I highly recommend all three of these titles. They might not be for all readers, but for those who are open to different times, places, and incidents, I think you will enjoy them just as much. 

*To comply with guidelines set forth by the Federal Trade Commission, HarperCollins Publishing provided me with a complimentary copy of the Tomorrow Will Be Better ebook. Thinker Books provided me with a complimentary copy of the ebook and the audiobook of Athena's Choice. Harper Audio provided me complimentary copies of the audiobooks of Tomorrow Will  Be Better and Leave the World Behind. These reviews are my opinion and are in no way influenced by the authors or publishers.


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