Showing posts with label Nonfiction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nonfiction. Show all posts

12 October 2015

All the Things We Never Knew by Sheila Hamilton

Series: N/A, Standalone
Publication date: October 13, 2015
Publisher: Seal Press
Genres: Nonfiction, biography
Format: eArc
Source: The publisher through netgalley in exchange for an honest review
Pages: 312

Even as a reporter, Sheila Hamilton missed the signs as her husband David’s mental illness unfolded before her. By the time she had pieced together the puzzle, it was too late. Her once brilliant, intense, and passionate partner was dead within six weeks of a diagnosis of bipolar disorder, leaving his nine-year-old daughter and wife without so much as a note to explain his actions, a plan to help them recover from their profound grief, or a solution for the hundreds of thousands of dollars in debt that they would inherit from him.


All the Things We Never Knew takes readers from David and Sheila’s romance through the last three months of their life together and into the year after his death. It details their unsettling descent from ordinary life into the world of mental illness, and examines the fragile line between reality and madness. Now, a decade after David’s death, Sheila and her daughter, Sophie, have learned the power of choosing life over retreat; let themselves love and trust again; and understand the importance of forgiveness. Their story will resonate with all those who have loved

I mainly wanted to read All the Things We Never Knew because it has to do with depression and bipolar disorder – a subject I’m very interested in. I’ve read a ton about these disorders and I’ve written a bunch of papers on it too so I know all the basics and more.

The storyline in All the Things We Never Knew is told by Sheila Hamilton, the wife of the deceased David Krol. David Krol suffered from bipolar disorder and eventually took his own life. Hearing, or reading, about this is very emotional and it was hard to read more than a few chapters at a time.
After every chapter there was a factual ‘chapter’ about different subjects. In the beginning I read these factual chapters but after a while I lost interest. Most of it I knew beforehand and reading these informational pages and then read the highly emotional chapters was tough. It definitely made me read the book slower since I had to switch out of the ‘story telling mode’ and into ‘ learning’ mode. I understand why they are included in the book but for me it made the book harder to read.
So, to summarize I wasn’t a fan of all the facts.

I really enjoyed getting to know the story of Sheila and David, it didn’t read entirely as nonfiction and I just enjoyed reading about how they met, their dates, the first couple of months and eventually the wedding, the pregnancy and so on. This is basically the story of Sheila and David, it just happens that David is bipolar.
I really felt like I got to know them both, Sheila doesn’t just talk about David’s family, his upbringing and his life. She included herself, we got to know about her upbringing, family and life and I liked that. The fact that it isn’t focused solely on David was a welcomed surprise.

All the Things We Never Knew begins in the middle of the story; the marriage is not a marriage anymore and Sophie, their daughter, is nine. It then goes back to the actual beginning, when the two of them met and we get to know everything until where the book began and then continues telling the story.
I don’t really know whether I like this timeline or not but I loved getting to know their story!

All the Things We Never Knew is definitely a memorable story, seeing all the signs in David and knowing there was nothing to be done because he’s already dead was hard. Knowing what it would do to Sophie, Sheila and the rest of his family was even worse, they have to live with it for the rest of their lives!

It was good, but I’ve only given it 3 berries. I feel like all the facts ruined the story and I ended up skipping all those chapters.
All the Things We Never Knew is highly emotional and you definitely need to know that going into it. 


1 August 2015

Confessions of a Tinderella by Rosy Edwards

Series: N/A, Standalone
Publication date: August 1, 2015
Publisher: Random House UK
Genres: Nonfiction
Format: eArc
Source: The publisher through netgalley in exchange for an honest review
Pages: 306 pages


GoodreadsAmazon Book Depository


The laugh-out-loud true story of one girl's experience of life on Tinder


Rosy Edwards is the epitome of a contradictory 20-something year old. She’s frugal when it comes to food shopping, but is willing to spend £17 on shampoo. She’s career-minded, she just doesn’t know which career to have in mind right now. And although she’s happy being single, a part of her kind of wants a boyfriend. 

So after a few unsuccessful dates with friends of friends (read: being forced to date their shortest/dullest/oddest acquaintance), she put herself on Tinder, the app that has transformed the world of online dating. And she soon learns the unspoken rules the hard way: always reject a guy with black and white profile pics (he is ginger and/or ugly); is wearing a hat (bald); has a shot of his torso (moron); or is not standing beside anything scaleable (5”8 and under). 

And then there are the dates themselves. From a 3:30 am dinner date to a borderline drug bust in Chelsea, Rosy has experienced it all, swinging through her love life on the trapeze of Tinder. She falls for the wrong guys, ditches the nice ones, but can she finally find her happy ending? Amazingly honest and hilariously funny, Rosy’s story shows us all that the key to a successful love life could just be a swipe away.

In Confessions of a Tinderella we meet Rosy, or Rosamund. She's 27, ginger and 5"1. Through out this book I got to know Rosy and even though I'm only 18 I could relate to her in a lot of ways.
Rosy wants to be a writer and even though I share that dream - to a certain point - I don't think I would ever have the guts to actually try and I really admire Rosy for pursuing her dream, even though it took quite a while!

Even though the title suggests that it's about Tinder, the word, or app, isn't uttered before you're 17% in and it's not that prominent as I would've thought.
She goes on a bunch of dates and we hear about a lot of them but I feel like her friends 'The Couples' is such a prominent part of the story and I wish they weren't. It's nice to see Rosy's friend circle, but they're just such a big part of the story and I don't feel like they're that important. I truly thought this was about Rosy's experiences on Tinder but I feel like half of this book is nights with her friends.

The story itself reads like it's fiction, it's easy to read and it's quite fluffy and fun the entire way through. It definitely contains every feeling on the spectre from sad to laugh out funny and I had so much fun reading this book!
Since this is a memoir you actually get to know the author/narrator, opposed to just feeling like you know her. Rosy has been through a lot and you get to go with her on all these dates - some are definitely awful, some are great and the rest is in-between. You go with her on all kinds of journeys, and you're experiencing all the ups and downs she goes through. While reading this I seriously felt like it was a fiction book, it reads so well and there's not a dull moment!

Rosy is laugh-out-loud funny! Her opinions, her dates, her life - even though some of the things are sad or just normal, there's a bunch of things where you don't really believe it has happened, but since it's a memoir it must have and that's the best part!

Since this is a memoir there's a lot of life lessons and I thought I'd share a couple with you. Life lessons is probably one of my favorite things about reading memoirs and I've definitely learned a lot.

Life isn't a straight line
Doing the thing that makes you happy isn't always the thing that makes you rich. 
Even though I enjoyed certain parts of this book I was disappointed with others and I definitely had expected more! As I've mentioned it is quite a funny book and if you're branching out and want to read a memoir then maybe start with a fluffy, light and funny one like this one!
I decided to give Confessions of a Tinderella 3 berries since it is funny but I'd expected more and something different.



Two of my all time favorite memoirs are The Happiness Project by Gretchen Rubin and If You Find This Letter by Hannah Brencher (review)

5 June 2015

Being a Girl by Hayley Long, illustrated by Gemma Correll

Publication date: June 4, 2015
Publisher: Hot Key Books
Genres: Nonfiction
Format: Review copy
Source: The publisher in exchange for an honest review
Pages: 224


Goodreads ⎜AmazonBook Depository

A funny, frank and fearless guide to being a girl


Being a girl is not all sugar and spice. How can you possibly survive school and even think about talking to your crush when you have spots in places you didn't even know you had, your boobs are too big (or too small) and the friend drama is off the charts? Luckily, bestselling YA author and sixth-form teacher Hayley Long provides a straight-talking guide to puberty - from cattiness to kisses, and everything in between. With witty black-and-white illustrations by Gemma Correll throughout, BEING A GIRL tells you everything you need to know about surviving puberty, in an honest and humorous way.

This book is definitely one every girl should have before, or when, they reach puberty. Even though I'm 18 there was still some things I didn't know before I Being a Girl and I wish I'd had this when I was younger.

Being a Girl is wonderfully illustrated - I really got to hand it to you Gemma Correll, you did an amazing job! It's a pleasure to go through and definitely not boring - even though it is nonfiction. I can see girls reading this in their teens and I can definitely see them understanding this part of their life better because of this book.

I've read many guides to 'being a girl'; they all explain what you're going to go through, what's going to happen, how things are going to happen etc. Even though this explains all those things as well it's better somehow. The other books can be judgemental and I don't think any of them have explained puberty as well. It's so positive and I think every teen could use a positive view of puberty!

When I say it's positive and not judgemental I mean that Hayley writes that we shouldn't be someone we don't want to be, we don't have to put on makeup, do our hair or wear heels just because we're girls. The femininity issue is definitely a problem today and with all the models and such it's hard not to feel ugly or 'not good enough'. This book is the perfect guide to puberty because it keeps telling you, or rather Hayley keeps telling you, that being who you are is perfectly okay - as long as you're not a douchebag.

One of the best things about this guide is probably that it is immensely funny! It deals with quite serious subjects but I laughed so many times. It was a pleasure to read, and not many books about puberty are!

It took me years to figure out exactly who I was or am and I needed help, it's mainly because of my boyfriend that I embraced my love for reading and it's due to him, or a lot of it is, that I am who I am today. This guide would probably have helped me figure out who I am sooner, or maybe I wouldn't have been so ashamed of who I was.

Please, PLEASE buy this for your younger sister, daughter, niece, friend etc before or just when they reach puberty. It's the ideal book and it explains everything in detail without it being hard to understand. It will help these kids in this hard time and I think it's worth every penny.
Even though kids these days know a lot more than what we did then it still explains things that you don't really come across. This has more information than any other guide to being a teen than any other I've ever come across.
So again, if you want to help a girl, or boy (there's a guide to Being a Boy as well) out, then buy this and I promise you'll help them.


10 March 2015

If You Find This Letter by Hannah Brencher

Publication date: March 10, 2015
Publisher: Howard Books
Genres: Nonfiction
Format: eArc
Source: The publisher through netgalley in exchange for an honest review
Pages: 272

A heartwarming memoir of love and faith from Hannah Brencher, founder of The World Needs More Love Letters, who has dedicated her life to showing total strangers that they are not alone in the world.

Fresh out of college, Hannah Brencher moved to New York, expecting her life to look like a scene from Sex and the City. Instead, she found a city full of people who knew where they were going and what they were doing and didn't have time for a girl still trying to figure it all out. Lonely and depressed, she noticed a woman who looked like she felt the same way on the subway. Hannah did something strange--she wrote the woman a letter. She folded it, scribbled If you find this letter, it's for you on the front and left it behind.

When she realized that it made her feel better, she started writing and leaving love notes all over the city--in doctor's offices, in coat pockets, in library books, in bathroom stalls. Feeling crushed within a culture that only felt like connecting on a screen, she poured her heart out to complete strangers. She found solace in the idea that her words might brighten someone's day.

I absolutely loved this one! I was a bit hesitant at first since it's nonfiction and a memoir and that's definitely out of my comfort zone but when I began reading I just knew I'd love it!

I thought it would be more about the letters, which was the part that intrigued me, but it's more about Hannah's journey - obviously. I didn't expect that I could relate to Hannah as much as I can, I felt much of it could be said about my own life. Hannah didn't really know what to do after college - I'm 18 and in a few months I've taken my exams and I don't really know where I'll end up. I love that, for once, I didn't feel so alone. I'm not the only one who has fears about the future and this book was just what I needed to realize that. It simply took away my fears and I'm much more relaxed when I think about the future now - anything can happen and you don't have to know exactly what you want.
Depression is another thing me and Hannah have, or had, in common. It's not really something I talk about but I have to mention it when it comes to this book. Hannah is an inspiration! I love her optimism and even when she was diagnosed with depression she kept going. It's awful to have but it didn't bring her down and I won't let it bring me down either!
I love how openly Hannah talks about her life, the ups and downs - not everything is good. One thing Hannah said will probably stick with me the rest of my life;
"Life is just hard sometimes. And people deserve more credit for even getting out of bed sometimes."

I smiled everytime Hannah talked about her mother; I love their relationship! It's loving, kind and they actually talk to each other. I also love how the idea with love letters was inspired by her mother's love for letters. It is a relationship like that I want with my daughter
(s) when the time comes.

This book is packed full of lessons for life! I kept highlighting all the parts I love and quotes that's inspiring and I have never ever highlighted this much in my life!
One of my favorite quotes is probably:
"This was the moment when I discovered I knew close to nothing about what would happen next at any given moment, and surprisingly, that was okay."

It's not like this book is depressing at all, I guess you can call it inspirational or uplifting. That's what it was for me at least. If you're looking for a book to make you happy or just something to read this is probably not for you, but if you're unsure about life; what you're doing and where you're going I definitely recommend it. It has made me cherish life a bit more since I feel like she understood; she understood that not everyday is good and you just have to go through life one day at a time.

Since I've already told my mom to go ahead and buy this for my birthday I have to give it 5 stars. I feel like I have to have my own physical copy so I can read certain passages when I feel down and want something to help me through it.


1 April 2014

Top Ten Tuesday: My reading journey

Top Ten Tuesday is a weekly meme hosted by the sweet girls at The Broke and the BookishEvery Tuesday we list our top ten of a certain theme, genre or anything else - basically a top ten of you name it! This Tuesday is all about our reading journies, whether it's authors who got us into reading, author's who got us into reading a different genre, authors that brought us back into reading. I will list particular books!



I absolutely loved the Harry Potter series when I first read it, and it was probably the first book ever that made me WANT to read and keep going. 

TFiOS was the first contemporary book (and my first ebook) that I ever read I think. I really enjoyed it and to this day it's still one of my favorites. 


I was actually "forced" to read Hunger Games, we had to read it for a book club and my best friend made me promise to read it... So I read it - and I loved it. I've read it 3 times and I still want to re-read it. 

Aaah Austen. P&P was my first classics and my first book about love. I've read it a couple of times and I love it more and more. I still have yet to read any of her other books, but P&P will probably remain a favorite forever!


I have read fantasy a bunch of times (a lot when I was younger) but I've never actually read a high fantasy or adult fantasy book before I read The Final Empire. I loved everything about it and I highly recommend it!

I always though nonfiction books had to be boring - but this book! I couldn't put it down. I really enjoy reading happy books and 


I recently read my first new adult novel - which was Torch - and I really really enjoyed it. If my first experience with NA had been awful, I probably wouldn't have continued with it. 

I don't enjoy reading short stories, I hate them. I have tried reading some anthologies but I can't get through them. This story is the first ever to catch my interest and I have even recommended it to people. I also really love Somnia by Isaac Marion


I haven't read much "actual" sci-fi. I've read a bunch of dystopia, but never pure sci-fi - until I read Across the Universe, and now I'm hooked! 

I know this is tecnically the second book in a series, but I didn't know that 4 or 5 years ago. Since then I've read every book I've come across that says "for fans of The Da Vinci Code" or "similar to The Da Vinci Code" and so on. The prequel (Angels and Demons) is just as good!



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18 March 2014

Top Ten Tuesday: My Spring TBR

Top Ten Tuesday is a weekly meme hosted by the sweet girls at The Broke and the Bookish. Every Tuesday we list our top ten of a certain theme, genre or anything else - basically a top ten of you name it! This Tuesday is all about our Spring TBR's. 

As usual in no particular order: 

An Abundance of Katherines  The Book Thief  This Star Won't Go Out: The Life and Words of Esther Grace Earl  The Edge of Never (The Edge of Never, #1)  The Well of Ascension (Mistborn, #2)

An Abundance of Katherines by John Green If I have understood correctly, this book is about a guy named Colin that only dates girls named Katherine.. This is me and Jayd's buddy read for the month of April. 
The Book Thief by Markus Zusak I have wanted to read this book for such a long time. This book is set in Germany during WW2, we follow this girl named Liesel and the story is seen from Death's perspective. 
This Star Won't Go Out by Esther Earl I bought this as a birthday present for myself, I absolutely loved The Fault in Our Stars, and I want to read about the girl that inspired the story. Also, I want to venture out of my comfort zone and since this is nonfiction and a journal - it's definitely out of my comfort zone!
The Edge of Never (Edge of Never #1) by J.A. Redmerski I got this around Christmas and since I got the sequel (The Edge of Always) for my birthday I figured I should get to it - this will also be my first New Adult novel. 
The Well of Ascension (Mistborn #2) by Brandon Sanderson I read the first book, The Final Empire, in January and I really want to continue with the series, I just haven't had the time. The series is about so called Mistborn and Mistings with Allomantic powers (metal magic). (Review of The Final Empire (Mistborn #1))


Shattered (Slated #3) by Teri Terry I started this trilogy back in the summer of 2013 and I enjoyed the first one, but it wasn't really as good as I hoped, then I read the sequel and I fell in love! I am looking forward to seeing how Terry will end this trilogy! In the world of Slated criminals under 18 aren't in prisons, they get their memory wiped and can't remember a thing about their past. Release date: March 6
The Treatment (The Program #2) by Suzanne Young I had so high hopes for The Program (the first book) and it didn't really live up to it.. I really hope this book will be a lot better and that we get to see some more of the actual program. In this novel you get sent to the program if you show signs of depression or suicide - because in this world suicide is an epidemic! Release date: April 29
Killer Instinct by S.E. Green This is actually a debut novel about a teenage girl that thinks she may be a serial killer. I remember reading somewhere that this has a Dexter-esque feeling to it. Sounds interesting! Release date: May 6
Side Effects May Vary by Julie Murphy This is another debut novel! This is about a girl that has leukemia and is about to die, so she wants to right all the wrongs - however she sees fit. And then she doesn't die and has to live with everything she has done. Can't wait! Release date: March 18
To All the Boys I've Loved Before (To All the Boys I've Loved Before #1) by Jenny Han In the beginning I didn't really want to read this book, but then I started to see the interesting thing in it - it's about a girl that has wrote a letter to every crush she's ever had and kept them in a secret box, and one day all those letters are gone and her crushes have them. I am looking forward to it! Release date: April 15



Which books are on your spring TBR?