What I’m Reading: Before I Go to Sleep

What I'm Reading


Synopsis from Goodreads.com:
“‘As I sleep, my mind will erase everything I did today. I will wake up tomorrow as I did this morning. Thinking I’m still a child. Thinking I have a whole lifetime of choice ahead of me …’ Memories define us. So what if you lost yours every time you went to sleep? Your name, your identity, your past, even the people you love – all forgotten overnight. And the one person you trust may only be telling you half the story. Welcome to Christine’s life.” 

My Review:
I bought this book on kind of an impulse buy at the bookstore. I really wanted some new reading material, but I wasn’t sure what I was in the mood for. I had heard about the book from someone (although I can’t remember who exactly) so I thought I’d pick it up and give it a read.

“Before I Go to Sleep” is the diary of Christine, a 40-something(?) year old woman who suffers from amnesia. It’s so bad that as soon as she goes to sleep at night and wakes up the next morning, the majority of her life’s memories are erased. The result of the memory loss is because of an accident. In her diary she writes of her daily going-ons so she knows who she is, what has happened and where she’s headed the next day. With the help of a doctor, Christine is slowly starting to make headway in remembering who she was.

Overall, I enjoyed the book. It wasn’t a super easy read like most chick-lit, but again, I wouldn’t file this book under that category. It was harder for me to get into, but once I had a hard time putting it down because I wanted to find out whether or not Christine gets her memory back.

I really don’t want to give a review that will give away the ending, but in the back of my mind, I KNEW something was fishy. The ending, sadly, didn’t surprise me completely. I feel the book was missing something, but I’m not entirely sure what that something was. Part of me wishes that Christine’s character was developed a little bit more, but perhaps it was the author’s intent not to because of the “lather-rinse-repeat” life of hers due to the amnesia.

Overall, I gave this book 3 out of 5 stars. I felt it could have been a wee bit better, I’m just not sure how.

Have you read “Before I Go to Sleep?” What did you think of it?

What I’m Reading: The Book of Negroes

What I'm Reading

Synopsis from Goodreads.com:
Unrolling a map of the world, Aminata Diallo puts one finger on the coast of West Africa and another on London. The first is where she was born in 1745, the second is her location six decades later. Her story is what happened in between, and her remarkable voice is the heart and soul of Hill’s magnificent novel. 

Brought before the British public by the abolitionists to reveal the realities of slavery, she has come, old and weary, to change the tide of history and bear witness to some of the world’s most grievous wrongs. 

Kidnapped and taken from her family as a child, Diallo is forced aboard a ship bound for South Carolina, where she arrives at age 12, weak and ill, the other slaves her only family. But soon she is sold again and begins an exodus that will lead to Canada, where she discovers the same relentless hardship and stinging prejudice. 

Her hunger for freedom drives her back across the Atlantic to England, and in 1792, Aminata undertakes yet another ocean crossing, bound for the place of her birth. 

My Review:
A while ago I tweeted what books I should add to my reading list, and The Book of Negroes was suggested by a couple people. I read the jacket cover online a couple times before, and had always thought it sounded a little too “deep” for me to actually to enjoy. Boy was I wrong!

I REALLY enjoyed this book and couldn’t put it down! (Just ask my husband – every spare moment I had I was reading the book!) It took me less than a week to finish, in fact!

This book goes way back to the “beginnings” of the slave trade between Africa, Europe and the United States, and follows a young girl (Aminata) during her capture just outside her village in Africa to South Carolina to New York to Nova Scotia and back to Africa. The story she tells of her life during this time I can only imagine ring very true to the actual events and horrors that occurred during the slave trade. I became emotionally attached to her character and her life events.

I can’t say the events that happened throughout the book shocked me – most of them were no surprise – but it did help drive the issue home. It never fails to amaze me that humans treated each other this way, and that it still does in some shape or form. It angers me to the core when I think about this sort of thing happening, past or present.

I’m going to rate this book 4.5 stars out of 5.

I would give it 5/5, but the only predictable part of the book (for me) was part of the way it ended. (I won’t give it away for those who have read it, but if you want to email me your thoughts, feel free!) I highly recommend this book to everyone and anyone willing to sit down for a good, heavy read! You won’t be disappointed!

Questions:
Have you read The Book of Negroes? How did you like it?
Do you get emotionally attached to characters in books?

Also – I just thought I’d point out that today is the start of Black History Month. How fitting that I post this review today! 

What I’m Reading: Room

What I'm Reading

Synopsis, from Goodreads.com:
To five-year-old-Jack, Room is the world… It’s where he was born, it’s where he and his Ma eat and sleep and play and learn. At night, his Ma shuts him safely in the wardrobe, where he is meant to be asleep when Old Nick visits.

Room is home to Jack, but to Ma it’s the prison where she has been held for seven years. Through her fierce love for her son, she has created a life for him in this eleven-by-eleven-foot space. But with Jack’s curiosity building alongside her own desperation, she knows that Room cannot contain either much longer.

Room is a tale at once shocking, riveting, exhilarating–a story of unconquerable love in harrowing circumstances, and of the diamond-hard bond between a mother and her child.

 —

Room was one of the two books I picked up from my local library. I had seen in stores but whenever I read the book jacket I was apprehensive to actually buy it. I put it on hold at the library and a few days later it was available to pick up!

The story of Jack and his mom (Ma) is told through Jack’s eyes, a sheltered 5-year old who has lived in “Room” all his life. His mom was kidnapped by “Old Nick” when she was 19 and is kept in a garden shed-turned-makeshift house/shack.

To be honest, it took me a while to catch onto Jack’s unique language. Because he’s only ever lived in Room with just his mom, he has no sense of the “real” world. To him, Room and the things in it are the only thing that’s real. Once I got used to the way he describes things, it was a lot easier to follow along.

I don’t know if I loved the book, but I didn’t hate it either. It was definitely a lot different than books I normally read, and it had quite a few shocking and “REALLY?” moments. Really, I kept reading to see what happens in the end because the story of Jack and his mom and what they go through together is pretty amazing.

If I were to rate the book, I’d give it Three out of Five. It was good, but it wasn’t amazing.

Have you read Room? What did you think of it?
Do you plan to read it?