THE SEVEN YEAR SLIP by Ashley Poston

February 2, 2024

From the publisher:

A New York Public Library Best Book of 2023

A Most Anticipated Book by Entertainment Weekly ∙ Harper’s Bazaar ∙ PopSugar ∙ Real Simple ∙ BookRiot ∙ and more!

An overworked book publicist with a perfectly planned future hits a snag when she falls in love with her temporary roommate…only to discover he lives seven years in the past, in this witty and wise new novel from the New York Times bestselling author of The Dead Romantics.

Sometimes, the worst day of your life happens, and you have to figure out how to live after it.

So Clementine forms a plan to keep her heart safe: work hard, find someone decent to love, and try to remember to chase the moon. The last one is silly and obviously metaphorical, but her aunt always told her that you needed at least one big dream to keep going. And for the last year, that plan has gone off without a hitch. Mostly. The love part is hard because she doesn’t want to get too close to anyone—she isn’t sure her heart can take it.

And then she finds a strange man standing in the kitchen of her late aunt’s apartment. A man with kind eyes and a Southern drawl and a taste for lemon pies. The kind of man that, before it all, she would’ve fallen head-over-heels for. And she might again.

Except, he exists in the past. Seven years ago, to be exact. And she, quite literally, lives seven years in his future.

Her aunt always said the apartment was a pinch in time, a place where moments blended together like watercolors. And Clementine knows that if she lets her heart fall, she’ll be doomed.

After all, love is never a matter of time—but a matter of timing.

https://amzn.to/3u3FeHZ

This was one of those books that I somehow overlooked last year, so when it showed up on some of the best books of the year lists, I dug around and found it on my Kindle. And here we are!

This is the sort of book I love - a good romance set in the publishing industry, with a touch of magic, or in this case, time travel. That is as close to sci-fi/fantasy as I usually get, and Poston does a bang-up job with it.

Clementine has inherited her beloved aunt’s apartment in New York City. Her aunt had always said there was something magical about the place, but it wasn’t until she found a good-looking man in her home that she started to suspect her aunt wasn’t lying. Iwan introduces himself and says he is subletting the apartment for the summer. But it isn’t this summer; it was a summer seven years earlier. A tiny bit confusing, at least for Clementine!

Her aunt had two rules:  

1. Take off your shoes when you enter

2. Don’t fall in love in the apartment

Clementine starts to understand that second rule as they get to know one another. Strong feelings develop, but she never knows if Iwan will be in the apartment when she returns until she gets there. Then time shifts again to the present day, and Iwan is now an award-winning chef set to take Manhattan by storm in a new restaurant of his own. Clementine works for the publisher who is desperate to get his cookbook, sure to be a bestseller, but it seems like their past may get in the way.

This was a thoroughly enjoyable read, with interesting, well-developed characters and a plot line so good it should win over everyone. Highly recommend!

2/2024 Stacy Alesi, AKA the BookBitch

THE SEVEN YEAR SLIP by Ashley Poston. Berkley (June 27, 2023). ISBN: 978-0593336502. 352p.

Kindle

Audible

Hardcover


THE TALK OF COYOTE CANYON by Brenda Novak 

February 2, 2024

Coyote Canyon, Book 2

From the publisher:

She’s not here to make friends. She’s here to make trouble.

With her piercings, tattoos and spiky blond hair, Ellen Truesdale doesn’t quite fit in with the other folks in Coyote Canyon—and that’s just fine with her. She’s only here to put her father out of business, as payback for abandoning her when she was young.

Or is she more interested in finally proving that she was worth keeping?

Either way, she’s struggling to keep her rival well-drilling company afloat. And being a single woman in a male-dominated field has started to take a toll. So when Hendrix Durrant steps in to help, Ellen has no choice but to let him—even though he happens to be her father’s business partner and therefore her enemy. But the closer she works with him, the more she sees what she’s been missing…in life and love. And once she lets go of her anger long enough to learn the truth about her past, she might just find the family she’s always wanted.

Coyote Canyon Series

Book 1: Talulah’s Back in Town
Book 2: The Talk of Coyote Canyon

Book 3: The Messy Life of Jane Tanner

https://amzn.to/3ud98cI

This is the second book of the series set in the small Montana town of Coyote Canyon. This one centers on Ellen and Hendrix, sworn enemies for most of their lives. Ellen’s parents divorced when she was a young child, and her father quickly remarried a woman named Vicki. Shortly after they wed, her sister died, leaving her son Hendrix an orphan. Vicki took him in and raised him as her own. But her husband’s daughter, Ellen, was a different matter; she was a tough kid, and Vicki wanted nothing to do with her. It comes out that she was jealous of her husband spending any time with his daughter, and he acquiesced to keep his wife happy.*

Fast forward many years, Ellen has moved into her grandparents’ home that she inherited in Canyon Creek and started her own well drilling company - in direct competition with her father’s company. Her goal is to put him out of business, revenge for abandoning her and her mother. Ellen’s mother is none too stable, and is constantly needing bailing out, adding more stress to Ellen’s life.

When Ellen steals a job out from under Hendrix, he is livid. In retaliation, he offers her one and only employee a job with a huge increase in salary. Things couldn’t be any worse between these companies and people, but when Ellen’s employee puts the screws to her to pay him or he’s leaving, she doesn’t feel like she has much choice. There is no way she can get the drilling done alone. But then he takes off on vacation, stranding her anyway, and shockingly, Hendrix steps in to help, feeling guilty about what he’d done. As they work together and get to know one another, everything starts to change.

There are a lot of family dynamics going on here, some of which really hit home for me. The enemies-to-lovers trope is beautifully and realistically played out here. This was a solid entry into this new series, and I can’t wait for the next book – luckily, I won’t have to wait long. It comes out February 20th, review to follow!

*My parents divorced when I was eight years old. My father flew to Mexico for a quickie divorce and came home a week later married to another woman. He didn’t abandon me or my brother, but she made my life hell, especially after I was forced to move in with them.

I was a hellion as a child, pretty much your basic parental nightmare, especially once I hit my teens and my mother couldn’t handle me anymore. I spent two and a half years living with my father, his wife, and her three children, and it took many years to recover. I had always suspected that his wife was jealous of me; I was my father’s favorite which made her crazy, but I couldn’t understand how a grown woman could be jealous of a child. It made no sense to me, but it finally came out right before my own wedding. We didn’t speak or have any kind of relationship for a few years until he wormed his way back in.

We had several hellish years before I finally found the strength to walk away from all the toxicity. My father was a sociopath, a narcissist, and if his lips were moving, he was lying. I’m not sure he even knew the difference between the truth and a lie; whatever suited him best was always his answer. His wife was another kind of monster. They are both dead and left behind a bunch of screwed-up children who have been squabbling over money for years now. I walked away from it all – and them all – about thirty years ago and never regretted it.

I think this was the first time I have seen a similar situation with the second wife jealous of the first wife’s child. I would hope it’s not a common problem, but I felt almost vindicated to see it here, if that makes any sense!

2/2024 Stacy Alesi, AKA the BookBitch

THE TALK OF COYOTE CANYON by Brenda Novak. MIRA; Original edition (November 28, 2023). ISBN:  978-0778305323. 384p.

Hardcover

Kindle

Audible


BookBitch Diary: February 1, 2024

February 1, 2024

It’s Leap Year! Happy Birthday, leap babies – you get to celebrate on your real birthday this year!


Book News

In case you missed it: my list of the Best Books of 2023

Banned Books Back!

 Firestorm Books in Asheville, N.C., has devised a clever plan to help kids trapped in the censorial state of Florida. Last winter, Firestorm was offered more than 22,000 diverse books that had been pulled from Duval County Public Schools. Despite the logistical challenge, the bookseller jumped at the chance to rescue these Florida books from destruction. A statement on the store’s website says, “That’s 11,000 pounds of titles that right-wing politicians and small-minded school administrators conspired to keep out of the hands of young folks.” 

Not for long. Firestorm has just launched “Banned Books Back!” It’s a bold project to ship those titles for free back to kids who want them. Children, parents, teachers and librarians in Florida can request picture books or chapter books (start here). 

But fighting tax-engorged prigs isn’t cheap. The store is trying to raise $30,000 for postage, packaging supplies, labor and storage (make a donation).

Thanks to The Washington Post book critic, Ron Charles, for bringing this to my attention via the Book Club Newsletter.

When should you give up on a book? Readers weigh in.

Some bail after a couple of sentences. Others slog through to the bitter end.

Like a lot of great ideas, Nancy Pearl’s “Rule of 50” arrived in a flash. The librarian and best-selling author was fielding questions on a public radio show when a woman called in and explained she wasn’t enjoying the book she was reading but felt guilty about abandoning it.

“And then it just came to me,” Pearl says over the phone from her home in the Pacific Northwest. “I said, give the book 50 pages and if, at the bottom of page 50, all you care about is who the murderer is or who marries whom, turn to the last page, and then stop reading.”

Good advice or not??? Post a comment!

Librarians, who lost jobs for not banning books, are fighting back

Librarians in at least three states are asking the federal Equal Employment Opportunity Commission to intervene after they were fired for refusing to ban books.

At least one has already won.

Book Tour: Celeste Ng shows us her personal library

The author of ‘Little Fires Everywhere’ and ‘Our Missing Hearts’ guides us through her personal library (with very cool pictures!)

“That Octopus Book” was one of my favorite books last year! Guess I’m not alone…

Breaking up with Goodreads: The best book-logging apps for 2024

Fed up with the Amazon-owned book app? Check out these alternatives.

Book News & Good News!

TikTok Defends ‘Mychal the Librarian,’ Confronting Online Hate with Empathy

If you grew up a bookworm, or maybe even a social outcast, Mychal Threets, a Bay Area librarian who has become a social media star, knows what that’s like. 

And his mission is to make the library — and the digital world — a better place for everyone.


Food News

If you’ve ever enjoyed a bowl of ramen, check out this video on how ramen noodles are made!


Other News

Bird populations are declining

Interesting article in The Washington Post! Includes a way to check your neighborhood, “Are birds disappearing in your city?


My grandson got to have fun in the snow! It’s only snowed once since he was born, and he was too young to appreciate it. January’s snowfall was fun times for Jonah!

As always, thanks for reading, and stay safe.

Thanks to The New York Times and The Washington Post for allowing me to “gift” my readers with free access to these articles, a lovely perk for subscribers.