Asian rom-com, set in Southern California, with the Chinese-Indonesian community.
Dial A for Aunties by Jesse Q. Sutanto, April 27, 2021, Berkley Books Genre: romance, contemporary Asian American fiction
Setting: Southern California
Source: library
Five stars for inventiveness in character and plot and for a humorous and entertaining book about a Chinese-Indonesian young woman who must fend off her "interfering" but loving aunts in order to find true love in her choice of career and love life. When Meddelin later becomes entangled in an accident that looks like a murder, the aunties come to the rescue to save their niece. Their antics carry the day.
No surprise that the book is slated to be made into a Netflix movie!
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On a much more serious note, here is a book from Saichek Publicity, a very candid memoir that comes with a warning that it contains possible triggers as it describes violence, childhood abuse, rape, etc.
Brain Storm by Shelley Kolton, MD, January 2, 2021, FLR Press
Genre: memoir
Brain Storm is the heartbreaking account of a mind, fragmented and broken, ultimately made whole by one woman's incomparable strength and courage. (publisher)
"You will not emerge unchanged from Brain Storm. It is a harrowing, hallowing experience and a triumph of the human spirit" - Robin Morgan, bestselling author of Sisterhood is Powerful, former Editor-in-Chief of Ms. Magazine.
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On the mystery side, I am re-reading Of Mutts and Men, a quirky but fun novel about Chet, a canine, and his companion in crime solving, Bernie Little, who comprise the Little Detective Agency.
Of Mutts and Men makes for light humorous reading as we follow Chet's thoughts and observations, a dog's point of view, as he helps Bernie solve mysteries and find and bring "perps" to justice.
What are you reading this week?