Book Review: The Celebrants by Steven Rowley

Title: The Celebrants
Author: Steven Rowley
Publisher: G.P. Putnam’s Sons
Publication date: May 30, 2023
Length: 320 pages
Genre: Contemporary fiction
Source: Review copy courtesy of the publisher via NetGalley
Rating:

Rating: 5 out of 5.

A Big Chill for our times, celebrating decades-long friendships and promises—especially to ourselves—by the bestselling and beloved author of The Guncle.

It’s been a minute—or five years—since Jordan Vargas last saw his college friends, and twenty-eight years since their graduation when their adult lives officially began. Now Jordan, Jordy, Naomi, Craig, and Marielle find themselves at the brink of a new decade, with all the responsibilities of adulthood, yet no closer to having their lives figured out. Though not for a lack of trying. Over the years they’ve reunited in Big Sur to honor a decades-old pact to throw each other living “funerals,” celebrations to remind themselves that life is worth living—that their lives mean something, to one another if not to themselves.

But this reunion is different. They’re not gathered as they were to bolster Marielle as her marriage crumbled, to lift Naomi after her parents died, or to intervene when Craig pleaded guilty to art fraud. This time, Jordan is sitting on a secret that will upend their pact.

A deeply honest tribute to the growing pains of selfhood and the people who keep us going, coupled with Steven Rowley’s signature humor and heart, The Celebrants is a moving tale about the false invincibility of youth and the beautiful ways in which friendship helps us celebrate our lives, even amid the deepest challenges of living.

The shortest of short reviews: I loved this book.

Want to know more? Okay, here goes…

The Celebrants is a funny, human, touching story of lasting friendship and chosen family, as well as a deeply impactful reminder to show love and appreciation to the people we care about while we still can.

In The Celebrants, a group of six best friends attending Berkeley in the mid-90s becomes a bereaved group of five after Alec dies tragically shortly before graduation. Numb, the friends gather after his funeral and talk about all the things they wish they’d told Alec while he was alive.

And so a pact is born: The five friends vow to hold “living funerals” for each other, to be held whenever someone needs a reminder that they’re loved and valued. Each person can trigger the pact when they feel they need it, and they each get one (and only one).

As they move into adulthood and into their own lives, the pact is largely forgotten, until almost twenty years later, when Marielle summons everyone back to the Big Sur house we’re they’d congregated after Alec’s death. With her marriage falling apart, feeling adrift and without purpose, Marielle calls upon the group to remind her of all that she has to live for.

From there, we see the group reconvene over the years at various crisis points in their 30s, 40s, and 50s. The gatherings are sentimental, funny, and ultimately, meaningful in different ways. Each person may need something different at their funeral, but the group is there to celebrate them no matter what.

I can’t say enough good things about The Celebrants. I came to really love the characters, both as individuals and as members of a friend group that’s based on love even at its snarkiest and most critical. The book is written with compassion and humor, and flows quickly from one funeral to the next, interspersed with the “now” storyline that drives the momentum of the novel as a whole.

In fact, the only discordant note for me was a scene where the group does mushrooms before going on an outing, which was probably meant to be much funnier than I found it and came across as fairly cringey.

Other than that, the writing is funny and emotional, a hard balance to pull off, but accomplished here incredibly well. The message of the book is powerful and left me thinking quite a bit — it’s all about celebrating life and the important people in it while they’re here, not waiting to tell people how and why they matter to us, because there’s no guarantee that there will be time later on.

None of them would leave this Earth without knowing that they were loved.

So much of this book resonated with me — holding onto lifelong friends, relishing small moments, sharing and facing difficult truths, and making space for the important people in our lives, even when we feel busy or overwhelmed ourselves.

I ended up listening to the audiobook of The Celebrants, which is narrated by the author. I’ve often found author narrations less than satisfactory, but not so in this case — he does a wonderful job of bringing the characters to life and conveying the humor and flavor of their banter and conversations.

I highly recommend The Celebrants. Don’t miss this lovely book.

Book Review: Mrs. Porter Calling by AJ Pearce

Title: Mrs. Porter Calling
Author: AJ Pearce
Publisher: Scribner
Publication date: August 8, 2023
Length: 320 pages
Genre: Historical fiction
Source: Review copy courtesy of the publisher via NetGalley
Rating:

Rating: 4 out of 5.

London, April 1943. A little over a year since she married Captain Charles Mayhew and he went away to war, Emmy Lake is now in charge of “Yours Cheerfully,” the hugely popular advice column in Woman’s Friend magazine. Cheered on by her best friend Bunty, Emmy is dedicated to helping readers face the increasing challenges brought about by over three years of war. The postbags are full and Woman’s Friend is thriving.

But Emmy’s world is turned upside down when glamorous socialite, the Honorable Mrs. Cressida Porter, becomes the new publisher of the magazine, and wants to change everything the readers love. Aided by Mrs. Pye, a Paris-obsessed fashion editor with delusions of grandeur, and Small Winston, the grumpiest dog in London, Mrs. Porter fills the pages with expensive clothes and frivolous articles about her friends. Worst of all, she announces that she is cutting the “Yours Cheerfully” column and her vision for the publication’s future seems dire. With the stakes higher than ever, Emmy and her friends must find a way to save the magazine that they love.

Emmy Lake is back! Mrs. Porter Calling is the third in a series of books about a magazine journalist and her group of close friends and colleagues, navigating life on the homefront in WWII-era London. In the first two books, Dear Mrs. Bird and Yours Cheerfully, we see Emmy land a job at Woman’s Friend magazine, where she eventually takes over the advice column, seeing it as her mission to offer compassionate, practical advice to women in need. Over the course of these two books, she also meets and marries a lovely man, and supports her best friend through horrible loss and recovery.

As Mrs. Porter Calling opens, the year is 1943, and Emmy continues her work at Woman’s Friend as well as with the fire service, which monitors and responds to disasters caused by air raids. Emmy’s beloved husband Charles is off on the front lines, the couple having had only a few short days together following their wedding before his deployment. Emmy shares a home with her best friend Bunty, and they lead busy, productive lives — they’ve learned to adapt and carry on, despite the constant fear and rationing.

Emmy’s professional life is thrown into a tailspin when the magazine’s owner dies. He’s bequeathed ownership to his niece, who turns out to be a spoiled upper-class woman who feigns delight with the magazine, provided they implement just a few of her “tiny ideas”. She finds the current version “A Bit Mis” — miserable — and decides that what the readers really need is more stories that are pleasant. Rather than focus on food columns about how to make good meals with limited rations or knitting/sewing clothing when supplies aren’t available, she wants glamour, fashion, and a focus on the beautiful lives of her own class. The staff of the magazine is appalled — this is not what their readers rely on them for — but having no choice, the magazine is changed to Mrs. Porter’s standards, and of course, readership and then advertising drop off. Soon, the future of Woman’s Friend is in doubt, and Emmy and her colleagues become desperate to save it.

Meanwhile, at home, Emmy and Bunty welcome a woman with three young children into their home, and soon their days are filled with activity and joyful chaos — but the realities of war are always present, and soon enough Emmy’s woes at the magazine are eclipsed by a more personal tragedy.

I enjoyed Mrs. Porter Calling so much! Mrs. Porter herself is an insidiously vapid character who acts sweetly haughty, until she hits the team with her “ideas”, all with the most saccharine of smiles and eyelash batting. As Emmy reflects:

I was beginning to feel as if I was being run over by a steamroller made from petals and kittens. It was delightful, but also somewhat immobilizing.

Beyond the work crises, where we can’t help but root for the underdogs — the hardworking, dedicated team of Woman’s Friend — the book delves sensitively into the lives of the women and children struggling to make ends meet on the home front.

“Don’t worry, Em, we’ll do what all the other women in Britain are doing.”

“What’s that?” I said.

“Cope,” said Bunty.

Again and again, Emmy, Bunty, and their circle of friends show what true bravery is, as well as devotion and determination.

While there’s sorrow and conflict in Mrs. Porter Calling, there’s a chipper, upbeat air that carries the story along — the “Keep Calm and Carry On” attitude that lets the characters find happiness even in the darkest of days. I loved the found family aspect of the characters’ lives — despite fears for loved ones on the battlefield or sorrow for those lost, they bond together to get through it all, and clearly show how love and friendship can mend broken hearts.

“War’s bad enough as it is. Imagine if you’re trying to get through this on your own.”

The Emmy Lake books are emotional, entertaining, and heart-warming. I recommend starting at the beginning of the series, and continuing on from there. I understand there’s at least one more book planned, and also read a comment by the author that she hopes to continue writing books that will take Emmy and friends through to the end of the war. I hope that’s the case! I’d really love to see more of Emmy’s story (and will be waiting to see what I hope will be a happy ending for her once the war ends).

Book Review: The Hundred Loves of Juliet by Evelyn Skye

Title: The Hundred Loves of Juliet
Authors: Evelyn Skye
Publisher: Del Rey
Publication date: August 1, 2023
Length: 337 pages
Genre: Contemporary fiction / fantasy
Source: Review copy courtesy of the publisher via NetGalley

Rating: 3.5 out of 5.

A woman discovers that she is part of a legendary love story that spans lives, years, and continents in this modern-day reimagining of Romeo and Juliet.

I may go by Sebastien now, but my name was originally Romeo. And hers was Juliet.

It’s a frosty fairytale of an evening in small-town Alaska when Helene and Sebastien meet for the first time. Except it isn’t the first time. You already know that story, though it didn’t happen quite as Shakespeare told it.

To Helene, Sebastien is the flesh-and-blood hero of the love stories she’s spent her life writing. But Sebastien knows better—Helene is his Juliet, and their story has always been the same. He is doomed to find brief happiness with her over and over, before she dies, and he is left to mourn.

Albrecht and Brigitta. Matteo and Amélie. Jack and Rachel. Marius and Cosmina. By any name, no matter where and when in time, the two of them are drawn together, and it always ends in tragedy.

This time, Helene is determined that things will be different. But can these star-cross’d lovers forge a new ending to the greatest love story of all time?

The Hundred Loves of Juliet takes the classic tragedy of Romeo and Juliet as inspiration for a modern-day love story that spans centuries.

After leaving her awful — manipulative, cheating, gaslighting — husband, Helene Janssen decides to create a new life for herself, and relocates to a small town in Alaska to recover her equilibrium and work on her novel. A professional journalist, Helene is eager to see if she can turn the snippets of stories she’s written all her life into an actual book.

Since middle school, Helene has had a vividly detailed imaginary hero at the center of her stories and daydreams. Whether as a nobleman at Versailles, a Swiss clockmaker, or trekking across the Sahara, the same man repeatedly appears in all her scenarios, and she knows everything about him — his appearance, his voice, even his quirky habits and gestures.

Imagine Helene’s shock when, on her first night in Alaska, the man from her stories shows up in the restaurant where she’s having dinner. He’s not just similar to her character — every detail matches up exactly. But when Helene approaches Sebastien, who’s clearly much beloved by the town and seems like kindness itself — he rudely rebuffs her and makes it clear that he doesn’t want to know her.

We soon learn more from Sebastien’s point-of-view, and what a story he has to tell! Sebastien is only his latest identity. Originally, he was Romeo Montague. Yes, that Romeo. And he lets us know just what Shakespeare got wrong. Juliet did die, shockingly and tragically, just a few short days after their secret marriage — but Romeo survived. Since then, he’s been cursed with immortality, and doomed to meet, fall in love with, and then lose reincarnations of Juliet, over and over again across the long centuries.

Each time he meets a new version of Juliet, he hopes things will be different, but each time, she dies — sometimes within days, sometimes after they begin a life together, but no Juliet has lasted more than two years after they meet. This time, he’s determined to save Helene — whom he immediately recognizes as Juliet — by staying out of her life. If he needs to run away from his life in Alaska in order to avoid her, he will… but when Helene is stranded near his home during a blizzard, he has no choice but to offer her shelter, and his carefully constructed walls can’t last once they begin to spend time together.

In many ways, The Hundred Lives of Juliet is highly enjoyable. Thanks to the alternating POV sections, we see the past vignettes as well as the current storyline unfold from both Helene’s and Sebastien’s perspectives, which helps us understand why they behave as they do. The rules of their curse aren’t clear-cut or consistent, and even Romeo/Sebastien isn’t entirely sure why things happen the way they do. Were they cursed by Mercutio’s dying words:

A plague o’ both your houses

Or is there some other reasons why Sebastien seems to live forever, while Juliet lives through sequential lives, always destined to die tragically at a young age?

There’s an undeniable tension that builds as the story progresses. Once Helene and Sebastien give in to the inevitability of their love, we can feel the clock ticking on their happiness. We know that all Juliets die, so there’s a sense of held breath — what will go wrong? This tension pulled me in and kept me reading, to the point where I just couldn’t stop until I reached the end.

At the same time, not everything here works well. We read Helene’s story vignettes scattered throughout the book, and there isn’t a particularly kind way to say that they feel pretty clichéd and stale. Not to mention, yes, Romeo has lived for about 700 years, but it still feels unlikely that his adventures would take him to quite that many new lives around the world.

On top of this, Helene’s novel-writing project is centered on turning her vignettes into a cohesive whole — but since it turns out that all of these stories are actually depictions of past lives she’s lived with Sebastien, how is that actually creative writing, and isn’t this all supposed to be a secret? (Also, I was amused that one of Helene’s first errands in Alaska is a trip to the local bookstore to buy a book about how to write a novel — is that really all it takes? A good how-to book?)

There’s a suspense element toward the end of the book involving a looming threat to Sebastien and Helene, as his secret is on the verge of being revealed (and they fear that if the truth gets out, he’ll be locked away in a government research facility forever — again, this feels very clichéd to me). However, the danger is dealt with pretty quickly in a way that is almost a deus ex machina solution, and I didn’t love anything about this part of the story.

Not to be overly nitpicky, but one scene in the first half of the book made me consider walking away from it all. Sebastien warns Helene not to go wandering around his house at night, she compares the warning to Belle being barred from the west wing in Beauty & the Beast, and he responds by calling her “childlike”. Okay, agreed, that’s rude… but she responds to the “childlike” comment by slapping him. SLAPPING him!?! Who does that? To a stranger who’s giving you shelter from a dangerous storm, and who may not be as polite as we’d like, but who has a right to set limits on where a guest goes in his home? Wow, I did not like this scene at all, and it made me think less of Helene as a person.

I’ve gone into greater details on what I didn’t like about the book, but the fact remains that I read the whole thing in about 24 hours, so clearly there was plenty that I did like! Helene and Sebastien’s struggles to make sense of their connection and to understand the past were very compelling, and the key concepts of the story are unique. I had a hard time suspending my disbelief, but ultimately decided to just go with it (immortality! reincarnation!) and not worry about whether every last bit made sense.

Overall, The Hundred Loves of Juliet is a compelling read despite its flaws, and I appreciated the momentum that builds over the course of the novel. It’s definitely more than a bit melodramatic, but considering this is a retelling/reimagining of Romeo and Juliet, I suppose melodrama is allowed!

Happy book birthday to Ravensong!

Wishing a very happy book birthday to Ravensong by TJ Klune!

I’m loving the shiny new reissues of TJ Klune’s Green Creek books, and today it’s Ravensong‘s turn! Originally published in 2018, the new hardcover edition of Ravensong — #2 in the series — is now available, released today by Tor Publishing.

This new edition is gorgeous, but the amazingness doesn’t stop at the cover — I fell hard for this series, and loved reading Ravensong. My review from earlier in the summer is here.

The remaining two books in the series will be reissued in 2024… but since the Kindle editions are available now, chances are I’ll be reading Heartsong and Brothersong much sooner than that!

Top Ten Tuesday: Forgotten Backlist Titles

Top Ten Tuesday is a meme hosted by That Artsy Reader Girl, featuring a different top 10 theme each week. This week’s topic is Forgotten Backlist Titles (Spread love for books that people don’t talk about much anymore!).

I’m not sure that I’d consider these books “forgotten” — but I’ve put together a list of earlier books by authors with more recent books making a big splash. Here are my ten:

1) Green Creek series by TJ Klune: This may be a bit of a cheat, since this series is being reissued this year and next. TJ Klune broke into bestseller stardom with The House in the Cerulean Sea in 2020, but before that, his books included this outstanding werewolf series (of which, I’ve read books 1 & 2 — Wolfsong and Ravensong — and can’t wait to dive into 3 & 4!)

2) Lord John books by Diana Gabaldon: Sure, everyone knows about Outlander, but die-hard fans also read the Lord John books, which fill in critical pieces of LJ’s story and help a lot by the time you get to later books in the Outlander series as well.

3) Maybe in Another Life by Taylor Jenkins Reid: This was my TJR gateway book! Before Daisy Jones or Evelyn Hugo, I read this one, then all of her earlier books. These books deserve love too!

4) A Wizard’s Guide to Defensive Baking by T Kingfisher: I loved this magical fantasy! My first introductions to T Kingfisher were horror novels, but going back and reading her fantasy stories is a total kick.

5) River of Teeth by Sarah Gailey: This author has had some big hits since, but I will never get tired of talking about the American Hippo books!

6) The Darkest Part of the Forest by Holly Black: I’ve since read many more Holly Black books, including the Folk of the Air series (my favorite) — but I remember loving this one, and have been thinking I should go back for a reread.

7) The Android’s Dream by John Scalzi: You really can’t go wrong with a Scalzi book. I don’t know many people who’ve read this one, but it’s hilarious (especially if you listen to the audiobook version).

8) The Pact by Jodi Picoult: This author is a huge bestseller, but of all her books, this is the one that’s really stayed with me across the years. It’s the first of her books that I ever read, and maybe because of the combination of subject matter and the particular time in my life that I read it, it’s haunted me ever since.

9) Rosie Hopkins series by Jenny Colgan: I love this author’s books, with their sunny outlook on life, quirky characters, and cakes, cookies, and candies to die for! I feel like this series is very under-the-radar, but I thought it was a stand-out.

10) Newsflesh series by Mira Grant: Mira Grant is one of Seanan McGuire’s pen names, under which she writes terrific horror. This series is outstanding, and I don’t know that I’d consider it forgotten in any way… but I just don’t see it getting mentioned very often. I love these books, and recommend them whenever I get a chance.

Have you read any of my backlist books? What backlist books do you wish more people would read?

If you did a TTT post this week, please share your link!