Twinchantment

Review:

In the Kingdom of Kalloon, magic has been outlawed for decades. After a magical attack on the royal family, it was decided that the only way to keep everyone safe was to get rid of all magic and potentially magic beings. Black cats, twins, and other potentially magic beings obviously also had to go. Any magic-weilders were banished from the land to the Twists. And this sounds great in theory… until the twin princesses Sara and Flissa are born, and their parents decide to conceal their twin-ness and introduce them to the world as Princess Flissara. The girls have lived as one for twelve years, and their Ascension Day (when they will officially be in line for the throne) is drawing near. However, when the Queen is attacked with magic, Sara and Flissa must go on a journey to the Twists in hopes of saving her and the Kingdom of Kalloon.

Favorite Passage:

It was like Sara had reached inside Flissa and twisted her stomach.
“I like sharing a life with you,” she said. “I thought you did too.”
Sara sighed. She looked tired. She squeezed Flissa’s hands. “I like you. I love you. But I don’t want to be you, and I don’t want you to have to be me. It’s not fair. To either of us.””
– Chapter 16, Flissa

What I Loved Most:

Flissa and Sara are extremely different girls. Flissa is athletic and adventurous, ready to race horses or compete in swordsmanship tournaments. Sara loves people – making connections with both nobility and servants, speaking publicly to the kingdom, etc. Their strengths complement each other, and they can fill in for one another’s weaknesses. I loved that one personality type isn’t prized over the other. It doesn’t matter if you’re outgoing or shy, if you’re athletic or charismatic… what matters is learning how to embrace who you naturally are.

Read this book if you like:

Magic, people of color, adventures, siblings, things that aren’t always as they appear

Book Details:

With the Fire on High

Review:

The two most important people in Emoni Santiago’s life are her daughter (two year old Emma, affectionately called Babygirl) and the grandmother who is raising her (‘Buela). Emoni is a senior in high school this year. When her school decides to offer an elective class in culinary arts, she is torn between the desire to improve her cooking skills and the knowledge that she doesn’t have time for a seemingly frivolous class. But Emoni’s cooking seems to be magical – it brings out emotions in the people who eat it. In her heart, she knows that cooking is her calling.

I absolutely adored With the Fire on High. The chapters are written in short vignettes, so it’s a great book to read if you only have a couple minutes at a time. But be forewarned – it’s so compelling that you can’t help but pick it up again shortly after you put it down. It’s a great read for high school students, particularly for those who are trying to decide how they want to navigate life after high school. It comes out one week from today, and is a must to add to your TBR list!

Favorite Passage:

I dream everyday for Babygirl. I see people in business suits on the bus and I imagine Babygirl grown up with a briefcase and a nice executive office job. I watch a TV show and imagine Babygirl as a famous actress winning an Oscar. There’s so much I want for her that somethings I think the seams of my skin aren’t enough to contain every hope I have. And I whisper it to her all the time. When I’m feeding her. When she’s asleep in my arms. When we are playing at the park. I whisper all the everything I know she can be and the ways I’ll fight for her to be them. I want her to know her entire life her mommy may not have been much but that her moms did everything so that she could be an accumulation of the best dreams.
— 
Dreams

What I Loved Most:

I’ve read several books about teen pregnancy, but they always seem to be about that moment when the girl finds out she’s pregnant and is deciding what she wants to do. With the Fire on High is an empowering story of a teenager who is successfully raising her daughter. It goes beyond the “OMG I’m pregnant” time period to focus instead on what it looks like to raise a child while being in school and working to help support a household. Emoni is a great mom, and I loved exploring her mindset and the way she cares so fiercely for her daughter.

Read this book if you like:

Contemporary fiction, teen moms, dreaming, charting your own path

Book Details:

Stoned: Jewelry, Obsession, and How Desire Shapes the World

Review:

Stoned is an examination of the way that precious gems and jewels have impacted world history. As Raden explains, value is subjective. We’ve decided that these shiny stones are valuable, because we like the way they look. We declare that they should be expensive, because we want to have status symbols to separate classes from each other. However, our decisions about worth and value have implications that reach so much farther than I would have thought. Each chapter looks at the way one jewel has shaped the economy and history of a given culture (or of the world), while also exploring the psychology of human desire. I listened to this in as an audiobook, and it made my commute the last week go by so quickly!

Favorite Passage:

Gemstones are, in fact, just colorful gravel. They’re just rocks that we’ve given special names. True jewels are things that are beautiful and scarce. We want them because few others can possess them. We want them even more if they are from some very faraway, exotic place. Their value is, and always has been, 90 percent imaginary.

What I Loved Most:

As I’ve told friends about this book (and I’ve told like everyone I’ve come into contact with about this book), I can literally see everyone’s eyes glazing over as they hear the book is about the history of gems. But y’all, this book is BEYOND fascinating. Raden not only examines the way that various gems shaped history, but also pulls economics and psychology (which were my undergraduate major and minor areas, so I’m always pumped to learn about real world applications of these two!). Plus, you get to learn a bunch of fun facts, like how Marie Antoinette isn’t the one who said “Let them eat cake!” and how we all have diamond engagement rings as the result of a very successful marketing campaign in the early 1900’s. This book makes you smarter. Go read it.

Read this book if you like:

Social studies, finding out how small things can have a huge impact, economics, history, fun facts

Book Details: