TSM Book Club Book #10: Born A Crime by Trevor Noah

Started: February 24th
Finished: February 28th
TSM Rating: 5/5

Phew. That’s the first word that came to mind when I closed this book a moment ago. Probably because it finished with the most harrowing of stories: his mother being shot in the head by his stepfather…and SURVIVING.

When we learn history in school, we get broad strokes. However, history is nuanced. It is lived and experienced by every living thing on this planet every single day. We can learn history by speaking to those who lived it. Born A Crime is basically Trevor Noah giving a history lesson on late-stage and early post-apartheid through the lens of his life. There is so much underlying trauma because of the political situation in the country, on top of everything he had to deal with, growing up as someone who wasn’t supposed to exist.

He speaks about his mother and father being unable to walk down the street with him because it would look suspicious. Not being able to make friends because he didn’t know where he fit in.

I thought about it from a parents’ perspective, and my heart broke thinking of my sons feeling so outside the world around them. My biggest fear as a mom is my kids not finding their place and their people.

Luckily, despite all the insanity and instability in South Africa and in his home life, Trevor Noah found his way and became a star. He was able to rise above his circumstances and make life better for himself.

The book is funny, profound, and enlightening. I knew things about apartheid, but I didn’t understand the nuance of apartheid. All the world knows is segregation, violence, and Nelson Mandela. There is more, and there is depth.

This is why books from all perspectives are important.

TSM Book Club Book #7: Fake It Til You Bake It by Jamie Wesley

Started: February 6th
Finished: February 9th
TSM Rating: 5/5

This book was so much fun. I loved the banter between the main characters — Jada and Donovan — and I also loved that they were honest with each other from the very beginning. I know that it’s a popular romance trope, but I hate it when characters hide things from each other that will inevitably blow up in their face when the truth is revealed. And this is coming from an AVID watcher of Hallmark Christmas movies! So much chaos that can be avoided with a single conversation!

Jada and Donovan are polar opposites, but their personalities complement each. In my last review, I mentioned that I didn’t like doubting whether a couple would last — a Happy-For-Now vs. a Happy-Ever-After — this one, like Seven Days in June, felt like a HEA.

I also love the setup for her next book!

TSM Book Club Book #6: Seven Days in June by Tia Williams

Started: February 1st
Finished: February 6th
TSM Rating: 4/5

Dark. Melancholy. Isolated. Bright. Funny. Hopeful.

Those are all the things I felt while reading this book. Tia Williams really gets to the heart of what life can truly feel like when you have no one to rely on but yourself. She also shone a big shiny light on what it feels like to find the one person that truly gets you. How whole that can make you feel when you have and how hollow you can be when you lose it.

Shane and Eva are two very flawed characters. They aren’t shiny and bright like most romance/women’s fiction novel characters can be. And their dark is depths of hell kind of dark, but they are endearing because of their ability to endure. Their unbridled love and passion for each other are the kinds of things that teenage love affairs are made of. The seven days they spend together are all angsty, gritty, horny stuff that makes up the best teen romances.

The levelheaded maturity they show in the end really gets me. Sometimes I read these books that are all about the HEA, but I finish them thinking, These relationships would NEVER actually work in real life. At least not without A LOT of couples therapy. This one, though, I think could go the distance. And I liked that. I liked the feeling I got finishing this book at 3:30 in the morning — when both my toddlers wake up and fall back to sleep, but I’m now WIDE awake, I read. It felt like, These crazy kids might actually go the distance.

I liked that feeling. I want more of that feeling in my books. I’ll pick up a few more Tia Williams books, chasing this high.