Review: The One Memory of Flora Banks

Review: The One Memory of Flora Banks

Rating: โ˜…โ˜…โ˜†โ˜†โ˜† (2/5)

*Review includes major spoilers*

Flora has anterograde amnesia. She canโ€™t remember anything past a few hours and relies on the scribbles on her hand and the people around her. Until she kisses a boy, she shouldnโ€™t and remembers it. But heโ€™s gone now, and thatโ€™s all she can remember.

Oh, how do I feel about this? A large part of me was enjoying this book, to begin with despite the rather odd plot, but overall, I didnโ€™t care for this. I kind of feel bad since it was pretty intriguing, but so much little things irked me that when stacked up, my reading experience wasnโ€™t very good.

With a plot like this, it is no doubt very repetitive, and for some, it can be boring. I quite like it in a sense with the stop and start motions. Itโ€™s practically a collection of mini-stories where Flora has to repeat herself constantly. I think that part was done in a way that it didnโ€™t feel completely lacking for me. On her hands are the words โ€œBe brave,โ€ and she is an impressive character to do what she does which such bravery.

I know suspension of disbelief is crucial to read this book, especially with this plot, but thereโ€™s a lot that I couldnโ€™t just ignore. Like how Floraโ€™s parents think itโ€™s okay to leave their daughter with her best friend for a week. Sure, Paige knows what to do, but thatโ€™s a lot of responsibility to place on her. And I wasnโ€™t even mad when Paige said her mum didnโ€™t agree with it because itโ€™s true, you donโ€™t leave her amnesiac daughter with her only friend for a week. How social service did not catch wind of that is beyond me.

Paige isnโ€™t off the hook either since Flora kisses Paigeโ€™s ex-boyfriend and, fair enough, sheโ€™s upset. Itโ€™s normal to be upset when your best friend kisses your boyfriend. But itโ€™s even more reckless to not stay with Flora when she had already agreed with Floraโ€™s parents. Like she just doesnโ€™t even tell Floraโ€™s parents that sheโ€™s not coming. Like, WHAT. Putting your friendโ€™s life at risk was just SO BAD. In the end, Paige does whatโ€™s right, but it was still unsettling how she knowingly left her friend in danger for the sake of her own empowerment.

Also, Floraโ€™s brother! Heโ€™s very much an enigma throughout the novel, whose real story doesnโ€™t come to light until the very last chapters. And that was so disappointing. HE DESERVED BETTER.

Drake doesnโ€™t deserve so much as a couple of lines. I donโ€™t think it was appropriate to have a 19-year-old boy go after a 17-year-old girl who amnesia makes her still think sheโ€™s ten-years-old. Fuck that dude.

Iโ€™ll stand by this final point. The book shouldโ€™ve ended where it began. It had Everything, everything vibes and where it ends is where the story becomes more interesting. We learn that Floraโ€™s parents lied about the cause of her amnesia and theyโ€™re too scared to let her grow, so they give her drugs which make her more controllable. It ends with Flora learning that her amnesia could go away and leaving her parents to begin discovering herself. A story from there wouldโ€™ve been more interesting. Or better, a better plot wouldโ€™ve been replacing boyfriend with brother. Like, Flora remembers a memory of her brother and goes in search of him despite her parentโ€™s disapproval. Honestly, anything apart from having to read about creepy Drake wouldโ€™ve been worth my time.

Overall, this book followed the wrong parts, in my opinion. Thereโ€™s so much to Flora that couldโ€™ve been uncovered more, but we got stuck with the love plot instead.


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Blog Tour: The Weight of Our Sky (+ giveaway!)

Blog Tour: The Weight of Our Sky (+ giveaway!)

Hi!!! Todayโ€™s post is all about The Weight of our Sky by Hanna Alkaf. Iโ€™m so excited to be a part of the SEA blog tour for this incredible book. Iโ€™ll be sharing my own review and a playlist that Iโ€™ve made for this book! Before I get into what I have to show, hereโ€™s some information on the book and its brilliant author!

Melati Ahmad has imagined her motherโ€™s death countless times. Plagued by gruesome thoughts she believes are put into her head by a djinn, Melati has developed an intricate set of tapping rituals to tame the monster within and keep her mother safe.

But there are things that Melati canโ€™t protect her mother from. On the evening of May 13th, 1969, racial tensions in her home city of Kuala Lumpur boil over. The Chinese and Malays are at war, and Mel and her mother become separated by a city in flames.

With a 24-hour curfew in place and all lines of communication down, it will take the help of a Chinese boy named Vincent and all of the courage and grit in Melatiโ€™s arsenal to overcome the violence on the streets, her own prejudices, and her djinnโ€™s surging power to make it back to the one person she canโ€™t risk losing.

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Hanna Alkaf graduated with a degree in journalism from Northwestern University and spent over ten years writing everything from B2B marketing emails to investigative feature articles, from non-profit press releases to corporate brochures. She worked in Chicago as an online copywriter for several years upon graduation before coming home. Sheโ€™s been a senior writer at Marie Claire Malaysia, the communications manager of education non-profit Teach For Malaysia, and a freelance journalist. Her articles have appeared in the Malaysian iterations of Marie Claire, Shape, and Esquire, as well as a host of other media both print and online.

Hanna now spends her time making it up as she goes along, both as an author of fiction and as a mom. THE WEIGHT OF OUR SKY is her first novel. She lives in Kuala Lumpur with her family. (Photo credit: Azalia Suhaimi)

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Continue reading “Blog Tour: The Weight of Our Sky (+ giveaway!)”

Monthly Rewind: January 2019

Monthly Rewind: January 2019

I’m not even sure how.. but I managed to read 11 books this month!

B O O K S 

All The Lonely People by David Owen
Everyone tells Kat that her online personality – confident, funny, opinionated – isn’t her true self. Kat knows otherwise. The internet is her only way to cope with a bad day, chat with friends who get all her references, make someone laugh. But when she becomes the target of an alt-right trolling campaign, she feels she has no option but to Escape, Delete, Disappear.

Queer, There and Everywhere by Sarah Prager
Queer author and activist Sarah Pragerย delves deep into the lives of 23 people whoย fought, created, and loved on their own terms. From high-profile figures like Abraham Lincoln and Eleanor Roosevelt to the trailblazing gender-ambiguous Queen of Sweden andย aย bisexual blues singer who didnโ€™t make it into your history books, these astonishing true stories uncover a rich queer heritage that encompasses every culture, in every era.

Furthermore by Tahereh Mafi
Twelve-year-old Alice Alexis Queensmeadow has only three things in the world that matter: Mother, who wouldnโ€™t miss her; triplet brothers, who never knew her; and Father, who always loved her. The day Father disappears from Ferenwood he takes nothing but a ruler with him, so some said heโ€™d gone to measure the sea. Others said the sky. The moon. Maybe heโ€™d learned to fly and had forgotten how to come back down. But itโ€™s been almost six years since then, and Alice is determined to find him. She loves her father even more than she loves adventure, and sheโ€™s about to embark on one to find the other. No matter the cost.

Continue reading “Monthly Rewind: January 2019”

Review: Does My Head Look Big In This?

Review: Does My Head Look Big In This?

Rating: โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…โ˜†โ˜† (3/5)

Amal is sixteen when she decides to wear the hijab full time. But she soon faces trouble at her exclusive prep school. Suddenly, everyone seems to have an opinion on her. And as she begins navigating her last years of secondary school, she must find herself without losing her identity.

I think regarding the representation of a hijabi teen, itโ€™s actually quite good. Amal reminds me of my cousin who is actually her age right now. The high school drama, the catty people, and the confusion that comes with growing up are portrayed quite realistically. When she comes to school wearing the hijab, everyoneโ€™s confused, and because theyโ€™re all children, itโ€™s natural to ask questions. I only say this because a lot of reviews tend to call this part unrealistic. Amal is, at first, outcasted momentarily because they didnโ€™t understand, and she then actually helps and informs her peers. Sure, thereโ€™s a lot of scenes that come across unrealistic, but her experiences are entirely valid, and loads of reviews havenโ€™t really grasped that, once you consider the time itโ€™s set in and location. Quite a lot of what Amal experiences were quite familiar to me.

Amal is very well-spoken, confident, and incredibly charming. I was rather proud at this young Muslim girl, who also wears the hijab, and was confident in her decision to do so. I donโ€™t think I even had a shred of her self-confidence at this age.

I listened to the audiobook, so I donโ€™t know what itโ€™s like reading the book, but I felt like I had some issue differentiating some characters. She has like four friends, and along with huge dialogue dumps, it felt all the same. Iโ€™m not sure if thatโ€™s just the narratorโ€™s voice. Thereโ€™s also a reliance on a lot of typical stereotypes, and thereโ€™s a lot of phrases that are used that just didnโ€™t sit with me. Also, sorry to Amal, I couldnโ€™t see she liked Adam so much. But you do you, I guess. I actually preferred Amal and Adam as a friend. There was also a good potential for an arc with one of Amalโ€™s friends who is often bullied for her weight. I was holding onto something more empowering, but I donโ€™t think the book really hit the mark there. Amal and Leilaโ€™s polar opposite arcs can come across as being typical but do partially agree about having something more in the middle. Also, mean girl who is mean and nothing else was a bit boring.

Considering when this book first came out, I have to give Randa Abdel-Fattah a massive amount of respect. Donโ€™t expect this book to teach you everything about Islam, itโ€™s merely one girlโ€™s story, one whereโ€™s she learning. It does come across preachy at some moments, but in the end, Amal realises her mistakes and begins to show that sheโ€™s learning and growing, which is what I really liked.

Overall, itโ€™s a somewhat entertaining book, and very hilarious at many moments. Regarding recommending, Iโ€™m not too sure. If I had read this ten years ago, the list of Muslims in YA wouldnโ€™t have reached half a page, then sure, but reading it in 2019 is a much different experience. But itโ€™s a straightforward book to listen to. A light-hearted journey of identity and discovering oneโ€™s self.


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Review: Proud

Review: Proud

Rating: โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…โ˜† (4/5)

*I received an advance e-copy from the publisher via NetGalley. This in no way affected my opinion of the book.*

Proud is an upcoming anthology of stories and poetry by LGBTQ+ YA authors, each piece reflecting the theme of Pride. Proud is such a fun anthology. It was a pure joy to read some of these pieces.

Some stories are utterly hilarious with Greenโ€™s Penguins were his own coming out to his parents is interrupted by penguins. Somewhere deeply saddening which follow the narrator as they navigate grief. All the chosen pieces are equally powerful and personal.

Each piece could easily be expanded by their authors if they wanted to. However, my fantasy-biased self obviously loved Cynthia Soโ€™s The Phoenixโ€™s Fault the most. The short F/F story where a Chinese lantern maker has to choose between what her heart desires and what is expected of her. It reminded me a lot of Girls of Paper and Fire. Almost Certain comes close which follows a music loving teen who struggles to come out to her family while navigating her impending adulthood. I like reading books set in Brighton, where Iโ€™m from.

A broad and heart-warming collection of stories poems about identity and pride. Each piece was refreshing and different. I really love how each writer had interpreted the theme in their own unique way, and the range that is in this book is rather brilliant and fun to read. The accompanying art does not go unnoticed, and they work so well with their matching piece.


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Review: Furthermore

Review: Furthermore

Rating: โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…โ˜† (4/5)

In Ferenwood, colour is everything, but Alice Queensmeadows is devoid of it all. And that makes her different, outcasted, even in her own family. Three years after her father’s disappearance, the only person who believed in her, Alice joins a journey into the perils of Furthermore to find him.

Alice hides in her colourful clothes and bangles. And with her upcoming Surrender, the ceremony in which the younger generation of Ferenwood are given a role based on their magical abilities. Alice’s Surrender goes wrong which leads her to join Oliver through the world of Furthermore.

Alice has no choice but to team up with a past friend, Oliver, who is given the job to find her father. And he needs her help. Oliver takes her to Furthermore, a rule changing world, where one mistake will have you lost forever. Oliver is a gifted and strict while Alex is reckless and free-spirited. They begin at odds, but their friendship is forged quite quickly as they face fast-paced adversity. The way they bounce off each other was rather exciting. Their friendship was adorable, and I really enjoyed their development.

This is a fantastic Middle-grade read! I wish something like this existed when I was ten and discovering fantasy. While I fumbled with the world-building at first, the visuals are rather captivating. This book deserves its own graphic novel. The current cover is enough to justify it. It’s very adventurous, with its twisted logic, and Alice’s inner journey of self-love and friendship is fantastic.

Like I said, the world building was a bit confusing, to begin with, it makes more sense in the end, but I would’ve appreciated more clarity in the beginning. But the setting is so unique and thrilling. The eccentricity of all it all was somewhat entertaining. Mixed with its oddity of background characters, there is a lot to love in this book. I’m slightly disappointed in myself that kept putting this book off because I was not a massive fan of Tahereh’s Shatter Me series. I had learnt that quite a lot of other people shared this sentiment which I can now say, give Furthermore a shot, even if you didn’t like Shatter Me.

Overall, Furthermore is impressive. A story of loss and recovery, one of Tahereh’s more unique novels which show Alice and Oliver negotiate the harsh landscape of Furthermore and discover more about themselves. It’s fun, vibrant and imaginative! A definitely recommended read, especially for younger readers.


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