Showing posts with label Charles Dickens. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Charles Dickens. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 1, 2023

From Summer Fling to Year Round Thing: A Romance for the Books


The phrase "summer reading" usually evokes either an idyllic three months of beach books or a tedious list of classics to be crammed in before the next school year.  But for Samantha Gale, the nightmare isn't limited to Dickens and Tolstoy.  Because Sam is dyslexic and has struggled with reading her whole life.  Now twenty-eight and between chef gigs, she's returned to her childhood home on Martha's Vineyard to plan her second act.  On the ferry over, she escapes being hurled on by a frat boy thanks to the gallantry of one Bennett Reynolds.  Ben is a swoon-worthy librarian, and Sam would like nothing more than to distract herself with a summer fling.  So she lies about her dyslexia and pretends to be Stephen King's biggest fan.   

Welcome to Jenn McKinlay's latest, Summer Reading.  I've enjoyed many a McKinlay romcom and mystery, but from the foreword, I knew that this book would be special.  In it, McKinlay explains what inspired her to write a novel about dyslexia -- and print it in a neurodivergent-friendly font and format to boot:

"Having been an avid reader all my life, I can't imagine not having books and stories to escape into when life gets difficult.  But I'd watched up close as several of my family members did not find reading as enjoyable as I did and had to navigate a world that was incredibly unfriendly to those with dyslexia.  Books weren't the safe place for them that they were for me, and it made me much more aware of how many people find decoding the written word a challenge." (xi)

As someone who also finds comfort in books, I was instantly sympathetic to anyone who can't seek such refuge.  That said, Sam's dyslexia makes her life -- as well as her relationship with Ben -- take on another dimension.  A library card-carrying knight in shining armor, Ben accepts Sam for who she is.  He even shares his love of books by reading her a romcom that just happens to be McKinlay's own Paris is Always a Good Idea.  (How's that for mignon?)  But Ben has his own stumbling block: his eccentric artist mother refuses to tell him who his father is.  Because her family has lived on the island for generations, Sam is the ideal person to help Ben research his dad's identity.  As the two work and play, their bond grows even stronger, leading Sam to hope that it'll last long after Labor Day.      

Summer Reading is a refreshing and irresistible romance, all wrapped up in a classic opposites-attract trope.  

But then, maybe the reason that opposites attract is that they're not so opposite after all. 

Thursday, March 17, 2022

Yellow Brick Mode, Clover Day Way

Coat: Anthropologie, Zulily

Bag: LC Lauren Conrad, Kohl's; Necklace: Candie's, Kohl's; Belt: Belt is Cool, Amazon; Ring: Express; Barrette: Buffalump, Etsy

Dress: GYK, Zulily

Shoes: Worthington, JCPenney

Sweater: Hooked Up, Macy's

Bangles: B Fabulous; Bag: Target; Dark green scrunchie: Target; Kelly green scrunchie: So, Kohl's

Blouse: Candie's, Kohl's; Tank: Kohl's

Necklace: Modcloth; Headband: Zulily

Jeans: Arizona Jeans, JCPenney

Scarf: Zulily; Fabulous Felt Erin Brooch: The Tote Trove; Ring: Wet Seal; Yellow bangle: B Fabulous; Watch: Boscov's; Bag: Wild Fable, Target 

This St. Patrick's Day, I didn't get around to getting a Shamrock Shake.  But I did wear my green and then some!  Coat of many colors?  Check.  Pot of gold purse?  You know it.  Multicolored but still mostly green scarf?  Couldn't salute St. Patrick without it.  Together, these pieces formed a rainbow, making this rainy day a bit brighter.  As did thinking of clover and Clover Day and Strawbridge & Clothier.  

For those of you not from the New Jersey-Pennsylvania-Delaware area, Strawbridge & Clothier was a local department store on a par with or maybe a slight cut above Macy's.  Its beautiful flagship location was in Philadelphia, but my mom used to take my sister and me to the one at the Echelon Mall (except for one Christmas when the whole fam trekked to the one in the City of Brotherly Love to walk through Dickens's A Christmas Carol display, an experience that turned out to be more frightening than visiting Santa).  Even as an adult, I enjoyed going to the store in the Echelon Mall once in a while (it was super close to my dentist).  Then it got bought out by Macy's in 2006.  I still went, but it wasn't the same.  

In addition to Strawbridge & Clothier's wonderful merchandise, I also really liked the name.  Strawbridge.  It was like a cross between a strawberry and a drawbridge, which appealed to kid (and, okay, grown-up) me.  Speaking of wordplay, the parent company had a discount chain called Clover, and because of this, sale days at Strawbridge & Clothier were called Clover Days.  

Which is how I brought this bad boy back to the topic at hand.

Thanks for understanding, Pat.  I knew you would.           

Tuesday, March 27, 2012

Something New and Sparkly: Grape Expectations



Fabulous Felt Grapes, Lemon, and Strawberry Barrette

Dress: Arizona Jeans, JCPenney
Shoes: Chinese Laundry, Marshalls
Bag: Nahui Ollin

Thankfully, this Fabulous Felt Grapes, Lemon, and Strawberry Barrette is a smidge sweeter than that decaying wedding cake in Dickens's Great Expectations.  Even so, I like to think that its over-the-top aesthetic appeals to Miss Havisham's style if not her pastry. 

Never let it be said that I don't deliver a little culture with my cute.