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review 2020-05-10 22:14
The Miracles of the Namiya General Store by Keigo Higashino, translated by Sam Bett
The Miracles of the Namiya General Store - ???? (Higashino Keigo),Higashino Keigo

Content warnings for this book: suicide, child abuse and neglect, multiple deaths due to cancer.

In the late 1960s, the Namiya General Store became known for its particular gimmick: the owner would write serious replies to any letters asking for advice, even those that were clearly intended to be pranks. People would slide their letters through the store's mail slot after it closed for the night, and in the morning they'd find a response in the store's milk crate. This continued for about a decade, until the owner was no longer able to run the store.

In the book's present (probably about the same time it was published, 2012), three delinquents named Shota, Kohei, and Atsuya have completed their first big theft and need a place to hide out until morning. The hideout they select is the abandoned Namiya General Store. A short while after they arrive, someone drops a letter into the store's mail slot. Scared that they've been found out, but also curious, they open the letter. It's written by someone going by the name "Moon Rabbit," a female athlete who's faced with a serious dilemma. Her boyfriend is dying of cancer and she wants to be by his side, but both she and her boyfriend also want her to qualify for the Olympics. She can't train at the level and amount required and also be by his side, and she wants to know what she should do.

The three guys quickly find themselves emotionally invested in the letter writer's problems, but as they attempt to help her, and the other letter writers after her, they realize that there's something odd going on at the Namiya General Store. Somehow the letters coming through the mail slot are arriving from decades in the past.

If I hadn't already known it, I would never have guessed that this book was written by the same author who wrote the Detective Galileo mysteries. The tone and genre were so completely different. By the end, though, I suppose I could see some similarities between The Miracles of the Namiya General Store and, say, The Devotion of Suspect X. Both novels eventually took a bunch of little details and tied them all together into one intricate whole.

Initially, it seemed like this book would be a series of stories connected only by the Namiya General Store and the three delinquents. They'd get a new letter asking for advice, do their best to answer, and so on, until they finally left the store in the morning.

And it sort of was like that, at first. The first chapter dealt with the female athlete whose boyfriend was dying. The second chapter took place entirely in the past, focusing on the letter writer, a young man trying to decide between taking over his family's fish shop and pursuing his dream of becoming a famous musician, rather than on the three delinquents. The third chapter went deeper into the past, when the owner of the Namiya General Store was still alive and answering letters. The fourth chapter followed the structure established in the second chapter and focused on one of the letter writers, a young man who'd written the Namiya General Store's first serious request for advice.

It's around Chapter 4, but definitely Chapter 5, that Higashino starts tying things together. The characters in this book were much more interconnected than was immediately apparent. The interconnectedness of everything got to be a bit much for me, and aspects of the story became incredibly sappy. Like, "angels watching over us" kind of sappy, only not so religious.

I don't know how I feel about how certain things worked out. Both Mr. Namiya and the delinquents eventually realized that they weren't necessarily giving the letter writers answers but rather helping them feel better about the choices they were going to make regardless. The one part that made me unhappy was the end of Chapter 4, the things he discovered, and the conclusions that the author seemed to be nudging the readers towards. It looked as though the author believed that the letter writer, a teenager at the time, had been faced with two choices, a right one and a wrong one, and had made the wrong choice. However, I'm not sure that any choice could have been the right one in that situation. He had been at the mercy of his parents' decisions.

As far as emotionally manipulative books go, this wasn't bad, but I've read better. I found myself repeatedly thinking of A Man Called Ove - similar efforts to draw you into characters' lives and make you cry about them, although the stories and character types were completely different.

 

(Original review posted on A Library Girl's Familiar Diversions.)

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review 2018-12-17 04:37
Review: The Spartan Way: Eat Better. Train Better. Think Better. Be Better. by Joe De Sena
The Spartan Way: Eat Better. Train Better. Think Better. Be Better. - Joe De Sena

Reviewed for Wit and Sin

 

The Spartan Way is a helpful, no-nonsense resource for anyone looking to make a change. No matter what your goal, Joe De Sena’s Spartan philosophy is something you can apply to your life. I loved Mr. De Sena’s passion – it comes through strong in this book and his dedication and enthusiasm is infectious. Self-Awareness, commitment, passion, discipline, prioritization, grit, courage, optimism, integrity, and “wholeness” are not new values or ideas, but the way they are presented is what separates this book from the pack. It’s intense, honest, and straightforward, which I really appreciated. I will note that some of the examples Mr. De Sena uses in this book are a bit extreme and the sample sizes in the studies he cites are sometimes rather low, but the core principals are good. If you want a good kick in the butt and helpful, easy-to-digest advice that will serve you well, I recommend The Spartan Way.


FTC Disclosure: I received this book for free from the publisher in exchange for an honest review. This does not affect my opinion of the book or the content of my review.

Source: witandsin.blogspot.com/2018/12/review-spartan-way-eat-better-train.html
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review 2016-02-08 21:56
Ring in a Teacup - Betty Neels

I laughed at how the h who was a nurse Lucy first met the H who was a professor Fraam when she was asleep in his lecture, I liked how they met again in Holland when she was visiting her friend who I wasn't too keen on but seeing as she wasn't much in the story it didn't bother me too much, I enjoyed how Fraam fell in love with Lucy but she was clueless throughout the story and I particularly like the blizzard plotline and how he came to be there at the right time.
What I didn't really get is why even though he was in love with her he was still dating and going around with other women instead of slowly wooing her but when he proposed to her he did stop and I didn't really get why that even when she told him she loved him he didn't tell her the same, it left me confused especially when he tells her near the beginning that it will be her fault if he marries someone else.
I liked the tactic he used to get her back to Holland when he got her to look after her friend's father despite him not really needing her.
There was the typical mischief of the ow who once again the h easily believed and obviously the ow got away with it, I did laugh at how Lucy got into a temper afterwards and threw her engagement ring into a teacup hence the title and how Fraam had to rescue her from a locked hotel room when she left her belongings in the house and had no money to pay.
The ending I did like but it was too short and there was no epilogue.

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review 2015-08-02 00:00
Girl Walking Backwards
Girl Walking Backwards - Bett Williams I went into this book with an open mind but it was very dark and painful to read at times. The MC is supposed to be smart, she's analyzing Virginia Wolf, but keeps making poor decisions probably because she has no adult in her life worth having. She has either a painfully disturbed mother (not just into "new Age" ideas - she's a red-hot mess) and a narcissistic, Peter Pan kind of father. I wonder if there is a sequel planned with this girl escaping the madness around and in her.
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review 2015-07-02 23:15
Chicken Soup for the Soul: Here Comes the Bride
Chicken Soup for the Soul: Here Comes the Bride: 101 Stories of Love, Laughter, and Family - Jack Canfield,Mark Victor Hansen,Susan M. Heim,Betty Ost-Everley
With my wedding coming up on Sunday, there was no better time to be inspired by this book. Reading stories of engagements, the wedding, and married life, helped inspire me and ignite the excitement that was already beginning to brew. 
Even if you are not getting married, this book is filled with stories that will remind you all about love. I felt connected to so many of the stories and was beaming by the time I reached the end. 
So many of you romantics will hopelessly enjoy this anthology of stories just like I did. Now is the season for wedding bells, so read on!
 
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