Rating: ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
Author: Alix Ohlin
Genres: Literary Fiction, Canadian Lit
Pub. date: Jun. 2019 (read Feb. 2020 on Audible)
Dual Citizens is one of the those weird creations of Canadian literature that I ended up really loving, yet wouldn’t necessarily recommend to everyone. It’s a bit of an artsy story with a meandering plot, but it’s ultimately about family and sisterhood and that really resonated with me.
Lark and Robin are sisters that grew up in Montreal and received little attention or praise from their young mother. So they instead look to one another for support and long for the day when they can branch out on their own. Lark is shy but very studious and does well in school, earning herself a scholarship for a college in the States. Robin learns to play the piano and has a natural talent for it. She is dismayed when Lark leaves her behind to go to school and within the year she runs away to live with Lark.
Eventually Lark discovers a love for film and Robin is accepted to study piano at Julliard. But the pressure of music school gets to her and as Lark dives further into her film degree, the sisters begin to grow apart. The separation between the two sisters was jarring and upsetting for me. They were all each other had and I felt as set adrift by the separation as Lark did. The sisters are very different and Lark struggles to understand why her sister suddenly distances herself and they begin to grow apart, each caught up in their own struggles and insecurities.
Lark spends a lot of time working in the film industry and is quite successful, but she reads like a character who just moves through life without actually engaging in it. She is passive in every scenario and I really felt like part of her was missing during her estrangement from Robin. I’m not really an artsy person and I don’t care for film, but I really loved the storytelling in this book. I just felt this ache throughout for the relationship that Lark and Robin once had and the strain and impact that the loss of communication had on Lark. The feeling of incompleteness while the two were separated and the tenseness that continued between them even once they were reunited. It’s scary to watch two people that were so close become disconnected to the point that they don’t really know who the other person is anymore.
It really reminded me of the feelings of nostalgia and sadness that you get when you return home and realize that the people you loved and spent so much time with have all changed. The feeling of moving on, but thinking fondly of the experiences you once shared, but the sadness of realizing that some experience meant more to one person than the other.
It’s hard to describe, but Lark’s longing for both motherhood and a renewed relationship with her sister were so authentic. It’s a slow moving story with little driving the plot, but I related so keenly to Lark. I think Ohlin captured a very flawed, but real relationship, and I felt really invested in Lark’s life. I don’t think it’s a story for everyone though and I’m not sure I’d want to read it again because of the emotional toll, but I’m glad to have picked it up and thoroughly enjoyed the audiobook. A great story with a lot of depth!
Winner: Han Allister from
Winner: Jo March from
Winner: Samwise Gamgee from Lord of the Rings
Winner: Beth March from
Winner: Cinda Williams Chima
Winner: Lord of the Rings by JRR Tolkien
Winner:
Winner: Full Cast in
Winner: The Golden Compass by Phillip Pullman

Winner: Lord of the Butterflies by Andrea Gibson
Winner:
Winner:
Rating: ⭐⭐⭐⭐
This is the 3rd book in Lepionka’s mystery series about private investigator Roxane Weary. The first book is called
Honestly, I’m a little surprised at myself including this one on the list. Holly Black’s
Another book that I’m a little surprised to see on this list. Queenie has gotten pretty mixed reviews, mostly I think in part because of its hard-to-love protagonist. Queenie has just split up with her boyfriend and she is really struggling to move on. She is distracted at work and has little respect for herself, seeking to escape through bad sexual relationships. She’s worn down by casual racism and micro aggressions and struggles with her mental health. Parts of the novel are funny, while other parts are frustrating. It’s hard to watch Queenie continually make bad decisions, but her struggle is so relatable and authentic that despite her flaws, you really want to see her succeed. It’s a book about learning to love and take care of yourself and seeking forgiveness.
Will Marchetta ever write a book that I don’t love? The Place on Dalhousie is the third novel she’s published in the
I read Jean Kwok’s other book,
I’m starting to sense a bit of a theme with this middle section of the list. Ask Again, Yes is another character-driven family drama that tells the multi-generational story of two families living in suburban New York; the Gleeson’s and the Stanhope’s. The families have had a somewhat tumultuous history together, but their children become good friends until one day a tragedy occurs that splits everyone apart, resulting in consequences that shake both families for decades to come. It’s a story about friendship, family, mental health, and forgiveness. It explores whether one event can have the power to shape our entire lives or whether we have the power to influence how we let it change us.
I can’t remember what inspired me to pick up Angie Kim’s debut novel, Miracle Creek, because on the outside it does sound like it has a bit of a random plot, but I ended up being totally enthralled with the audiobook! Miracle Creek is about the Yoo family, who treat patients using a hyperbaric pressure chamber called HBOT, which allows patients to breathe in pure oxygen. One day though someone leaves a lit cigarette outside the chamber, blowing it up and killing two people. What follows is a courtroom drama investigating who was responsible for the explosion and what happened leading up to that moment.
The top two books on my list were actually both audiobooks! Taylor Jenkins Reid became really popular from her last book, the Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo (which I would also hugely recommend) and I couldn’t wait to read her latest book, Daisy Jones & the Six, about a rock band in the 1970’s. It’s formatted in a series of interviews from all of the band members that reads like a VH1 music documentary about how the band got together and then later breaks up at a concert in 1979. And Damn is it ever compelling. Part of what makes the audiobook so strong is that it’s narrated by a full cast, so you really get the personalities of all of the individuals coming through and it honestly reads like a real life documentary. So much so that it’s hard to believe that none of the band members or their music is actually real.
Rating: ⭐⭐⭐⭐