ASK Musings

No matter where you go, there you are.

Monthly Archive: March 2025

Monday

31

March 2025

0

COMMENTS

All the Missing Girls by Megan Miranda

Written by , Posted in Reviews

Three Stars

Best for:
Those who like a bit of creative license with their storytelling.

In a nutshell:
Nicolette is back home to help prepare her dad’s home for sale. Her dad’s memory is going, but he keeps saying things that make other think he knows about someone who went missing ten years ago.

Worth quoting:
N/A

Why I chose it:
I liked another work by this author.

Review:
I was into this book at the start, then was skeptical, but by the end I was mostly on board. The entire book is told from Nicolette’s perspective. She is engaged to Ethan, a wealthy attorney in Philadelphia, but she heads back home. Her dad is in a memory care facility, and her brother Dan needs some help getting the family home ready to sell. Nic’s ex boyfriend Travis is helping with some repairs on the house.

We learn by the second day she’s there that Travis’s girlfriend Anabelle has gone missing, which brings up the past – ten years earlier, Nic’s best friend went missing and was never found. Her father starts making strange comments, and the police are interested.

At this point we jump forward two weeks. And each chapter after that is a day before – so day 14, day 13, day 12, etc. Nic tells us something, then a chapter later we find out how that might be relevant, and what information she might not have fully shared. It was annoying at first, but after I got into it and accepted that I wasn’t going to get the whole story the way I thought I would, it was mostly an entertaining read. Not a huge fan of the ending, but it works.

Sunday

23

March 2025

0

COMMENTS

The Last to Vanish by Megan Miranda

Written by , Posted in Uncategorized

4 Stars

Best for:
Fans of claustrophobic mysteries with possibly unreliable narrators and reasonable twists.

In a nutshell:
Abby works at in a town where seven people have gone missing in four separate incidents over the years. The sibling of the latest to disappear has arrived at the Inn where she works, and he has questions.

Worth quoting:
Nothing stood out.

Why I chose it:
When I was visiting my parents last month, my mother recommended this as something I’d like.

Review:
This was an interesting mystery. It had that small town feel that I enjoy in mysteries – much like the Icelandic books I’ve read, where everything takes place in one town, and where everyone knows everyone else’s business.

Abby works at the inn owned by her now-deceased uncle and his wife. She’s been there for ten years, so not a local. She arrived right around when someone went missing – the fifth, after a group of four guys went missing over a decade earlier. The town is right at the edge of the Appalachian trail, so the assumption is that everyone who has gone missing met their end from a fall on the trail.

But four months ago, a reporter came to town, looking into the six disappearances. Then he went missing, and now his brother has shown up at the inn, wanting answers.

The author does a great job of holding back information without it being silly once it is revealed – nothing is truly out of the blue. She also plays around a bit with the narrator – is she reliable, is she telling us everything she knows? The author also creates a very specific feeling with the town and its inhabitants – how some people can never be considered a ‘local’ no matter how long they live there, how people can close ranks to protect their own, how some are always suspicious of others.

I enjoyed this one enough to seek out other books by the author – just downloaded one to read this week.

Sunday

16

March 2025

0

COMMENTS

Orbital by Samantha Harvey

Written by , Posted in Uncategorized

Four Stars

Best for:
Anyone wanting a beautiful bit of writing that isn’t about a plot so much as a feeling.

In a nutshell:
A day in the life of four astronauts and two cosmonauts as they orbit the earth 16 times.

Worth quoting:
“We find out about our own unspecialness and in a flush of innocence we feel quite glad – if we’re not special then we might not be alone.”

“We think we’re the wind, but we’re just the leaf.”

Why I chose it:
This was a birthday present from my partner, who clearly knows me well.

Review:
Like many people, occasionally I’ll have a moment where I think about the vastness of space and how I don’t understand it. It nearly takes my breath away when I really contemplate it. At the same time, I would love to spend a few days in space, to view Earth and the cosmos from high above.

This book isn’t plot driven – at the risk of spoiling it, there is not unexpected incident putting the six space travelers at risk. We learn a bit about each of their lives – one has just lost her mother (and will in fact miss her funeral while up in space), others have partners, children. What motivated them to want to be sealed in a tiny can circling the Earth sixteen times each day. How they feel now that they are in space. And that is a bit part of the book.

But most of the book is about Earth – what is going on, how humans relate to each other on it, how it appears from above, how it fits into the universe. The writing is beautiful but not overly flowery. It invokes a mood – for me it was a mixture of calmness, overall peace, and also curiosity. It’s a fairly short novel, but it’s clear why it won the Booker Prize in 2024. I would recommend it to anyone looking for something a bit different.

Saturday

15

March 2025

0

COMMENTS

Mickey 17

Written by , Posted in Reviews

2 Stars

I think I don’t ‘get’ a lot of popular satire. Like, I walked out of Book of Mormon at the intermission. It didn’t seem clever, or insightful – it just seemed like a way for some people to be mean and racist under the guise of satire. And most people I’ve mentioned this to just say ‘huh, I really enjoyed it’ and then we move on.

I thought Parasite and Snowpiercer, both by Bong Joon-ho, were fantastic. They were interesting glimpses into different ways of looking at class (one hyper-dramatic, another much more insidious) While not the same, I do feel like part of the reason I dislike Mikey 17 so much is because it claims to be satire, and I just … I just don’t get it. I am not alone in this opinion, at least. But it is still a bummer, as we really only go out to the movies maybe twice a year at this point.

The main issues I had, beside the fact that the film was WAY too long, is that it was so on the nose that it felt almost childish. Like, a kids’ film about the perils of cults and capitalism, but only adults are allowed to see it. The Mark Ruffalo and Toni Colette characters were so on the nose it seemed a bit like a quick improv scene in a college theatre class, where one doesn’t have loads of time to prepare and so just goes for the very obvious laughs. Especially Ruffalo’s Trump/Musk hybrid person. Also, the Creepers (the alien life) were the victims of some pretty brutal cruelty, which felt a bit like watching cats be tortured, and I’m not so much interested in seeing that in the movies I choose to watch.

Overall, I thought Robert Pattinson’s acting was fantastic, and some of the moments were interesting. There was just so much more potential there, but it seemed like any time there was an opportunity to explore an interesting discussion about ethics, politics, capitalism, relationships, religion, etc., the filmmakers decided to just cut to a different scene.