The Husbands

by Holly Gramazio
First sentence: “The man is tall and has dark tousled hair, and when she gets back quite late from Elena’s hen do, she finds him waiting on the landing at the top of the stairs.”
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Release date: April 2, 2024
Review copy provided by the publisher.
Content: There is some swearing, including multiple f-bombs, and off-page sex. It’s in the Fiction section of the bookstore.

When Lauren – who is single, just out of a long-term relationship – arrives home from her best friend’s bachelorette party, she discovers that the universe has gifted her a husband. One that she has no memory of ever marrying (or even meeting). And then, to make things even more interesting, when he goes up into her (their?) attic, a different man comes down. Soon she realizes that her magic attic has gifted her something… interesting: the opportunity to figure out who the “perfect” husband is. But, she soon realizes that it’s not as simple as all that. 

There’s not much else to the plot of this one, but I still found it immensely enjoyable. I’m fascinated by the concept of multiverses, and as Lauren changes through husbands – and consequently, lives – I’m interested in what does and does not change in each iteration. I liked that it was sort of freeing for Lauren; she didn’t have a lot of the constraints around setting up a relationship, having been dropped into the middle of one. I also think there’s the underlying theme of “choose your love and love your choice” going on here. If you’re allowed to change things – because he’s messy, because he has long nose hairs, because he makes coffee badly – would you? Would you settle when you didn’t have to? 

And I thought Gramazio did all this well while keeping Lauren a sympathetic character. it’s her story; we don’t get to know many of the husbands well, and her friends and sister, while always there, are not central to the story. It’s a gimmicky book, sure, but it’s done well, and I quite enjoyed it.

Gemina

by Amie Kaufman and Jay Kristoff
First sentence: “… over seven hundred thousand employees across dozens of colonized worlds.”
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Others in the series: Illuminae
Content: All the swear words are blacked out, but there’s a lot of violence and some drug use. It’s in the Teen section (grades 9+) of the bookstore.

Spoilers for the first one, probably.

The nice thing about not reading a series when it first comes out is that you can read them all one right after another. And I remember what happens! That said, Gemina is part of the whole story, and picks up where we left off, but it also it’s own thing.

It’s the space station Heimdall, and everything is going lovely for Hannah and her boyfriend Jackson for their Terra Day plans. She’s got a super cute outfit, she’s about to pick up some dust to make the party super lit. Except, while she’s on her way, the station is attacked by an elite crew of 24 “auditors” (read: assassins) from BeiTech corp, who is still trying to cover up their attack on Kerenza. They have orders to take over Heimdall and open up the wormhole before any survivors reach the jump station.

(There’s a bit of a gap here: how did BeiTech know that there were survivors from the Kerenza attack?)

Anyway. The assassins capture the station, kill the commander (who happens to be Hannah’s dad), and take over. But, a few people Hannah and her drug dealer, Nik, and Nik’s cousin Ella, who’s a hacker, are left on the outside to stop the assassins from completely taking over.

I wondered how this would go over in print, since I adored it so much in audio. And it’s fabulous. I’m amazed that Kauffman and Kristoff could put so much into just documents, text streams, and illustrations, but they do! (since this one is so heavily illustrated, I wonder how it is in audio?) It never got tedious, I adored the reveals as they happened, and I was never too far ahead of the characters. I figured something out, and by the next page, the characters were there as well. It’s quite brilliantly plotted. And they do tension SO very well. I kept having to take breaks as I read because it would just get too much for me to handle. So very very good.

And yes, I’ve got the third already checked out, so I can see how this story ends.