Featured Reviews

My NetGalley accolades

Professional Reader80%
Love the World or Get Killed Trying - Alvina Chamberland
Mona Angéline Mona Angéline

Love the World or Get Killed Trying - Alvina Chamberland

The honor of reviewing Alvina Chamberland’s autofiction was all mine this summer. Hers is a book that makes you question the world. It makes you think, really think, it makes you step out of your comfort zone and into some of the realities that shape her life and that of so many other trans women who aren't seen for who they are but for their bodies instead.

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White World - Saad T. Farooqi
Mona Angéline Mona Angéline

White World - Saad T. Farooqi

White World by Saad T Farooqi is a book of violence. It is also a book of love, of family, of perseverance. Of a country divided, a country aflame in religious conflict, its reach ever increasing from Pakistan’s historical independence in 1947 to the dystopian future in 2083 that the book is set in.

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Wanted: Toddler's Personal Assistant - Stephanie Kiser
Mona Angéline Mona Angéline

Wanted: Toddler's Personal Assistant - Stephanie Kiser

Stephanie Kiser’s memoir on her time as a nanny for the New York elite transports us into the extravagant lives of the privileged few, to their Upper East Side residence with their designer baby wardrobes, their estates in the Hamptons too large to take in, and then some.

Kiser leaves us in awe of not only her courage, but also her exemplary writing, both on her personal journey and the many social issues this topic touches on.

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Half-Life of a Secret - Emily Strasser
Mona Angéline Mona Angéline

Half-Life of a Secret - Emily Strasser

“There's hope, so much hope, in this recurring opportunity to shift our story—but will we ever grab it by its horns and seek out peace, real peace for once, once and for all?”

This review commentary is located in the Publications section.

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Rebellion Box - Hollay Ghadery
Mona Angéline Mona Angéline

Rebellion Box - Hollay Ghadery

Hollay Ghadery's poetry collection "Rebellion Box" spoke to me in so many ways. I've recently started to read more poetry, especially the kind that's sort of a memoir in verse. This beautiful work of art definitely touches on that theme and gives us glimpses into Ghadery's life from so many scintillating angles.

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Men Have Called Her Crazy - Anna Marie Tendler
Mona Angéline Mona Angéline

Men Have Called Her Crazy - Anna Marie Tendler

This intriguing memoir describes the author's time at an in-patient psychiatric treatment facility and intersperses this present day story with the past struggles that culminated in her hospital stay.

I applaud Tendler for her courage in writing this vulnerable memoir. It touches on so many points that are vital to mental health awareness, and I think that many people will be able to see themselves in these pages, as did I.

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Fuse - Hollay Ghadery
Mona Angéline Mona Angéline

Fuse - Hollay Ghadery

Fuse is a memoir written by Hollay Ghadery, a woman of biracial descent living in Canada, with a particular focus on the heritage from her Iranian father.

Not only do we get to experience her life and emotions in true memoir fashion, but, and this is rare in this genre, we also receive a well-crafted story arc that keeps us on our toes while reading. Add to that the wonderful lyrical writing - perhaps inspired by Ghadery's poetry - that's so suited to the inner monologue, and you've got a stunning book in your hands.

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Prisoner of Lies - Barry Werth
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Prisoner of Lies - Barry Werth

This work of nonfiction recounts the scary fate of ex-CIA member Jack Downey, who was captured by the Chinese during a covert operation of the early Cold War. Downey remained imprisoned for over twenty years, having fallen between the cracks of various political agendas.

I liked this book for the excellent research and writing. The author knows how to tell a good stor

y.

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Rubble Children - Aaron Kreuter
Mona Angéline Mona Angéline

Rubble Children - Aaron Kreuter

Rubble Children is a clever collection of seven and a half interwoven stories on the historical trauma inserting itself into the day-to-day life of Jewish youth in Canada.

This review was published in a literature magazine and is therefore located in the Publications section.

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A Well-Trained Wife - Tia Levings
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A Well-Trained Wife - Tia Levings

Levings's memoir reads as if it were fiction, like a thriller that's all too real.

Maybe because it's so unbelievable that these things happen in our time?

Maybe because we women never fully lose the fear of being suppressed, used, our souls, wants, and needs exterminated?

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Better, Faster, Further - Maggie Mertens
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Better, Faster, Further - Maggie Mertens

Literature on female sports has started to gain traction lately, and it's so satisfying to see this field discussed, finally! Female sports have been the afterthought to the glorified male athletics since the beginning of time, and even though we've made a lot of progress in other areas of inequality, it seems to me that sports are behind in that regard.

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Skater Girl - Robin Pacific
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Skater Girl - Robin Pacific

This memoir was such a raw and honest account. It was not at all the linear skating story I imagined and instead became a nonlinear read of many interesting essays on Pacific’s eventful life.

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I Cheerfully Refuse - Leif Engler
Mona Angéline Mona Angéline

I Cheerfully Refuse - Leif Engler

“I Cheerfully Refuse” is a beautifully crafted dystopian story taking us on protagonist Rainy’s journey as he sails the Great Lakes when life as he knows it doesn't fit an ever changing world any longer.

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Joe Pete - Ian McCulloch
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Joe Pete - Ian McCulloch

Joe Pete”, published post mortem and written by Ian McCulloch, flew into my life to manifest itself as a truly beautiful work of indigenous literary fiction.

Thank you Ian McCulloch for this story. Its depth and all it invokes. Its love and its grace. Its unflinching, refreshing authenticity. Thank you.

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The Road to the Salt Sea - Samuel Kóláwole
Mona Angéline Mona Angéline

The Road to the Salt Sea - Samuel Kóláwole

“The Road to the Salt Sea” by Samuel Kóláwole is an impressive new work of contemporary fiction, taking us on one man's migratory journey from sub-Saharan Africa to Europe. It is a story of classism, of racism, of the exploitative nature of humanity in a corruptive environment, and then some.

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Sociopath - Patric Gagne
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Sociopath - Patric Gagne

“My name is Patric Gagne and I am a sociopath.”

Gagne feels basic emotions like happiness and anger, while more complex emotions like guilt, empathy, remorse, and even love, are foreign to her. She describes the stress of not having natural access to these feelings as the cause of her compulsive acts of violence and destructive behavior such as stalking, stealing, hurting people and even animals.

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We are not Animals - Martin Rizzo-Martinez
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We are not Animals - Martin Rizzo-Martinez

Published in the Beakful Litblog.

If you had to talk about the lives of the indigenous peoples that inhabited California before and during the arrival of whites, would you have much to say? Do we really know much at all?

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Invisible Tears - Iram Gilani
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Invisible Tears - Iram Gilani

Do you put family above all else? What would it take to change that for you?

In “Invisible Tears”, Iram Gilani tells us about her awful journey of abuse throughout many years of her life, all of it condemned by her family. Gilani deals with abandonment, molestation, forced marriage, and even being shot, leading to irreversible wounds and pain.

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Prescriptions for Pain - Philip Eil
Mona Angéline Mona Angéline

Prescriptions for Pain - Philip Eil

Can doctors be blamed for the opioid crisis?

What if a doctor prescribes narcotics to a patient who then dies a few days later from an overdose? Would you hold the doctor accountable?

What if said doctor established a clinic prescribing opioids with the sole goal of making money? What if these prescriptions were for insubordinate amounts of pills per person, in some cases for 600-800 pills per month?

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The Morningside - Téa Obreht
Mona Angéline Mona Angéline

The Morningside - Téa Obreht

If you were tasked with the creation of a story that combines the genres of dystopia, magical realism, and even some mystery, how would you go about it?

Téa Obreht manages this feat wonderfully in "The Morningside" by taking the reader into a world changed forever due to climate change.

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