A Hard Freedom by Dan Chung
Published July 2026 via Bloomsbury Academic
★★★
Years ago, Chung got involved with an organization dedicated to supporting North Korean refugees and defectors who have made their way to China and, sometimes, beyond. A Hard Freedom tells some of his stories, and some of the stories of the people he's met along the way.
I read Barbara Demick's Nothing to Envy more than a decade ago, and it's stuck with me enough that I take a second look whenever I see a book about North Korea. To be fair, I am curious about most places I've never been (exceptions include Delaware and Tampa), but North Korea is of course unique for its closed-off nature and secretiveness.
A Hard Freedom wasn't really what I expected. Based on the description, I thought this would be largely about defectors' journeys through China (where detection by authorities can mean deportation back to North Korea, and consequently imprisonment in a labor camp) and into third countries (including South Korea). Maybe some anecdotes, but a few people's stories told in full throughout the book. I didn't expect so much of this to be about religion—it turns out that Crossing Borders, the organization Chung is involved in, is a Christian organization, and a lot of what they do centers on religion. Chung says early on that the point of the book is not to proselytize, but that religion is part of his story (and I suppose the organization's), and so he's included it. I do think he tried to limit how much he talked about religion, but it feels like perhaps religion is so ingrained in his life that even limiting how much it comes up in the book makes for...well, quite a lot more than I expected, when I thought I was just going to be reading a book about North Korea.
The book itself was a bit of a mixed bag for me. There's some interesting research and some devastating stories. Crossing Borders works mostly with women, many of whom were sold as wives or slaves when they crossed into China, and many of whom have suffered the sorts of hardships that should be unimaginable. I haven't spent a lot of time thinking about the demographics of people who try to get out of North Korea, but Chung notes that, for various reasons, it's often women of low social status. And again for various reasons, they're incredibly vulnerable in China, and even if they make it to South Korea, it can take a long time and a lot of work and support to reach any kind of emotional and physical stability.
The structure of the book felt disjointed, though, with a fair amount of repetition. Chung talks about a number of women he and Crossing Borders worked with, and returns to some of their stories throughout the book, but I found myself wishing he'd worked with a journalist who was used to teasing out stories and digging deep for details. There are also some odd things, like an out-of-left-field quotation from Elon Musk talking about how much better it is to be a prisoner of war in the US than in North Korea, and like...while I don't doubt that, there's also, like...Guantanamo...and everything the US is currently doing to immigrants...and if someone is going to be quoted on the subject, I'd prefer it to be an expert than it to be an egotistical billionaire.
With all this said: I'd likely still have read the book if I'd known that it was about the experiences of a specific, religious organization, but I'd have adjusted my expectations accordingly. And I'm curious now about the book Chung's former colleague wrote—but I'll go into that one with my expectations a bit clearer, and then I'll go read something a bit more academic on the subject.
Thanks to the author and publisher for providing a review copy through NetGalley.
liralen liest
Friday, June 26, 2026
Thursday, June 25, 2026
Review: "Gutted" by Maide Korte
Gutted by Maida Korte
Published June 2026 via She Writes Press
★★★★
Korte was a city person through and through—but her husband dreamed of life in the country, so they compromised with a rambling old Victorian house in a smaller town. They were better qualified than most to take on a house Project: Korte's background was in interior design, and her husband was a contractor. So she had the vision, and he had the know-how to make it happen...once they got past the structural issues.
I have a longstanding love of house-restoration books. It's not a project that I particularly want to take on—keeping a one-bedroom apartment clean is enough for me!—but to me reading about house restoration is the real estate equivalent of armchair traveling. Bring on the floor plans, the unexpected termites, the dithering over which tile to use, the walls torn down to reshape the space...
Gutted is partly a house-restoration memoir, but more than that I'd say that it's Korte's story of growing up and finding a place for herself, and then finding a new place when things changed. It's a quick read but a fairly quiet book: The basic house restoration took years, and if I had to guess I'd say that the finer details are ongoing; Korte doesn't chart the process from beginning to end but rather dips in and out, highlighting certain areas (my mind was boggled by the idea of a space that may have been designed with pre-burial casket viewings in mind) and leaving others untouched. 3.5 stars for me (predictably, I would have liked more house details), but will be higher for those looking for something that is more about family and figuring oneself out.
Thanks to the author and publisher for providing a review copy through NetGalley.
Published June 2026 via She Writes Press
★★★★
Korte was a city person through and through—but her husband dreamed of life in the country, so they compromised with a rambling old Victorian house in a smaller town. They were better qualified than most to take on a house Project: Korte's background was in interior design, and her husband was a contractor. So she had the vision, and he had the know-how to make it happen...once they got past the structural issues.
I have a longstanding love of house-restoration books. It's not a project that I particularly want to take on—keeping a one-bedroom apartment clean is enough for me!—but to me reading about house restoration is the real estate equivalent of armchair traveling. Bring on the floor plans, the unexpected termites, the dithering over which tile to use, the walls torn down to reshape the space...
Gutted is partly a house-restoration memoir, but more than that I'd say that it's Korte's story of growing up and finding a place for herself, and then finding a new place when things changed. It's a quick read but a fairly quiet book: The basic house restoration took years, and if I had to guess I'd say that the finer details are ongoing; Korte doesn't chart the process from beginning to end but rather dips in and out, highlighting certain areas (my mind was boggled by the idea of a space that may have been designed with pre-burial casket viewings in mind) and leaving others untouched. 3.5 stars for me (predictably, I would have liked more house details), but will be higher for those looking for something that is more about family and figuring oneself out.
Thanks to the author and publisher for providing a review copy through NetGalley.
Wednesday, June 24, 2026
Review: "In Every Possible Way" by Alicia Thompson
In Every Possible Way by Alicia Thompson
Published June 2026 via Berkley
★★★★
Jess is fresh off a bad first date in her home of Florida, and she's ready to throw in the towel when life throws her for a loop: She's mugged, she hits her head...and she wakes up in Ireland. No passport, no money, no idea how she got there or how to get home. And no contacts except Eamonn, the first man she meets there...
I am predictable: I like travel books (even if that travel is accidental), and I like books set in places I don't know well, and I like nontoxic relationships. Also, I don't always read (or remember) the entire description before I commit to reading a book, because aren't books a bit more fun with an extra element of surprise?
Fortunately, this one delivered. Jess ends up seeing a fair amount of Ireland over a short couple of days, some of it touristy and some of it a little more off the beaten path. There's a sort of dreamy sense to her experience there, because she knows full well that she shouldn't be there, that it makes no sense that she's there, that it can't last. And every so often we get a reminder from Florida that the universe, too, knows that the time can't last. (Jess tries to go to the US embassy to get things sorted out, but it is conveniently a holiday weekend, so there's time to get caught up in things.)
The romance is sweet. Jess and Eamonn have a good dynamic, initially pretty uncertain but always respectful. We have some of the typical "he thinks she's dating someone else", but they get over that reasonably quickly. The chemistry is there early, but the figuring out what to do with it is more complicated...especially for Jess, who of course knows things Eamonn doesn't.
A few quibbles: I didn't like the epilogue—in retrospect I should have just skipped it, but of course you never know that going in! Late-in-game POV shifts always throw me for a loop, and it just didn't feel necessary. I'd also like to know just what Jess would expect at the US embassy in Ireland. Contacting the embassy is the logical thing to do if you've lost your passport on vacation, yes...but imagine the questions for someone in Jess's situation! No passport, but also no record of ever entering the country...and also no record of her ever having a passport, because, well, she doesn't have a passport. I mean, obviously there's a reason the story goes off in a different direction, but I am bad at suspending disbelief (see: me being predictable), and I think I just could have used a bit more acknowledgement that as complicated as things are, they have the capacity to get much worse, very quickly.
But overall? Much fun. This is the second of Thompson's books that I've read, and it was a better fit for me than the first (which was also fine, just—it wasn't set in Ireland). Would read more along these lines.
Thanks to the author and publisher for providing a review copy through NetGalley.
Published June 2026 via Berkley
★★★★
Jess is fresh off a bad first date in her home of Florida, and she's ready to throw in the towel when life throws her for a loop: She's mugged, she hits her head...and she wakes up in Ireland. No passport, no money, no idea how she got there or how to get home. And no contacts except Eamonn, the first man she meets there...
I am predictable: I like travel books (even if that travel is accidental), and I like books set in places I don't know well, and I like nontoxic relationships. Also, I don't always read (or remember) the entire description before I commit to reading a book, because aren't books a bit more fun with an extra element of surprise?
Fortunately, this one delivered. Jess ends up seeing a fair amount of Ireland over a short couple of days, some of it touristy and some of it a little more off the beaten path. There's a sort of dreamy sense to her experience there, because she knows full well that she shouldn't be there, that it makes no sense that she's there, that it can't last. And every so often we get a reminder from Florida that the universe, too, knows that the time can't last. (Jess tries to go to the US embassy to get things sorted out, but it is conveniently a holiday weekend, so there's time to get caught up in things.)
The romance is sweet. Jess and Eamonn have a good dynamic, initially pretty uncertain but always respectful. We have some of the typical "he thinks she's dating someone else", but they get over that reasonably quickly. The chemistry is there early, but the figuring out what to do with it is more complicated...especially for Jess, who of course knows things Eamonn doesn't.
A few quibbles: I didn't like the epilogue—in retrospect I should have just skipped it, but of course you never know that going in! Late-in-game POV shifts always throw me for a loop, and it just didn't feel necessary. I'd also like to know just what Jess would expect at the US embassy in Ireland. Contacting the embassy is the logical thing to do if you've lost your passport on vacation, yes...but imagine the questions for someone in Jess's situation! No passport, but also no record of ever entering the country...and also no record of her ever having a passport, because, well, she doesn't have a passport. I mean, obviously there's a reason the story goes off in a different direction, but I am bad at suspending disbelief (see: me being predictable), and I think I just could have used a bit more acknowledgement that as complicated as things are, they have the capacity to get much worse, very quickly.
But overall? Much fun. This is the second of Thompson's books that I've read, and it was a better fit for me than the first (which was also fine, just—it wasn't set in Ireland). Would read more along these lines.
Thanks to the author and publisher for providing a review copy through NetGalley.
Tuesday, June 23, 2026
Review: "Long Island Girls" by Gabrielle Korn
Long Island Girls by Gabrielle Korn
Published June 2026 via St. Martin's Press
★★★★
Long Island, 2005: Susan feels awkward and out of place in her teenageness. A chance encounter with Eliza leaves her reeling—both because of her own inadequate reaction to revelations about Eliza's experiences and because Eliza awakens something in Susan that she hadn't really been aware of. It goes nowhere. And for years after, Susan wonders: Was she the one?
It's so odd to be old enough that formative periods of my childhood are now historical fiction. Long Island Girls doesn't stay in 2005—every so often it jumps forward, and Susan ages, and the historical context changes. Susan is involved in the music scene, parts of which go a bit over my head (I skipped the whole pop culture thing when I was a teenager), but her understanding of what is normal and what is okay in the music scene changes as she ages and as cultural understandings change.
Susan thinks: I'm just learning a lot about who gets to make art in this city. (loc. 930*)
A number of themes run through the book, but one of the ones with the most sticking power is Susan's nonrelationship with Eliza. Their first interaction is something fleeting, but over the years they run into each other again, and again, and each interaction rewrites what Susan knows about Eliza, and sometimes what she knows about herself.
"You're not going to want to hear this," he says, "But I don't think we ever really get over the things that end before they begin." (loc. 2647)
At times I wished Long Island Girls had stayed in the 2000s, just because it felt so strange and specific to read about my own teenaged years—I turned 17 and graduated from high school in 2005—through the lens of historical fiction. The book wouldn't be able to do a lot of the things it is doing without spanning decades, though. I'm so curious to see how this will land for people from different generations—from we millennials (nary a mention of avocado toast, I should note) who remember a time when landlines were the norm to those who have grown up with and on social media.
*Quotes are from an ARC and may not be final.
Thanks to the author and publisher for inviting me to read a review copy through NetGalley.
Published June 2026 via St. Martin's Press
★★★★
Long Island, 2005: Susan feels awkward and out of place in her teenageness. A chance encounter with Eliza leaves her reeling—both because of her own inadequate reaction to revelations about Eliza's experiences and because Eliza awakens something in Susan that she hadn't really been aware of. It goes nowhere. And for years after, Susan wonders: Was she the one?
It's so odd to be old enough that formative periods of my childhood are now historical fiction. Long Island Girls doesn't stay in 2005—every so often it jumps forward, and Susan ages, and the historical context changes. Susan is involved in the music scene, parts of which go a bit over my head (I skipped the whole pop culture thing when I was a teenager), but her understanding of what is normal and what is okay in the music scene changes as she ages and as cultural understandings change.
Susan thinks: I'm just learning a lot about who gets to make art in this city. (loc. 930*)
A number of themes run through the book, but one of the ones with the most sticking power is Susan's nonrelationship with Eliza. Their first interaction is something fleeting, but over the years they run into each other again, and again, and each interaction rewrites what Susan knows about Eliza, and sometimes what she knows about herself.
"You're not going to want to hear this," he says, "But I don't think we ever really get over the things that end before they begin." (loc. 2647)
At times I wished Long Island Girls had stayed in the 2000s, just because it felt so strange and specific to read about my own teenaged years—I turned 17 and graduated from high school in 2005—through the lens of historical fiction. The book wouldn't be able to do a lot of the things it is doing without spanning decades, though. I'm so curious to see how this will land for people from different generations—from we millennials (nary a mention of avocado toast, I should note) who remember a time when landlines were the norm to those who have grown up with and on social media.
*Quotes are from an ARC and may not be final.
Thanks to the author and publisher for inviting me to read a review copy through NetGalley.
Monday, June 22, 2026
Review: "The Rise and Fall of the Non-trad Wife" by Natasha Ansari
The Rise and Fall of the Non-trad Wife by Natasha Ansari
Published June 2025
★★★
I recently went down a rabbit hole that started with a tradwife murder mystery and kind of...went from there. This came up in my search, and I couldn't tell whether or not it was about, well, tradwives (women voluntarily staying at home and, like...being 1950s housewives, but in the 2020s?). But it was on Kindle Unlimited, and I make questionable reading choices when I temporarily have Kindle Unlimited, so I thought I'd give it a go.
Now: This was not the sort of tradwife story I was looking for. That's just as well (because tradwife life sounds terrible, and I wouldn't wish it upon Ansari or almost anyone else), but I'll just put that up front in case the title raised questions for anyone else. But this is a story of expectation vs. reality: Ansari got married in part because that was the societal expectation, and over time she found that what she wanted and expected out of marriage was not what her marriage looked like, and not what it was going to look like. And: that she was going to feel more like herself if not in this marriage.
This is one for readers who have followed convention and then realized that convention isn't, or isn't entirely, for them. It wasn't what I was looking for, but that's not a fault of the book (I was looking for something pretty specific!), but it's a very fast read. Here's hoping that Ansari's life looks more like one that she wants now.
Published June 2025
★★★
I recently went down a rabbit hole that started with a tradwife murder mystery and kind of...went from there. This came up in my search, and I couldn't tell whether or not it was about, well, tradwives (women voluntarily staying at home and, like...being 1950s housewives, but in the 2020s?). But it was on Kindle Unlimited, and I make questionable reading choices when I temporarily have Kindle Unlimited, so I thought I'd give it a go.
Now: This was not the sort of tradwife story I was looking for. That's just as well (because tradwife life sounds terrible, and I wouldn't wish it upon Ansari or almost anyone else), but I'll just put that up front in case the title raised questions for anyone else. But this is a story of expectation vs. reality: Ansari got married in part because that was the societal expectation, and over time she found that what she wanted and expected out of marriage was not what her marriage looked like, and not what it was going to look like. And: that she was going to feel more like herself if not in this marriage.
This is one for readers who have followed convention and then realized that convention isn't, or isn't entirely, for them. It wasn't what I was looking for, but that's not a fault of the book (I was looking for something pretty specific!), but it's a very fast read. Here's hoping that Ansari's life looks more like one that she wants now.
Sunday, June 21, 2026
Review: Short story: "Julia at the Drive-In" by Rainbow Rowell
Julia at the Drive-In by Rainbow Rowell
Published June 2026 via Amazon Original Stories
Julia was invisible until Chloe came along—came along and made her over and treated her like someone worth talking to, worth listening to. But Julia still feels like her old self, and when the boy she likes starts talking to her at the drive-in, she's afraid to ask: does he recognize her?
I've read and liked a few of Rowell's full-length books, and honestly, I would follow these characters into a full-length book. Julia is insecure but practical; she knows she's third-wheeling on her friend's date, and she's fine with that to a point, after which she's well prepared to go, ah, un-third-wheel herself.
Most of the story is about Julia's interaction with her crush (and whether it will go anywhere, and whether he knows she's the same girl who used to be invisible), but I was most interested in the friendship part of things. Because: Whether Chloe is in fact a supportive friend could go either way in this story, and we don't really know until the end. Does she only like Julia when Julia does what Chloe says? Does she notice when Julia's not there? How much will she prioritize her date (or perhaps we should say hookup) over her evening with her friend? And ultimately, if this were something longer (though the story feels complete as it is), it's that look at friendship that would keep me reading.
Thanks to the author and publisher for providing a review copy through NetGalley.
Published June 2026 via Amazon Original Stories
Julia was invisible until Chloe came along—came along and made her over and treated her like someone worth talking to, worth listening to. But Julia still feels like her old self, and when the boy she likes starts talking to her at the drive-in, she's afraid to ask: does he recognize her?
I've read and liked a few of Rowell's full-length books, and honestly, I would follow these characters into a full-length book. Julia is insecure but practical; she knows she's third-wheeling on her friend's date, and she's fine with that to a point, after which she's well prepared to go, ah, un-third-wheel herself.
Most of the story is about Julia's interaction with her crush (and whether it will go anywhere, and whether he knows she's the same girl who used to be invisible), but I was most interested in the friendship part of things. Because: Whether Chloe is in fact a supportive friend could go either way in this story, and we don't really know until the end. Does she only like Julia when Julia does what Chloe says? Does she notice when Julia's not there? How much will she prioritize her date (or perhaps we should say hookup) over her evening with her friend? And ultimately, if this were something longer (though the story feels complete as it is), it's that look at friendship that would keep me reading.
Thanks to the author and publisher for providing a review copy through NetGalley.
Saturday, June 20, 2026
Review: Short story: "Safe Harbor" by Nicola Yoon and David Yoon
Safe Harbor by Nicola Yoon and David Yoon
Published June 2026 via Amazon Original Stories
Isabel isn't sure of much, but she is sure that she doesn't want to be at the Safe Harbor therapy program. Her parents' divorce is bad enough; having to discuss it with other teenagers whose families are going through divorce is adding insult to injury.
The authors do a good job of differentiating the various characters throughout the story, which is impressive given the length of the story and that almost all the characters are introduced pretty much all at once at the beginning. I'm not wildly impressed by the therapist in the story; on the one hand, she's human, which is great (I do not stan Miracle Therapists in books), but on the other hand, I found her pretty unprofessional. Nice to see the teenagers connecting anyway, and finding ways to bring their walls down a bit.
Reading short stories from this collection has been super interesting, because many of the authors are ones whose books I've seen but not (yet) read; nice to get a chance to try them out.
Thanks to the authors and publisher for providing a review copy through NetGalley.
Published June 2026 via Amazon Original Stories
Isabel isn't sure of much, but she is sure that she doesn't want to be at the Safe Harbor therapy program. Her parents' divorce is bad enough; having to discuss it with other teenagers whose families are going through divorce is adding insult to injury.
The authors do a good job of differentiating the various characters throughout the story, which is impressive given the length of the story and that almost all the characters are introduced pretty much all at once at the beginning. I'm not wildly impressed by the therapist in the story; on the one hand, she's human, which is great (I do not stan Miracle Therapists in books), but on the other hand, I found her pretty unprofessional. Nice to see the teenagers connecting anyway, and finding ways to bring their walls down a bit.
Reading short stories from this collection has been super interesting, because many of the authors are ones whose books I've seen but not (yet) read; nice to get a chance to try them out.
Thanks to the authors and publisher for providing a review copy through NetGalley.
Friday, June 19, 2026
Review: Short story: "Winter Breakage" by David Levithan
Winter Breakage by David Levithan
Published June 2026 via Amazon Original Stories
It's winter break, and Eric is meeting up with his college friends in New York. He likes them (mostly), but he still feels like an odd one out...like maybe none of them has quite seen him yet.
This makes for a sweet and very relatable short story. I wonder how many people have felt just the same way as Eric—these are sort of his friends by default, and he's not sure if he really fits in, if they actually like him or if he's just the one tagging along. And that feeling when you think you've finally found someone you actually click with!
I quite liked the sense that there could be something romantic or there could be something platonic—or, I guess that's not entirely accurate; maybe it's more the reminder that a fledgling friendship can feel as exciting and daunting as a fledgling romance. This felt just right for a short story, too; satisfying without inspiring a wish that it were longer.
Thanks to the author and publisher for providing a review copy through NetGalley.
Published June 2026 via Amazon Original Stories
It's winter break, and Eric is meeting up with his college friends in New York. He likes them (mostly), but he still feels like an odd one out...like maybe none of them has quite seen him yet.
This makes for a sweet and very relatable short story. I wonder how many people have felt just the same way as Eric—these are sort of his friends by default, and he's not sure if he really fits in, if they actually like him or if he's just the one tagging along. And that feeling when you think you've finally found someone you actually click with!
I quite liked the sense that there could be something romantic or there could be something platonic—or, I guess that's not entirely accurate; maybe it's more the reminder that a fledgling friendship can feel as exciting and daunting as a fledgling romance. This felt just right for a short story, too; satisfying without inspiring a wish that it were longer.
Thanks to the author and publisher for providing a review copy through NetGalley.
Thursday, June 18, 2026
Review: Short story: "The Price of Admission" by Dustin Thao
The Price of Admission by Dustin Thao
Published June 2026 via Amazon Original Stories
Evan's life isn't easy, but he makes do: between scholarships and part-time jobs, he's confident that he can move up in the world and fulfill his mother's dreams for him. And there's a boy—one who comes from an entirely different world, but who seems to see Evan for who he is...at least, behind closed doors.
This is one in a collection of coming-of-age stories, and one of the most interesting things about it is the ambiguity of the role of Dalton, that boy from a different world, for so much of the book. Evan is not ashamed of who he is or who his family are or the world he comes from (immigrant background, tight financial situation), but he's aware that Dalton might have reservations about their different financial backgrounds, and he responds accordingly, bending over backwards to fit better into Dalton's world. I wondered, for much of the story, how far he might be willing to go to excuse Dalton's behaviour, and at what point one of the boys would have to change their tune.
The telling is a little bit removed—the story isn't long, but it covers a significant chunk of time, so a lot of the events of the story are told through summary rather than scene. I think I might have preferred to see fewer events, but in more detail; or maybe just a longer work where the individual elements of the book could be given a bit more room to breathe. (Also interesting, in the end, who Evan chooses to criticise, and what type of work he chooses to pursue in the long run; I'd have loved to see that explored more.) Still, it explores interesting themes and allows most of the characters to have some complexity.
Thanks to the author and publisher for providing a review copy through NetGalley.
Published June 2026 via Amazon Original Stories
Evan's life isn't easy, but he makes do: between scholarships and part-time jobs, he's confident that he can move up in the world and fulfill his mother's dreams for him. And there's a boy—one who comes from an entirely different world, but who seems to see Evan for who he is...at least, behind closed doors.
This is one in a collection of coming-of-age stories, and one of the most interesting things about it is the ambiguity of the role of Dalton, that boy from a different world, for so much of the book. Evan is not ashamed of who he is or who his family are or the world he comes from (immigrant background, tight financial situation), but he's aware that Dalton might have reservations about their different financial backgrounds, and he responds accordingly, bending over backwards to fit better into Dalton's world. I wondered, for much of the story, how far he might be willing to go to excuse Dalton's behaviour, and at what point one of the boys would have to change their tune.
The telling is a little bit removed—the story isn't long, but it covers a significant chunk of time, so a lot of the events of the story are told through summary rather than scene. I think I might have preferred to see fewer events, but in more detail; or maybe just a longer work where the individual elements of the book could be given a bit more room to breathe. (Also interesting, in the end, who Evan chooses to criticise, and what type of work he chooses to pursue in the long run; I'd have loved to see that explored more.) Still, it explores interesting themes and allows most of the characters to have some complexity.
Thanks to the author and publisher for providing a review copy through NetGalley.
Wednesday, June 17, 2026
Review: Short story: "Back to You" by Ann Liang
Back to You by Ann Liang
Published June 2026 via Amazon Original Stories
Allison has done all the "right" things—competitive degree, high grades, prestigious job...and she's miserable. And maybe she wouldn't act upon that, but then there's a little incident with a late-night snack, and suddenly she finds herself with a chance to redo things...
I've read a few of Liang's novels, so it was interesting to pick up this short story for a change. For a moment I thought the book would be adult fiction, as, when the book opens, Allison is working her first job out of college...but then we got back into a more YA feel. It has a bit of a sliding-doors sense, or at least a do-over sense.
One quibble: Allison never really questions her do-over. This makes some sense in a short story (there's only so much room to figure out what might happen if two different timelines), but as someone who really loves a sliding-doors story (or, for that matter, a do-over story!), I would have liked to read something longer with this same premise. What if she had to choose? What if she didn't have to choose, but she did have to give up things she loved? What if her do-over were more temporary? Still cute, but I'd be really curious to see a longer-form version.
Thanks to the author and publisher for providing a review copy through NetGalley.
Published June 2026 via Amazon Original Stories
Allison has done all the "right" things—competitive degree, high grades, prestigious job...and she's miserable. And maybe she wouldn't act upon that, but then there's a little incident with a late-night snack, and suddenly she finds herself with a chance to redo things...
I've read a few of Liang's novels, so it was interesting to pick up this short story for a change. For a moment I thought the book would be adult fiction, as, when the book opens, Allison is working her first job out of college...but then we got back into a more YA feel. It has a bit of a sliding-doors sense, or at least a do-over sense.
One quibble: Allison never really questions her do-over. This makes some sense in a short story (there's only so much room to figure out what might happen if two different timelines), but as someone who really loves a sliding-doors story (or, for that matter, a do-over story!), I would have liked to read something longer with this same premise. What if she had to choose? What if she didn't have to choose, but she did have to give up things she loved? What if her do-over were more temporary? Still cute, but I'd be really curious to see a longer-form version.
Thanks to the author and publisher for providing a review copy through NetGalley.
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Review: "A Hard Freedom" by Dan Chung
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