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A review by wordsofapaige
Siri, Who Am I? by Sam Tschida
funny
lighthearted
fast-paced
- Strong character development? Yes
- Loveable characters? It's complicated
- Diverse cast of characters? Yes
- Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes
4.0
I received a copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.
This book was pure escapism for me. So much so that it had me up until the early hours of the morning because I just could not put it down.
Mia wakes up in the hospital with zero idea who she is, and nothing on her but her phone. For some reason her phone is basically empty, no emails, texts or anything that could lead her to finding out who she is. So yes, you have to suspend your disbelief, BUT you'll get so swept up in the story that it doesn't particularly matter.
Mia is character that you'll both love and hate a little bit. Only because she is so insanely confident in how great a person she is, and how she must do all these good things and be such a wonderful human. But as a reader you really quickly suspect that that probably isn't the case, so you're left with this slightly irked feeling as you can so clearly tell that she isn't quite right about her life.
However there is so amazing character growth over the course of the book, there's some kickass girl power going on and I really enjoyed that aspect. It definitely starts to come into its own in the second half of the book. I got swept away and read the vast majority of this in one sitting. Something I rarely do anymore!
If you're looking for an escape, for something to distract you and for a book you'll power through in no time at all. This is the one for you. It's light, it's fluffy, it's fairly ridiculous. And it's oh so worth the read.
This book was pure escapism for me. So much so that it had me up until the early hours of the morning because I just could not put it down.
Mia wakes up in the hospital with zero idea who she is, and nothing on her but her phone. For some reason her phone is basically empty, no emails, texts or anything that could lead her to finding out who she is. So yes, you have to suspend your disbelief, BUT you'll get so swept up in the story that it doesn't particularly matter.
Mia is character that you'll both love and hate a little bit. Only because she is so insanely confident in how great a person she is, and how she must do all these good things and be such a wonderful human. But as a reader you really quickly suspect that that probably isn't the case, so you're left with this slightly irked feeling as you can so clearly tell that she isn't quite right about her life.
However there is so amazing character growth over the course of the book, there's some kickass girl power going on and I really enjoyed that aspect. It definitely starts to come into its own in the second half of the book. I got swept away and read the vast majority of this in one sitting. Something I rarely do anymore!
If you're looking for an escape, for something to distract you and for a book you'll power through in no time at all. This is the one for you. It's light, it's fluffy, it's fairly ridiculous. And it's oh so worth the read.