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Tuesday, October 25, 2016

What I'm Reading Tuesday

     Welcome to today's edition of What I'm Reading Tuesday! This edition will include, books that I'm ready to be done with and books that I keep starting and restarting because I just can't seem to read an e-Library book until the last days before it's due.


     I've been reading Beautiful Chaos by Kami Garcia and Margaret Stohl for a couple of weeks now. I am honestly so ready for this book/series to be over and I still have one book and a spin off series to read to get the whole story. Now, I am NOT a quitter. I have never not finished a series, no matter how awful, and I don't plan to start now. Lena and Ethan are still fighting Sarafine and Abraham and there have been few plot twists in this book to keep my interest. I am within the last fifty pages and I still have not finished it.


     Now, Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children by Ransom Riggs, the movie is coming out soon and now the book has become very popular since I first tried to read it this summer on our cruise. I don't exactly know what it is about the book... but it hasn't really caught me yet, if you know what I mean. I love creepy stuff, not scary, just creepy. But the last part I got to was when Jacob entered the time loop. I'm going to start the book over again to make sure that I'm not forgetting anything.

Finally, Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire by J.K. Rowling, I have no excuse for this. No legitimate excuse anyway. I had fourteen days to read this book and waited until the last two to even start it. Now, I have 42 hours until it goes back to the e-Library this time. Yes, this is the second time I've checked it out. I am one of that small percentage who has not read the Harry Potter series. *Audience gasps* Yes, you heard me correctly. I have never read the Harry Potter series, and honestly, the only reason that I'm reading them now is because The Cursed Child came out and I may read it. My aunt has read the books and listened to the audio books many times over, and my brother read the entire series in a school year while he was in elementary school. I do believe that the books, so far, are better than the movies when it comes down to details. We shall see how long it takes me to finish the series.

     I will get through these books, be it this week or a year from now, they will eventually be finished. I would love to know what you all are reading this week. What are your thoughts on your current read? Do you have recommendations for my to-read list?

Monday, October 24, 2016

Series Review: The Lunar Chronicles by Marissa Meyer

*This post will be updated as I finish each book. *
* Each review contains spoilers. *

Cinder (The Lunar Chronicles #1)
Marissa Meyer
YA - Science Fiction, Fantasy
400 Pages

(Read 9/29/14)
     Where do I even start with this book? I love it. I am a huge fan of fairy tales and I believe Marissa Meyer did a great job of this spin-off of the classic Cinderella. The whole cyborg/lost princess Selene/supposedly murdered by her aunt/"adopted" by the Linh family/renowned mechanic backstory is spot on. 
     

Book Review: Cinder by Marissa Meyer


* This post contains spoilers. *
* To view reviews for each book in the Lunar Chronicles series, go here. *


Cinder (Lunar Chronicles #1)
Marissa Meyer
YA - Dystopian
400 Pages

(Read 9/29/14)
     Where do I even start with this book? I love it. I am a huge fan of fairy tales and I believe Marissa Meyer did a great job of this spin-off of the classic Cinderella. The whole cyborg/lost princess Selene/supposedly murdered by her aunt/"adopted" by the Linh family/renowned mechanic backstory is spot on. 

Thursday, October 20, 2016

A Book and Some Needles

     A few of you may have noticed that the name of my blog has changed. I promise, it's for a good reason. I've been reading so much more lately, now that I'm working from home again, and I feel the need to share my thoughts and input with others. I read mostly YA fiction, but I dabble in Fiction and Non-fiction as well. When I started this blog in 2014, it was meant to be an online journal of sorts, about my life and my family, and our adventures. It did start out that way, but over the last year or so (when I was actually posting) my main focus has been books and knitting/crafting. Hence the name, A Book and Some Needles.
     Books and knitting, both are my zen. My happy place, my oasis. I learned to knit in 2012 and really took to it. I still have the first thing I knit, a Blues Infinity Scarf by Jenny Withrow, which I still wear every winter. I've evolved majorly over the last two years. I've knit sweaters and shawls, socks and mittens, and more hats than I can count on both hands! I learned to spin and sew, and I feel like knowing these skills will most definitely be something to be thankful for down the line.
     I hope that seeing more book reviews doesn't bother anyone, but if it does, I'm sorry but this is my blog and the book reviews are part of it, of me and who I am. There will still be What I'm Reading Tuesdays, WIP Wednesdays, FO Fridays, and sometimes even Making Mondays if I happen to make something scrumptious that I want to share. Maybe not every week, maybe not even once a month, but I will still share my knitting with you all, even if it happens to coincide with my book reviews.

We also have an Instagram account and a Facebook page now, if you would like to follow there as well. I post all updates to both places as soon as a review or post goes live!

Instagram - @ABookAndSomeNeedles


Tuesday, October 18, 2016

Beautiful Creatures by Kami Garcia

* This post contains spoilers. *
* Read my reviews for each book HERE *


Beautiful Creatures (Caster Chronicles #1)
Kami Garcia
YA - Fantasy, Paranormal
563 Pages

(Read 9/9/16)
     I read this book under recommendation from a friend, and it was worth it. They said I needed to download it right away and read it, which I did. It took me around a week to read,  just because I was busy, not because I wasn't completely invested in Ethan and Lena's relationship.
     Ethan Wate is the main character and narrator of this book, which is different for me. I haven't read many books where there is a male narrator/main character, but I did immensely enjoy this book. He is a typical teenage boy at the beginning of the book. He's on the basketball team, he's dated cheerleaders, and he and his best friend are inseparable and basically brothers.  

Book Review: The Jewel by Amy Ewing

* This post contains spoilers *
* To read the reviews for each book in the series go here *


The Jewel (The Lone City #1)
Amy Ewing
YA - Dystopia
358 Pages

     This book showed up in my Facebook and Instagram feeds as recommended for many weeks, months maybe, before I actually downloaded it. I read the entire book in two days. Now, granted, that is my normal reading speed... I've just been slacking lately... A lot. This book was in a way, wonderful. But it was also horrible as in it was very degrading towards women, but I will explain that.

Book Review: The Crown by Kiera Cass

* This post contains spoilers *


The Crown (The Selection #5)
Kiera Cass
YA - Romance, Dystopia
288 Pages

(Read: 10/16/16)
     It took me a while to actually sit down and finish this book, I was just ready for it to be over. I seriously thought about dropping it but I would antagonize myself for not finding out what happened in the end.
     The Crown still revolves around Eadlyn and her selection, but the main story of the book is about her becoming regent after America has a heart attack and is bedridden. Though America is the queen and is not the main ruler, Maxon will not leave her side until she is fully healed and able to be by his side continuously again. Eadlyn is named regent because her twin, Ahren, has fled the country to marry the princess of France, Camille. This is technically treason, but we all know that Maxon and America are not going to prosecute their son over falling in love.
     Eadlyn is learning the hardships that come along with becoming queen but with the help of the palace staff and her Selection suitors, she is making it through. Marid Illea threatens that she needs to marry her because he is "the people's choice" and would be the only one to make the country happy. She knows that the country sees her as self-centered and unable to care for her country, let alone a husband. They all think the Selection is a rouse, but Eadlyn is actually in love, in a way, with the last five of her suitors. With Marid's threat, Eadlyn is forced to speed up the Selection and pick a husband. She is able to do this quickly and easily because I believe she was just keeping all of these guys around as company. She already knows who she's going to marry, and has for some time. 
     Hale and Ean turn out to be in love with each other, which is also treason as one cannot be in a relationship with someone other than Eadlyn while in the Selection. And being gay is still kind of taboo in Illea. She and Fox are just not compatible. 
     Growing up, she and Kile didn't get along, but now that she has actually spent time with him adn gotten to know him, she realizes that she does love him. She loves him so much that she would never condemn him to the palace for the rest of his life while he has such big dreams of being an architect. Eadlyn actually banishes him from the palace for a whole year, with the exception of her birthday, Christmas and the royal wedding. 
     Henri is the sweetest, most adorable guy I have actually ever read about. He tries so hard just to learn English to be able to communicate with Eadlyn. Though he has a translator, he is determined to be able to talk to her without one so that there is a chance that he may win this selection. Eadlyn even sets up Finnish lessons for her and the rest of the selected so that they may try just as hard to communicate with Henri as he is trying with them. I loved how Kiera Cass was so realistic in the process of Eadlyn learning Finnish, how she didn't just make it seem like since she was a princess, she could automatically accomplish any task handed to her. 
     All of this being said, Henri was Eadlyn's second choice. She originally thought that she was going to marry Kile, but she wanted him to go out and build homeless shelters and anything else his little heart desired. (Paid for by the palace, of course.) But when it came time to announce the engagement on the Report, Henri drags her over to his translator, Erik (or Eikko, if you prefer his given name), and says in his best try speaking English, something along the lines of "I won't marry you because you are in love with Erik and I want you to marry him." HOW SWEET IS THAT!? All along, this sweet Finnish boy, who could hardly speak any English, was the only one who noticed that Eadlyn and Erik were hopelessly in love. 
     Erik and Eadlyn had had an affair in the last couple months of the Selection, but had come to a mutual conclusion never to speak again after it was over. Let me just say, technically, the whole Shreave family has committed treason and could most likely be overthrown by the Illea family if this were reality. But no, this is fiction and it's going to have a happy ending. Anyway, Eadlyn (quickly, in seven minutes before the report) asks her father's blessing and announces to all of Illea that she will be marrying the translator of one of her suitors, rather than going with tradition and marrying a Selected. All is lived happily ever after (as far as we know) and I am ready for this story to be over. So please, Mrs. Cass, I think this story is finished. 

Saturday, October 15, 2016

Series Review: The Lone City series by Amy Ewing

* This Post will be updated as I finish each book. *



The Jewel (The Lone City #1)
Amy Ewing
YA - Fantasy, Dystopia
358 Pages

     This book showed up in my Facebook and Instagram feeds as recommended for many weeks, months maybe, before I actually downloaded it. I read the entire book in two days. Now, granted, that is my normal reading speed... I've just been slacking lately... A lot. This book was in a way, wonderful. But it was also horrible as in it was very degrading towards women, but I will explain that.
     This book is about a girl named Violet Lasting, aptly named for the vibrant violet color of hers eyes, in case you were wondering. Violet was born a surrogate. Not a surrogate as in a woman who volunteers to carry another woman's child... No, Violet was born the kind of surrogate who is forced to live in secluded "homes" and be raised to fulfill her duty to carry a royal child and keep the bloodline alive. The royal women in the Lone City cannot bear their own children, so they must have a surrogate. These surrogates aren't technically mortal, for lack of a better word. These women, the surrogates, have certain powers which they use to manipulate the genetics of the child, en utero, to determine how they will look and be. They manipulate the child's hair color, their skin color, and sometimes (as in Violet's case) they may even be able to manipulate the rate at which the child grows after conception.
     This book ended on a cliff hanger and I almost bought the second book on Amazon, since I'm fourteenth in line on the e-library hold list, because I was so eager to find out what happens. I didn't though, because I honestly only ever read most books once and I'm not going to spend money on a book that I might never read again. 
     These women who are born surrogates do not know that they are surrogates until they are tested at age twelve, but once they find out, they are sent to live with other surrogates and taught to use their powers. These girls are literally sold at an auction and bought by royalty based on their looks and scores on their tests. How awful is that? Violet is bought by the Duchess of the Lake, who has waited nineteen years to purchase another surrogate because it had to be the perfect one. 
     The Duchess of the Lake is obviously bipolar. When Violet first meets her, she slaps her across the face to "warn her" to behave. A few days later, she buys Violet an extravagant cello only to smash it to pieces a week or so later as punishment. The reason the Duchess purchased her is because of Violets score in the growth section of her final tests, in which she scored a perfect 10. The Duchess of the Lake wants a daughter (Royalty is only allowed one son and one daughter) who is perfect in every way... and who will be birthed in only three months. Since Violet has such great powers in growth, she practices with the Doctor to make sure that she can make this child grow at three times the rate of a normal child. They practice on a tree out in the garden because I guess growing trees is the same as growing children? Anyway, the first attempt at impregnating Violet nearly causes her to die in front of hundreds of people while performing a cello concert for them, and the second time is unsuccessful as well, but not as dramatically. 
     Before Violet was sold to bear the Duchesses child, she was "prepped" by a man named Lucien, who is a Lady in waiting for the Electress (Basically the queen, who isn't really royal, of everyone including the duchesses who are actually royal). Lucien sees something in Violet that reminds him of his sister, who was also a surrogate, and he wants to save her from the horrible, short life that she would endure and promises to get her out. He gives her a key thing that is like a walkie talkie, but no one can eavesdrop on your conversation. An invention of Lucien himself. Violet ruins this plan when she and Ash, her lady's niece's boyfriend, get caught together. 
   Ash is a consort who was also purchased, but as a boyfriend for the Duchess's niece. At the end of the book, she and Ash are caught in bed together and Ash is beaten in front of her and dragged to the dungeon. Violet is dragged upstairs to her room to await punishment. At the last minute, her key/walkie talkie-like thing that no one can ease drop on "rings" and Garnet, the Duchess's son, says "We are going to get you out." That's it, that's how it ends. Can you see why I was so eager to read the rest of the series?
     Overall, I give this book a 4/5 because I really hate that this book is about selling women for their bodies. Even if it isn't in a prostitutional way. Carrying a child is a blessing that not all women are able to enjoy, but I don't believe that women who can have children should be forced to carry for those who can't. If this book were about voluntary surrogacy, this book would get a 5/5. Get the book, read it, cry a little and maybe yell a bit. Read the whole series in two days, if you can manage that. Just don't spoil it for me.



The White Rose (The Lone City #2)
Amy Ewing
YA - Dystopia
308 Pages
 
     So if you remember, back in October I read The Jewel by Amy Ewing, book one in the Lone City trilogy. Boy did I rave about that book, and frankly, still do. The White Rose though, not full marks, but a four out of five stars for me. The White Rose gave some more insight to what Violet and the other surrogates are capable of, and how twisted the nobility of the Lone City are, but I felt like it was just a companion piece to the story. I know that sounds really bad, but I don't mean it to be. This book was mainly about escaping the Duchess of the Lake and keeping Ash from being caught, but frankly, I enjoyed the last chapters, when Violet, Raven and Ash were living with Sil at the White Rose best. 

     The White Rose takes place after Violet and Ash are caught in bed together in the Duchess of the Lake's manor. A companion and a surrogate, *tsk tsk tsk*  Ash is beaten in front of Violet and then taken to the Dungeon, then the Duchess brings Annabelle, Violet's mute, innocent, lady in waiting, and slits her throat and tells Violet that she killed her.  Of course, Lucien is MIA and Garnet is supposed to be Violet's rescuer. Violet is supposed to wake up in the morgue "dead" in a few hours, but she gave the serum to Raven, her best friend instead, to save her from the abuse and the pregnancy that will kill her. Raven does miscarry and die after arriving at the White Rose, but Violet revives her using her powers correctly. More on that in a bit. 
     Garnet manages to get Violet, and Ash (because we all knew that she wasn't leaving without him), out of the manor and to the morgue. From there, Violet has to use the auguries (powers) to manipulate the incinerator, the only way out of the morgue where no one will find them out. She, Ash, and Raven travel through the sewage system following a map that Lucien gave them when Raven (who apparently has a new ability) takes them right to where the exit they've been looking for. Ash is seen, and Violet gets separated, but in the end, they make it to the safe house separately after a night apart. 
     The journey from there goes from a companion house disguised as a man and his prostitutes to hiding in a storage compartment in a train, to being stored in shipping containers until finally, they make it to Lucien and Garnet. From there, Violet has to "trust her instincts" and lead them to where they need to be. That's how they end up at the White Rose.
     Okay, now my favorite part! Sil, a sassy, no nonsense, maternal, former surrogate built up this place, The White Rose, a safe haven for herself and other surrogates, to learn the real use of their abilities. The auguries are not the powers that surrogates are born with, the nobility twisted and corrupted the girls' ancestral connection with the elements when their people (the nobility's) took the island and murdered the natives. The girls who are confirmed "surrogates" are actually great-great-great-great (continues?) grandchildren of the native people of the island that had a connection with the elements. They were one with the elements and the elements were with them. Sil teaches Violet this, and Violet teaches Sienna (the lioness from the auction), and two other girls when brought to her.
     The story takes a dramatic turn when Violet finds out that the Duchess of the Lake has quickly and quietly found a replacement surrogate (who becomes quickly pregnant) after Violet escapes. This surrogate turns out to be Violet's younger sister, the girl that Violet is trying to start a revolution to save. 

     Like I said, this book isn't as great as the first, but I'm looking forward to delving into The Black Key (Book #3).

The Black Key (The Lone City #3)
Amy Ewing
YA - Dystopia
304 Pages

Tuesday, October 11, 2016

Book Review: Double Identity by Margaret Peterson-Haddix


* This post contains spoilers *


Double Identity
Margaret Peterson-Haddix
YA - Science Fiction
234 Pages


     This book is honestly my all time favorite book. I first read it in fourth grade for the Bluebonnet reading thing they do every year here in Texas. You read as many books off the list of books nominated for the Texas Bluebonnet Award, and then vote on your favorite. (Read more about the TBA here.) I love science fiction, in case you all haven't noticed, and was very intrigued by the summary of this book....

"So my only protection is a kindergarten teacher and a ninety-eight-pound female minister....And they don't even believe I'm in danger. 

As Bethany approaches her thirteenth birthday, her parents act more oddly than usual. Her mother cries constantly, and her father barely lets Bethany out of his sight. Then one morning he hustles the entire family into the car, drives across several state lines -- and leaves Bethany with an aunt she never knew existed. Bethany has no idea what's going on. She's worried her mom and dad are running from some kind of trouble, but she can't find out because they won't tell her where they are going. 

Bethany's only clue is a few words she overheard her father tell her aunt: "She doesn't know anything about Elizabeth." But Aunt Myrlie won't tell Bethany who Elizabeth is, and she won't explain why people in her small town react to Bethany as if they've seen a ghost. The mystery intensifies when Bethany gets a package from her father containing four different birth certificates from four different states, with four different last names -- and thousands of dollars in cash. And when a strange man shows up asking questions, Bethany realizes the's not the only one who's desperate to unravel the secrets of her past"
(Double Identity, Margaret Peterson-Haddix, 2007)

     I can't tell you why this is my favorite book, as I can't even figure it out myself. It's about a girl named Bethany who was cloned from her older sister, Elizabeth, who died at thirteen in a car accident. I guess what intrigues me, as someone with an interest in psychology, is why the parents would do this. In a way, I feel like I should be revolted. I mean, the parents didn't want to accept that their daughter was dead so much that they took her cells and cloned her. I understand not wanting to lose someone you love, especially a child, but cloning them so that they're technically not dead? That's taking it a little too far. 
    
      As Bethany's thirteenth birthday approaches, her dad packs her up and dumps her at her (never before spoken of) Aunt Myrlie. He promises that he will be back, that he is just going to get her hysterical, guilt ridden mother, some help. Being only twelve years old, Bethany is obviously scared. I think even as teenagers, if our parents suddenly decided to dump us on an unknown, very distant relative's doorstep and drive off into the night, we'd probably freak out too... Just a little bit, because you know, nothing bothers teenagers.  She eventually realizes that her parents aren't coming back anytime soon, and  her assumption is proven correct when her dad sends an envelope full of money and identification to Aunt Myrlie. 
     
     Bethany keeps hearing Aunt Myrlie and other people around town talk about someone named Elizabeth. Sometimes they even call her Elizabeth. The teachers at her new school, Aunt Myrlie's friends, and sometimes, Aunt Myrlie's daughter Jocelyn slips up and calls her Elizabeth. If I were her, I'd be demanding answers. But of course, this is fiction, and she's going to play the "I'm going to act like no one would answer my questions anyway so why should I ask?" card. 

     Okay, so I'm being a little melodramatic on her not asking any questions. Her dad told her straight up when they left that she wasn't to try to contact him, and she wasn't to bug anyone about her situation. He had a good reason. As it turns out, her parents are being "hunted down."  Not in the "you're going to die" way, but the man who went halfsies with her dad during the cloning experiment is looking for them. Her dad thought that he could lead the man away from Bethany so that she's not in danger, but the guy eventually figures it out and breaks into Aunt Myrlie's house. It turns out that the guy and Bethany's dad were both cloning children, but the man's half of the experiment was not successful which caused Bethany's dad to go into hiding because the guy was jealous and probably wanted revenge in a way. 

     In the end, after Bethany is told everything about Elizabeth (even watches some home videos with her in them), she is reunited with her mom and dad and everyone gets to move on with their life. The main reason that Bethany was dropped at Myrlie's house a week before her thirteenth birthday was because her parents were so worried that since she was cloned, she was only destined to live to her thirteenth birthday. 

     Like I said, I don't know why this is my favorite book, but I"ve read it four times already and I'm reading it a fifth. I've even purchased it in paperback and am enjoying writing and making notes on things that make me think on the pages. (Does anyone else do this, or is it just me?) 


Sunday, October 9, 2016

Book Review: The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald




The Great Gatsby
F. Scott Fitzgerald
Classics - Literature
180 Pages

     I just finished reading this book for school and I enjoyed it... to a point. The storyline was well written, from Nick Carraway's point of view. The story was about Jay Gatsby, a man from the western United States who moved to West Egg in New York, and his love for Nick's cousin, Daisy Buchanan.

     In the beginning of the story, Nick Carraway has just moved to West Egg. He moves in next to a "party house" occupied by Jay Gatsby. Mr. Gatsby lives alone, except for his house staff, but throws lavish parties every weekend which just about everyone in New York and New Jersey attends. Nick spends the first chapters visiting with his cousin Daisy and her husband Tom over in East Egg. While there, he is introduced to golfer extraordinaire Jordan Baker, who he later realizes that he loves.

     After a while, Nick is personally invited to one of Gatsby's parties through invitation via Gatsby's Butler. Most people just show up by word of mouth. He attends the party and runs into none other than Miss Jordan Baker. They drink, and eat, and dance through the night. As Nick decides to get ready to leave, he runs into Mr. Gatsby himself (not knowing that it was actually him) and they form an instant bond making plans to go out on Gatsby's boat the next morning. 

     Later on in the book, Gatsby has Miss Baker tell Nick about his past with Daisy. Apparently, Gatsby and Daisy had a fling before Daisy married Tom Buchanan, and they were really in love. What was going on though was that Gatsby was making extravagant promises to Daisy that he had absolutely no way to keep. At this time he was poor, without a nickel to his name. When he has an opportunity to make money, he leaves daisy and goes into the army. The army gives him enough pay to travel and try to find Daisy again. Of course, Daisy is now married to Tom and thinks that Gatsby wouldn't come back to her. Little did she know that Gatsby had been working up the nerve to ask her cousin to invite her for tea so that they (more he than she) could spark up the old fire that was burning between them and make a future together. 

     At the end of the book, Gatsby and Daisy have been spending more and more time together and Tom is starting to notice. When Tom, Daisy, Jordan, Nick, and Gatsby all get together one day, Tom straight out accuses them of an affair. (Of course, Tom has had many mistresses throughout his marriage...but nobody says anything about that, now do they?) Everyone gets into a tizzy and Tom and Gatsby start going at it, with poor Daisy in the middle of it having to pick a side. The man she once loved and has rekindled the fire with? Or the man who she is married to, for better or worse, but cheats on her constantly (currently with the mechanic's wife.)? Now, back then, divorces were not common at all. And when your husband was having an affair, you just gathered up your girls played bridge, drank tea (or in Daisy and Jordan's case, sometimes whiskey) and complained and gossiped about their husbands and their mistresses. 

     Gatsby drives Daisy home, while Jordan and Nick ride with Tom back to East Egg, and on the way Tom, Jordan and Nick run into traffic by the auto shop. They get out and go to see what's going on and it turns out that the mechanic, George Wilson, and his wife, Myrtle Wilson (also Tom's mistress), got into a fight and Myrtle runs out getting hit by a car. A yellow Rolls Royce. Tom holds himself together while at the scene, and then returns home. 

     Gatsby holes up in his house after this incident and fired all of his house staff to keep the secret safe. Turns out, what happened was Daisy was driving the Rolls and Myrtle ran out into the street. Daisy swerved to avoid her but there was a car coming the other way and swerved back and hit her. They drove off because Gatsby didn't want Daisy to get in trouble (and I'm sure Daisy was scared out of her mind and didn't want to stick around either.). Daisy and Tom take off, so that Tom can keep Daisy away from Gatsby, and in the meantime, tells a crazed George Wilson that it was Gatsby's car who hit Myrtle. Tom admits at the end of the book to Nick that he did this while Mr Wilson had a gun the entire time. I have no doubts that Tom knew that George was going to shoot whoever did this and wanted Gatsby out of Daisy's life for good. Wilson went over to Gatsby's house and shot him while he was just hanging out in his pool. 

     The end of the book was just funeral planning, scrounging for people who would actually show up to the funeral, meeting Gatsby's dad (who showed up out of nowhere considering Jay Gatsby never ever talked about him) and getting dumped by Jordan Baker, who was now engaged to another man. 

     Overall, this book was disappointing. I read a lot of books and I feel that this book was rushed. Only nine chapters for the whole story was not nearly enough for me. I know that this is a classic and everyone has read it, but I had high hopes for this book. I wanted more insight into who Jay Gatsby was, his life, and his feelings. What I got was Gatsby's life and feelings through the eyes of Nick Carraway. I know that that is the point of the book, to show how Nick was integrated into Gatsby's life and became so close to him, probably his best friend, but there just was not enough detail for me. 
     
     A couple things about the book that I didn't hate- I thought it was kind of funny that Gatsby had such a hard time asking Nick to invite Daisy over. He couldn't even tell Nick his and Daisy's history... I guess maybe since Nick and Gatsby didn't really know each other that well and Daisy was Nick's cousin? I guess Gatsby was just uncomfortable when presented with the opportunity to bring it up, so he had Jordan Baker, Nick's girlfriend, if you could call her that, do it. That is honestly about it. There weren't many character relationships that I could get behind and encourage and there weren't any characters that I fell in love with. I finally got around to reading this book and all in all, I am very disappointed.