Just finished 100 Days by mimsyhale!!! What a fantastic read, I can't wait for her to write another book :)
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Just finished 100 Days by mimsyhale!!! What a fantastic read, I can't wait for her to write another book :)
My review of “100 Days” by Mimsy Hale
I recently acquired “100 Days”, by mimsyhale and published by interludepress, and on my trip back from New York, dived into the book (if only to stretch the feeling of bringing the States with me)
I expected a story of a friendship evolving into something more
I got so
Much
More
I’m not about to spoil anything, because I do want everybody who can to get their hands on this book and read it and get swept away just like I was, but Mimsy’s ability to woven relationship and feelings and her talent to describe internal turmoils blew my mind with every page, and I honest to God clutched the book to my chest when I closed it on its ending.
I know, for sure, that this is a book that I will read again after some time and will be just as entranced as I was this first encounter
“100 Days” is available online at Interlude Press’s store or on Amazon
Book review: 100 Days by Mimsy Hale
This book is a lovely emotional ride. Jake and Aiden's friendship and relationship issues (as the book progresses) aren't easy, and I love that Hale doesn't make them easy, skip over the hard parts, or solve things in a way that isn't realistic. First I want to say that there is some stunning prose. Hale is so gifted, and there were moments I wanted to highlight just for how beautiful some passages and sentences were. Second, I love Jake. I just love him. He's kind of fucked up and he's damaged and has a traumatic past. Hale doesn't overdo this history, and she doesn't make the escalation of Jake and Aiden's relationship an easy out or solve for these issues. He progresses and regresses, which is perfect for me because that's so real. I cried when Jake did at the end, because I really felt the catharsis and the pain he goes through. I loved this book. Alaska was frustrating, but there are 49 beautiful states (I loved this trip). Also, shout out to the cover artist, that's lovely and perfect.
Solid 4.5 stars, highly recommended.
April Prism Recommended Read Awards. Authors, you may use the following graphic in conjunction with any title appearing on the monthly list, indefinitely. These are chosen by us, the reviewers of P...
Congratulations, Mimsy Hale! 100 Days Selected a Prism Book Alliance Recommended Read for April!
Jake Valentine, Aiden Calloway, you boys make it far too easy to love you beyond words every. single. time. Despite at times wanting to donk you both over the head, and knock some much needed sense into you.
100 Days, a love letter disguised as a review
So, a while back I was given the opportunity to read an ARC of 100 Days by Mimsy Hale (published by Interlude Press), and it would be an understatement to say that I was honoured and excited. Unfortunately, the past few months have been their own particular breed of chaos and I was unable to be as out-front and ahead of the release date as I would have liked to be.
BUT!! I’ve finally had time to curl up and finish this lush, sense-drenching story of childhood friends who share an abiding and bone-deep love but who continue to miss each other as they ricochet off each other’s amour and scars from age old wounds. This was not the first time I have read this story and it will not be the last, because when magic happens in someone’s words, the spell enchants forever. So, ON TO THE REVIEW!!!
I will start by saying that over the years I have yelled very loudly at the author about my love of her world and the depth of feeling that it drew from me, and when I began reading this I was unsure whether I would have anything new to say… But then six pages in I realized that it was indeed possible to fall more in love with 100 Days and that each subsequent reading would reveal new insights and spark new resonances with my emotions, and would always give me that delicious ache which zings between my heart and stomach, like a closed circuit of electricity, making my hands twitch and and my throat tighten with tears that sting the corners of my eyes. So too, her skill with description continues to amaze me, drawing me in and immersing me in a complex world of sense imagery, giving sight and sound and texture and scent to the places which play host to Aiden and Jake’s tale. I always emerge from a chapter as I would from a particularly vivid dream, blinking and and slightly confused that my room is not an RV parked at the edge of the Grand Canyon…
There is something universally appealing about the idea of the great American road trip—vast expanses of frontier to discover, both out in the wide world and in our own psyches, the one drawing out the other. And so this tale of Aiden and Jake begins, with the world an open atlas at their feet and the beautiful fragility of their long-time friendship teetering on the edge of so much more, with that particular brand of sadness and desperation that we all feel when things that have been constant in our lives, start to change but we don’t yet know what that change means.
“All he knows is that something has to give, and soon.”
The chapters are layered with these beautiful moments of push and pull between two life long friends who stopped being just friends years ago but never looked up and saw each other at the same time. In the epic book of their lives, Jake is scared to move on in the story lest the early chapters full of the loving presence of his parents disappear, and Aiden can’t keep his eyes on the page in front of him, he keeps jumping forward in the hopes that the future will make more sense to him than the past. There is a beautiful agony in watching them leap and struggle to land on the same page at the same time.
“If we can’t be everything, at least we’re more.”
And as the Jake and Aiden size up the cinematic potential of the majesty and small beauties of the American landscape, it is impossible not to get swept up in the imagery, because Mimsy Hale has not just written a romance between two lifelong friends, she has written too a love letter to the vast charms of the length and breadth of the United States. 100 Days takes us on such an incredible zig zag journey along the length and breadth of the country, the effectiveness and success of which I lay at the feet of two things: Mimsy’s obvious love, reverence, and fascination with the beauty and untold possibilities of the American landscape; and her keen ability to focus on the unexpected and the easily overlooked details of places so famous as to become cliché, and on the human element that can make the most common of places become special. The author does not just take us on the usual tour of America, she gives us a tapestry of love, uncertainty, passion, disappointment, discovery, and home, all set against an ever-changing landscape—sometimes fulfilling expectations, sometimes leaving an empty moment of oh was that all?, and sometimes a reluctant destination that becomes an emotional touchstone.
Something which I found surprisingly effective was the use of real world events in elements of the story—such having Hurricane Katrina, the presidential election, and first real moves in the battle for marriage equality. The focus on these events grounds the story in time, but not in a way which will go stale or date it in years to come, more like a time capsule of large moments that in years to come older readers will nod and remember where they were, and with luck, may galvanize younger readers into asking questions and Googling names and maybe connecting with a moment in their own history.
“Sometimes having more when you want everything still feels like nothing.”
But I guess the thing that sticks with me most, that has ensured my love of this book, is that I care deeply about both Jake and Aiden. Mimsy Hale was able to draw out their voyage of discovery in a way that heightens the suspense of when they will finally get their acts together, while never raising doubt that they will, and never once doubt that this is as it should be. When they come together physically, it is so emotionally fraught, drenched in passion and intimacy, reverence and care, that I feel like a voyeur, and yet, breath stolen from my body, I cannot look away. My heart clenches with each misstep, each perceived sign of disinterest, as each missed opportunity to communicate passes by only to leave a deepening tension and a greater chance for misunderstanding. I ache with each tear that falls and rejoice with every step they take toward each other. From beginning to end, I was caught up and desperately in love with both boys and their journey into each other’s forevers.
At its heart, as with any road trip story, 100 Days is about finding out what it means to be Home. This is a love story about two young men finding their way home, and realizing that they’ve always been there.
“Stoke the fires. Start the engines.”
Honorary Blogger Mimsy Hale: The Road Never Runs Out + Giveaway!
Honorary Blogger Mimsy Hale: The Road Never Runs Out + Giveaway!
The Road Never Runs Out
by Mimsy Hale
At the age of seventeen, I visited the USA for the first time—I stayed with a friend I’d met through Supernatural fandom, at her home in Indianapolis. I’d long since gotten used to feeling half a step out of sync with the rest of the world, but as soon as I stepped off the plane for my layover in Chicago, it was as if I’d finally caught up.
I loved Indiana.…
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Looking for 100 Days on Amazon?
We’ve heard from many of you that Mimsy Hale’s debut novel, 100 Days is showing as sold-out on Amazon. We have sent several shipments of the book to Amazon, and have filed an inquiry to find out what has happened to their supply. In the mean time, there are several other ways to purchase 100 Days.
The IP Web Store: If you’re in the US or Canada, buy direct from IP. It may cost you a buck more, but authors receive a far greater share of the proceeds when you purchase direct instead of through a third party vendor.
Barnes & Noble: You can order off the site or from the store at B&N.
Indiebound: Use this link to order 100 Days from your local independent bookseller.
And, of course, you can order from sites or stores around the world by using this ISBN: 978-1-941530-23-8. If it doesn’t show up on the site, email them and request it for sale by referencing the ISBN.