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What You Wish For: A Novel by Katherine…
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What You Wish For: A Novel (edition 2020)

by Katherine Center (Author)

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5506443,825 (3.79)7
"Samantha Casey loves everything about her job as an elementary school librarian on the sunny, historic island of Galveston, Texas-the goofy kids, the stately Victorian building, the butterfly garden. But when the school suddenly loses its beloved principal, it turns out his replacement will be none other than Duncan Carpenter-a former, unrequited crush of Sam's from many years before. When Duncan shows up as her new boss, though, he's nothing like the sweet teacher she once swooned over. He's become stiff, and humorless, and obsessed with school safety. Now, with Duncan determined to destroy everything Sam loves about her school in the name of security-and turn it into nothing short of a prison-Sam has to stand up for everyone she cares about before the school that's become her home is gone for good"--… (more)
Member:tmoore318
Title:What You Wish For: A Novel
Authors:Katherine Center (Author)
Info:St. Martin's Press (2020), 320 pages
Collections:Your library
Rating:*****
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What You Wish For by Katherine Center

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Showing 1-5 of 64 (next | show all)
I received this ebook from NetGalley. The book publishes in July 2020.

This book takes place in Galveston, Texas. It is about the story of Sam (Samantha) Casey, the librarian at Kempner School. The school is run (and was founded) by Max and Babette Kempner. When someone in the school community passes away, they find themselves with a new principal, Duncan Carpenter. Duncan and Sam worked with each other years before. She had feelings for him but it was not mutual. Sam was thrilled to learn that Duncan would be their new principal because he was fun, goofy and she thought he would be a good fit. He changed a lot from when they worked together - even going so far as not remembering her. He makes several changes at the school that do not go over well resulting in a bit of animosity between Sam and Duncan.

This book is about joy and finding joy, feeling joy, experiencing joy. I did not like this book as much as Things You Save in a Fire. This book seemed a bit overdone and I found myself skipping over some of the dialogue. ( )
  Cathie_Dyer | Feb 29, 2024 |
This is an uplifting and heartwarming story of friendship, love, found family, taking risks, pursuit of happiness, healing from trauma, living with a chronic health condition, education, and PTSD.

While the romance is OTT, I loved the school setting and the eccentric and quirky characters!

This is the kind of book you read simply for the pure pleasure of reading. The narration by Thérèse Plummer made this audiobook such a pleasure to listen to! ( )
  nadia.masood | Feb 7, 2024 |
See the full review and more at MyBookJoy.com!

Recommended: sure
For teachers, for those who like Center's writing style, for a blend of teaching pedagogy and medical/personal self-discovery, for a book where you know exactly what to expect, for something uplifting and quotable if you're having a bad day

Thoughts:
The writing was very familiar to Center's other works. The MC was very self-aware, and did a good job at calling herself out in cliche situations with clear-eyed bemusement. Overall, I was entertained but not enthralled. It's hard to pinpoint exactly why, but I'll try.

There were points that felt unecessarily drawn out; like descriptions that didn't add to the story, or musings that we had already heard several times before ("I can't believe how different Duncan is"). I rarely skim in stories, but I was here every now and then.

My main issue was with the characters. The MC didn't seem to put much empathy or thought into what could have made Duncan change so drastically, and was unable to recognize that something that severe is usually based in trauma. Perhaps that's due to her inward focus of her own feelings. Duncan provided some issues for me as well, as the descriptions of what Old Duncan was like was pretyt much cringeworthy for me. He sounded... exhausting. And over the top. Having taught, I definitely have known people and specifically teachers like him. They can be fantastic at their jobs, but reading about one was just tiring and overwhelming. Personal issue, maybe? Either way, I didn't particularly like him in his old or new form.

The story was a bit of a slow build. I expected Duncan to be taking over relatively quickly, as the key conflict in the story was him taking over the school and sending it in a different direction. In reality, I feel like that was a very small portion of the story in terms of length. Once he showed up, the school year passed in a few chapters. There was a lot of setup to everything that telegraphed quite clearly what could be expected for character and story growth.

It was entertaining and had some really great quotable lines, but it probably won't be one that sticks with me for very long.

Thanks to NetGalley and St. Martin's Press for a free advanced copy in exchange for an honest review. ( )
  Jenniferforjoy | Jan 29, 2024 |
With the exception of The Bodyguard, in the middle of most of Katherine Center's books I think they are a little out there. But then by the end she does such a good job of bringing everything together to support her narrative/thesis of the book I end up almost always liking them.

This book has a heavy event at the center of it that everyone might not want to read about, but Center does a good job of showing how fear impacts everyone differently. And how we have to figure out a way to keep living and experiencing life. ( )
  littlemuls | Dec 10, 2023 |
I've only listened to a few audiobooks so far and this one cemented me wanting to continue listening to audiobooks. I've read other books by this author and have enjoyed them all.

Initially, I thought this was a "lighter" story, but when I think about the underlying meaning, the story has many layers, and the core of the story - find joy where we can - is an especially timely read now during the Covid pandemic.

Sam(antha) the main character, is a teacher at a quaint school on Galveston Island. She finds out their new principal is none other than Duncan, the fellow teacher she fell in love with years ago at her previous school.

Duncan lives, breathes, eats, exudes joy. He turned Sam's view of the world from black/gray/beige to vibrant colors and her push to embrace joy each day.

But when Duncan shows up at her school, he's the opposite of his former self. As opposite as one can get. The upside is Sam's no longer attracted to him. Yet, she can't help but wonder what changed him, and can't help but try to lead him back to find joy again.

At first this seems like a love story. It is, in a way, but that's a minor plot. It's a story of community, supporting each other, looking on the bright side of life even after it has kicked you in the teeth, and about taking chances. I thoroughly enjoyed listening to the story (I looked forward to long walks just so I could listen to this) and I thank NetGalley and the publisher for providing me this entertaining book. ( )
  JillHannah | Nov 20, 2023 |
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Dedication
For my editor, Jen Enderlin.
And for my agent, Helen Breitwieser.
Thank you both---so much more than I could ever say---for believing in me.
First words
I was the one dancing with Max when it happened.
Quotations
The world keeps hanging on to this idea that love is for the gullible. Bit nothing could be more wrong. Love is only for the brave.
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"Samantha Casey loves everything about her job as an elementary school librarian on the sunny, historic island of Galveston, Texas-the goofy kids, the stately Victorian building, the butterfly garden. But when the school suddenly loses its beloved principal, it turns out his replacement will be none other than Duncan Carpenter-a former, unrequited crush of Sam's from many years before. When Duncan shows up as her new boss, though, he's nothing like the sweet teacher she once swooned over. He's become stiff, and humorless, and obsessed with school safety. Now, with Duncan determined to destroy everything Sam loves about her school in the name of security-and turn it into nothing short of a prison-Sam has to stand up for everyone she cares about before the school that's become her home is gone for good"--

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