Monday, November 24, 2025

Book Review: Monday's Not Coming by Tiffany D. Jackson

When fourteen-year-old Claudia Coleman returns home to Washington, D.C., after spending the summer with her grandmother in Georgia, she discovers that her best friend, Monday Charles, has mysteriously vanished. Monday has always been Claudia’s anchor—her closest friend, her defender, the person who understands her learning difficulties and stands by her. So when Monday doesn’t show up on the first day of school, Claudia immediately knows something is wrong. But no one else seems to care.

Teachers assume Monday transferred. Neighbors are evasive or dismissive. Monday’s mother, who has a history of instability and abusive behavior, offers excuses that don’t add up. The authorities insist that because Monday has a record of truancy, there’s no need to panic. Claudia becomes more and more alarmed, and increasingly determined to uncover the truth.

As Claudia pushes for answers, her story unfolds across fragmented timelines—Before, After, and The Before Before—revealing the depth of Claudia and Monday’s friendship, the secret struggles they shared, and the subtle signs that something had been wrong in Monday’s home long before she disappeared.

Claudia faces her own battles: dyslexia that isolates her at school, parents who worry she’s obsessing over Monday to an unhealthy degree, and the emotional and academic fallout of carrying a truth no one else will acknowledge.

Eventually, Claudia’s persistence leads to the devastating truth: Monday is dead—and has been for nearly a year.

Her body was hidden in her family’s home after she died from abuse and neglect at the hands of her mother. The novel’s disjointed timeline reveals that Claudia’s sense of “last seeing” Monday was distorted by trauma; she had actually been communicating with Monday’s sister, April, who pretended to be Monday through letters and messages to spare Claudia the truth.

The revelation shatters Claudia, who spirals into grief and survivor’s guilt, grappling with the horrifying reality that her best friend was suffering—and dying—out of sight while the school and institutions that should have protected her failed at every level.

Monday’s Not Coming closes with Claudia beginning the long process of healing while confronting the systemic silence, community neglect, and apathy that allowed Monday’s disappearance and death to go unnoticed. It is a powerful indictment of how Black girls often go missing without the world paying attention.

I’ve had this book on my TBR for a while, and I finally picked it up—and I’m so glad I did. Once I started reading, I burned through it in just three days because I genuinely couldn’t put it down. The writing pulled me in immediately, and the emotional tension kept me turning pages long after I should’ve gone to bed. I thought I had an idea of where the story was going, but I definitely wasn’t prepared for the ending. It completely caught me off guard in the best—and most heartbreaking—way.

In the end, I truly believe Monday’s Not Coming is a story worth picking up. It’s powerful, heartfelt, and incredibly impactful in today’s world, and it stays with you long after you turn the last page. That said, it does tackle heavy and sensitive topics, so I encourage you to go into it when you feel ready for a more emotionally rigorous read. If you’re looking for a book that’s both beautifully written and deeply meaningful, this one deserves a place on your shelf. I’m really glad I finally crossed it off my TBR, and I hope it finds a spot on yours too.

Friday, November 21, 2025

Book Review: Ninth House (Galaxy Stern- Book 1) by Leigh Bardugo

Hello everyone! It's been awhile! Here's a review of a recent book I've read. When I first started it, I wasn't completely sure if I'd like it as much as I did. It was definitely not something I would've picked up it I hadn't read and loved other books by Leigh Bardugo.

Ninth House follows Galaxy “Alex” Stern, an unlikely Yale freshman with a dark past. Despite dropping out of school and falling in with dangerous crowds, Alex possesses a rare ability: she can see ghosts; the “Grays” without magical aid. This talent earns her a mysterious second chance—an offer to attend Yale University in exchange for joining Lethe House, the secret society responsible for overseeing the university’s eight “ancient” societies.

These elite societies perform powerful magic tied to wealth, influence, and ambition—predicting the stock market, manipulating political outcomes, and even influencing the dead. Lethe monitors them to keep their rituals from crossing dangerous lines.

Alex is partnered with the charming, accomplished upperclassman Darlington, her mentor in the dangerous underworld of Yale. But when Darlington mysteriously disappears, Alex is left struggling to fulfill Lethe’s duties alone.

At the same time, a murder on campus appears unrelated to magic—until Alex notices signs that the ritual societies may be involved. Determined to uncover the truth, she digs deeper into secrets that Yale’s powerful alumni would kill to protect. As she investigates, Alex confronts her own past, her haunting abilities, and forces older and darker than anything she expected.

The book blends dark academia, fantasy, mystery/thriller elements and themes of trauma, privilege, and survival.

My rating: 8.5/10

Book Review: Monday's Not Coming by Tiffany D. Jackson

When fourteen-year-old Claudia Coleman returns home to Washington, D.C., after spending the summer with her grandmother in Georgia, she disc...