Sisters, Scars & Songs: A Story That Hits All the Right Notes
I’m a total sucker for a heartfelt, tragic story about complicated sisterhood—and when it’s messy, emotional, and tangled up in fame, I’m all in.
This one hooked me fast. Two very different sisters, at odds in so many ways, yet still deeply connected. They clash, but have their quiet ways of holding each other up. Now throw in some rock and roll vibes, and I was completely sold.
This Isn’t Daisy Jones-not even close
So if you're looking for a story full of fame, glitter, glamor, and or that whole sex-drugs-rock-and-roll fantasy… this isn’t that book.
Jennifer Weiner is doing something entirely different here. This one goes deeper. Weiner dives into heavier themes: women in the music, the toxic obsession with beauty, body image, and how those pressures fracture bonds—with others and with ourselves
Real Women, Real Pain, Real Growth
What stuck with me most is how raw and real Zoe and Cassie feel. Zoe may be the so-called “pretty” one, but she’s constantly lost in the shadow of Cassie’s undeniable talent. Cassie, on the other hand, wrestles with social anxiety, body shame, and the pressure to shrink herself—even as her voice could fill an arena. Their relationship is the emotional heart of the book. There’s a love triangle, but the true love story is between these two sisters and the music that both binds and breaks them.
Come for the Drama, Stay for the Healing
Weiner captures the early 2000s pop scene so well—the cruel headlines, the body shaming, the spotlight that’s both intoxicating and destructive. But beneath the glitz, this is a story about forgiveness, ambition, learning to find your place, see your own beauty, and shine like the star you are
I received a copy from the publisher through Edelweiss