⭐ All This Can Be True by Jen Michalski
Rating: 3.5, rounded to 4
For those who know me, picking up a book that opens with infidelity might raise eyebrows—You?! But lately I’ve found that when infidelity is used not as the focal point, but as a catalyst for personal exploration and self-discovery, it can carry emotional weight that defines women’s fiction. Jen Michalski has written a work of Queer Fiction that marries women’s fiction with a touch of romance in a way that deserves more attention.
The road trip structure here is iconic and deeply American, but also emotionally resonant. Quinn and Lacey are navigating grief and self-definition after loss, and the partial isolation of the road invites introspection. When shared, it becomes an act of vulnerability and conversation—questions asked, experiences shared, and always, a discovery waiting at the end.
Michalski’s writing is strong, and her characters speak with voices that feel real and authentic. This is a book of realities—cold and hard, sweet and painful. There are truths that must be contended with and new realities that must be acknowledged. How Quinn and Lacey face these and move forward showcases the grit and courage we all have to claim.
⚖️ What Walked the Line Between 3 and 4 Stars
InstaLove: For me, this felt rushed.
Dual POV Disorientation: While necessary, the narration sometimes felt disjointed.
Compressed Transitions: The book tackles a lot, and while concise, some emotional beats needed more breathing space.
🧠 Personal Note
This is a real book. Under Michalski’s deft hand, serious and emotional topics are explored with compassion and empathy. Themes like child loss, grief, infidelity, coming to terms with your truest self, mental health, and addiction are handled with care—but they will ask a lot of you as a reader. Please take care, know your limits, and treat yourself as gently as you would others.