Landline • Rainbow Rowell
We were all so stoked to read LANDLINE, friends, that we bumped it up in our monthly schedule when all three of us managed to snag advanced copies. Because RAINBOW. And because reading any of her books, whether they are geared towards young adults or full grown-ups, always have an impact on all three of us.
LANDLINE is about a relationship that is struggling. Rainbow tells amazing stories about relationships, and the one between Georgie McCool (I KNOWWW) and her husband, Neal, is fraying. Georgie writes for a TV comedy and Neal is a stay-at-home dad to their two girls. When Georgie and her long-time friend and writing partner get news of a potential big break right before Christmas, Georgie and Neal’s relationship goes from “just ok” to “MAYDAY! MAYDAY!” Neal heads off with the girls to Nebraska as the family planned, and Georgie stays behind in LA to work on her TV show. Except when she starts spending time in her old bedroom at her mom’s house, she finds an old rotary phone in her closet and uses it to call Neal’s parents’ house to talk to her husband. And THAT’S when things get INTERESTING.




Isola’s bedroom is the scene of so much action, and I just about died when I found this pin because there’s so much about it that reminds me of Isola’s room. First of all, it has a window. Very important. Second of all–and it’s the part that kills me the most–is the writing on the wall behind the bed. Isola describes the wall behind her bed as being so covered over with poems and quotes and words and thoughts that she’s written there over the years that it looks like grafitti. Plus the lights…it makes the room look magical and that’s an important vibe from the book.







