Member Reviews

The Last Bathing Beauty was a great summer time read! Memories of my summer as a teen kept coming back to mind. The description and characters were easy to love. I ;have never been disappointed in any of Amy Sue Nathans book- this was a GREAT read!

Was this review helpful?

Such a good story. Loved it from the first page to the last. The characters are wonderful and the story lovely.

Was this review helpful?

A valentine to a long lost dream. Here is a tale of how life can bring great joy and regret almost in the same breath. We meet Betty in a world full of promise. Looking to make her way through the world she trades on her beauty and follows the path it brings. Along the way she learns the hard lessons of life and triumphs in small ways but allows those lessons to help her navigate for her family in ways they only later come to realize. She is forthright and sincere , traits that help her live a life full and rewarding,if only through the next generations.

Was this review helpful?

This was the perfect summer read. It's not a life changing book by any means but it's a great read to get lost in for a few hours. A tale of romance, friendship, love and loss narrated in the 1950s and present day. If you love Dirty Dancing then think along those lines . I'd definitely recommend this to all ages , it's sort of like an historical chick lit sort of read set in a lovely scenic Summer Haven . Well written with realistic characters.
Thank you Netgalletyfor this copy.

Was this review helpful?

📚Book Review📚
The Last Bathing Beauty by @amysuenathan. I actually got this through @netgalley the book came out in April of this year. I ended up getting the audible this month to participate in #arcsgotbackedup since I am SO far behind on my ARCs.😔
.
.
This book is what I call historical chick-lit with dual POVs from Betty as a carefree 18 year old in 1951 wanting to make her last summer before college memorable and Betty now called Boop at 84 reflecting on her life choices in 2017 as she notices her granddaughter seeming to be making some of the same choices Boop made all those years ago.
.
.
I really really really enjoyed this book. It’s heartwarming and heartbreaking all in in. Betty/Boop as a young woman and later as a older woman was a great character that I found relatable and I loved her two best friends also. 5⭐️
.
.
During reading this I found myself thinking of my own grandmothers. Wondering about their lives and finding with some sadness I don’t know a lot about what their lives were like before they got married. Being that I live so far from them now I’m hoping on my next visit I’ll be able to ask them about their lives.

Was this review helpful?

Fairly predictable story, girl falls in love withe wrong boy, Instead of following her heart, she does what is expected. Did learn about the Jewish summer getaways on Lake Michigan that I knew nothing about. Would not recommend unless as a quick summer read

Was this review helpful?

Amy Sue Nathan had me hooked when she compared the setting of The Last Bathing Beauty to those from Dirty Dancing and The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel. Her novel made me think of both in various ways.

This was a great story overall. I loved the South Haven scenery and mood. It made me think of when my family and I went to a resort in Wisconsin every summer. I liked the bits of Jewish information, such as keeping Kosher, observing Shabbat, etc. The nineteen fifties came to life through this story and I was able to visualize everything as it might have been back then.

I could relate to Betty with being boy crazy at eighteen, as I remember being the same way when I was starting college. I was definitely stressed out for her situation (which is revealed before it's actually played out). There were some surprises that I did not see coming at all, even with the foreshadowing. I love that Betty/Boop stayed friends with Georgia and Doris for such a long time and how they looked after each other. Their friendship reminded me of Donna, Rosie, and Tanya in Mamma Mia.

My only hangup was that I wasn't a fan of the name Boop by itself. It worked when paired with Betty because of the cartoon icon, but sounded strange otherwise. This didn't take away from my enjoyment of the novel.

This was an interesting and thought-provoking story and Amy Sue Nathan did a great job telling it and keeping me engaged the entire time.

Movie casting suggestions:
Betty: Odeya Rush
Georgia: Ella Wahlestedt
Doris: Sami Gayle
Abe: Luke Benward
Marv: Alex Wolff
Hannah: Melissa Benoist
I'll trust Hollywood to cast Boop and her friends...

Was this review helpful?

The perfect blend of storytelling and mystery creating the perfect beach read for our customers this summer!

Was this review helpful?

What a delightful quick paced summer read. When "Boop"'s grandaughter shows up for an unexpected visit she brings news for Boop. Boop and her lifelong friends decide Boop needs to share the secret she held for life and was hoping to take it to her grave.

Was this review helpful?

This story has a dual timeline, present day and then the 1950s, the story all centred on Betty Stern. Betty lives with her grandparents, after her parents left her in their care, and helps out in the summer camp they run in the catskills. I loved the 1950s atmosphere created by the writer, the innocence of those times. Betty and her young friends are out to have a fun last summer before they go off to work or college. However the events that summer will certainly change the plans of one of the girls.
In the present day Betty is back at the camp and her granddaughter visits unexpectedly, with her own dilemma. This is a story of family, friends and love. A great summer read.

Was this review helpful?

Rating: 4 stars
This is a great read for our almost summer reading season. I’d classify this a Women’s Fiction with a beachy feel. The story is told in dual timelines of the 1951 version of Betty (Boop) Stern, and her 2017 version.

We watch Boop navigate both time periods and understand how choices made by her family members, and herself helped to shape her future. This is a story about family connections. I enjoying learning about the Midwest ‘Catskills’ lake side resort in Michigan. It’s where Betty grew up with her Jewish grandparents after having been abandoned by her parents. I also appreciated how choices made that fateful summer when Boop was just eighteen, affected the rest of her life. It also helped give her the wisdom as to how to answer a grand-daughter’s plea for help during her own crisis.

I enjoyed so many things about this book including the gorgeous cover. This was such a lovely and relatable read about family, love, connections, and following your heart.

‘Thank-You’ to NetGalley; the publisher, Lake Union Publishing; and the author, Amy Sue Nathan, for providing a free e-ARC copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.

Was this review helpful?

The beach has always done wonders for my soul, and this book set on the beach did the same. Every page is so drenched with the promise of summertime and the excitement of budding romance that I’d swear I lived these experiences right along with Betty, taking evening strolls to the arcade and gazing at fireworks on the boardwalk. The 1950s have always been one of my favorite time periods, and the details—from the penny loafers and dresses packaged in tissue to the families that flocked to resorts in the summer—transported me to an era that I desperately wanted to lose myself in. I adored Betty, both in girlhood and as the present-day Boop, and spending time with her family, her girlfriends, and her great love was the exact escape I needed.

Amy Sue Nathan is the kind of magnificent writer who can create a world you just want to curl up and live in for a while. That type of novel is one I’ll turn to time and time again, but especially now. For fans of the ‘50s, for fans of Dirty Dancing-esque summer loves, and for those in need of a seaside escape, I highly recommend this wonderful read. Self-isolating is a lot less isolating when you’re spending time with The Last Bathing Beauty.

Was this review helpful?

Absolutely delightful escapism to a back-in-time era when hair was curled and lipstick was bright. I loved this transporting story that held me in rapt attention, liking the characters so much, smiling as this story zipped along. Nathan rings true in crafting a realistic setting and storyline, so that you're always present in the book's world. I love when a book delivers more than the cover and description promise, and I love that deeply satisfied feeling at the end that I've just been on a wonderful getaway and the time to return is perfect, and I am better for having been there. Wonderful work. I'll check out more of this author's works.

Was this review helpful?

Heart-warming, beautifully written, and a glimpse back to an era when the options and choices available to young women were very different. A lovely summer read.

Was this review helpful?

This was so much fun to read! Written in a twin timeline, I was swept back to the 1950's in a family resort where everyone knew each other, and community was paramount. Admittedly, it gave me Dirty Dancing vibes and I was all for it. These were the kinds of vacations that I never had, nor did my parents, so the entire reading of this book was an escape. I loved the lost love/second chance just lovely and perfect.

Was this review helpful?

In the tradition of sagas such as the The Shell Seekers, The Last Bathing Beauty uses the narrative of an older woman reflecting back on the pivotal events of her life. I didn't know that there were Catskill like resorts (like those in Dirty Dancing) on Lake Michigan, but Amy Sue Nathan describes the sights, sounds, and smells evocatively. Betty Stern is a likable heroine and I loved the descriptions of that summer of 1951 right down to the peep toed shoes and shades of lipstick.

Truly a novel of life coming full circle, as Betty herself notes, while not diminishing the decades in the middle.

Such a perfect book for a lazy summer afternoon.

Was this review helpful?

This story was great! It transitioned smoothly between the 1950s Betty version and the present day Boop version. The 1950s era is not one that I have often read about and this book made me.want to experience more from that time frame. A great beach read that connects readers to the characters with a hint of mystery.

Was this review helpful?

I really wanted to ljke this one because I loved the cover - but it just didn’t do it for me. I didn’t find the wiring to be compelling or well done. However, I could be the odd one out on this one! •

I will say that this book jumps from the past - Summer is 1951 - to the 21st century future: I enjoyed the modern aspect of the story slightly more (there were some Golden Girls vibes in there). •

The story focuses in on the life of a former beauty queen, and the summer that changed her life forever, as she dreamed of a career, marriage, and life of her own. Decades later, she is forced to look back at the decisions that caused that summer to end in tragedy and forced her to make choices that ultimately led her to a life that was nothing like what she had imagined and dreamed of. •

An interesting take on happiness and contentment versus passion and dreams, family, and the way we are beholden to the times we are born into, it was an intriguing read. The bonus was an extremely happy ending, if it did occur in old age. •

Was this review helpful?

I wanted to love this book, I am a sucker for summer camp type stories, but I was sadly disappointed. The story is told in present-day, as well as flashbacks from 1951 and centers around Betty/Boop and how her summer in 1951 is still affecting her life in present day. I did enjoy the flashback portions of the story, but felt that the entire story moved along at too frenetic a pace and felt rushed. The characters were vapid and lacked any kind of development.

Was this review helpful?

EXCERPT: Summer 2017

Boop Peck had looked everywhere for her favourite lipstick. It wasn't in the bathroom, or in her purse, bedroom, or her pocket. She shuddered at the injustice: Boop remembered her first telephone number - 359J - but not the whereabouts of the lipstick she'd worn the day before. Or was it the day before that? She peeked around and patted herself again. Nothing. A lost lipstick wasn't the end of the world. Unless it was Sly Pink, her discontinued colour of choice, which it was.

Enough with the lipstick.

The girls would arrive soon. No, the ladies would arrive soon. Boop chuckled. Ladies sounded so stuffy, boring, and inaccurate. Even at eighty-four Boop and her friends would always be girls - and they'd never be boring.

ABOUT THIS BOOK: Everything seemed possible in the summer of 1951. Back then Betty Stern was an eighteen-year-old knockout working at her grandparents’ lakeside resort. The “Catskills of the Midwest” was the perfect place for Betty to prepare for bigger things. She’d head to college in New York City. Her career as a fashion editor would flourish. But first, she’d enjoy a wondrous last summer at the beach falling deeply in love with an irresistible college boy and competing in the annual Miss South Haven pageant. On the precipice of a well-planned life, Betty’s future was limitless.

Decades later, the choices of that long-ago season still reverberate for Betty, now known as Boop. Especially when her granddaughter comes to her with a dilemma that echoes Boop’s memories of first love, broken hearts, and faraway dreams. It’s time to finally face the past—for the sake of her family and her own happiness. Maybe in reconciling the life she once imagined with the life she’s lived, Boop will discover it’s never too late for a second chance.

MY THOUGHTS: What a delightful read! I really didn't want to close the rather beautiful cover on The Last Bathing Beauty by Amy Sue Nathan. I finished reading with tears in my eyes and a smile on my face.

This is a story of family and friendship, hope and disappointment, owning your mistakes, taking control over your own future and making it the best future it could possibly be.

The summer Betty was four, her parents had dropped her off with her grandparents in South Haven for the weekend - and had never come back for her. Her Jewish grandparents have raised her with love, a strong work ethic, and big dreams for her future. But the summer of 1951, the year Betty is crowned Miss South Haven, just when it seems that all her dreams are within reach, something happens to change her life.

The Last Bathing Beauty travels back and forward in time between 1951, when she was still Betty Stern, a smart and sassy girl on the cusp of a great future, and 2017 when she is Boop Peck, widow, mother of one son, grandmother of two girls, and great-grandmother of 2 point something great-grandchildren.

Betty is quite wonderful. I fell in love with her character. I aspire to be her should I make the great age of eighty-four. Actually, I aspire to be her long before then. She is going to be my role model.

Amy Sue Nathan has created a vivid and captivating picture of life in a Jewish family at a holiday camp in 1951. The summer romances, the morals and mores of the time, so very different from now, when mixing outside your social/religious/racial circle was frowned upon, and young women were expected to marry to please their families and improve their social status.

This is a lovely story, told with both humour and empathy. I will be reading this author's other books. Highly recommended.

❤😪❤😪.5

'You're never too old to find love and throw a good party.'

'Sometimes it takes a long time to get things right.'

THE AUTHOR: Amy Sue Nathan is Writer of novels, lover of cats, morning coffee, dark chocolate, and bold lipstick. Former vegetarian, occasional crafter, adequate cook, loyal friend, proud mom to two awesome adults.

DISCLOSURE: Thank you to Lake Union Publishing via NetGalley for providing a digital ARC of The Last Bathing Beauty by Amy Sue Nathan for review. All opinions expressed in this review are entirely my own personal opinions.

For an explanation of my rating system please refer to my Goodreads.com profile page or the about page on sandysbookaday.wordpress.com

This review and others are also published on Twitter, Amazon, Instagram and my webpage sandysbookaday.wordpress.com

Was this review helpful?