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New Kit Drop: Crash Into Me by Robinne Lee May

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Our Crash Into Me digital resources are LIVE! Whether you’re navigating the toxic playground of LA with a bestie or diving into Cecilia’s world in total solitude, we have four distinct ways to experience Robinne Lee’s latest masterpiece:

📚 The Full Book Club Kit: For the hostess! Discussion guides, themed menus, and art therapy activities for your next big meetup. https://tinyurl.com/54uezwb2

📖 The Individual Member Kit: For the prepared reader! Your personal guide to tracking motifs and Mask Moments as you read and prepare for your upcoming book club meeting! https://tinyurl.com/yhw9x293

🎨 The Solo Deep Dive: For the introspective soul! A private retreat guide for the reader who wants to go inward. https://tinyurl.com/mr36dj5d

🥂 The Buddy Reader Kit: For the ultimate duo! Our interactive schedule and prediction tracker for you and your favorite reading partner. https://tinyurl.com/ysjjjhmt

Everything you need to turn a book into a full sensory experience is just a tap away.

#ThePageLadies #TheBindery #CrashIntoMe #RobinneLee #BookClubKit #BuddyRead #DeepDiveReading #FirstEditions #ReaderKits

📚Free Starter Reader Kit & Deep Dive Book Club Review: Crash Into Me by Robinne Lee

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There are books you read for escape and then there are books that quietly unravel you. Crash Into Me by Robinne Lee firmly belongs in the second category.

This was one of those rare book club picks that didn’t just spark conversation it demanded it.


💔First Impressions: A Story That Doesn’t Play It Safe

At its core, Crash Into Me is about Cecilia Chen, a woman who, on paper, has everything: a husband, children, a life steeped in privilege in Los Angeles. But beneath that polished surface is a quiet, persistent question:

Who is she, really, outside of the roles she’s been given?

From the very beginning, there’s a sense of emotional tension simmering under the surface. Cecilia isn’t in crisis in the traditional sense she’s functioning, surviving but there’s a disconnect between the life she’s living and the life she feels she should be living.

And then Anouk reappears.

Not gradually. Not gently. But in a literal, physical collision that mirrors the emotional upheaval to come.


🔥The Heart of the Story: Identity vs Expectation

One of the most powerful elements of this novel and the core of our book club discussion is its exploration of identity.

Cecilia is constantly defined by labels:

  • Wife

  • Mother

  • Daughter

  • Artist

But none of those labels fully capture her truth.

Her reconnection with Anouk doesn’t just reignite attraction; it reopens a version of herself she left behind. A younger, freer, more instinctive version that wasn’t yet shaped by expectation and responsibility.

Book Club Takeaway:
We found ourselves asking:

How much of who we are is chosen and how much is assigned?


❤️The Romance: Intense, Complicated, and Unapologetically Messy

Let’s be clear this is not a conventional romance.

The relationship between Cecilia and Anouk is:

  • Emotionally charged

  • Physically intense

  • Morally complicated

And that’s exactly why it works.

Their connection is rooted in history unfinished, unresolved, and still burning after twenty years. When they come back into each other’s lives, it doesn’t feel like a new love story. It feels like a continuation of something that never truly ended.

But what makes this relationship so compelling is that it doesn’t offer easy answers.

Is it love?
Is it escape?
Is it self-discovery?

The answer shifts depending on how you read it and that ambiguity led to some of the most passionate debates in our group.


🌴Setting as a Character: The Illusion of Los Angeles

Los Angeles in this novel isn’t just a backdrop, it's a pressure cooker.

It represents:

  • Image over authenticity

  • Wealth masking emotional emptiness

  • A curated life that feels increasingly suffocating

Cecilia’s environment amplifies her internal struggle. She’s surrounded by privilege, yet feels deeply disconnected from herself.

Book Club Insight:
Several of us felt that LA almost acts as an antagonist quietly reinforcing the life Cecilia feels trapped in.


🧠Themes That Sparked Discussion

1. The Cost of Reinvention

What happens when you try to reclaim a version of yourself that no longer fits your current life?

2. Desire vs Responsibility

Cecilia’s journey forces her and the reader to confront an uncomfortable question:

Do we owe more to our own truth or to the people who depend on us?

3. Second Chances

Is rekindling a past connection an act of courage or avoidance?

4. The Fluidity of Identity

This book challenges the idea that identity is fixed. Instead, it suggests that who we are can shift depending on circumstance, relationships, and time.


😬The Tension: Why This Book Divides Readers

Not everyone in our book club experienced this story the same way and that’s what made it such a strong pick.

Some readers:

  • Loved the emotional honesty and complexity

  • Connected deeply with Cecilia’s internal conflict

Others:

  • Felt frustrated by her choices

  • Struggled with the moral ambiguity of her actions

And honestly? Both reactions are valid.

This is a book that invites you to sit in discomfort and not everyone enjoys that experience.


✨Final Thoughts: A Story That Lingers

Crash Into Me isn’t about finding clean resolutions or perfect love. It’s about the chaos of wanting more, the courage or recklessness it takes to pursue it, and the consequences that follow.

It’s introspective. It’s messy. It’s deeply human.

And most importantly it’s the kind of book that doesn’t end when you close it. It stays with you, quietly asking questions long after the final page.


💬 Book Club Discussion Question

If you were in Cecilia’s position, would you choose the life you’ve built or risk everything to rediscover who you used to be?


✨️Thank you The Book Club Cookbook, St. Martin's Press and Robinne Lee for sharing Crash Into Me with us!

🎁 Grab Your Free Starter Kit

Want to take your reading experience even further?

✨ Tap the link to download your FREE Starter Kit which includes:

  • 📚 A Mini Book Club Kit to guide your group discussion

  • 👥 A Mini Individual Book Club Member Kit to use while reading and preparing for your meeting

  • 🕯️ A Mini Solo Deep-Dive Reader Kit for a more personal, reflective experience

  • 🥂 A Mini Buddy Reader Kit to read alongside a friend

Whether you’re reading solo or with a group, this starter kit gives you a taste of a fully immersive book club experience.

🔗https://tinyurl.com/3aamnrsf 

💎 Want the Full Experience?

Join The First Editions to unlock:

  • Full deep-dive book club kits

  • Expanded annotation guides & worksheets

  • Complete buddy read and solo immersion experiences

  • Exclusive monthly content and reader resources

Because some stories like Crash Into Me deserve more than just a quick read.

April reading wrapup

Let’s talk about the books we all read together in April!

Unfortunately April was a big bust for me. I DNFd our fantasy pick and didn’t love our thriller pick so let’s discuss…

Fantasy: The Book of Fallen Leaves

This was one of my most highly anticipated new releases for 2026. This was pitched as Game of Thrones meets Shogun which are two of some of my favorite shows of all time (I haven’t read the books). I honestly went in pretty blind other than knowing that pitch. I don’t DNF books this early on EVER but I only got 50pages in and knew this book wasn’t going to be for me. I have since seen very many mixed reviews. The book is very slow and dense and within those 50 pages, I had no idea what was happening and where the story was going. If anyone has finished this book please let me know if you enjoyed it and if it’s worth revisiting!

Thriller: If You Lie

I listened to this book on audio and there wasn’t anything necessarily wrong or bad about this book. I think I went in with too high of expectations first of all because I loved You’ll Never Know by the same author. That book was so fast paced from beginning to end I literally could not put it down! But I found If You Lie to be very slow. It’s not a bad book by any means, however, I haven’t thought about it at all since we finished it and there wasn’t much for me to actually discuss with this one.

Let me know your guys thoughts and make sure to join the discord to discuss!! No worries if you didn’t get to these books in April. You can always message in the dedicated chats for these books in the future if you ever decide to read them.

Halfway to Halloween and Not Ready for Summer

There’s something kind of funny about this time of year for me. As of tomorrow, we’re halfway to Halloween which feels like a holiday I can actually get behind. And today is Beltane, which is technically the halfway point to summer… my least favorite season. So I’m standing right in the middle of two very different energies and trying to appreciate both.

Last night was Hexxenacht, or Witches Night. Traditionally it’s tied to warding off spirits and welcoming in spring energy, but for me it looked like a virtual ritual, lighting a few candles, and settling in with The Craft and Sabrina the Teenage Witch. It felt quiet and a little nostalgic, which was exactly what I needed.

Beltane has a very different feel. It’s a fire festival, all about life, growth, desire, and everything waking up at once. It’s louder in energy, more alive, a little harder to ignore. Instead of rituals inside, I spent today out exploring Whidbey Island. It’s close enough to home that it still feels familiar, but different enough that I can start pulling pieces of it into Woods Bay. The mix of water, trees, and small town spaces felt right for that kind of inspiration.

Tonight I’m leaning into the slower side of it. I’ll sit with the full Flower Moon, pull a tarot spread, and just see what comes up. I’m planning to leave out some water with an intention and drink it tomorrow. Nothing complicated, just taking a moment to pause and let things settle.

I was outside most of today, and honestly that felt like the most important part. Being in nature, noticing things, letting everything feel a little more vivid than usual. Beltane is supposed to be about life at its peak, and even if summer isn’t my season, I can still meet it halfway.

May Book Club: The School for Good Mothers by Jessamine Chan, Week 1

How is it May already?

For May, I'm excited to discuss The School for Good Mothers by Jessamine Chan with you and hope that you'll pick it up, too!

Here is my schedule for discussion:

  • May 1: Chapter 1-4 (p.1-72)

  • May 8: Chapters 5-9 (p. 73-164)

  • May 15: Chapters 10-14 (p. 165-241)

  • May 22: Chapters 15 - end (p. 242+)

So, now on to my thoughts on chapters 1-4!

I've heard some recent critique of the dystopian elements of this book (that we haven't really gotten to yet). But these first chapters remind me why I love this book so much, as the themes are evident from the beginning.

This is my 3rd time reading it, but on my first time reading it, my daughter was just a bit older than Harriet. While my circumstances were different than Frida's, I very much related to what Frida is going through.

Here are a couple of themes I observed:

Us vs. Them

Repeatedly we're reminded that Frida isn't like "those" mothers who harm their children. Class and race separate her from the "those" people who don't deserve to be mothers with an emphasis that it's not typically mothers from her neighborhood under investigation. While Frida isn't white, she is "pale enough" that she will likely be treated better than others who are not.

The Expectations on Mothers

Frida is on trial for her mothering. While I think we would all agree she made a bad decision, it's not hard to see why she was brought to that point. The expectations on mothers is high, but the supports are lacking.

And now that Frida is under investigation, even reasonable and typical behavior will be frowned upon. She must be perfect.

And even fellow mothers are holding each other to these standards. Any weakness or struggle must be hidden, while the front of perfect, sacrificial motherhood is showed to others.

And finally, Frida is holding herself to unreasonably high standards, being her worst critic. This has always been me (even before becoming a mother) to the point where my parents would regularly tell me that they wouldn't punish me for less than perfect grades, because I would punish myself plenty.

Some questions for further discussion:

  • What stood out to you from these first few chapters?

  • Did you relate to Frida? Did you find yourself judging her?

  • What about Gust and Susanna?

Kate

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We partner with select tastemakers to discover resonant new voices and publish to readers everywhere.

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