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A review by ireadlikeaboss
The Art of Crash Landing: A Novel by Melissa DeCarlo, Johanna Parker
4.0
Twenty-seven minutes is, if anyone ever asks, exactly how long it takes to cram everything I own into six giant trash bags...Most people would probably have a hard time totally fucking up their life in under an hour. But then again, I'm not most people. I'm amazing. I'm like some kind of fuckup savant.
The opening lines of Melissa DeCarlo's THE ART OF CRASH LANDING tells you a lot about the quirky screwup protagonist, Mattie Wallace. At thirty, she's learned to fail and keep on going, but this time she may have just hit the bottom. She gets with the wrong guys, used to smoke and drink too much, has no money to her name, and will soon be a mother.
Upon finding that she may be the beneficiary of her grandmother's estate, she picks up and heads to Gandy, Oklahoma, where her late mother grew up and her estranged grandmother lived until she passed away. Bad karma follows her there when her car breaks down, she meets a prickly mechanic, and finds out that her grandmother has a long list of creditors waiting to get a piece of the estate. The good news? She's allowed to stay in her grandmother's house while the estate is settled, thanks to the cute paralegal she meets when coming into town who also hooks her up with a job.
The cast of characters Mattie meets while in Gandy is one of my favorite parts of the novel. Everyone has their own part in a past Mattie knows very little about—her mother's. About to be a mother herself, Mattie reflects on her own experiences with her alcoholic mother who passed away suddenly. She worries that she will screw up her unborn child's life like her mother did hers.
Despite being a frustrating and sometimes selfish character, I really liked Mattie. Her narrative was peppered with a heavy dose of humor and introspection. In a lot of women's fiction novels, the female character is totally aware of her own journey; it's often intentional. But Mattie sort of falls into her own metamorphosis. As a reader, it made seeing her growth that much more entertaining.
This book explores the idea of growing out of your mistakes, learning from them, and trying to avoid making the same ones again. It's so fun to read books with such charismatic side characters and this one did not disappoint in that area. This was Melissa DeCarlo's debut novel and I can't wait to see what's next for her.
![The Art of Crash Landing by Melissa DeCarlo](https://readingbookslikeaboss.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/01/The-Art-of-Crash-Landing-Teaser-1024x1024.jpg)
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