Cover Image: On Rotation

On Rotation

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Member Reviews

2.9


My favorite thing about this story was the love interest. For a description that says that it is for Grey’s Anatomy lovers, I was left hanging… Everything surrounding the female lead is absolutely toxic. Even her and her attitude. This female lead had her moments of clarity that made her likable, but everything that came out of her mouth left me with eyes and mouth wide open. Her relationship with her family is beyond toxic. I know that family dynamics are very personal and everyone has to deal with their respective relatives in their own way. Still, this particular story seems to go above and beyond ridiculousness. For being grown adults, her best friends behaved like little kids. And most of the book I was reading with a WTF? Look on my face. Even so, I couldn’t bring myself to DNF. I had to know how the mess would end and how her life would magically be fixed. I kinda want my time back.

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What a delightful read!! There are so many things to be said about On Rotation, but if to keep it brief, if you love the medical world, meet cutes, and strong female characters then pick this up now!

Things I loved:
- the cultural perspective provided
- the honesty and insight into the medical world
- the love
- the fact that she gets the degree, the friends and the man. Being a woman with multiple priorities can be done!
- the writing was great, easy to read and captivating

Overall, I really loved this read. I finished weeks ago and have still been thinking about it!

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I thoroughly enjoyed this book. It doesn't fit neatly into a single genre, and I think that's partially why I found myself so engaged - yes, there's romance, but there's also a strong focus on Angie's career, her relationship with her family, her personal goals.

I look forward to reading more from Shirlene Obuobi, because she's a masterful author. The characters leap off the page - they're so clearly drawn, I felt like I knew them within a few sentences of first meeting them. This also means that when the characters struggle, you feel it right alongside them. I had to remind myself a few times that these are characters in their early 20s and they're supposed to be making mistakes, because I definitely wanted to yell into the book a few times there! However, I think that's a sign of a successful novel - I really cared about Angie and where she ended up.

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Angie has spent her whole life working towards being everything her parents dreamed she would be. When her well planned future starts slipping away, she will need to uncover what it is she truly wants. Once she discovers that, can she put the pieces of her life back together to get there?

I enjoyed this book. It wasn't overly dramatic and felt completely believable. The relationships Angie has with her sisters and friends were extremely relatable. While I could not quite relate to Angie's work struggles, Obuobi does a great job of making Angie's work challenges feel like challenges in any other career path. I would recommend this book to anyone looking for a heartfelt, easy read.

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This was a romance novel which didn't follow the usual tropes and clichés. I appreciated the two characters from different ethnic and racial backgrounds as well as the narrative which covers career choices, parental influence and relationship vulnerabilities. Oboudi writes with ease and detail and the characters felt well created and realistic. I enjoyed the story and would read future novels by this author!

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This is another story that I really enjoyed. From the first page, I felt the MC 100% because she was speaking about the struggle of having "an ass". I also felt her struggle of dealing with family dynamics and wanting to do more for her future. I liked the romance though, I wish there were more spice/intimacy but I also know that that wasn't the primary focus of this story. There were so many layers to this story and a child of immigrants, I really appreciated her experience. This is just a story I deeply connected with and I know so many others would connect with it too.

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*** Thank you to Netgalley and Avon Books for sending me an advanced reader copy of On Rotation by Shirlene Obuobi! All thoughts are my own! ***

What I really liked about this book was getting a look inside Angie's rotations inside the hospital in the different departments. The reader really got to see what it's like inside a hospital and the amount of work it takes to become one.

Also loved Angie's friend group, the Sanity Circle. You can tell how close they really are, from the Beyoncé concert to their hangout in general. They are the kind of friend group you want in your life.

I kind of think some of the fights in this book were forced, both with the love interest and the best friend. Some of it really could have been resolved like adults if they just talked it out.

Also figured this is point that needed mentioning, Ricky is the sweetest cinnamon roll of a human being ever. That is all.

The end of my book was probably my favorite. The amount at stake kept me from putting the book down, between Ricky and Angie's relationship and Ricky's father.

I love the addition of asterisks, leading to commentary from the author, but I really would have liked to see footnotes at the bottom of the arc. It could have been because it was an advanced copy and they couldn't format it, but I realized all of the asterisks lead to the end of the arc. This might have changed with the physical copy of the book, but I'm not sure.

On Rotation is out now! Be sure to get your copy!

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I was really excited for On Rotation because it is so rare that we get to see a strong, smart black woman as the FMC. I really appreciated the representation and loved the way the author showed the struggles of being not only a medical student, but a Black, female, immigrant med student.

All that said, I really thought this had a lot of potential but the romance fell flat. As soon as Ricky admitted to being in a relationship after several hours of flirting with Angie, I was frustrated. While the way their relationship developed may have been more realistic than most romance novels, it didn't make me giddy and happy the way I expect of the genre because of the fact that there was so much added drama and tension. Additionally, Ricky ended up being relatively manipulative, with some gaslighting throughout the story.

I'd definitely read another book by Obuobi because I did like the writing style, concept and representation but I just could not stand the LI,

Thank you to Netgalley and the publisher for providing me with a copy of this novel in exchange for an honest review.

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Angela subscribes to mentality of deciding what you want then doing what you need to do to get it. As the daughter of an immigrant, she feels the pressure to measure up to her parents’ expectations. When it all falls apart, she is heartbroken.

This was a beautifully written novel - I can’t believe it is a debut! Shirlene beautifully writes her characters, especially Angela, and we get to see her growth as she is working her way to her dreams - or what she thinks they are.

Thank you to Netgalley, the publisher and the author for the ARC in exchange for my review!

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A Black Woman in STEM with LGBTQ and API representation. This book has it all, most importantly a strong female lead who is career focused but flawed + a romantic interest that is just the right amount of complicated but oh so sweet= GOLD! If you are looking for a book that has more than romance this one may be for you 💗

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I enjoyed reading this book, I had no idea how difficult it is to be a medical resident and go to med school at the same time. The main character, Angie, is a Ghanian-American who’s parents have such high expectations that even her choice of specialties could disappoint them. Her parents also have fixed expectations about who she’ll marry, and set her up with guys she has nothing in common with.

At the same time, she faces prejudice at work. She’s goes to a fair by herself and meets a guy she likes, who’s an artist and would be completely unsuitable to her family. His outlook on life is completely different than hers, which makes her even more determined to make up her own mind and choose her partner on her own.

I liked how Angie faced her issues with her parents, and it was great to watch her navigate all the parts of her complicated life. 4 stars.

Thanks to the publisher and NetGalley I received a complimentary copy of this book. Opinions expressed as in this review are completely my own.

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𝐌𝐲 𝐑𝐚𝐭𝐢𝐧𝐠: ⭐️⭐️⭐️/5 {3.5}

Read if you like:
🩺 Medical School Setting
🩺 Strong Female Friendships
🩺 Single POV

Overall, I really enjoyed this story. I love the representation portrayed throughout. And I will always be onboard for strong female friendships!

However, I think I would have been more content with this just being a story about Angie and her life trying to make it through medical school, while juggling her friendships. I just never truly felt the chemistry between her and the love interest. It felt like they were always arguing and I just couldn’t find myself rooting for the relationship.

I think this was a well written story and great debut novel. I look forward to what this author comes out with next!

🎁 Thank you @netgalley and @harperaudio for my gifted copies.

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I really enjoyed this read! The struggles the MC goes through are very relatable. I found her inner dialogue and thought process understandable.

Angie is a medical student who is dealing with school, family, friendship, and relationship stress while constantly trying to foresee her future. She continues to have to deal with these deep struggles and sometimes her own insecurities. There were so many layers to this book and I would definitely recommend!

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I DNF’d at 30%. I just didn’t care about the connection between our two main character. I did find the struggle of living up to parents expectations, especially from an immigrant point of view interesting and would skip the romantic stuff to focus on that

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This was a really enjoyable book about a third year medical student navigating school, family, friendships, love and self-discovery. Angie was an interesting and layered character with some strong friendships. I enjoyed the medical school setting and seeing some of the rotations that she was on as she found the area and focus of medicine meant for her. Her family felt a little flat development wise, but I enjoyed seeing them.

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This was a really fun book about finding yourself, how to love yourself and also how to let others love you. Angie is in Medical school and struggling to be the perfect student, a good daughter and manage a relationship that really isn't working. Enter a new man Ricky and things start to change.

I loved the internal monolog Angie had. Her determination and growing love for herself. I just thought this was so fun with some serious moments mixed in. I didn't want to stop reading about her and how things were going to turn out. I was really interested in her medical career and watching her become an amazing doctor.

Thank you to Avon Books for my review copy.

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*I received a copy of this book on NetGalley in exchange for an honest review. Thank you to the author, publisher, and NetGalley for this opportunity*

At its heart, ON ROTATION– a perfect example of the burgeoning New Adult genre– is the story of someone growing up. Angie Appiah prides herself on her “perfect” eldest daughter and med school student status, and tries to ignore her bad luck in love. At 25, she’s facing entering one of the hardest years in med school with a breakup and poor test result looming over her.

This story follows Angie’s growth during that third year of med school– the ups and downs of her friendships, the hard work and dedication she puts forth in her trials and rounds, the redefining of her relationship with family, and (of course) the love interest Ricky.

While there was a fair amount of insta-love– the author, Obuobi, does a masterful job of making Angie and Ricky’s relationship feel real. There was SO much angst, a healthy amount of “will they won’t they”, and the general awkwardness that is dating today. There were so many wonderful aspects of this book: the inclusion of Ghanaian culture, LGBTQ+ representation, medical bias pertaining to black people, the overall horror of medical school… I can confidently say that everyone will find something in this book that speaks to them.

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"On Rotation" is a gripping new story perfect for fans of Grey's Anatomy and Chicago Med. You'll fall in love with the main character and never want to put it down!

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I absolutely adored this book! Reminiscent of Grey’s Anatomy (without all the crazy drama), it was so fun to look inside the life of a medical student during her third year: life, family, friends, work/school and love. I loved watching Angie come into her own in so many different areas of her life and don’t even get me started on how much I am enamored with Ricky!! I also thought the footnotes in this book were so fun, giving information about medical things or cultural things that I didn’t know before (& sometimes just fun ones). If you love medical drama, light on the drama and mixed with the sweetest romance, add this one to your list! Can not wait to read whatever Shirlene Obuobi writes next!

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Angie Appiah is the perfect daughter. She's very intelligent and has always been the best at everything she does but she doesn't have the best luck in love. Now she's a med student and just took the most important exam of her medical career, the one that's going to decide whether she can get into the residency program she wants or not. To top it off, her Ghanaian-American family is very strict and expects her to be nothing less than perfect.

As Angie is getting ready to go with her boyfriend to her parents’ home, he breaks up with her and she discovers that she barely passed her exam. Her world seems to be falling apart. Luckily, she has an amazing group of friends and she’s about to meet a charming boy that will help her take control of her life and follow her dreams.

I loved this book! I loved the diversity, the romance, the character development, the family dynamics, the medical drama and her supportive group of friends.

This is one of the most relatable stories I've read in a long time. As I'm studying right now for these exact same medical exams, I can definitely say that I've never felt more related to a book's main character. The pressure, the exhaustion, the long hours at the hospital, the tough, sad medical cases, the bias in medicine and the impostor syndrome that comes with all of this are very well reflected in this complex story.

Thank you @avonbooks and @netgalley for providing me with an e-ARC in exchange for my honest review.

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