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4 months ago

absolutely nuts for this copy of the illiad + odyssey

Absolutely Nuts For This Copy Of The Illiad + Odyssey

the edges are GOLD


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9 months ago
Latest Book Haul Including This Winter/Spring 1962 Issue Of The Paris Review
Latest Book Haul Including This Winter/Spring 1962 Issue Of The Paris Review

Latest book haul including this Winter/Spring 1962 issue of The Paris Review


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9 months ago

found Villette at a local bookstore and almost had a heart attack ! it was only $12 too

it's nice to see not all bookstores have been so heavily affected by mainstream books, I'm definitely going back there

Found Villette At A Local Bookstore And Almost Had A Heart Attack ! It Was Only $12 Too

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10 months ago

ᯓᡣ𐭩

"someone will remember us, I say, even in another time"

. ݁₊ ⊹ . ݁˖ . ݁

call me a lesbian but i JUMPED for this book when I saw it at my local bookstore. ive already read it twice, and im in love

her poems are enrapturing, attention grasping, and overall beautiful. i'm not even kidding when i say these fragments top any other completed poem ive read

will never not suggest this book to people, it is 100% worth the read. my copies already heavily annotated

ᝰ.ᐟ

ᯓᡣ𐭩

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11 months ago

𐙚

"I think I’d been looking for it all my life, a storm in my body to match the one in my head."

─── ⋆⋅☆⋅⋆ ───

To say this book was NOTHING like i expected would be a massive understatement.

sapphic horror has got to be one of my new favourite genres, and this book did i great job in playing into it. the gore was detailed, the mysteries nerve wracking, and i was constantly worrying about our main characters.

make sure to check the trigger warnings before getting into this one<3

-

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️/5⭑

𐙚

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11 months ago

ᯓᡣ𐭩

"You who call women the fairer sex, you may repress and deny all you want, but some of us were born with a howling void where our souls should sway"

-ˋˏ✄┈┈┈┈

oh. my.

I absolutely ADORED this book, and I also think it's just about time we saw some "women killing men" media floating around, and this was the perfect take on it.

A food critic who eats men? I don't know about the rest of you, but this is exactly what I meant when I said I support women's wrongs.

If you're looking for a book with weird gorey details, cannibalism, and a psychopathic woman as an mc, I absolutely recommend looking into this!

of course, please check trigger warnings before diving in

ᯓᡣ𐭩

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1 year ago

whore. what’s your address. crebit cbard.

what happened to hello?? my name is??? smh

(ง •̀_•́)ง


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1 year ago

ᯓ★

"But I wasn't listening. I wasn't stopping. Because we were already running away again, me and my imagination." Bunny by Mona Awad

₊✩‧₊˚౨ৎ˚₊✩‧₊

im covered in bandaids at the moment, but regardless this book has a tight grip on me :')

I haven't been able to properly put it down since I finally convinced myself to read it. i've brought it everywhere with me just so I can sneak a few pages in wherever I go lmao

im 60% through this book, and im absolutely in love. depending on how this ends, I might even give it a reread soon

as always, head the trigger warnings, and happy reading!

૮꒰ ˶• ༝ •˶꒱ა ♡

ᯓ★

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1 year ago
Y'all Aren't Going To BELIEVE This

y'all aren't going to BELIEVE this

I only got these books for $6, literally crying happy tears rn. I found them in my local thrift store and grabbed them immediately


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1 year ago

I think this was the first time in a damn while I actually had to put a book down and have a break from reading

I read the tws, I knew this scene would be here, but fucking hell

currently running to my cat video compilations to fix this, the book is "The Marrow Thieves" By Cherie Dimaline, I'll do a full book review once im done reading it

I Think This Was The First Time In A Damn While I Actually Had To Put A Book Down And Have A Break From

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1 year ago
Sitting Near A Fireplace, Listening To Dark Is The Night, While Reading Has A Different Feeling To It

sitting near a fireplace, listening to Dark Is The Night, while reading has a different feeling to it

very cozy here ngl


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2 months ago

Jan + Feb Reading Wrap Up

I will be the first to admit that it’s a little late for a February wrap up when it’s nearly April, but I wasn’t planning on doing one until recently, so fuck off. 

Jan + Feb Reading Wrap Up

Ushers by Joe Hill - Short Story (4 stars)

I’ve been a Joe Hill kick recently, since his new novel comes out in October. Ushers is a short story that follows a young man who can see grim reapers, and this ability affects his life in both positive and negative ways. I gave this story 4 stars. It was okay, but I don’t really like short stories for the simple reason that they are too short! It was creepy, it was well written, and an overall interesting read, so if you want something spooky, you want to give Joe Hill a shot, or you just have a free lunch break, take a gander at it. 

Jan + Feb Reading Wrap Up

The Pram by Joe Hill - Short Story (3.5 stars)

Another Joe Hill short story, this entry follows a husband who comes across a supernatural pram and, as you can imagine, creepy chaos ensues. This was a fun read. I didn’t enjoy it as much as Ushers. I don’t enjoy stories that are particularly hopeless, and I also don’t fully enjoy stories where the main character is evil, an unreliable narrator, or crazy, because it tends to make me sympathize with them less. It was well written, just as Ushers was, and I would like to know more about the lore of the story. The background of the story seems so much more interesting than the story itself. 

Jan + Feb Reading Wrap Up

Ancestor by Scott Sigler - Novel (3 stars)

Ancestor follows a team of experts as they attempt to craft a brand new species with the specific purpose of xenotransplantation. In the process, they create hungry entities that stalk the humans they were created to help. You’ll like this novel if you enjoyed Jurassic Park. It has a healthy balance of likable and unlikable characters. This was a fine novel. I gave it three stars. I wasn’t angry, I read it, but had I known what my experience would be, I probably would’ve gone with something else. Ancestor has the feel of a big budget action movie that you go to see on a weekday because nothing else is playing that evening. Or better yet, some random action thriller you found on Netflix that you turn on while you clean the house. It’s fine. My only major problem with the story is that the monsters weren’t scary to me. The descriptions made them sound like mutated chickens, and the image was more surreal than it was scary. I don’t know if I can recommend this. I don’t think I’m in the target demographic. You’ll probably like this novel if you enjoy James Patterson or Michael Crichton. 

Jan + Feb Reading Wrap Up

Stones to Abbigale by Onision - Novel (0 stars) 

Holy shit. This was the worst book I've ever read. Ever. I’m not kidding. I read this as part of a reading challenge, and I have so many regrets. The only good thing to come out of it was my new skill of being able to stop reading books that I hate. If I start a book and I don’t jive with it, it’s a DNF now. I can’t ever get the time back that I wasted reading this garbage. At one point, I crumpled up a page, threw it in the toilet and pissed on it. Click here or here for more details. 

Jan + Feb Reading Wrap Up

The Way of Kings by Brandon Sanderson - Novel (4.5 stars)

I’ve been hearing about Brandon Sanderson for years so I was excited to read his stuff for the first time. This book was good, had some really solid worldbuilding, but I’ll warn you, it is long and it is part of a series. The final 15% made me feel like I was on drugs and I was losing my goddamn mind. Trying to explain the ending to the uninitiated is like trying to explain Endgame to someone who has never seen a marvel movie. It would be five stars but I didn’t enjoy the pacing of the novel. For a more in-depth review, click here.

Jan + Feb Reading Wrap Up

Annihilation by Jeff VanderMeer - Novel (0.5 stars)

Annihilation follows a government funded team as they enter a mysterious land afflicted with paranormal activity known as Area X. I didn’t like this book. The issue is that I don’t enjoy ambiguous stories and I didn’t know that’s what I was walking into. Who is that? What is this? What does that mean? Why is this happening? How does the story end? Who knows? Who cares?! If I’m going to devote my time to a novel, I would like to A) relate to the characters, B) understand what is going on, and C) know that there was a point to what I just read. Even stories that aren’t inherently deep, like the Fast and the Furious franchise, have a point. And the point of the Furious franchise is to entertain. The Hunger Games is a critique of elitism and power structure. A story should be about something and if it’s not about anything, it should at least try to entertain. I didn’t know what Annihilation was about or what it was trying to do. My problem with ambiguous stories is that a lot of them are pointless meanderings masquerading as deep and complex story telling. You can write virtually anything and say, “Well, it’s not supposed to make sense!” When I finished Annihilation I was left no different than the start of the story. It made me feel nothing. 

And this is a side tangent, but what is with the Snowbird thing? For the uninitiated, the main character’s husband had a nickname for her, and the nickname was Snowbird. He kept repeating it over and over again in every flashback and it annoyed me. A part of it made have been the fault of the narrator, as I listened to the audiobook and her drawl on the word made me want to slit my wrists. 

I’m left asking, what was the point? It was a six hour audiobook, why did I devote so much time listening to that when I gained nothing? Not even entertainment? I was bored and annoyed. The climax was confusing and lackluster. I saw the sequel on sale this week for 1.25 and I had to remind myself how much I hated the first book, but come on! A 1.25?! Can you think of a place where you can get a book for a 1.25? I might go back and see if it’s still there. For a 1.25 I’d buy twelve more Onision books. 

Jan + Feb Reading Wrap Up

Talking as Fast as I Can by Lauren Graham - Novel (4 stars)

It should surprise nobody that I am a Gilmore Girls fan. When I discovered Lauren Graham had a memoir, I jumped at the chance to read it, and it was splendid. The novel includes dozens of anecdotes (funny, sad, and everything in between), focused on Gilmore Girls and the overarching structure of Graham’s career. I highly recommend this if you like Lauren Graham or Gilmore Girls. It’s funny, it’s touching, and I just discovered that Graham has written a fiction novel which I will be reading very soon. 

Jan + Feb Reading Wrap Up

Clown in a Cornfield by Adam Cesare - Novel (3.5 stars)

Clown in a Cornfield follows Quinn Maybrook, who, after moving to a small town, finds herself trapped in a cornfield with her new friends and several chainsaw-wielding psychopaths wearing clown costumes. This was a good book, though I was a little disappointed. If you’re on BookTok, you know people have talked up this novel, and I was expecting a little more. For one thing, I didn’t feel very connected to the protagonist. We know how she feels and we know about her past, but we don’t really see a lot of her personality. In larger conversations, it feels as if she’s just a bystander. Other than that, things were okay. It was enjoyable, and I wasn’t really creeped out while reading this. It is classified as a horror, but I’d say it’s closer to a suspense novel. There’s a sequel, but I probably won’t read it. This could be a standalone novel if you don’t read the epilogue. 

Thanks for reading. I may do these monthly or bi-monthly, I haven’t decided yet.


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5 months ago

Classics are so weird because you will be reading the most beautiful writing known to mankind, absolutely heartwrenching quotes and brilliant themes, and then you will be hit with the most VIOLENT RACISM AND SEXISM


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