Books:
Archive:
Favorite Reviews:
I have reviewed many books over the years, and some reviews have been more interesting or fun to write than others. The below list were my favorites to write.
• Ada, or Ardor
• Choose Your Own Autobiography
• Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde
• If Not, Winter
• Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell
• The Kid Table
• Like Water for Chocolate
• Lolita
• The Monk
• The Night Circus
• Oathbringer
• Return of the Native
• Rhythm of War
• S
• Things Fall Apart
• The Unit
• The Woods Are Always WatchingCategories:
Tags:
- abandoned
- Africa
- Asia
- atmospheric
- audio
- BBAW
- body image
- callback
- circus horror
- classics
- collection
- comfort
- Cosmere
- cruise
- divinity
- dream-invader
- education
- end of year
- fanfiction
- favorite
- fitness
- food
- gender studies
- goals
- good omens
- Harry Potter
- health
- historical
- house
- humor
- I made a thing.
- joint review
- KonMari
- Latin America
- LGBTQIA
- lists
- memorable
- Middle East
- mini-review
- multi-read
- nonfiction
- photography
- place-character
- POC
- portentous
- psychology
- quarantine
- race report
- readathon
- reread
- revisiting
- RIP-worthy
- running
- shredded me
- speculative
- Sunday Coffee
- tarot
- tattoo
- the ferals
- translation
- travel
- Wellness Wednesday
- WTF moments
- Yarn Art


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Category Archives: Prose
Harry Potter et L’Ordre du Phenix, by JK Rowling
It’s the fifth Harry Potter book in French and I really have nothing more to say at this point about the project. I took over a month off between books 4 and 5 and was happy to find that my … Continue reading
The Nun, by Denis Diderot
I’ve wanted to read this for years solely because I bought it in French back in 2000. I didn’t even know what it was about, but I owned it in French. I read it in English though. It’s all about … Continue reading
Posted in 2011, Adult, Prose
Tagged classics, divinity, LGBTQIA, mini-review, translation
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Dracula, by Bram Stoker
The first weekend of May, a cold front came through and got me right into the mood for RIP reading. My last book of the weekend was Dracula. Everyone pretty much knows the story of Dracula. While I didn’t love … Continue reading
Death in the Castle, by Pearl S. Buck
The first weekend of May, a cold front came through and got me right into the mood for RIP reading. Death in the Castle was the second of three books I read. Buck is famous for The Good Earth, which is … Continue reading
Protected: The Winter of our Discontent, by John Steinbeck
There is no excerpt because this is a protected post.
The Professor’s House, by Willa Cather
The Professor’s House is different from most of Cather’s more famous works, which feature immigrants, pioneers, and life in the lower Midwest. Interestingly, I’ve found that I tend not to care much about those works. My Antonia was okay but … Continue reading
The Unit, by Ninni Holmqvist
Imagine a world where economic productivity comes first, a world perhaps not so different from our own, if you really think about it. In this world, people are considered necessary to society if they marry, have children (future workers), and/or … Continue reading
Jude the Obscure, by Thomas Hardy
Jude and Sue are two distant cousins from a family that has had bad luck with marriage. They’ve both been warned not to marry anyone, but both do, and both marriages fail. Now they are in love with each other, … Continue reading
Shooting Kabul, by NH Senzai
I have a difficult time reading children’s or middle-grade fiction because I recognize too many of the elements that go into writing them. Shooting Kabul was no different, and at first I struggled, but the story was so engaging that … Continue reading
Joy in the Morning, by Betty Smith
Eighteen-year-old Annie leaves Brooklyn to join her longtime boyfriend Carl in the Midwest, where he’s attending law school. The two get married against their families’ wishes. This book takes them through their first year of marriage and the birth of … Continue reading