#SUZANNE COLLINS WITCH HUNT
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Just finished catching fire.. HOW COULD YOU SUZANNE
#thg series#thg#why why whyyy#PEETAA#fuck snow#WHYYYYY#ON TO MOCKINGJAY IG#I MEAN I KNEW THE SPOILERS BUT STILL#IT WAS STILL A TRAUMATIC EXPERIENCE#SUZANNE COLLINS WITCH HUNT#whyyyyyyyyyy#😀#EVERLARK IS IN FLAMES
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you look just like your father
and
it's the things we love most that destroy us
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fascinating, isn't it, how often heroic and foolish turn out to be one and the same
and
what if we could stop being different colors, different backgrounds, and just be in love?
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there's always a choice. it's just that sometimes one choice is worse than another
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watch how quickly the supreme court can make an alien of you. watch how they light your skin on fire and call your attempts to breathe inhuman
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perhaps bravery is simply the face humanity wraps around its collective madness
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sometimes evil deserves a sorry
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but you're the good guys right? you're doing the right thing? you're the ones protected by the future authors of history. no one will remember your wrongdoings, so what does it matter?
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sorry but destiny doesn't exist in this world. it's just one person's circumstances colliding with another's
#tigris snow#coriolanus snow#the ballad of songbirds and snakes#suzanne collins#heartless#marissa meyer#we were liars#e. lockhart#cath#jest#cadence sinclair eastman#gatwick matthew patil#only ashes remain#rebecca schaeffer#adair#arati warrior#witch hunt#slam poetry#illuminae#amie kaufman#jay kristoff#ezra mason#kady grant#adam sass#surrender your sons#luka kane#the block#ben oliver#tokyo ghoul#rize kamishiro
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She lost her billionaire status because she donated so much to charity.
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2023 reading log
the uncensored picture of dorian gray by oscar wilde / jan. 2-9 / 4 stars
buzz saw: the improbable story of how the washington nationals won the world series by jesse dougherty / jan. 9-11 / 4.5 stars
proposal by meg cabot / jan. 17 / 3 stars
sidelined: sports, culture, and being a woman in america by julie dicaro / jan. 12-17 / 4 stars
remembrance by meg cabot / jan. 18-19 / 3 stars
how sweet it is by dylan newton / jan. 19-20 / 3 stars
daughters of sparta by claire heywood / jan. 21-22 / 3 stars
highly suspicious and unfairly cute by talia hibbert / jan. 22 / 4 stars
gentlemen prefer blondes: the diary of a professional lady by anita loos / jan. 23-26 / 3 stars
hell bent by leigh bardugo / jan. 26-31 / 4 stars
all about love: new visions by bell hooks / jan. 22-31 / 4 stars
daisy jones & the six by taylor jenkins reid / jan. 31-feb. 2 / 4 stars
everything i know about love: a memoir by dolly alderton / feb. 2-9 / 4 stars
emma by jane austen / feb. 11-19 / 4 stars
fake it till you bake it by jamie wesley / feb 19-23 / 3.5 stars
my dark vanessa by kate elizabeth russell / feb. 23-26 / 4 stars
throttled by lauren asher / feb. 26-28/ 2 stars
the locker room by meghan quinn / mar. 1-5 / 1 star
come as you are: the surprising new science that will transform your sex life by emily nagoski / feb. 17-mar. 5 / 4.5 stars
pucked by helena hunting / mar. 5-11 / 3 stars
legendborn by tracy deonn / mar 12-23 / 4.5 stars
unadulterated something by m.j. duncan / mar. 23-25 / 4 stars
the fifth season by n.k. jemisin / mar. 26-apr. 15 / 4 stars
how to fake it in hollywood by ava wilder / apr. 16-19 / 3.5 stars
sharp objects by gillian flynn / apr. 19-22 / 4 stars
the homewreckers by mary kay andrews / apr. 22-25 / 3.5 stars
the kiss curse by erin sterling / apr. 25-26 / 3.5 stars
the wedding crasher by mia sosa / apr. 26-27 / 3 stars
let’s get physical: how women discovered exercise and reshaped the world by danielle friedman / mar. 25-apr. 27 / 4 stars
mile high by liz tomforde / apr. 27-may 6 / 1.5 stars
happy place by emily henry / may 6-7 / 5 stars
carrie soto is back by taylor jenkins reid / may 7 / 4 stars
the spanish love deception by elena armas / may 8 / 2 stars
neon gods by katee robert / may 8-9 / 1 star
love in the time of serial killers by alicia thompson / may 9-11 / 4 stars
the bodyguard by katherine center / may 11 / 4 stars
the intimacy experiment by rosie danan / may 11-12 / 3 stars
upgrade by blake crouch / may 12-13 / 4 stars
by any other name by lauren kate / may 13 / 3 stars
the dead romantics by ashley poston / may 15-17 / 4 stars
the ballad of songbirds and snakes by suzanne collins / may 19-28 / 3.5 stars
so many ways to lose: the amazin’ true story of the new york mets—the best worst team in baseball by devin gordon / may 13-jun. 4 / 4 stars
iron widow by xiran jay zhao / jun. 5-7 / 3 stars
the grace year by kim liggett / jun. 7-8 / 4 stars
the last magician by lisa maxwell / jun. 9-11 / 4.5 stars
little fires everywhere by celeste ng / jun. 12-14 / 4 stars
not a happy family by shari lapena / jun. 14-17 / 2.5 stars
the familiars by stacey halls / jun. 17-21 / 3 stars
the girls i’ve been by tess sharpe / jun. 21-22 / 3.5 stars
once more with feeling by elissa sussman / jun. 23 / 3 stars
the cheat sheet by sarah adams / jun. 24-25 / 1 star
how to sell a haunted house by grady hendrix / jun. 26-29 / 3 stars
little thieves by margaret owen / jul. 1-3 / 4.5 stars
this is how you lose the time war by amal el-mohtar and max gladstone / jul. 3-6 / 3 stars
the very secret society of irregular witches by sangu mandanna / jul. 11-12 / 4 stars
the lies of locke lamora by scott lynch / jul. 13-27 / 4.5 stars
seven days in june by tia williams / jul. 28-30 / 4 stars
bloodmarked by tracy deonn / jul. 31-aug. 2 / 4 stars
something wilder by christina lauren / aug. 3-4 / 3 stars
howl’s moving castle by diana wynne jones / aug. 4-5 / 4 stars
dark matter by blake crouch / aug. 12-13 / 3 stars
eat up! food, appetite, and eating what you want by ruby tandoh / jul. 30-aug. 14 / 4 stars
the silent companions by laura purcell / aug. 5-18 / 4 stars
mr. wrong number by lynn painter / aug. 19-20 / 2 stars
romantic comedy by curtis sittenfeld / aug. 20-21 / 4 stars
the last tale of the flower bride by roshani chokshi / aug. 21-23 / 4 stars
the hating game by sally thorne / aug. 23-25 / 2 stars
lessons in chemistry by bonnie garmus / aug. 25-26 / 2.5 stars
the godparent trap by rachel van dyken / aug. 27 / 2 stars
i’m glad my mom died by jennette mccurdy / aug. 27-29 / 4 stars
the atlas six by olivie blake / aug. 29-sep. 9 / 3 stars
wordslut: a feminist guide to taking back the english language by amanda montell / sep. 1-9 / 4 stars
practice makes perfect by sarah adams / sep. 10-11 / 3 stars
all systems red by martha wells / sep. 13-14 / 3 stars
do i know you? by emily wibberly and austin siegemund-broka / sep. 14-16 / 4 stars
same time next summer by annabel monaghan / sep. 17 / 3.5 stars
Ounder the influence by noelle crooks / sep. 18-22 / 4 stars
burn for me by ilona andrews / sep. 22-23 / 4 stars
the littlest library by poppy alexander / sep. 24 / 3 stars
the neighbor favor by kristina forest / sep. 25-27 / 3 stars
satisfaction guaranteed by karelia stetz-waters / sep. 28-oct. 5 / 3 stars
the ex talk by rachel lynn solomon / oct. 5-7 / 4 stars
change of plans by dylan newton / oct. 8-9 / 2 stars
coraline by neil gaiman / oct. 9 / 4 stars
you, again by kate goldbeck / oct. 9-11 / 3 stars
mrs. caliban by rachel ingalls / oct. 12 / 3 stars
summer sons by lee mandelo / oct. 12-19 / 4 stars
the death of jane lawrence by caitlin starling / oct. 19-24 / 3 stars
house of hollow by krystal sutherland / oct. 25-29 / 4 stars
white hot by ilona andrews / oct. 28-nov. 2 / 4.5 stars
twice shy by sarah hogle / nov. 4-5 / 3 stars
sexed up: how society sexualizes us, and how we can fight back by julia serano / nov. 2-10 / 4 stars
artificial condition by martha wells / nov. 11-14 / 4 stars
wildfire by ilona andrews / nov. 14-16 / 4.5 stars
between a fox and a hard place by mary frame / nov. 18 / 3 stars
revolting prostitutes: the fight for sex workers’ rights by molly smith and juno mac / nov. 18-20 / 4 stars
emily wilde’s encyclopaedia of faeries by heather fawcett / nov. 21-24 / 4.5 stars
love and other words by christina lauren / nov. 24-25 / 3 stars
the boyfriend candidate by ashley winstead / nov. 26 / 3.5 stars
the seven year slip by ashley poston / nov. 27-28 / 5 stars
how to fall out of love madly by jana casale / dec. 3-10 / 3 stars
ordinary monsters by j.m. miro / dec. 10-21 / 3 stars
rogue protocol by martha wells / dec. 22-23 / 4 stars
what you wish for by katherine center / dec. 25 / 3 stars
the blonde identity by ally carter / dec. 25-26 / 2.5 stars
just my type by falon ballard / dec. 26-31 / 2 stars
#belatedly jumping on this trend don’t mind me#trying to inject some life back into this blog#allison’s reading log
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September 2024 TBR--
I am DETERMINED to make September a good month. Just a good month in my life (I need it). And that's starting with the books. I'm having to roll over my reread of Catching Fire from last month due to life but I'm also so excited for all of the romance reads coming to me soon. (Also, a non-hockey sports romance? Let's all take a moment to reign in our surprise.)
The Hunting Moon by Susan Dennard (Reread)--I'm prepping for the final book in the trilogy to come out this Fall. The general synopsis for the series is this: Hemlock Falls has a forest that fills with monsters every night when the sun sets and the mists rise. Which is why the town is full of hunters. But Winnie and her family are outsiders due to her father being outed as a witch and a traitor ten years ago. Until she creates a plan to be welcomed back with open arms.
Catching Fire by Suzanne Collins (Reread)--This is my other reread for the month. I’m planning on reading all of the books in the series this year. We follow Katniss and Peeta as they complete the district tour following their win of the games. But then they’re forced to go back into the arena when the Quarter Quell is announced.
First Down by Grace Reilly--A sports romance that isn't hockey? Who is she? In honor of football starting up, I'm reading this football romance I found in the Chicago airport a few months back. This follows Bex as she struggles to make her ex realize she doesn't want to get back together and James as he struggles with a writing class he needs to graduate. They decide to trade: tutoring for fake dates. But what happens when the dates don't feel so fake after all?
Five Broken Blades by Mai Corland--The king of Yusan must die and the five most dangerous liars in the land have been mysteriously summoned to work together in order to kill him. Each of the five blades will come for him. They can agree on murder. They can agree on treachery. But for these five killers it's not enough to forge an alliance. To survive, they must find a way to trust each other, but only one can take the crown.
Happy Place by Emily Henry--This is my first attempt at Emily Henry and I'm not sure how I want this to go. This one has fake dating so I'm excited to give it a shot. A couple broke up 6 months ago but never told their friends and now they're all going on vacation together. And this will be their final year to vacation at this cottage so they think it'll be easier to pretend they're still together. That will be easier, won't it?
Blindsided by Victoria Denault (Kindle)--This is an enemies to lovers hockey romance. I'm keeping my streak of reading one hockey romance a month going with this one. I read book one in this series a while back and decided to pick up the next one. It seems like this series is written by a bunch of different authors so I'm not sure how this will stack up with the first but I'm ready to give it a shot. (Pun intended.)
The Bitter End by Alexa Donne(NetGalley)--A winter storm traps eight students of LA's elite Warner Prep in a remote ski cabin. They're stranded with a killer--who may just be one of their own. I've never read from Alexa Donne before, but I've heard of them so I'm excited to try out one of their books. I'm always down for a locked room mystery. One that deals with snooty rich kids? Let's go.
Christmas Sweater Weather by Jaqueline Snowe(NetGalley)--While at a snowy ski resort for her brother's festive bachelor party, Charlotte is thrown together with her bother's best friend Hayden--the same best friend who rejected her long ago. She can tell herself to get over Hayden, but holiday cheer is turning to holiday lust every time they're within ten feet of each other.
I'm hoping the romance helps lift my spirts this month. I'm also really hoping to enjoy the fantasy and mystery novels that are coming to my eyeballs soon.
#tbr#monthly tbr#September tbr#the hunting moon#susan dennard#catching fire#suzanne collins#first down#grace reilly#five broken blades#mai corland#happy place#Emily Henry#blindsided#Victoria denault#the bitter end#Alexa donne#christmas sweater weather#Jaqueline snowe
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2023 Reading Summary
I'm late...again... It's hardly a surprise. However, I've finally looked at my reading for 2023. The only stats I tracked this year was the genre, and even this was a simplified version because I decided I don't care. I spent most of my time this year recording what I thought about the books I read not the data surrounding them. And, if I'm honest, I don't think I'll even bother with the genre in 2024.
The Numbers
In total I read 84 books, which considering I've been working or training full time all year is surprising for me. On average I tend to read 60-70 books in a normal year, usually towards the lower end, so almost 20 books over that is a very pleasant surprise.
The biggest surprise has been my change in most read genre! I've only recorded 4 genres, classic, nonfiction, fantasy, and general fiction, these broke down to:
Classic 53%
Fantasy 31%
Nonfiction 12%
General fiction 4%
Fantasy is usually my top genre with over 50%, so this is a change (I don't think it will be permanent). However the largest shock is the nonfiction! I never read nonfiction for fun, but I guess this is a change from leaving university. I don't have to learn for work anymore, so I'm now looking into these things for fun as the mood takes me. I am disappointed these haven't been history books, however, I'm hoping to change that in 2024 and it has been nice learning more about literature in 2023.
Top Three Books
I tried to do a top 5 but the gap between 3 and 4 was too large, so I've narrowed it down to a top 3.
Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell by Susanna Clarke
The Tombs of Atuan by Ursula K. Le Guin
Evelina by Fanny Burney
I loved all of these books in different ways, and I think I've done a mini review of each in the months I read them. However, if anyone wants detailed thoughts then I'm more than happy to talk about any of these books.
Biggest Surprises
The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes by Suzanne Collins
Silas Marner by George Eliot
Goblin Market and Other Poems by Christina Rossetti
Fugitive Prince by Janny Wurts
All of these were excellent, they just weren't quite in my top three.
Most Disappointing
Witches: James I and the English Witch-Hunts by Tracy Borman
The Fitz and the Fool Trilogy by Robin Hobb (I DNFed this series after Fool's Quest and I'm heartbroken, but I have major issues with this trilogy in a way I couldn't keep reading as it was destroying my love for Fitz.)
Tress of the Emerald Sea by Brandon Sanderson (this is standing in for all of the secret project books)
Goals (Sort Of...)
To continue the surprises... I've only listened to 4 audiobooks, so most of those books were read physically or through an ebook. This is huge for me as I used to consume about a third of my books through audio, it's a massive improvement because I don't retain them very well. Listening to fewer audiobooks was a big part of my informal (in other words unwritten) reading goals and I'm very happy to have got it down this far. I do think it'll go up again next year because I've got a lengthy commute to work now, but I've also broken the habit of sitting at home listening when I could easily read the book myself and get more out of it.
I did as well with not worrying about numbers or data surrounding the books I'm reading. I deliberately retired my spreadsheet this year and only kept up with my reading journal. After a week or so I didn't miss it in the slightest. I'm not a hard data/stats kind of person, but I am easily persuaded to keep these sorts of records. I started keeping a spreadsheet in 2019 where I track genre, pages, author gender, and format in addition to the book information, by 2022 I was tracking book info, series, genre, format, author info (just too much to list), pages, month read, where I bought the book, if it was a tbr, new or library read, reread or new to me, and rating. It was too much! It was hard work, I was MISERABLE, and I didn't care. It was performing to the standards of what you see in the reading community online... So, I ditched the spreadsheet and I've been much happier. I've read better books because I haven't had my stats in mind, and I've read more. I had more time to actually read because I haven't been spending an inordinate amount of time researching books and entering data into a spreadsheet! I'm definitely making this a permanent change.
I've also used my ereader a lot more this year, I have no numbers to back this up but I've naturally been reaching for it regularly and it has done me good. I've not only read more frequently and for longer periods of time, but I've been more comfortable while reading (no more back, neck, or arm strain from 1000+ page fantasy tomes!) and I've tried books I was hesitant about buying physically because I could access a digital copy. I did have a massive problem with my ereader in November because my Kobo Libra 2 started to have battery changes that nothing resolved and then it died completely. Unfortunately I lost a lot of my reading data, including my notes, which has upset me. But I have saved my elibrary and bought a "new" device (it's a Boox Nova 3) so I can still read - I might discuss getting a Boox separately. However, I am much more cautious about note taking through a device and I'm sticking to recording everything in my physical journal.
This brings me nicely onto my reading journal. I wanted to overhaul my journal this year because my old journal format was growing stale and uninspiring to use. I was often leaving it for weeks at a time and often scrambling to write up 5 or 6 books in one go because I'd forgotten to do it as I was reading. So, I worked through several different styles of journal and found a new, more flexible, and engaging style that can fit my changing moods throughout the year. I'm definitely going to discuss this at a later date, so I won't say much here. But I am very happy to have a new journal system and I'm excited to get into it properly this year.
#books#reading#books of 2023#reading summary#end of year reflection#bookblr#booklr#best of 2023#worst of 2023#reading goals#reading journal
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See previous year's reading journeys
Book Goal: 30 50
Read So Far: 61
Books to Be Read:
Dark of the West - Joanna Hathaway
Books Read this Year:
These Violent Delights - Chloe Gong ~ Review
Our Violent Ends - Chloe Gong ~ Review
The Nature of Witches - Rachel Griffin
Of Cages and Crowns - Brianna Joy Crump
Gods of Jade and Shadow - Silvia Moreno Garcia ~ Review
Foul Lady Fortune - Chloe Gong ~ reread ~ Review
Anatomy: A Love Story - Dana Schwartz ~ Review
American Royals - Katharine McGee ~ Review
Ever the Hunted - Erin Sumerill
Ever the Brave - Erin Sumerill
Once a King - Erin Sumerill
Serpent and Dove - Shelby Mahurin
Six Crimson Cranes - Elizabeth Lim ~ Review
Last Violent Call - Chloe Gong ~ Review
The Dragon’s Promise- Elizabeth Lim
Shadow and Bone - Leigh Bardugo ~ Review
Skin of the Sea - Natasha Bowen
Soul of the Deep - Natasha Bowen
Siege and Storm - Leigh Bardugo ~ Review
Ruin and Rising - Leigh Bardugo ~ Review
Six of Crows - Leigh Bardugo ~ Review
Crooked Kingdom - Leigh Bardugo
King of Scars - Leigh Bardugo
The Raven Boys - Maggie Stiefvater ~ Review
The Dream Thieves - Maggie Stiefvater ~ Review
Blue Lily, Lily Blue - Maggie Stiefvater
Rule of Wolves - Leigh Bardugo
The Raven King - Maggie Stiefvater
Call Down the Hawk - Maggie Stiefvater
Mister Impossible - Maggie Stiefvater
Greywaren - Maggie Stiefvater
Caravel - Stephanie Garber ~ reread ~ Review
Legendary - Stephanie Garber
Finale - Stephanie Garber
The Poppy War - R. F. Kuang
The Inheritance Games - Jennifer Lynn Barnes
The Hawthorne Legacy - Jennifer Lynn Barnes
The Final Gambit - Jennifer Lynn Barnes
Clockwork Angel - Cassandra Clare ~ reread
Clockwork Prince - Cassandra Clare ~ reread
Clockwork Princess - Cassandra Clare ~ reread
Legendborn - Tracy Deonn ~ Review
Bloodmarked - Tracy Deonn
The Shadow of Perseus - Claire Heywood
The Hunger Games - Suzanne Collins ~ reread ~ Thoughts
Catching Fire - Suzanne Collins ~ reread
Mockingjay - Suzanne Collins ~ reread
Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes- Suzanne Collins
The Atlas Six - Olivie Blake
Guardians of Dawn: Zhara - S. Jae-Jones ~ Review
House of Salt and Sorrows - Erin A. Craig
Foul Heart Huntsman - Chloe Gong ~ Review
Atalanta - Jennifer Saint
The Enchanted Hacienda - J.C. Cervantes
Fourth Wing - Rebecca Yarros
This Vicious Grace - Emily Thiede
The Curse of Saints - Katie Dramis
Iron Flame - Rebecca Yarros
Song of Silver, Flame Like Night - Amélie Wen Zhao ~ Review
The Lightning Thief - Rick Riordan ~ reread
The Sea of Monsters - Rick Riordan ~ reread
The Titan’s Curse - Rick Riordan ~ reread
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If you like ___ then read ___ - Studio Ghibli Edition
No, I am not giving any context :)
Howl’s Moving Castle
Sorcery of Thorns by Margret Rogerson
Clockwork Angel by Cassandra Clare
Howl’s Moving Castle by Diana Wynn Jones
Castle in the Sky
Starflight by Melissa Landers
To Kill a Kingdom by Alexandra Christo
Truthwitch by Susan Dennard
Grave of the Fireflies
The Book Thief by Markus Zusak
The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini.
To Kill a Mockingbird by Harper Lee
The Cat Returns
The Cat Who Saved Books by Louise Heal Kawai
The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe by C.S. Lewis
The Golden Compass by Philip Pullman
Kiki’s Delivery Service
We Ride Upon Sticks by Quan Barry
The Ex Hex by Rachel Hawkins
Mooncakes by Suzanne Walker
My Neighbour Totoro
Tuck Everlasting by Natalie Babbitt
The Wind in the Willow by Kenneth Grahame
Fairy Tale: A True Story by Monica Kulling
Spirited Away
A Darker Shade of Magic by V.E. Schwab
The Screaming Staircase by Jonathan Stroud
Gregor the Overlander by Suzanne Collins
Princess Mononoke
The City of Brass by S.A. Chakraborty
An Ember in the Ashes by Sabaa Tahir
Flame in the Mist by Renee Ahdieh
Only Yesterday
The Midnight Library by Matt Haig
Under the Whispering Door by T.J. Klune
The Secret Garden by Frances Hodgson Burnett
The Secret World of Arrietty
The Borrowers by Mary Norton
Wild Beauty by Anna Marie McLemore
Bridge to Terabithia by Katherine Paterson
When Marnie Was There
My Sister’s Keeper by Jodi Picoult
Little Women by Louisa May Alcott
When the Butterflies Came by Kimberley Griffiths Little
Ponyo
Between the Lines by Samantha Van Leer & Jodi Picoult
Fathomless by Jackson Pearce
Midnight Pearls by Debbie Viguie
The Wind Rises
All the Light We Cannot See by Anthony Doerr
The Fault in Our Stars by John Green
Everything, Everything by Nicola Yoon
From Up on Poppy Hill
The Once and Future Witches by Alix E. Harrow
Better Together by Christine Riccio
Wonder by R.J. Palacio
Porco Rosso
We Hunt the Flames by Hafsah Faizal
The Gilded Wolves by Roshani Chokshi
Biggles the Camels are Coming by W.E. Johns
Whisper of the Heart
One Last Stop by Casey McQuiston
Fangirl by Rainbow Rowell
The Upside to Unrequited by Becky Albertalli
Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind
The Last Namsara by Kristen Ciccarelli
Rebel of the Sands by Alwyn Hamilton
The City of Ember by Jeanne DuPrau
Pom Poko
Hollow Kingdom by Kira Jane Buxton
Furiously Happy: A Funny Book About Horrible Things by Jenny Lawson
Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy by Adam Douglas
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stealing this from @snoopysfriendwoodstock but here are my 2021 reads so far <3
january
a tale for the time being by ruth ozeki
the year of the witching by alexis henderson
so you’ve been publicly shamed by jon ronson
horrorstör by grady hendrix
no visible bruises by rachel louise snyder
from the desk of zoe washington by janae marks
the wife upstairs by rachel hawkins
difficult women by roxane gay
red, white, and royal blue by casey mcquiston
convenience store woman by sayaka murata
the hating game by sally thorne
detransition, baby by torrey peters
the hunger games by suzanne collins
catching fire by suzanne collins
mockingjay by suzanne collins
the invisible life of addie larue by victoria schwab
when no one is watching by alyssa cole (3.5/5 stars)
between the world and me by ta-nehisi coates (4.5/5 stars)
dear girls by ali wong
mad and bad by bea koch
brokeback mountain by annie proulx
last night at the telegraph club by malinda lo
february
fangirls by hannah ewens
mooncakes by suzanne walker & wendy xu
the book of delights by ross gay
autobiography of a slave by juan francisco manzano
the hunting party by lucy foley
chasing the scream by johann hari
women, race, and class by angela y. davis
watch over me by nina lacour
wow, no thank you by samantha irby
american spy by lauren wilkinson
white like me by tim wise
the reader by bernhard schlink
we’ve all seen helena by lip manegio
the laugh of the medusa by helene cixous
where the crawdads sing by delia owens
love & gelato by jenna evans welch
trick mirror by jia tolentino
house of salt and sorrows by erin a. craig
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All The Books I Read In 2020
Here she is! The full list of books I read in 2020. My goal was to read 52 books again this year, but once lockdown started I upped it to 100, and I ultimately surpassed even that goal!! I think reading is so important for my personal growth and mental health, so the last two years I have made reading a big priority in my life, and it is the best choice I could have made. This year especially, I found reading to be such a comfort and such a great tool for keeping the quarantine blues at bay. Here’s to all the books I read in 2020, and all the books I will read in 2021!
132 books, 44,531 pages, and a refreshed passion for learning and growth:
The Kite Runner- Khaled Hosseini (372 pgs) 4.5
A Discovery of Witches- Deborah Harkness (579 pgs) 2.75
The Call of the Wild and Selected Stories- Jack London (176 pgs) 4
I Wear The Black Hat -Chuck Klosterman (225 pgs) 3.75
Digital Fortress- Dan Brown (430 pgs) 3.75
Night Boat to Tangier- Kevin Barry (224 pgs) 2
The Chemist- Stephanie Meyer (518 pgs) 3
Find Me- Andre Aciman (272 pgs) 3.5
A Walk In The Woods- Bill Bryson (394 pgs) 4.5
Invisible Monsters- Chuck Palahniuk (304 pgs) 2.5
Underland, A Deep Time Journey- Robert MacFarlane (496 pgs) 3.25
The Dutch House -Ann Patchett (337 pgs) 5
Notes From a Small Island -Bill Bryson (324 pgs) 3.75
Home Work -Julie Andrews (560 pgs) 3.5
100 Essential Things You Didn’t Know About Maths and The Arts- John D. Barrow (320 pgs) 2.25
On the Road -Jack Kerouac (307 pgs) 3.5
Train Dreams -Denis Johnson (116 pgs) 4.25
2001: A Space Odyssey -Arthur C. Clarke (297 pgs) 4.75
Educated: A Memoir -Tara Westover (334 pgs) 5
Carrie -Stephen King (253 pgs) 3.5
Dig. -A.S. King (394 pgs) 4
salt slow -Julia Armfield (208 pgs) 3
Don’t Call Us Dead -Danez Smith (96 pgs) 5
Convenience Store Woman -Sayaka Murata (163 pgs) 3.25
The Life and Times of the Thunderbolt Kid: A Memoir -Bill Bryson (288 pgs) 3.75
Who Moved My Cheese? -Spencer Johnson (96 pgs) 3.5
The Truth About Keeping Secrets -Savannah Brown (336 pgs) 4
All-American Poem -Matthew Dickman (85 pgs) 3.5
2010: Odyssey Two -Arthur C. Clarke (320 pgs) 4
Behind Her Eyes -Sarah Pinborough (307 pgs) 3
The Stand -Stephen King (1440 pgs) 4
On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous- Ocean Vuong (246 pgs) 4.5
Homie: Poems -Danez Smith (96 pgs) 4
The Long Way to a Small, Angry Planet -Becky Chambers (516 pgs) 3.5
The Silent Patient -Alex Michealide (325 pgs) 3.75
Talking As Fast As I Can -Lauren Graham (205 pgs) 3.5
Gregor the Overlander -Suzanne Collins (326 pgs) 1.5
The Transmigration of Bodies -Yuri Herrera (112 pgs) 2.5
The Deep -Rivers Solomon (166 pgs) 4
The Last Man -Mary Shelley (478 pgs) 3
Oryx and Crake -Margaret Atwood (389 pgs) 4.25
One Summer: America, 1927 -Bill Bryson (456 pgs) 3.5
Aristotle and Dante Discover the Secrets of the Universe -Benjamin Alire Sáenz (359 pgs) 3
The Climb: Tragic Ambitions on Everest -Anatoli Boukreev (297 pgs) 3.75
2061: Odyssey Three -Arthur C. Clarke (302 pgs) 3
Where I Belong -Alan Doyle (315 pgs) 4
Humble Pi: When Math Goes Wrong in the Real World -Matt Parker (314 pgs) 4
Normal People -Sally Rooney (304 pgs) 4
Dinosaur Tales -Ray Bradbury (144 pgs) 3
Someday, Someday, Maybe -Lauren Graham (340 pgs) 3.25
The Power -Naomi Alderman (341 pgs) 4.25
Deception Point -Dan Brown (558 pgs) 2.5
3001: The Final Odyssey -Arthur C. Clarke (272 pgs) 3.75
The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes -Suzanne Collins (540 pgs) 3.5
The Vegetarian-Han Kang (188 pgs) 3
The Map of Salt and Stars -Zeyn Joukhadar (368 pgs) 4.5
One Man’s Wilderness: An Alaskan Odyssey -Sam Keith (224 pgs) 4
11/22/63 -Stephen King (849 pgs) 4.5
The Ballad of Black Tom -Victor LaValle (149 pgs) 3.5
Girl With A Pearl Earring -Tracy Chevalier (233 pgs) 4
The Year of the Flood -Margaret Atwood (431 pgs) 3.5
In A Sunburned Country -Bill Bryson (335 pgs) 3
Disappearing Earth -Julia Phillips (312 pgs) 2.5
The Hidden Life of Trees -Peter Wohlleben (288 pgs) 3.5
The People in the Trees -Hanya Yanagihara (368 pgs) 4
Shadow of Night -Deborah Harkness (584 pgs) 3
High Fidelity -Nick Hornby (340 pgs) 3.5
If It Bleeds -Stephen King (528 pgs) 3.5
Sharp Objects -Gillian Flynn (254 pgs) 4
A Newfoundlander in Canada -Alan Doyle (244 pgs) 4
The Water Dancer -Ta-Nehisi Coates (406 pgs) 4
The Fellowship of the Ring -J.R.R. Tolkien (398 pgs) 5
The Bluest Eye -Toni Morrison (216 pgs) 4
Into the Wild -Jon Krakauer (207 pgs) 4
Fahrenheit 451 -Ray Bradbury (194 pgs) 4
Burial Rites -Hannah Kent (336 pgs) 4.5
The Poet X -Elizabeth Acevedo (368 pgs) 5
The End of October -Lawrence Wright (400 pgs) 1.5
Eleanor Oliphant is Completely Fine -Gail Honeyman (336 pgs) 3.5
Survivor -Chuck Palahniuk (304 pgs) 3.5
Every Song Ever -Ben Ratliff (272 pgs) 2
A Beautifully Foolish Endeavor -Hank Green (452 pgs) 4
The Time Traveler's Wife -Audrey Niffenegger (540 pgs) 3.5
The Body: A Guide for Occupants -Bill Bryson (450 pgs) 3
Mr. Mercedes -Stephen King (437 pgs) 3.5
Girl, Woman, Other -Bernardine Evaristo (453 pgs) 4.5
Midnight Sun -Stephenie Meyer (662 pgs) 2
The Maltese Falcon -Dashiell Hammett (213 pgs) 3
The Hunting Party -Lucy Foley (406 pgs) 4
The Hating Game -Sally Thorne (387 pgs) 2.5
My Year of Rest and Relaxation -Ottessa Moshfegh (304 pgs) 4
Real Life -Brandon Taylor (329 pgs) 4
My Sister the Serial Killer -Oyinkan Braithwaite (226 pgs) 4
The Answer Is...: Reflections on My Life -Alex Trebek (304 pgs) 3
Eileen -Ottessa Moshfegh (272 pgs) 3
Answering Back -Carol Ann Duffy (144 pgs) 4
Then She Was Gone -Lisa Jewell (359 pgs) 3.5
Death In Her Hands -Ottessa Moshfegh (259 pgs) 3.5
This Is How You Lose The Time War -Amal El-Mohtar, Max Gladstone (209 pgs) 4
The Goldfinch -Donna Tartt (771 pgs) 4.5
Shutter Island -Dennis Lehane (369 pgs) 3.5
The Devil All The Time -Donald Ray Pollock (261 pgs) 4
I'm Thinking of Ending Things -Iain Reid (241 pgs) 2
Bunny -Mona Awad (307 pgs) 3
The Snowman -Jo Nesbø (516 pgs) 2.5
Something Wicked This Way Comes -Ray Bradbury (293 pgs) 3
Pretty Little Liars -Sara Shepard (286 pgs) 1
Psycho -Robert Bloch (208 pgs) 3.5
Along Came a Spider -James Patterson (449 pgs) 3
American Psycho -Brett Easton Ellis (399 pgs) 4
Night Sky With Exit Wounds -Ocean Vuong (89 pgs) 4
Arctic Dreams -Barry Lopez (496 pgs) 4
Four Colors Suffice -Robin Wilson (280 pgs) 4.5
My Grandmother Asked Me To Tell You She's Sorry -Fredrik Backman (372 pgs) 3
Such A Fun Age -Kiley Reid (320 pgs) 4
In The Dream House -Carmen Maria Machado (251 pgs) 4.5
Beach Read -Emily Henry (361 pgs) 3.5
The Queen's Gambit -Walter Tevis (243 pgs) 3.5
The Book of Life -Deborah Harkness (561 pgs) 2.5
Atomic Habits -James Clear (319 pgs) 2.5
Heart Berries -Terese Marie Mailhot (143 pgs) 3
The Kiss Quotient -Helen Hoang (323 pgs) 3
Around The World In 80 Days -Jules Verne (252 pgs) 3
Dolores Claiborne -Stephen King (384 pgs) 4.5
Flatland -Edwin Abbott (96 pgs) 3.5
The Impossible Girl -Lydia Kang (364 pgs) 2.5
Alice's Adventures in Wonderland & Through The looking Glass -Lewis Carroll (239 pgs) 3.5
Kiss The Girls -James Patterson (481 pgs) 2
The Bride Test -Helen Hoang (296 pgs) 2.5
In A Holidaze -Christina Lauren (307 pgs) 3.5
‘Twas The Knife Before Christmas -Jacqueline Frost (309 pgs) 2.5
The Great Alone -Kristin Hannah (435 pgs) 4
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March TBR/W.
Every book, audiobook, tv show and movie I want to consume in March 2021.
-Hence ‘TBR/W’ - to-be-read/watched.
I’m not usually a fan of pre-planning my media for the month - I plan out all my media obsessively, but doing it by month seems a little too much like setting deadlines for my taste, and I’m sure I’ll somehow manage to turn watching tv into a chore. Regardless, it’s worth a shot, so this is going to be a rough guide - I’m going to pick four of each category, one per week, because I’d rather underestimate and surpass than overestimate and have to defer things to the next month. So let’s go.
Books
1. Skyward and 2. Starsight by Brandon Sanderson
Skyward is set in a future where the human race is on the verge of extinction, trapped on a planet constantly attacked by alien warriors. Spensa, a teenage girl stuck on the planet, wants to be a pilot, but it seems far-off. Then, she finds the wreckage of a ship that appears to have a soul, and she must figure out how to repair it, and persuade it to help her navigate flight school.
In truth, I mainly want to read this because of how highly it’s been praised by Hailey in Bookland on YouTube. I actually tried reading Sanderson’s Mistborn series a couple years ago, and just didn’t click with it. I love fantasy, but I can pretty confidently say epic fantasy just isn’t for me. However, Sanderson’s work is adored by many, and Skyward and its sequel Starsight appeal so much more to me, and I can’t wait to get to them.
3. House of Earth and Blood by Sarah J Maas
This is Maas’s first technically-adult book; Throne of Glass is young adult, ACOTAR being classed either as young or new adult. I’ve been a fan of Maas for a long time, and, though I enjoy her books less now than I have in the past due to how seriously they tend to take themselves, I’d still love to read this one. Where her previous series were both fantasies, this sits somewhere between that and a sci-fi, but I can’t say as-of-yet what I think, because I haven’t read it yet.
Bryce Quinlan finds herself investigating her friends’ deaths in an attempt to avenge them after they were taken from her by a demon. Hunt Athalar is a Fallen angel, enslaved by Archangels, forced to assassinate their enemies, when he’s offered a deal to assist Bryce in exchange for his freedom.
4. Scythe by Neal Shusterman
I listened to this as an audiobook in 2019 as part of BookTuber Book Roast’s Magical Readathon, and didn’t hugely get along with it in truth. The audiobook was excellent as an audiobook, but the story Ian’s I just didn’t really vibe. I think I just want to like this book, so I think it’s worth a reread to see if my opinion changes.
This follows Citra and Rowan, a reluctant pair of apprentice Scythes - in a utopian future where humanity has the means to live forever, it is the job of the Scythes to control the population by essentially reaping the souls of those they choose to die. Neither Citra or Rowan want it, but I don’t remember enough about this book to say any more.
Audiobooks
1. Mockingjay by Suzanne Collins
This is the last book in the Hunger Games trilogy, and you either already know what this series is about, or you’ve been living under a rock for the last thirteen years. I read this book for the first time nearly seven years ago, and it’s stuck with me. It sent me into a phase of only reading dystopian books (The Darkest Minds by Alexandra Bracken was part of this, and was the series that really got me into reading), but this was the main one that stuck with me.
It contains a powerful message about capitalism and discrimination, and this is the second time I’ve listened to the audiobooks, though the god-only-knows-what time I’ve read the series. I listened to The Hunger Games and Catching Fire in February, which automatically puts this on my to-listen for March.
2. Ghosts of the Shadow Market by Cassandra Clare, Sarah Rees Brennan, Maureen Johnson, Kelly Link and Robin Wasserman
This is a novella bind-up set in the Shadowhunters world, that I would imagine has quite a bit to do with the Shadow Market, an aspect of the Downworld introduced in The Dark Artifices, which I finished in January.
In truth, I’m mainly planning to listen to this audiobook because it’s the only Shadowhunters novella bind-up with an audiobook, and I’d just rather read additions to the main Shadowhunters series in this format rather than physically.
3. The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes by Suzanne Collins
This is a Hunger Games prequel that was released early last year, and I just wasn’t going to read it. I heard several reviews, the general consensus of which was basically that it’s not as good as the trilogy and is somewhat unnecessary, but, in truth, my curiosity’s got the better of me, especially since I started listening to the trilogy’s audiobooks again.
This prequel follows Coriolanus Snow as a mentor in the Games before he became President of Panem and the wonderful villain of the original trilogy.
4. Eliza and Her Monsters by Francesca Zappia
I mentioned this in my physical TBR post a couple weeks ago, but have decided to listen to the audiobook instead. A few weeks ago, I’d started to run out of audiobooks I wanted to listen to, and didn’t want to read anything on my regular TBR in this format, including this book. But, I went through a load of audiobook recommendations, and this was one of them, so it joined my to-listen.
I’m not hugely into contemporary books, but I’ve wanted to get more into the genre for a while, and this was the first one to join my TBR.
This novel follows Eliza Mirk, your typical high school outcast, who publishes a hugely popular web comic under the pseudonym LadyConstellation. Then Wallace Warland, the biggest fanfic writer of her comic transfers to her school and begins to draw her out of her shell.
TV Shows
Before I go into my list, I’d like to mention that I am currently watching WandaVision and am definitely planning to watch Falcon and the Winter Soldier on Disney+, but both come out on a weekly basis, so aren’t being included on this list. Also, I’ve been watching way too much YouTube recently, so I’m not sure I’ll get through all of these this month, especially since I’m watching the Arrowverse shows, which have such long seasons.
1. Love, Victor Season 1
This Love, Simon spin-off follows a character named Victor at Creekwood (I think that’s the name?) High School. I saw Love, Simon twice in cinemas when it was released, and, miraculously, it made me cry. I love that movie.
This series was released last year on Hulu, which is only available in the US, but as of February 23rd, it’s one of the shows that came to Disney+ as part of Star.
2. The Flash Season 1
As mentioned, I’ve started watching the DC Arrowverse shows. I watch tv shows through alternating seasons - as in, I watch season 1 of show A, then season 1 of show B, then 2 of A, etc., then when I finish one, I start watching show C - but I’m treating the Arrowverse as one show (even though it isn’t) so it’s not the only thing I’m watching. So this is technically Arrowverse S3, preceded by Arrow S1+2 (though I haven’t actually started S2 as of writing this because of how much YouTube I’ve been watching, so I’ll be finishing that first).
I genuinely don’t know that much about most DC superheroes, Flash included, but I’m going into this having been assured it takes itself less goddamn seriously than Arrow. It’s my sister’s favourite Arrowverse show, and I can’t wait.
3. Dare Me Season 1
I added this Netflix show to my watchlist when it came out, and my basic understanding is that it focuses on the cheerleaders at a high school, and begins when a new coach arrives. It focuses on the psychological damage behind competitive cheerleading, and I’m not convinced I’m going to love it, but I think it’s worth a shot.
4. Arrow Season 3
I’m so confused by this poster. This is specifically the season 3 poster, and I’m so confused, but I’m sure it’ll make more sense when I watch the season.
I explained the weird way I’m watching Arrowverse (named as such because Arrow was the first show in it) already, but Arrow follows Oliver Queen, the son of one of the billionaires of Starling City upon his return after being stuck for five years on an island when a cruise ship carrying him and his father sunk. His father left him with a list of names of the people ‘corrupting’ the city, and Oliver takes it upon himself to assume a vigilante identity and take them down.
Movies
I’m not a huge movie-watcher, but I end up compiling so many to watch that, to ensure I get round to them, I watch a movie every time I finish a tv show season. I’m also currently re-watching the MCU movies in chronological order.
1. Instant Family
This is just something that came onto Netflix recently and I thought might be entertaining, and so it joined my list.
This follows a couple who decide to adopt a teenager, only to find out she has two more siblings.
2. Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2
This is just a continuation of my MCU re-watch - I love this movie. I love Guardians of the Galaxy, full stop (on another note, I just generally don’t understand why British people call it a full stop and Americans call it a period. Neither name makes particular sense).
3. Avengers: Age of Ultron
And here we have another continuation of my MCU rewatch. I honestly think this is my favourite Avengers movie, because the whole teams actually together, and Wanda, Scarlet Witch, is introduced - I love her. I really didn’t like Vision until WandaVision came out, though.
4. Behind The Try: A Try Guys Documentary
Not technically a movie, but still. (Are documentaries movies? I tend to think of them as separate categories, but I guess they’re both movies. Hm.) I’ve been watching the Try Guys for years, which means I need to convince my sister to give me her Google password so I don’t have to pay for this.
I’m probably not going to stick to this list, and even if I do, I’m either going to also consume things not on it, or just not finish it. But, you’ll have to wait for my March wrap-up to find out.
#tbr#book#books#reading#reader#bookblr#marchtbr#tv shows#movies#review#films#movie#tv show#writerblr#march tbr
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by butrfac14, endlessnightlock (butrfac14)
Katniss is angry with her mother, with her place in life.
She goes to the woods to hunt and to gather. It's the place where she feels whole. Not so alone.
The woods are said to be full of evil spirits. The stories keep the villagers away, which is fine with her, but all she's ever found is peace and tranquility there. She's never encountered anyone on her outings, until one day a golden boy appears.
Words: 1659, Chapters: 1/4, Language: English
Fandoms: Hunger Games Trilogy - Suzanne Collins, Hunger Games Series - All Media Types
Rating: Mature
Warnings: No Archive Warnings Apply
Categories: F/M
Characters: Katniss Everdeen, Mrs. Everdeen, Primrose Everdeen, Peeta Mellark, Coriolanus Snow
Relationships: Katniss Everdeen/Peeta Mellark, Katniss Everdeen & Primrose Everdeen
Additional Tags: dark characters, Angst, old-time, Witches, Magic, addtional tags to come, social prejudice, mrs. everdeen is a witch, References to Depression, references to mental illness
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Books I own part 1
The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy Adams, Douglas
Samantha Learns a Lesson Adler, Susan S.
Aesops Fables Aesop
Flame in the Mist Ahdieh, Renée
Honey Hunt 6 Aihara, Miki
negima! 26 Akamatsu, Ken
Little Women Alcott, Louisa May
The Last Grand Duchess Anastasia
Fairy Tales Anderson, Hans Christian
Let's Dance a Waltz 1 Andõ, Natsumi
Let's Dance a Waltz 2 Andõ, Natsumi
Kitchen Princess 10 Andõ, Natsumi
mär 1 Anzai, Nobuyuki
Beauty Pop 1 Arai, Kiyoko
Beauty Pop 9 Arai, Kiyoko
Beauty Pop 10 Arai, Kiyoko
Pride and Prejudice Austen, Jane
yotsuba&! 1 Azuma, Kiyohiko
Of Enemies and Endings 4 Bach, Shelby
Of Giants and Ice 1 Bach, Shelby
Of Sorcery and Snow 3 Bach, Shelby
Of Witches and Wind 2 Bach, Shelby
A Question of Magic Baker, E.D.
Dragon Kiss 7 Baker, E.D.
Dragon's Breath 2 Baker, E.D.
Once Upon a Curse 3 Baker, E.D.
The Dragon Princess 6 Baker, E.D.
The Frog Princess 1 Baker, E.D.
Of Neptune 3 Banks, Anna
Of Poseidon 1 Banks, Anna
Of Triton 2 Banks, Anna
Peter Pan Barrie, J.M.
Peter and the Secret of Rundoon 3 Barry, Dave and Ridley Pearson
Peter and the Shadow Thieves 2 Barry, Dave and Ridley Pearson
Peter and the Starcatchers 1 Barry, Dave and Ridley Pearson
The Wonderful Wizard of Oz Baum, L. Frank
The Unicorn Quest Benko, Kamilla
The Brimstone Key Benz, Derek
The Year of the Hangman Blackwood, Gary L.
Antigoddess Blake, Kendare
William Blake Blake, William
The Atlas of Classic Tales Bordin, Claudia
The Name of this Book is Secret Bosch, Pseudonymous
Witch Born Bowling, Nicholas
Caddie Woodlawn Brink, Carol Ryrie
The Time Travelers Buckley-Archer, Linda
Magic and Other Misdemeanors 5 Buckley, Michael
Once Upon a Crime 4 Buckley, Michael
Tales from the Hood 6 Buckley, Michael
The Council of Mirrors 9 Buckley, Michael
The Ever After War 7 Buckley, Michael
The Fairytale Detectives 1 Buckley, Michael
The Inside Story 8 Buckley, Michael
The Problem Child 3 Buckley, Michael
The Unusual Suspects 2 Buckley, Michael
A Little Princess Burnett, Frances Hodgson
The Secret Garden Burnett, Frances Hodgson
Arabian nights Burton, Sir Richard Francis
Molly Moon's Incredible Book of Hypnotism 1 Byng, Georgia
Molly Moon and the Morphing Mystery 5 Byng, Georgia
Ash and Quill Caine, Rachel
Flunked 1 Calonita, Jen
Charmed 2 Calonita, Jen
Rook Cameron, Sharon
The Forgetting Cameron, Sharon
Ender's Game Card, Orson Scott
All Fall Down Carter, Ally
Heist Society 1 Carter, Ally
I'd Tell You I Love You but Then I'd Have to Kill You 1 Carter, Ally
Only the Good Spy Young 4 Carter, Ally
Cross My Heart and Hope to Spy 2 Carter, Ally
Don't Judge a Girl by Her Cover 3 Carter, Ally
Uncommon Criminals 2 Carter, Ally
The One 2 Cass, Kiera
The Selection 1 Cass, Kiera
Rebel Girls Lead Cavallo, Francesca and Elena Favilli
Rebel Girls Explore Cavallo, Francesca and Elena Favilli
The School of Good and Evil 1 Chainani, Soman
A World Without Princes 2 Chainani, Soman
Be a Genie in Six Easy Steps Chapman, Linda and Steve Cole
The Testing Charbonneau, Joelle
Powerless Childs, Tera Lynn and Tracy Dee's
Drama Con 2 Chmakova, Svetlana
Drama Con 3 Chmakova, Svetlana
Drama Con 1 Chmakova, Svetlana
Aru Shah and the End of Time Chokshi, Roshani
The Star Touched Queen Chokshi, Roshani
Cinderella Cinderella
Magic Knight Rayearth CLAMP
City of Bones Clare, Cassandra
Ready Player One Cline, Ernest
Catching Fire 2 Collins, Suzanne
Mockingjay 3 Collins, Suzanne
The Hunger Games 1 Collins, Suzanne
Matched Condie, Ally
The Waterless Sea Constable, Kate
Seaward Cooper, Susan
Mechanica Cornwell, Betsy
Venturess Cornwell, Betsy
Don't push the button! Cotter, Bill
Chasing Redbird Creech, Sharon
Ruby Holler Creech, Sharon
Love that Dog Creech, Sharon
Chasing Redbird Creech, Sharon
The Death Cure 3 Dashner, James
The Scorch Trials 2 Dashner, James
The Kill Order .5 Dashner, James
The Twelve Dancing Princesses David, Alfred and Mary Elizabeth Meek
The Fandom Day, Anna
Frozen De la Cruz, Melissa
26 Fairmont Avenue DePaola, Tomie
Blind Dewoskin, Rachel
The Tale of Despereaux DiCamillo, Kate
Hard Times Dickens, Charles
A Christmas Carol Dickons, Charles
Stepsister Donnelly, Jennifer
The Boy With the Hidden Name 2 Dorset, Skylar
The Girl Who Never Was 1 Dorset, Skylar
The Magickers Vol. 1 Drake, Emily
The Magickers Vol. 2 Drake, Emily
Dragonsdale Drake, Salamanda
Half Magic Eager, Edward
The Last of the Really Great Wangdoodles Edwards, Julie Andrews
Happy Marriage 2 Enjoji, Maki
Harry Potter Fact Book Farrington, Karen and Lewis Constable
Rocket science for babies Ferrie, Chris
Once Upon a Marigold Ferris, Jean
Bridget Jones's Diary Fielding, Helen
Wellspring of Magic Fields, Jan
Erak's Ransom 7 Flanagan, John
The Battle for Skandia 4 Flanagan, John
The Burning Bridge 2 Flanagan, John
The Icebound Land 3 Flanagan, John
The Rangers Apprentice 1 Flanagan, John
The Outcasts Flanagan, John
The Diary of a Young Girl Frank, Anne
Sphinx's Princess Friesner, Esther M.
Igraine the Brave Funke, Cornelia
Inkdeath 3 Funke, Cornelia
Inkheart 1 Funke, Cornelia
Inkspell 2 Funke, Cornelia
Bloody Kiss 2 Furumiya, Kazuko
Stardust Gaimen, Neil
Scarlet Gaughen, A.C.
Dragon Flight 2 George, Jessica Day
Dragon Slippers 1 George, Jessica Day
Dragon Spear 3 George, Jessica Day
Sun and Moon, Ice and Snow George, Jessica Day
Princess of the Midnight Ball 1 George, Jessica Day
Princess of Glass 2 George, Jessica Day
Princess of the Silver Woods 3 George, Jessica Day
Ruby Red 1 Gier, Kerstin
Sapphire Blue 2 Gier, Kerstin
Emerald Green 3 Gier, Kerstin
The Book Jumper Gläser, Mechthild
Mines of the Minotaur 3 Golding, Julia
Secret of the Sirens 1 Golding, Julia
The Chimera Curse 4 Golding, Julia
The Diamond of Drury Lane 1 Golding, Julia
The Gorgon's Gaze 2 Golding, Julia
The Princess Bride Goldman, William
Escape from Mr Lemoncello's Library Grabstein, Chris
The Wind in the Willows Grahame, Kenneth
A Thousand Pieces of You Gray, Claudia
Tales of the Greek Heroes Green, Roger Lancelyn
Tales of Ancient Egypt Green, Roger Lancelyn
Rated Grey, Melissa
Grimm's Fairy Tales Grimm, Jakob & Wilhelm
Water for Elephants Gruen, Sara
The Princess Academy Hale, Shannon
The Princess Academy Hale, Shannon
The Fairie Ring Hamilton, Kiki
Violet Wings 1 Hanley, Victoria
Indigo Magic 2 Hanley, Victoria
The Fourth Ruby 2 Hannibal, James R.
The Lost Property Office 1 Hannibal, James R.
Seraphina Hartman, Rachel
Ouran high school host club 10 Hatori, Bisco
Ouran high school host club 14 Hatori, Bisco
Ouran high school host club 15 Hatori, Bisco
Pandora Gets Frightened 6 Hennesy, Carolyn
Pandora Gets Vain 2 Hennesy, Carolyn
Hoot Hiaasen, Carl
vb rose 1 Hidaka, Banri
vb rose 2 Hidaka, Banri
vb rose 3 Hidaka, Banri
Portrait of m&n 1 Higuchi, Tachibana
Portrait of m&n 2 Higuchi, Tachibana
City of Masks Hoffman, Mary
The Iliad Homer
The Odyssey Homer
Reawakened Houck, Colleen
Invitation to the Game Hughes, Monica
Pay it Forward Hyde, Catherine Ryan
Dial-a-Ghost Ibbotson, Eva
Which Witch? Ibbotson, Eva
Magic Flutes Ibbotson, Eva
The Secret of Platform 13 Ibbotson, Eva
Demon Sacred 2 Itsuki, Natsumi
Demon Sacred 3 Itsuki, Natsumi
Demon Sacred 1 Itsuki, Natsumi
Princess of Thorns Jay, Stacey
A Thousand Nights Johnston, E.K.
The Enchanted Quest 5 Jones, Allan Frewin
The Fairie Path 1 Jones, Allan Frewin
The Immortal Realm 4 Jones, Allan Frewin
The Lost Queen 2 Jones, Allan Frewin
The Sorcerer King 3 Jones, Allan Frewin
Howl's Moving Castle Jones, Diana Wynne
A Tale of Time City Jones, Diana Wynne
The Phantom Tollbooth Juster, Norton
The Midnight Dance Katz, Nikki
The Day of the Djinn Warriors Kerr, P.B.
The Stonekeeper Kibuishi, Kazu
Mamotte lollipop 1 Kikuta, Michiyo
mamotte lollipop 2 Kikuta, Michiyo
mamotte lollipop 3 Kikuta, Michiyo
mamotte lollipop 4 Kikuta, Michiyo
mamotte lollipop 5 Kikuta, Michiyo
mamotte lollipop 6 Kikuta, Michiyo
The Diabolic Kincaid, S.J.
The Jungle Books Kipling, Rudyard
From the Mixed-up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler Konigsburg, E.L.
Enchanted 1 Kontis, Alethea
Hero 2 Kontis, Alethea
Swindle Korman, Gordon
Chasing the Falconers 1 Korman, Gordon
Hunting the Hunter 6 Korman, Gordon
The Friday Society Kress, Adrienne
Theodosia and the Serpents of Chaos LaFevers, R.L.
The Coming of Dragons Lake, A.J.
Defy Larson, Sara B.
The Very Short, Entirely True History of Unicorns Laskow, Sarah
The Portal Lasky, Kathryn
25 Women Who Dared to Go Lassieur, Allison
To Kill a Mocking Bird Lee, Harper
Wings Lethcoe, Jason
Ella Enchanted Levine, Gail Carson
The Princess Tales Levine, Gail Carson
The Two Princesses of Bamarre Levine, Gail Carson
Prince Caspian 4 Lewis, C.S.
The Horse and His Boy 3 Lewis, C.S.
The Last Battle 7 Lewis, C.S.
The Magicians Nephew 1 Lewis, C.S.
The Silver Chair 6 Lewis, C.S.
The Voyage of the Dawn Treader 5 Lewis, C.S.
The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe 2 Lewis, C.S.
Spinning Starlight Lewis, R.C.
Pippi Longstocking Lindgren, Astrid
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June TBR List!
Happy June!
I’m still waiting on The Ballard of Song Birds and Snakes, so I never finished my May TBR and am reading the last book from Aprils (Clockwork Angel).
This was unintentional but every book is part of a series!
From Bad to Curse by Katie Alender finished
Alexis is the last girl you'd expect to sell her soul. She already has everything she needs--an adorable boyfriend, the perfect best friend, and a little sister who's finally recovering after being possessed by an evil spirit, then institutionalized. Alexis is thrilled when her sister joins a club; new friends are just what Kasey needs. It's strange, though, to see how fast the girls in The Sunshine Club go from dorky and antisocial to gorgeous and popular. Soon Alexis learns that the girls have pledged an oath to a seemingly benevolent spirit named Aralt. Worried that Kasey's in over her head again, Alexis and her best friend Megan decide to investigate by joining the club themselves. At first, their connection with Aralt seems harmless. Alexis trades in her pink hair and punky clothes for a mainstream look, and quickly finds herself reveling in her newfound elegance and success. Instead of fighting off the supernatural, Alexis can hardly remember why she joined in the first place. Surely it wasn't to destroy Aralt...why would she hurt someone who has given her so much, and asked for so little in return?
Clockwork Prince by Cassandra Clare
In the magical underworld of Victorian London, Tessa Gray has at last found safety with the Shadowhunters. But that safety proves fleeting when rogue forces in the Clave plot to see her protector, Charlotte, replaced as head of the Institute. If Charlotte loses her position, Tessa will be out on the street—and easy prey for the mysterious Magister, who wants to use Tessa’s powers for his own dark ends. With the help of the handsome, self-destructive Will and the fiercely devoted Jem, Tessa discovers that the Magister’s war on the Shadowhunters is deeply personal. He blames them for a long-ago tragedy that shattered his life. To unravel the secrets of the past, the trio journeys from mist-shrouded Yorkshire to a manor house that holds untold horrors, from the slums of London to an enchanted ballroom where Tessa discovers that the truth of her parentage is more sinister than she had imagined. When they encounter a clockwork demon bearing a warning for Will, they realize that the Magister himself knows their every move—and that one of their own has betrayed them. Tessa finds her heart drawn more and more to Jem, but her longing for Will, despite his dark moods, continues to unsettle her. But something is changing in Will—the wall he has built around himself is crumbling. Could finding the Magister free Will from his secrets and give Tessa the answers about who she is and what she was born to do? As their dangerous search for the Magister and the truth leads the friends into peril, Tessa learns that when love and lies are mixed, they can corrupt even the purest heart.
Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban by J. K. Rowling finished
Harry Potter's third year at Hogwarts is full of new dangers. A convicted murderer, Sirius Black, has broken out of Azkaban prison, and it seems he's after Harry. Now Hogwarts is being patrolled by the dementors, the Azkaban guards who are hunting Sirius. But Harry can't imagine that Sirius or, for that matter, the evil Lord Voldemort could be more frightening than the dementors themselves, who have the terrible power to fill anyone they come across with aching loneliness and despair. Meanwhile, life continues as usual at Hogwarts. A top-of-the-line broom takes Harry's success at Quidditch, the sport of the Wizarding world, to new heights. A cute fourth-year student catches his eye. And he becomes close with the new Defense of the Dark Arts teacher, who was a childhood friend of his father. Yet despite the relative safety of life at Hogwarts and the best efforts of the dementors, the threat of Sirius Black grows ever closer. But if Harry has learned anything from his education in wizardry, it is that things are often not what they seem. Tragic revelations, heartwarming surprises, and high-stakes magical adventures await the boy wizard in this funny and poignant third installment of the beloved series.
The Wonderful Wizard of Oz by L. Frank Baum finished
When Dorothy and her little dog Toto are caught in a tornado, they and their Kansas farmhouse are suddenly transported to Oz, where Munchkins live, monkeys fly and Wicked Witches rule. Desperate to return home, and with the Wicked Witch of the West on their trail, Dorothy and Toto - together with new friends the Tin Woodsman, Scarecrow and cowardly Lion - embark on a fantastic quest along the Yellow Brick Road in search of the Emerald City. There they hope to meet the legendary, all-powerful Wizard of Oz, who alone may hold the power to grant their every wish.
Among Wolves by R.A Hakok finished
There's only one place left that’s safe. It’s the last place you should be. Gabriel doesn't know how it began. Nobody does, not even Kane, and he was President. Gabriel was on a tour of the White House with Mags and the rest of Miss Kimble’s first-graders when it happened. They fled in helicopters to a long-abandoned mountain bunker, even as the first of the missiles found their targets. Ten years have passed, and Gabriel still lives deep inside the mountain, waiting for the world to thaw. But outside the ash-storms continue to rage, and supplies are running low. The President says it will be okay, but Gabriel isn’t so sure. He’s their scavenger; he’s seen what it’s like out there. Then one day Gabriel finds a bloodstained map. The blood’s not a problem, nor are the frozen remains of the person it once belonged to. Gabriel’s used to seeing dead bodies; there's far worse to be found in any Walmart or Piggly Wiggly you care to wander into. Except this one he recognizes, and it shouldn’t be here. Now all Gabriel can think is how he's going to make it back to the bunker to let the President know what he's found. But the map Gabriel has found is the key to a secret, one that has been buried for a decade. Gabriel's about to learn that inside the mountain things are not as they seem. And to get Mags and the others out he will need to face the thing that terrifies him most.
Unfinished TBR books:
The Ballard of Songbirds and Snakes by Suzanne Collins finished
The description can be found here at the bottom.
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Black Knight (Witch World, Vol. 2)
Simon Pulse, 2014 441 pages, 9 chapters + prologue and epilogue ISBN 978-1-4424-6734-7 LOC: PZ7.P626 Bl 2014 OCLC: 1065025018 Released December 2, 2104 (per B&N)
A month after her connection, Jessie Ralle starts dreaming about a young thief who mysteriously disappears in a flash of light. On the ninth night of the same lucid dream, she herself sees the flash, and wakes up next to the thief and four others in transport to a deserted jungle island. There are no ideas, no instructions, no obvious goals. There’s just a clue, a plaque mounted near their drop-off point that indicates that six groups just like theirs are here, but only one will make it out alive.
In other words: Remember that world-building we had in the first book, where it was implied that Jessie and her baby daughter were going to be integral components to the new and evolving leadership among the witch council? Remember the difficulty and heartbreak of Jimmy only being alive in one half of her life? Remember the potential new bonds of realizing her father was active in her upbringing, and could be again in both worlds? Well, fuck all that — let’s have a Hunger Games.
OK, technically this is more like Battle Royale, and Pike actually makes a reference to it as the young adults acclimate to their surroundings. But it is undeniable the influence that Suzanne Collins had on YA fiction, and certainly YA sci-fi/fantasy/analogues. In the wake of Katniss Everdeen, the market felt like it made a hard shift from doomed supernatural romances to dystopian future societies. It would be irresponsible of Pike to not try to cash in on that.
But this book ... is lacking in this regard. Collins’ success was not just that she made us care about Katniss, but that we cared about the bigger problem endemic to her (and all the other contestants’) situation. And Pike doesn’t give us enough to care about here. We don’t know what the stakes are, beyond survival. We don’t know who these people are, where they come from, or what they have to live for. We don’t even know where they are or why. I’m assuming there was another book or two planned for this series that would eventually get us to the meanings and revelations of this battle and why they were chosen to fight it and what ultimately was to come out of it. But this shit was so unsatisfying and we care so little about anyone or anything here that I can’t imagine we’ll ever see resolution.
(Like, does Pike even care? He claimed when the first one came out that it was going to be his “finest work,” and that the series could go “over ten books.” But it’s been almost five years and we haven’t seen another one of these. He didn’t mention his newer works at ALL in that recent Electric Lit interview. So who knows?)
The biggest problem is that the characters and setting we already know makes such a drastic shift to accommodate this story. And, like, I get it. The model of the industry, especially when this book came out, almost requires that you have established characters and an ongoing storyline before you ever publish anything. But it doesn’t feel connected to what’s come before. At all. It’s a new place we’ve never seen, everyone in the action except Jessie is a new character (and remember there are thirty-five of them), and there is almost zero resolution or explanation for what’s happening. There’s no reason this couldn’t have been literally anybody. Like, this could just as easily have been a Sita book, and maybe it would have actually made more sense, except that there’s no other vampires left. It probably shouldn’t have been a book about Jessie, who has a uniquely important position in witch world in light of the high-profile deaths she’s overseen and her responsibility to the Special. None of what happens in this story fits with anything that’s led up to it, and we are left a) wondering why the hell we’re reading this and b) ultimately unsatisfied.
I don’t even necessarily feel like there’s much to summarize, but I’m gonna do it anyway, because I’m dedicated.
We start with a chapter about the thief — Marc — whose MO is to hide in the trunk of a fancy car he’s valet-parked, wait for the owner to take him home, and then make off with the jewelry she (usually it’s a she) was wearing after she falls asleep. This heist is going to be his last job, because he doesn’t want to risk someone putting together a pattern that these high-profile thefts all came in the wake of the victims having been at his theater. So he steals the lady’s necklace and then her car to safely get out of Dodge, but when he stops to take a leak the light appears.
This is the dream Jessie has for over a week. The rest of the story is told from her immediate perspective, in first-person present tense just like a good little dystopian. She’s wondering about the dream, but she’s more concerned about who she just saw in the mall: the Highlander and President Coroner, just sitting there eating ice cream like they didn’t both get fatal holes in their chests last month. And yes, this is in witch world, where they died. She tails them and discovers they’re staying with (of course) the Alchemist, who tells Jessie there’s a reason for this and she needs to be prepared for ... something big, he isn’t clear on it. The Council has more info, maybe: the bad witches need to replace their leadership, and Jessie is first in line because she facilitated the killing. But what about the fact that she just saw President Coroner? The Council has an answer to that as well: one of the witch genes allows its bearer to control time, and so probably the Alchemist has that and has brought her and the Highlander forward from the past for some reason.
So Jessie goes home and has the dream again, only this time when the light appears she feels as though she’s yanked from her bed. She wakes up in the real world (and yes, I have expressed my hate for these names, but I’m sticking with them for consistency’s sake) in some kind of a shipping container with five other dudes, all of them wearing identical green outfits and matching unbreakable bracelets. And yes, one of them is Marc. The others are a precocious genius who’s going to MIT at 16, a quiet and scared Korean girl, an Israeli military fighter, and a Sudanese farmer who exudes strength and just seems to accept the situation. All of them were snatched at about the same time, globally and not locally — morning for the Americans, evening for Africa and Israel, middle of the night in Korea. But as far as Jessie can tell, she’s the only witch. So what is this about?
They don’t get very far before the next chapter, where Jessie wakes up in witch world and realizes she’s in some deep shit. She spends all day trying to find Marc, but like ... if he’s not connected, how is this going to help? She ends up not doing anything about it, and awakens again in the real world on some kind of volcanic jungle island. They find the aforementioned plaque and immediately realize that they’re going to need to work together and find a place to defend. They also need food, and so Jessie has to start showing her hand when she catches a bunch of fish just by grabbing them out of the water. They find a cave to hide out in, but they also see some fast-moving people in gray outfits, presumably another set of contestants.
The Israeli wants to hunt them down — kill before we get killed, she says — and so everyone except the brain and the Korean go tracking. What they find is a grotesque death scene: five bodies in various states of dismemberment. It’s not the gray people there, though: it’s a giant Swede who has a deal for Jessie. He wants her to kill her humans as a show of faith, and he’ll do the same, and then they can team up against the other witches. Because of course he’s gotten all the information already, having made better use of his interim day in witch world than stalking some boy. Jessie refuses, and they fight, only the Swede has a healing factor that works almost immediately. Luckily some of Jessie’s time-controlling gene kicks in and she manages to run away, but her teammates aren’t so lucky. Another witch shows up and throws motherfucking LAVA at them, killing the Israeli and spearing the Sudanese to a tree.
So her next day in witch world needs to be more productive than the last one. Jessie calls up the Council, who is all pissed off that she didn’t come to them already. To survive, they say, she’s gonna have to go back to the Alchemist, because obviously this is what he wanted to prepare her for. So she shows up and talks to the Highlander, who starts working with her on fighting. Specifically, he forcibly activates her telekinesis power by throwing her off a cliff. So after this she’s gonna want to unwind with her family and enjoy their time together, right? Nope — she goes straight to Marc’s house and tells him the world’s least believable story, ending in the prospect that she might want to try to kill him so his witch powers activate in the other world. But haven’t we already said that killing someone in witch world means they’re totally dead? Technicalities. So she gets home and, oh shit, Jimmy’s mad that she went on a date with some random dude without talking to him at all about her troubles! What a silly boy!
When they wake up in the real world again, the Sudanese warrior is totally healed. Apparently the Korean girl has a super-powered healing factor even though she’s not a witch, tied somehow to the death of her twin sister, who presumably channels the power through her. They’ve also been offered a truce by a couple of other witches, not the ones who tried to kill them last night. So they partner up, but the Korean girl’s healing factor is instantly undone when she tries to fix one of the other dude’s teammates but they die randomly on the walk. (Probably actually secretly strangled by the lava-thrower, who Jessie learned yesterday can also make herself invisible.) They talk about the bracelets, which have some kind of weird stone inside, and one of the other witches says he’s found the source: a giant wall that blocks off half of the island they’re on, which you can only see if you climb to the top of the volcano.
As they’re walking, the gray team attacks ... sort of. These people are short and pale, almost albinos, but they move faster than any human can and Jessie knows they have some kind of group mind that allows them to work together. They surround the group and lure them into a battle with the giant Swede, and while they’re fighting him the invisible lava thrower murders all the humans except five: Marc (who does take a poisoned knife to the back), brain boy, Korean healer, and two dudes on a new witch’s team. Jessie manages to lop off her hand and collect her bracelet before she totally vanishes and gets away. Oh, and the other witch has captured the leader of the albinos, and is holding her hostage to attempt to lure in the rest of them. She doesn’t talk, but her telepathy is unsettling at best.
Jimmy shakes her awake in witch world and tells her to do whatever she has to in order to survive. If that means blowing another dude, whatever. So Jessie calls up the Council, which gives her a little more info on the two witches she’s teamed up with. Watch out for the second one, they say (not the one who’s tied up an albino), because he might have choked his last boyfriend to death and successfully covered it up. She goes back to the Alchemist’s house, where President Coroner pins her down about why their present selves can’t help Jessie train. So she has to limit just what she says about their deaths, and in turn they limit telling her that they traveled to Jessie’s funeral in the near future.
Fuck this training, then, right? Jessie figures the only thing to do is help Marc live, and to do that she’ll have to activate his witch genes. But to convince him to die she’s probably gonna have to give up the booty ... only she can’t do it, she’s too busy thinking of Jimmy for a change in this novel. He wants to go through with it anyway (the death, I mean) but she has second thoughts and isn’t ready to put him through it. So they fall asleep next to each other and wake up in a cave on the side of the volcano, where the other two witches are fighting. It seems the first dude had his teammates on watch, but they mysteriously choked to death in the night while the second dude was backing them up. Huh. But they have to keep moving, climbing to the place where the second dude said he saw the wall, for ... like, reasons.
They find another cave near the top of the volcano, and inside there are drawings showing a woman who looks suspiciously like the Council president touching a bracelet to a giant wall. They have to learn more, but the second witch isn’t eager to reapproach the wall. Brain Boy wants to go, so they agree that Chokey Witch can watch Healing Girl and Slowly Dying Marc while the rest of them investigate. Brain Boy touches the wall and freezes, and even though Jessie knocks him away immediately he senses that a lot more time passed, and he’s seen things that happened in witch world but not the real world. So Jessie wants to try, and when she touches it she’s suddenly playing red queen with the dead gambler from the first book, who reminds her that there’s more to the game than just the next card in her own hand. What? I don’t know.
She comes to on the ground with a lot of screaming going on. The Swede is back, so she and the first witch have to fight him. But he forgets Jessie’s plan and attacks weird, getting stabbed in the gut by one of the flying spears Jessie is controlling with her new telekinesis. Oh, and here’s Invisible Lava Thrower too, about to kill Brain Boy! He acknowledges that there’s nothing he can do and succumbs so Jessie has enough time to grab the Swede’s head and crank it around 360 degrees. Lava Girl vanishes, and Jessie picks up our other witch and carries him back to the cave, which is suddenly being guarded by all six albino dwarves. The other witch says that in this proximity, killing the leader will cause all of them to die because of the group mind, so Jessie sneaks up and lops off her head, and then goes inside the cave by herself.
Sure enough, there’s Lava Girl, holding Chokey at machete-point. Marc is mostly submerged in a freezing stream, and Healing Girl is just, like, there. Chokey fights free, but of course Lava Girl hits him with ... you know, because they’re INSIDE A FUCKING VOLCANO. Only Jessie has realized something: these bracelets with the rock inside that matches the wall control their physical connection to the island. Lava Girl looks sick, pale, and weak since she’s lost hers, and when Jessie casually chucks it into the lava she drops dead.
And now Healing Girl comes to. She wants to try to help revive Marc before it’s too late, and wants to study the poisoned knife. Only she then tries to stab Jessie with it. Turns out that when she was alone with the first witch, the one hiding outside with a spear through his guts, he used his strongest power: mental suggestion. He turned Healing Girl into a slave, designed to kill those who weren’t expecting it. Jessie uses all her mental powers to break the hold, upon which Healing Girl ... jumps right into the motherfucking lava herself.
I don’t know, I guess because we’re getting close to the end.
So Jessie disguises herself as Healing Girl and goes to confront the last witch standing besides herself. Who, surprise, does NOT have a spear through his guts. Apparently he can disguise himself too, in addition to the hypnosis. So he tells her to kill herself with the knife, but she stabs him in the lungs just before dropping her disguise, and then ... slits her wrists.
So Marc can live.
Because only one can survive, and of course it should be some dude we just met rather than the main character of the LAST TWO BOOKS. THE ENTIRE SERIES THUS FAR.
But as Jessie’s soul is floating away, she sees something. She sees herself, only older. Even though I thought once you were connected you stopped aging. And she tells herself that it’s not over, and they can go wherever they want to go ... or whenever, rather.
The epilogue takes place at Jessie’s memorial service (not actually a funeral, because there is no body, Jessie’s just been missing for a month but because Marc is now connected they think they know what happened) where Jimmy approaches Marc and they talk about what they know. In particular, Jimmy asks Marc to watch after his real-world son, who oh yeah there was an unfollowed thread where they got a DNA report that said he wasn’t actually Jimmy’s kid but it was also prepared by Jessie’s still-mostly-absentee father who has an agenda in ascending the ranks of the Council so its authenticity is questionable. But then they talk about Jessie and ... neither one thinks she’s actually dead.
And that.
Is the end of Black Knight.
I can sort of pick out the seeds that Pike is sowing in this story. I can start to sense the coming trails and paths the characters might walk in the supposedly potential ten-book series about witches. But like. You just essentially killed your MAIN CHARACTER. Your NARRATOR. And we don’t actually care about this jewel thief guy, who by all appearances is a BAD PERSON. But you went ahead and put him in the forefront.
Is it any wonder this series fizzled out? Part of why I (and maybe a lot of us) got tired of dystopian fiction is that so many authors felt the need to keep raining shit on their protagonists. And yeah, this is another Hunger Games thing, but there’s a reason there — the dictatorial leadership fighting to keep rebellion down. To be perfectly honest, even though I see that reason, I didn’t like it there either. At some point, I wanted Collins to HELP Katniss rather than repeatedly jamming a boot in her face. We want to trust our authors to care about the protagonist the way we’re supposed to care. So when writers keep making their characters climb uphill, for no reason other than to try to get readers to buy the next one and see how they get over the obstacles, it becomes stale. If they obviously don’t care, why should we?
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The True Confessions of Charlotte Doyle Audiobook Online
[Book] The True Confessions of Charlotte Doyle Audiobook Online by Avi
Avi's swashbuckling tale of murder and mutiny on the high seas has a fascinating twist: the heroine is a 13-year-old girl. In 1832, Charlotte Doyle boards a ship bound for America and is caught in a battle between a mad captain and his ruthless crew. If you're looking for an action-packed adventure story for girls, you'll find it in The True Confessions of Charlotte Doyle.
Download The True Confessions of Charlotte Doyle Audiobook Online by (Avi)
Duration: 6 hours, 28 minutes
Writer: Avi
Publisher: Recorded Books
Narrators: Alexandra O'karma
Genres: Alexandra O'karma
Rating: 3.8
Narrator Rating: 2.33
Publication: Saturday, 01 October 2011
The True Confessions of Charlotte Doyle Audiobook Online Reviews
Anonymous
One of my favorites growing u that I convinced my daughter to do her summer reading on.
Rating: 5
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