#jm miro
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asexualbookbird · 5 months ago
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Have You Read My TBR?
Round 1 of a new poll series! Results may or may not influence whether or not each book stays on my tbr. As always, tell me why you made the choice you did! Elaborate! Start a conversation! Tell me about YOUR never ending tbr!
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bigcats-birds-and-books · 5 months ago
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Books of 2024: June Wrap-Up.
Okay, y'all have Convinced Me--I'm going to start doing little wrap up posts! Behold: a shelf of what I read in June (not pictured: the bookmark at page 466 of ORDINARY MONSTERS, because despite having read two (2) books worth of book so far, I'm still not quite done with that one).
June was kind of a slow reading month for me (I did a LOT of writing, looking back--nice). I wanted to take OTHER TERRORS and THE ELEMENTS OF ELOQUENCE a bite at a time so the horrors and figures of rhetoric (respectively) didn't all run together. Both of those, much like A SHINING, turned out to be pleasantly leisurely wanders, whereas MONSTERS is kind of a plod.
I already did bigger write-ups for TERRORS and SHINING, linked in the bullets below.
OTHER TERRORS - ★★★★ Great bite-sized horror anthology with a really inclusive mix, as promised! I enjoyed most of these (always nice in an anthology!)
A SHINING - ★★★★ Weird fucked up heavy little book in translation, lit-fic flavored, but very approachable, I thought. Tiny enough to swallow in a sitting, but also kind of exhausting to do it that way? I'll definitely reread this one in the future.
THE ELEMENTS OF ELOQUENCE - ★★★ Fun romp through rhetoric! The examples were fun, and I appreciated the humor, but I also find myself still uncertain what a bunch of the figures actually ARE, definitions-wise, despite having read a book full of so many of them (I did just buy his recommended A HANDLIST OF RHETORICAL TERMS to help with that, at least, which is. almost entirely. definitions by volume). Neat thing to have on my references shelf, but it wasn't as excellent as I was hoping it'd be.
ORDINARY MONSTERS - 466/658 pages read; will report back later (but it's not looking good, folks).
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aurorawest · 1 year ago
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Reading update
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White Trash Warlock by David R Slayton - 4.75/5 stars
Urban fantasy with a protagonist from a trailer park, who, for bonus points, got sectioned by his older brother as a teen. Daddy issues, mommy issues, and brother issues, what's not to like? I ordered everything else by this author I could find when I finished the book, including the other two books in this series.
The Fascinators by Andrew Eliopulos - DNF
Boring.
The Revolutionary and the Rogue by Blake Ferre - DNF
Boring, with the added crime of actual plot happening but still, somehow, nothing actually happening. I kept reading whole pages and realizing I had no idea what I'd just read.
The Red Scholar's Wake by Aliette de Bodard - DNF
OMFG CAN I CATCH A BREAK. This was such a disappointing DNF, too, because I'd really been looking forward to it. One of the characters is a spaceship and it bills itself as a space opera? Yes please. But after the initial marriage of convenience setup, it's just all a bunch of pointless, boring conversations. Nothing happens. I flipped ahead. Still nothing happening. Not a space opera but definitely cozy sci-fi, which I think I officially hate.
Honeytrap by Aster Glenn Gray - 5/5 stars
An FBI agent and a GRU agent get assigned to work a case together in 1959 and they fall in looooove. But oof, this book was so good. I'm not sure I've ever had a time skip hit me in the gut so hard. I really can't recommend this book enough, it fits squarely in my niche interest of mid-century America or Britain m/m romance. I think Natasha Pulley also awakened something in me with The Half Life of Valery K, because I seem to be a sucker for gay Soviet men. Speaking of, if you liked The Half Life of Valery K, I bet you'll like this too! Anyway, read this, but be prepared to be hurt by it.
Ordinary Monsters by JM Miro - 4/5 stars
X-men meets Strangers Things with a dash of English boarding school, set in Victorian Britain.
Human Enough by ES Yu - DNF
Promising until it devolved into boring, pointless conversations and tumblr posts on neurodivergence.
Olympic Enemies by Rebecca J Caffery - DNF
I put this down on page 12 and my wife grabbed it to flip through it, cackling at the amateurish prose.
Frost Bite by J Emery - 4.5/5 stars
Snowed-in cabin fic with an enemies to lovers romance between a vampire and a (former) vampire hunter. It was cute and a quick read.
The Lost Apothecary by Sarah Penner - DNF
Very Not Like Other Girls. Also read a review that said pregnancy was a huge focus of the book, and that's a squick for me.
Reverie by Ryan La Sala - 3.75/5 stars
This book didn't quite live up to the promise of its beginning (missing memories, bizarre disruptions to time and space) and the writing was a little twee at times, but overall I enjoyed it. This was the author's debut, so I suspect subsequent books will probably be better. I did feel like the teenage main characters were weirdly inured to death, which also contributed to me knocking of a quarter of a star from what would otherwise have been a solid 4 star book.
All Souls Near & Nigh by Hailey Turner - 3/5 stars
If you like The Tarot Sequence by KD Edwards, this series might be worth picking up. I will say, though, that it's nowhere near as good. I think it's a combination of pacing and too many characters that detracts from my enjoyment of this series. This is the second book and I enjoyed it more than the first, probably because I sort of remembered the massive cast of characters from the first one. It's one of those things where I really don't think they're all necessary and some should be combined with others. The pacing is also...weird. It's pretty much nonstop action. At one point I think the main character drove back and forth between various crime scene locations and his office like 5 times in a day.
That said! Despite the issues, clearly I still picked up book 2, and I'll probably read book 3 at some point. I really like the two main characters.
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ladyinrosso · 2 years ago
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No... not again....
*wispered her while starting hyperfixating on books with no fandom*
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anwhitebooks · 8 months ago
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Ordinary Monsters (Book 1): For the adults who loved Miss Peregrine’s
March 21, 2024 Spoiler-Free Review If you ever wished for a darker, more adult version of Miss Peregrine’s Home for Peculiar Children – you may just love Ordinary Monsters. Click here for content warnings. What’s Ordinary Monsters about? In 1880s Scotland, there is an Institute for children with special magical talents. An evil entity wants to eat these children, and only a select few can…
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bipidin · 2 months ago
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Got more book mail that I forgot I signed up for
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aricastmblr · 1 year ago
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BTS LAND SEASON2 ep7 230822
(3 ultimas fotos son del siguiente capitulo)
Estar en una habitación con un perro VS Estar en una habitación con un gato
jm-Solo ustedes dos están en la habitación..
jm-Ah, es un perro o un gato
jk y yg rojo
jm-tengo alergia a los gatos
v-Jimin-ie tiene alergia a los gatos
jk-¡Pero te gustan los gatos!
jm-Claro que me gustan
jm-¡Pero ahora, solo miro de lejos!
jm-En una habitación.. :s
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Estar cansado incluso después de dormir tanto VS Tener hambre incluso después de comer tanto
bts- rojo
jh-Está bastante claro: tener hambre incluso después de comer tanto, ¿no?
jin-Jungkook-ie finalmente dormirá de todos modos kkk
jm-No es (rojo) algo que pueda lastimarlo
jk-Definitivamente elegiré dormir/ir a dormir
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Quedarse en casa toda la vida VS Andar toda la vida pero sin casa
jm-Ahora son preguntas para JK~
jk-(lee la pregunta)
jk-
jk yg v jin (azul)
jm nj jh ( rojo )
jm- a jk ¡¡No mientas!!!
nj jh- Ah, ¿¡de verdad!? ¡Ya!
jk-No, pero no tengo casa!
jm-¡Pero también dice que solo estás en casa!
jk-Si es quedarse en casa pues la casa..
jm-¡Aunque siempre vas a las casas de los miembros!
jk-Dice que no tendría una casa en toda mi vida
nj-¡Puedes simplemente alquilar un lugar!
jk-Incluso si muero, seguirá siendo mi casa
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Solo comer el relleno de manggaetteok VS Solo comer tteokgomul
bts-(rojo)
jk-(azul)el único diferente
jk- Espera... ¿por qué estás eligiendo a tteokgomul?
jin-(rojo) Será demasiado dulce si solo te comes el relleno, te dolerá la barriga y te marearás.
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Jimin, que se acuesta en la cama de Jin con su atuendo para salir VS Jungkook, que se come todo el ramyeon después de pedir un bocado
bts-(rojo)
jm- (azul)
jk-Jin hyung realmente odia cuando su cama está sucia
jin-(rojo)Es mejor cocinar otra olla de ramyeon, yo cocinaré otra
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No comer pollo toda la vida vs No comer ramyeon toda la vida
bts-(rojo)
jm-No, me cambio a esto (sacan rojo)
jm jk - cambian rápido de rojo a azul XD
nj-les dice- Ah no hay cambio de respuestas y jh baja la manito a jm
jm-¡Ah, está bien! XD
jm jk- se ríen y cambian de azul a rojo (regresan al anterior XD)
jk-¿Pero no debería ser al revés?
jin-(azul) Como ramyeon a menudo pero pollo, no lo como tan seguido como pensaba
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damosays · 2 months ago
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Review: Bringer of Dust by JM Miro
The follow-up to Ordinary Monsters is no less bulky, but this is still a leaner animal, and all the more compelling for it. This is an absolute Empire Strikes Back of a sequel! By which I mean, the pacing is lively and perfectly balanced, the characters are deep in their personal darknesses, fighting for air and light, there’s a load of chewy father-figure drama that I could eat all day with a…
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weirdchurchgirl · 11 months ago
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rly sad to see the lack of talk around ordinary monsters by jm miro :-(
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zannolin · 1 year ago
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Zanna you should read Ordinary Monsters by JM Miro I swear to god its so worth it
sell me on it. do your worst.
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bigcats-birds-and-books · 4 months ago
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Books of 2024: July Wrap-Up.
This month, I picked my knitting back up with a vengeance, started a Three Sentences Writing Challenge, AND participated in several work-adjacent Social Events (who am I, even), On Top Of accidentally nerfing myself with several brick-like books, so! This little stack isn't half bad. Photos and/or reviews linked below:
ORDINARY MONSTERS - ★★ This was a miss for me, y'all, AND it was a brick, so it took a hot minute to read. I wanted it to be better than it was, but it rambled and wandered Too Much (which, coming from me, you KNOW is bad). Salty also-rambly 1.5k review linked.
IF FOUND, RETURN TO HELL - ★★★½ Way cuter than I was expecting!! I had a good time with the second person. Hugely relatable (which. wild. all things considered.).
THE HAUNTING OF HILL HOUSE - ★★★½ Funnier than anticipated, and very readable for something out of the '50s! I see why it's a cornerstone of the (sub)genre. Glad I have a copy on hand now.
THE ACTOR AND THE TARGET - ★★★★★ This Rewired My Brain. It took me three (3) weeks to get through. It was so good. If you're a writer, definitely check this out, 10/10 recommend.
WHEN AMONG CROWS - ★★★½ I checked this out from the library because hardback novellas are Expensive if you're not sure you vibe with the author's style, but I had a good time! Witcher fans should descend on this, I think.
ALWAYS COMING HOME - 76*/618 pages read; will report back later. I asked the People about this one, and the People have Spoken (read: this won my What Do I Read Next Poll), but I may or may not have miscalcuated how many brain cells I have available lately between work and writing, so I may or may not be cutting this with library books. I'll finish it. Eventually. (*asterisk because she keeps referencing Other Pages In Line, and every time she does I jump ahead to read those pages instead and then come back to where I was. I'm dual wielding bookmarks through this tome, it's an Experience™ so far!)
Under the Cut: A Note About ~*★Stars★*~
Historically, I have been Very Bad™ about assigning things Star Ratings, because it's so Vibes Heavy for me and therefore Contingent Upon my Whims. I am refining this as I figure out my wrap up posts (epiphany of this month: I don't like that stars are Odd, because that makes three the midpoint and things are rarely so truly mid for me)(I have hacked my way around this with a ½). Here is, generally, how I conceptualize stars:
★ - This was Bad. I would actively recommend that you do NOT read this one, no redeeming qualities whatsoever, not worth the slog. Save Yourself, It's Too Late For Me. Book goes in the garbage (donate bin).
★★ - This was Not Good. I would not recommend it, but it wasn't a total waste or wash--something in here held my interest/kept my attention/sparked some joy. I will not be rereading this ever. Save Yourself (Or Join Me In Suffering, That Seems Like A Cool Bonding Activity).
★★★ - This was Good/Fine/Okay/Meh. I don't care about this enough to recommend it one way or another. Perfectly serviceable book, held my interest, I probably enjoyed myself (or at least didn't actively loathe the reading). I don't have especially strong feelings. You probably don't need to save yourself from this one--if it sounds like your jam, give it a shot! Just didn't resonate with me particularly powerfully. I probably won't reread this unless I'm after something in particular.
★★★½ - I liked this! I'll probably recommend it if I know it matches someone's vibes or specific requests, but I didn't commit to a star rating on Goodreads. More likely to reread, but not guaranteed.
★★★★ - I really enjoyed this!! I would recommend it (sometimes with caveats about content warnings or such--I tend to like weird fucked up funny shit, and I don't have many hard readerly NO's). Not a perfect book for me by any means, but Very Good. This is something I would reread! Join me!!
★★★★★ - I LOVED THE SHIT OUT OF THIS, IT REWIRED MY BRAIN, WILL RECOMMEND TO ANYONE AND EVERYONE AT THE SLIGHTEST PROVOCATION (content warning caveats still apply--see 4-star disclaimer). Excellent book, I'll reread it regularly, I'll buy copies for all my friends, I'll try to convince all of Booklr to read it, PLEASE join me!!
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aurorawest · 1 year ago
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7, 8, 20, 22 for the book ask?
7. What was your average Goodreads Storygraph rating? Does it seem accurate?
4.24 stars out of 5. Seems pretty accurate. If I finish a book, I'm pretty generous with my ratings.
8. Did you meet any of your reading goals? Which ones?
My only goal was to read 100 books, which I met handily.
20. What was your most anticipated release? Did it meet your expectations?
Probably A Power Unbound by Freya Marske, and yes! I was pretty sure I wouldn't like it as much as A Marvellous Light, which I didn't, but I still loved it.
22. What’s the longest book you read?
Seveneves by Neal Stephenson, clocking in at 880 pages. Second longest was Ordinary Monsters by JM Miro (660 pages), and the third longest was The Emperor's Bone Palace by Hailey Turner (635 pages).
Thank you for asking!!
end-of-year book ask
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ladyinrosso · 2 years ago
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"Once" by Brad Kane are Coulton's thoughts on Marber. Just read the lyrics and you'll see I'm right.
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an-absolute-trainwreck · 2 years ago
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Hey tumblr
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Which one of these should I read next
[Ordinary monsters by jm Miro, babel by rf kuang, the strange case of doctor Jekyll and mister Hyde (and other stories) by Robert Louis Stevenson, the good earth by pearl s buck, or sister Carrie by Theodore Dreiser]
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bigdreamsandwildthings · 2 years ago
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Summer (book) lovin’ ✌🏻
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elliepassmore · 2 years ago
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Ordinary Monsters review
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5/5 stars Recommended if you like: fantasy, epic fantasy, multiple POVs, powers, magic, mysteries, morally gray characters This book was a nice surprise for me. I thought the concept sounded cool, then decided not to read it, but then needed something to listen to while going on a couple of trips, so I ended up finally getting it and absolutely loved it. I would not be surprised if this ends up being one of my favorite reads of the year. (Also, I will probably make spelling mistakes, I listened to the audiobook and only glanced through a physical copy, so have no idea how to spell 90% of the words from the book, lol). This book has a pretty big cast and a lot of POVs, but it's definitely something that was enjoyable about the book. I liked getting in the heads of the good guys, the bad guys, the guys in the middle. It was really interesting seeing how everyone thought and the ways that they saw the worlds differently. Miro also does the different POVs well because I surprisingly did not have one that I consistently wanted to skip in favor of one of the others, which I feel usually happens with multiple POV books. The book is complicated and it is an epic fantasy, so it takes a while to get to the part where everyone's at the institute and the schemes start coming together. I found that I rather liked getting Marlowe's background and seeing where he started off and how he ended up where he did when Alice found him, and likewise, I think having the longish stretches with Alice and Charlie prior to arriving at the institute also helped me like and understand them as characters. I also am a big fan of 'stories within stories,' so the fact that we get several chapters dedicated to Jacob Marber (and by extension Komako and Ribs) in the middle of the book is something that I really liked. I was equally invested in both the kids' side of things and the adults' side, and I liked that the adults clearly cared about the kids and wanted to do what was best and what would keep them safe. The main goal during this book was to stop Jacob Marber from reaching the kids and Cairndale, though more forces than not conspire to help Jacob. The kids, for their part, also don't want Jacob reaching Cairndale, but they've also stepped into another mystery, one much closer to home. Something I really enjoyed about the book was how everything was colored in shades of gray. The kids, often accidentally or in self-defense, had all done 'bad' things. The adults, even the ones who fully supported and wanted to help the kids, had done things that can't be considered 'good.' I enjoyed this well-roundedness of the characters and how the good guys didn't always make good or moral or correct decisions. Another thing I liked was that every character has a backstory (which I suspect is one of the reasons for the book's length). Virtually every character who plays a significant role in the book has a past that has shaped who they are and that we get to learn about over the course of the book. Even Marlowe's original two caretakers, who are collectively in the book for no more than three chapters (I think), get a backstory. The kids are all orphans and have all come from bad situations, though those situations as we see are quite varied (and really, Marlowe's situation isn't that bad, he's just in danger because of Jacob). This helps us better understand their motivations and actions and why they act in certain ways. I definitely think this helped with characterization and with making the characters feel like real people. This is also not solely focused on the kids and the people protecting them, but everyone who is significant gets one, which I think does something really interesting in that, despite them doing bad things, knowing the backstory elicits sympathy for Jacob Marber and the main lich. The fact that we get so many POVs contributes to this as well. It's difficult to get a solid feel on a lot of the adults in the book because so much is masked and they have secrets covered by secrets. On top of this, each character obviously has their own perceptions and thoughts about all the other characters, and as readers that is all we have to go off of. But when characters have their POVs, we get to see a little more about how they think about things and we get to understand what their true goals are, which complicates perceptions and muddies the waters into that "everything is gray" area. I also wanted to say that the narrator for this was perfect. Onwukwe definitely enhanced the experience and I liked how he not only did different voices, but also different voice qualities (i.e., talk, whisper, etc.). Some of the time when he whispered it was kind of hard to hear since I was driving, but overall the audio narration was very clear and understandable. Onwukwe also nailed the accents for each of the charactes, which I loved. I enjoyed this book a lot and have found that it is one of those books that stays with you even when you're not reading it. I look forward to knowing what happens in the sequel!
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