#megan mcguire
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My list of ppl who’d Id let hit it whenever is growing by the second
#diary 🦷#josh hutcherson#billie eilish#ethel cain#sydney sweeney#alex brightman#mia goth#isabelle fuhrman#florence pugh#florence welch#winona ryder#blizzy mcguire#megan fox#jennifer tilly#shelly duvall#miley cyrus#paris hilton#maya hawke#britney spears#sophia lillis#natasha lyonne#rachel mcadams
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📚 April and May Reading Round-Up 📚
I wasn’t able to post my April round-up, so have both April and May together! I am glad that I was able to read more books for both of these months than in March.
I started a few new series (Tiffany Aching, Maisie Dobbs, the Craft Sequence), and continued a few other series (the Memoirs of Lady Trent, October Daye).
In April, I read:
- The Tropic of Serpents by Marie Brennan (very good, enjoyable and compelling, liked it even better than the second book, great relationships and character growth, liked the way motherhood and grief were tackled, touched on themes such as colonialism and research ethics)
- How Not to Marry a Prince by Megan Derr (cute, fun, somewhat heart-wrenching but with a lovely ending, liked the themes surrounding class and privilege)
- Maisie Dobbs by Jacqueline Winspear (good, interesting, liked how it tackled healing and war and trauma, definitely cried at the end)
- Derring-Do for Beginners by Victoria Goddard (read it in one sitting, very relatable protagonists, loved the worldbuilding and the themes, happy to see younger versions of favourite characters, much growth and introspection, some of the emotional fulfillment will have to wait for the next book)
- I’m Glad My Mom Died by Jennette McCurdy (listened to the audiobook read by the author, compelling, kind of horrifying and depressing, very funny, great prose, banger chapter endings)
In May, I read:
- Half a King by Joe Abercrombie (read it in one sitting, bittersweet, good, interesting worldbuilding and politics, great character relationships and interesting character growth)
- Birds of a Feather by Jacqueline Winspear (good, enjoyed it more than the first book, engaging, bittersweet ending, liked the themes)
- A Local Habitation by Seanan McGuire (very good, read it in one sitting, a bit less depressing than the first one, sad but with a hopeful ending, good character growth)
- Clary Sage by Victoria Goddard (amazing!!! delightful read, loved all of the characters, so very heartwarming, Hal my beloved)
- Three Parts Dead by Max Gladstone (read it in one sitting, loved the MC’s motivations and character growth, interesting magic system, loved the themes at the heart of the book, commentary on justice and policing and belief, taking on the patriarchy)
- Le Comte de Monte-Cristo, Vol. 1 by Alexandre Dumas (good, very political, very grounded in the societal issues and references of the time, thoughts on morality and justice and the prison system, poor Dantes, liked the different perspectives)
- The Wee Free Men by Terry Pratchett (amazing, read it in one sitting, loved the themes and Tiffany’s entire character and character growth, felt very much like the books I used to read as a child in the best sort of way, the frying pan!)
- Pardonable Lies by Jacqueline Winspear (highly enjoyable, compelling from the very beginning, better than the two previous books, much character growth and nuance)
#mine#books#reading round-up#half a king#joe abercrombie#maisie dobbs#jacqueline winspear#a local habitation#Seanan McGuire#victoria goddard#the tropic of serpents#the memoirs of lady trent#how not to marry a prince#megan derr#i'm glad my mom died#jennette mccurdy#three parts dead#the craft sequence#max gladstone#the wee free men#tiffany aching#terry pratchett#le comte de monte cristo#alexandre dumas
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Mean girls (2024) thoughts
(obviously spoilers for the movie!)
- personally, I loved it. As someone who’s been totally (not) normal about the og mean girls movie since 2015 and saw the musical on broadway, the target audience was me
- Reneé Rapp Regina my beloved. She was the Regina I saw on broadway so this was extra special to me
- MS NORBURY AND PRINCIPAL DUVALL ARE A COUPLE?? “Can you run this?” “Fine but you walk the dogs the rest of the week” “I love you” “I love you too”. I’m so glad she found a good guy after her divorce <3
- Janis was such a vibe. Idk she just reminds me of myself in high school but with my current fashion sense. Weird art kid rep !!
- I cried twice. Once when they showed cady in kenya bc I always cry at musical opening numbers and again when Mrs. Heron said September 9th. THATS MY BIRTHDAY THEY SAID MY BIRTHDAY IN THE MOVIE
- When Damien performed the icarly theme song in french like it was a film from the 1930s. That was so real of him
- I think it’s actually really important for gen z to have their own version of this story. The explicit queerness of Janis was great. Waaay less of the casual fatphobia that was rampant in the 2000s. As someone who grew up loving mean girls, but also relatively recently graduated from high school, I can relate to this one more and it felt so nice
- in a similar vein, I liked the use of social media throughout the movie. It felt real, like how teens actually use it. This movie just didn’t feel like it was making fun of teens, like a lot of teen media does nowadays
- It’s so funny to me that they’re just not revealing what Glen Coco looks like. Not even some random extra. It’s just everyone reacting to Glen Coco getting the candy cane grams, but no shots of Glen
- WHY is Megan Thee Stallion giving input to drama at some high school in Illinois?? I love how she’s getting into acting now
- Also. The fact that they get real tiktokers sent me. Why did I see chris olsen in this movie
- The beanie baby 😭 so real for girls who grew up in the 2000s
- Lindsey Lohan being at the mathlete competition was everything to me. It was my version of Tobey McGuire & Andrew Garfield in no way home
- I thought the detail that Karen’s necklace with her name on it was backwards several times. She’s so stupid and I love her <3
- Speaking of Karen, her expressions were so funny. Just like this for 90% of the movie 👁️ 👁️
- Principal Duvall’s still got carpal tunnel after all this time, huh
- When Karen was trying on different Halloween costumes, I noticed that she had one of the tank top with the holes cut in it like Regina had in the first movie. We love to see callbacks like that
- Lastly, it was a good movie! People who say it’s bad don’t know what they’re talking about. They probably just didn’t know it was a musical or anything about the musical. But as someone who adores every adaptation of mean girls (except for the “sequel”), it was great!! Ppl who hate it just don’t like fun ig
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Hey Megan, I have a question for you.
If you had written season 8 of T7S (and the entirety of That 90s Show), what would you have done?
Season 8:
Donna: Goes back to being a redhead. Applies to UW Milwaukee, but is in community college in the meantime. She starts interning for the Point Place Chronicle, while still doing WFPP sometimes. She deals with a nightmare boss. She and Eric are still together, obviously.
Eric: He's about the same, minus breaking up with Donna and he doesn't get shit on all the time. He gets kicked out of the program, after questioning apartheid. He and Donna now plan to go to UW Milwaukee together.
Fez: Laurie is his new roommate, and it's revealed they never really divorced. They both go to cosmetology school, and hijinks ensue. Fez, slowly but surely, returns to his season 4 self.
Hyde: He and Jackie reconcile, and at some point, they get engaged. Hyde wants to wait for a wedding. Jackie is impatient. He still lives with the Formans, but he's about to move out with Jackie. He and Jackie are going to move to Milwaukee together. Kitty suffers with imminent empty nest syndrome.
Jackie: Also applies to UW Milwaukee, and is in community college in the meantime. She and Donna are studying journalism together. She still has a disastrous internship (this time) with Christine St George, and she tries to come to terms with essentially wasting her semester. But she wants to continue, as someone who is way better than Christine St George.
Kelso: He's about the same, but he's a cop, and he and Brooke officially get together.
That 00s Show: With no irl constraints, obv.
It'll take place in the early-mid 00s, when the gang's gang are most likely to be teens. Y2k nostalgia is definitely more prominent, atm, anyway. Anywho.
Eric and Donna live next door to Jackie and Hyde, in Chicago. ED, JH, and the kids are the main focus, as well as KB's son Jay (16).
Eric is a history teacher, ala Mr Feeny, at the school where the kids attend. ED's eldest kid is constantly humiliated. Donna works for the Chicago Sun Times.
Eric and Donna have two daughters (16 and 12), one of which is a tween and is the Matt McGuire nuisance type. The tween crushes on the older Hyde boy. The older ED daughter has been best friends with JH's daughter for the longest time, but she doesn't like Jay, and they're beginning to drift apart.
*****
Jackie has her own TV show, and Hyde owns a Grooves. Grooves, like The Hub, is a default hang out spot for the kids. Hyde imparts his wisdom, sometimes.
Jackie and Hyde have a daughter (16) and a son (14). The daughter is interested in Jay, and Hyde is overprotective and annoyed.
So, the gang includes...
Jay Kelso. Jackie and Hyde's son and daughter, William "Will" and Sarah. Eric and Donna's older daughter Alexandra "Allie." Fez and Rhonda's LGBTQ son Julian (15), and his black boyfriend Tony (15). Plus, there's ED's daughter Lucy on the fringes.
It's not that far off from my verse, obviously. I just had to do some things to make it less drama-filled and more comedic. Aka, omit Laurie and her brood, and the seriously troubling behavior of my OC Leah (ED's younger daughter).
#that 70s show#that 90s show#eric forman#eric and donna#jackie burkhart#jackie and hyde#donna pinciotti#steven hyde#michael kelso#kelso and brooke#fez#fez and rhonda#fez and laurie#my essays#i answer a thing
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Post 1043
Justin M Givens, Ohio inmate A801749, born 1995, incarceration intake May 2023 at age 28, expected release September 2046
Unlawful Possession of Weapon, Escape from Custody, Murder, Theft, Tampering with Evidence, Possession of Controlled Substances, Unlawful Placement of Firearms in a Motor Vehicle
Family members described Mary Ann McGuire as selfless, loving, humble and inspiring — a positive light and kind soul who cared for her family, her friends and thousands of patients during her years as a nurse.
In May 2023, Common Pleas Court Judge Megan Bickerton sentenced Givens, 28, formerly of Salineville, to a total of 23 years and one month to life in prison for charges from the murder case and charges from an unrelated case.
The breakdown was 15 years to life for the murder, a mandatory three years for the gun specification, 18 months each for charges of grand theft when the property is a firearm or dangerous ordnance, and two counts of tampering with evidence, both third-degree felonies, 10 months for aggravated possession of drugs, a fifth-degree felony, and 180 days for endangering children, a first-degree misdemeanor. The murder charge, gun specification, one grand theft charge, one tampering charge and the drug charge were ordered served consecutively, bringing the total to 21 years and 10 months to life.
Bickerton also sentenced Givens to 15 months for improper handling of firearms in a motor vehicle, a fourth-degree felony, and a misdemeanor endangering children charge for a Dec. 26, 2021 traffic stop when he had a firearm in the vehicle with children present.
Add it all together and Givens must serve 23 years and one month before he can become eligible for parole.
The judge went a little farther in the sentence than what the prosecution recommended, making the sentence for the drug charge for possessing methamphetamine consecutive to the rest. County Chief Assistant Prosecutor Ryan Weikart reviewed his recommendation, saying there is no punishment they can make that would make the family and friends of the victim whole whole.
3s
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my October media recs (based on a combination of genre/aesthetic/vibes based on my own brain’s association. so while most of these are horror adjacent or paranormal I have favs in these categories I don’t think of as October-y and some things in other genres that I do think of that way, only based on vibes according to my brain or I may have just read/watched the thing originally that time of year and now the association sticks)
books
• The Diviners series by Libba Bray
• Plain Bad Heroines by Emily M. Danforth
•Carmilla by J. Sheridan Le Fanu
•Certain Dark Things by Silvia Moreno Garcia
• The Fever by Megan Abbott
•The Lynburn Legacy by Sarah Rees Brennan
•The Demon’s Lexicon by Sarah Rees Brennan
•Frankenstein by Mary Shelly
•The Southern Book Club’s Guide to Slaying Vampires by Grady Hendrix
•The Bloody Chamber and Other Stories by Angela Carter
•Down Among the Sticks and Bones by Seanan McGuire (book 2 of the Wayward Children novellas)
•Dark and Deepest Red by Anna-Marie Mclemore
•We Have Always Lived in the Castle by Shirley Jackson
•Monsters of Verity duology by Victoria Schwab
TV shows
•Buffy the Vampire Slayer
•MTV’s Scream
•Lovecraft Country
•Interview with the Vampire
•The Vampire Diaries
•Jessica Jones s1
Halloween episodes of TV
•Pretty Little Liars 2x13 and 3x13
•Buffy 2x06 and 4x04
•all Community halloween eps but especially 2x06 and 3x05
•The Vampire Diaries 1x07
•Crazy Ex Girlfriend 4x02
films (boring list because I watch movies as recommended to me by tumblr)
• Lisa Frankenstein
•Jennifer’s Body
•Ginger Snaps
•Black Swan
•Us
•Ready or Not
•His House
#just posting without descriptions or anything. obviously jj is one that I merely binged around Halloween one year and have the association#stuck. I didn’t put yj because it doesn’t exactly feel fallish to me despite being horror and I didn’t put the haunting of hill house book#because it gives summer tbh. in a way you could say the fever gives summer in terms of imagery but it feels October-y to me my list I don’t#have to explain myself. just giving examples of the subjectivity#s speaks#recs#will add on if I think of something else I definitely forgot something
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Queer books
Anything 18+ will be in red. content warning will have a *
Lesbian
The do's and donuts of love by Adiba Jaigridar
These Witches don't burn by Isabel Sterling
Reaping the benefits by E.J Noyes
Robber Girl by S.T Gibson
Snow Roses by Taryn Tyler*
The Unlocked Tomb series by Tamsyn Miur*
Not your sidekick by C.B Lee
Orpheus Girl by Brynne Rebele-Henry
Gay
Cafe con Lychee by Emery Lee
Tales of Verania by T.J Klune
History is all you left me by Adam Silvera*
When Harry met Harry by Sydney Smyth
Simon vs. the Homo sapiens agenda by Becky Albertalli
What if it's us by Becky Albertalli and Adam Silvera
Consorting with Dragons by Sera Trevor
the Dragori series by Ben Alderson*
A little bit country by Brian D Kennedy
Jays Gay agenda by Jason June
Lord of eternal night by Ben alderson*
Bisexual
The Green Creek series by T.J Klune *
The Captive Prince trilogy by C.S Pacat *
Hani and Ishus guide to fake dating by Adiba Jaigridar
Tale from the High Court series by Megan Durr*
A Dowry of Blood by S.T Gibson*
The Gentleman's Guide to Vice and Virtue by Mackenzi Lee
The Alphas Son by Penny Jessup
Iceabreaker by A.L Graziadei*
The Meet cute Diary by Emery Lee
The seven husbands of Evelyn Hugo by Taylor Jenkins Reid*
So this is Ever After by F.T Lukens
Trans
Cemetery Boys by Aiden Thomas
The Witch King by H.E Edgmon
Fierce Femmes and Notorious Liars : A Dangerous Trans Girl's Confabulous Memoir by Kai Cheng*
Transmogrify! 14 Fantastical Tales Of Trans Magic by various authors
The Deep by Rivers Solomon*
The Heartbreak Bakery by A.R Capetta
Hell followed with us by Andrew Joseph White*
The Spirit bares it's teeth by Andrew Joseph White*
Asexual
Every Heart a doorway by Seanan McGuire
The Summer of Bitter and Sweet by Jen Ferguson*
If it makes you happy by Claire Kann*
Love letters for joy by Mellissa See
The Lady's guide to Petticoats and Piracy by Mackenzi lee
This is by no means a complete list, if you have any you want to add feel free!
#Queer books#booklr#books#books and reading#book recommendations#lgbtq books#lgbtqia#book lover#bookworm#queer
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@lesbiancassius' (very late) february reads
yes I will do this monthly now.
books (as it turns out, I was busy. one book)
Enter Ghost, Isabella Hammad - An actor, Sonia, returns to visit her sister Haneen in Haifa and gets caught up in playing Gertrude in a Hamlet production in the West Bank. Stellar.
short fiction & poetry
Why Don’t We Just Kill the Kid in the Omelas Hole, Isabel J. Kim - obsessed with this on title alone. It has such a feel to it in the way it moves that I envy.
Parthenogenesis, Piya Patel - horror that makes me want to peel out of my skin and/or get a hysterectomy.
Eschatology, Eve L. Ewing - poem that was circulating recently and God. Fuck, dude. Yeah. Yeah.
Ouroboros, Megan Xing - The to-do lists in this got me because I was having my little freak out before my show went up where you think you can fix everything with to-do lists. Also heavily feeling replacing ineffective psych meds with yogurt, a pickle, and two advil.
I also read Cancer Buffet by Mary Hannah Terzino and Soft Opening by Elle Nash, but I was tired and don’t remember them.
(some) articles
Who Was Barbie? (A Symposium), n+1 magazine - this cemented to me that I truly, truly do not care about Barbie or the Barbie movie and if I have to hear anything about it ever again I'm smashing a bowl on purpose
A bunch of Hera Lindsay Bird’s advice column, which is delightful.
Let’s talk about Goodreads, Nicole Brinkley. There are many days I am glad I do not want to pursue a career as solely an author of novels. Godspeed to the authors out there you're braver than I will ever be.
Saving a Life, Patricia Lockwood - my god I have got to read a Patricia Lockwood book, and also my god getting grievously ill on vacation is one of my greatest fears so this one made me a little bit crazy.
The Secret Life: On the poet Molly Brodak, Patricia Lockwood - again, my god, I need to read a Patricia Lockwood book.
A Final Checklist Before You Print up Your Play, Rick Roberts - this reminded me so much of Joshua McGuire’s Rules For Writing Libretto, which I think of a lot.
“I think the word is dignity” — Rachel Corrie’s Letters from Gaza — I don’t know what to say. Read these if you can. They’re striking.
The Sexual Status of Aeschylus’ Cassandra, Paula Debnar - I can put an academic paper here you're not the boss of me. why I opened this one I don't remember but I was fervently texting friends in the middle of a certainly unrelated class about it because I've never been normal about Kassandra and Klytemnestra and I'm not going to start now.
tv/movies
Rewatching Severance, slowly.
Rewatching Sort Of, less slowly - this is probably niche to non-Canadian readers but it is a very good show.
Watched The Prince, which was a long time coming, and then wrote a paper about it. Bless.
tbr/nightstand
in the midst of Salvage the Bones, which is of course very good
Helen of Troy: from Homer to Hollywood
I'm gonna be rereading like every play off my Shakespeare class syllabus for the final which I wish I was more excited about
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I responded to the booklist question! I'm sure I forgot some but whew it still took forever to write.
What about you? What are some of the books youve read the most?
Good question! I finally started keeping a list, so I have something to work from. That way I won't draw a blank.
My top five or six favorite authors and series are: J. R. R. Tolkien's Lord of the Rings, C. S. Lewis's Narnia books, Rosemary Sutcliff's Dolphin Ring series (beginning with Eagle of the Ninth), Enemy Brothers and The Reb and the Redcoats by Constance Savery the Queen's Thief series by Megan Whalen Turner, and The Mysterious Benedict Society (original trilogy and prequel) by Trenton Lee Stewart.
There are many other books and authors I love. I listed several of my childhood influences in this post featuring my 50 favorite children's books (focusing on ones I grew up with as a young person).
Here's my list of favorite books I've read the most or ones I think are worth rereading: The Ordinary Princess by M. M. Kaye (a delightful original fairytale about a princess who refuses to stay in her tower)
The Reluctant Godfather by Allison Tebo (romantic comedy fairytale retelling, with an emphasis on the comedy) Mrs. Frisby and the Rats of NIMH by Robert C. O'Brien (adventure about a mother mouse seeking to save her family) The Gammage Cup by Carol Kendall (middle grade fantasy adventure)
Dragon Slippers and Tuesdays at the Castle by Jessica Day George (original fantasy in the style of fairytales) Princess Academy by Shannon Hale (fantasy adventure and coming-of-age story about a group of girls who attend school for the first time)
The Secret Keepers by Trenton Lee Stewart (urban light fantasy with dystopian elements) The City of Ember by Jeanne DuPrau (middle-grade, post-apocalyptic dystopian) The Arrival by Shaun Tan (a wordless graphic novel that conveys human experiences through surrealism)
The Saturdays by Elizabeth Enright (vintage contemporary about a lively family) Derwood, Inc. by Jeri Massi (modern contemporary mystery about another boisterous family) The Westing Game by Ellen Raskin (quirky vintage mystery with an interesting cast of characters) Historical Fiction: Carry On, Mr. Bowditch by Jean Lee Latham Caddie Woodlawn, Family Grandstand, and other books by Carol Ryrie Brink Rebecca's War by Ann Finlayson Understood Betsy by Dorothy Canfield Fisher Knight's Fee by Rosemary Sutcliff
The Lost Baron by Allen French The Wheel on the School by Meindert DeJong By the Great Horn Spoon by Sid Fleischman A Single Shard and Seesaw Girl by Linda Sue Park The Bronze Bow and The Witch of Blackbird Pond by Elizabeth George Speare The Secret Garden and A Little Princess by Frances Hodgson Burnett Wives and Daughters by Elizabeth Gaskell A few books I discovered more recently that are now all-time favorites: Seventh City by Emily Hayse, The Letter for the King by Tonke Dragt, Valiant by Sarah McGuire, Out of the Tomb by Ashley Stangl, the Mistmantle Chronicles by M. I. McAllister, Escape to Vindor by Emily Golus, Chase the Legend by Hannah Kaye, The Key to the Chains by Allison Tebo (sci-fi), Rebel Wave by Tor Thibeaux (undersea dystopian) Historical fiction: Listening for Lions and Angel on the Square by Gloria Whelan, Courage in Her Hands by Iris Noble, Victory at Valmy and Word to Caesar by Geoffrey Trease, historical fiction Westerns and mysteries by author Elisabeth Grace Foley
Mystery/suspense: The Unexpected Mrs. Pollifax by Dorothy Gilman, The Moonspinners by Mary Stewart
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hi friends!! i've gotten a few asks / messages about book recommendations for the new septembers readathon so i figured i'd list some here! i tried to do a range of genres & mix up YA/adult + tried to fit the autumny september vibes where i could! if anyone wants more specific recs, feel free to send me a message 🤍
a book about witches: the very secret society of irregular witches by sangu mandanna, the witch haven by sasha peyton smith, the nature of witches by rachel griffin
a murder mystery: tita rosie's kitchen mystery series by mia p. manansala, queen of the tiles by hanna alkaf, miss aldridge regrets by louise hare
a book that takes place at a private school/boarding school: every heart a doorway by seanan mcguire, if you could see the sun by ann liang, a lesson in vengeance by victoria lee
a creepy or horror book: house of hollow by krystal sutherland, the gathering dark: an anthology of folk horror, our wives under the sea by julia armfield
a book that takes place in september: answered here!
a short story collection: eternally yours, toil & trouble: 15 tales of women & witchcraft, in these hallowed halls: a dark academia anthology
a gothic novel (classic or contemporary): a dowry of blood by s.t. gibson, all the dead lie down by kyrie mccauley, wuthering heights by emily brontë
an autumnal romance: the dead romantics by ashley poston, the ex hex by erin sterling, the night circus by erin morgenstern
a book about a haunted house: mexican gothic by silvia moreno-garcia, the haunting of hill house by shirley jackson
a book about vampires: court of the undying seasons by a.m. strickland, house of hunger by alexis henderson
a cozy fantasy: legends and lattes by travis baldree, the undertaking of hart and mercy by megan bannen, half a soul by olivia atwater, emily wilde's encyclopaedia of faeries by heather fawcett
a classic / retelling: little thieves by margaret owen, a wish in the dark by christina soontornvat, enter the body by joy mccullough
a new release (published this september): you again by kate goldbeck, the wake-up call by beth o'leary, cleat cute by meryl wilsner, a study in drowning by ava reid, if i have to be haunted by miranda sun
an autumnal classic: anne of green gables by l.m. montgomery, rebecca by daphne du maurier, northanger abbey by jane austen
a dark academia book: babel by r.f. kuang, these violent delights by micah nemerever, ace of spades by faridah àbíké-íyímídé
a graphic novel: the tea dragon society by kay o'neill, the witch boy by molly ostertag, check please by ngozi ukazu, heavy vinyl by nina vakueva & carly usdin, cheer up: love and pompoms by crystal frasier & val wise, displacement by kiku hughes
#new septembers readathon#i didn't include any classics for classics but if anyone wants my classic recs lmk!
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January Wrap-Up
The Only Survivors (Megan Miranda) (audio) ★★★
Two Twisted Crowns (Rachel Gillig) ★★★★★
The Quiet Tenant (Clemence Michallon) (audio) ★★★★
Heartstopper Vol. 5 (Alice Oseman) ★★★★★
Mislaid in Parts Half-Known (Seanan McGuire) (audio) ★★★1/2
Dark Heir (C.S. Pacat) ★★★★1/2
Forget Me Not (Julie Soto) ★★★★★
A Study in Drowning (Ava Reid) ★★★★★
The Couple Next Door (Shari Lapena) (audio) ★★★1/2
Powerless (Lauren Roberts) ★★★
Done and Dusted (Lyla Sage) ★★★★
Never Lie (Freida McFadden) (audio) ★★★1/2
Ruthless Vows (Rebecca Ross) ★★★★★
Butcher and Blackbird (Brynne Weaver) ★★★★
Murder in the Family (Cara Hunter) (audio) ★★★1/2
This was SUCH a great start to the year with multiple snow days and some excellent reads. Find me over on Goodreads (linked) if you want to be friends there!
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23 Books in 2023
thanks fr the tag @bloody-wonder 💞
also sorry because i'm always doing this things super late 'cause every time i think about all the books i read, i'm like ??? how many did i fr???
anyway, no particular order (i'm also adding here mangas, because i read quite a few this year):
loved it/ was disappointed by it/ conflicted feelings
Chainsaw Man by Tatsuki Fujimoto (ongoing)
Look Back by Tatsuki Fujimoto
Kimetsu no Yaiba by Koyoharu Gotaouge
Gachiakuta by Kei Urana (ongoing)
Hikaru Ga Shinda Natsu by Mokumokuren (ongoing)
Hell followed with us by Andrew Joseph White
The Three-Body Problem by Liu Cixin (only books 1 and 2)
The lost heir by Holly Black
Greywaren (The Dreamer Trilogy) by Maggie Stiefvater
The house in the cerulean sea by TJ Klune
The golden enclaves by Naomi Novik (didn't quite like the first book and i've my issues with the second)
Summer Sons by Lee Mandelo (reread for the magazine)
Every heart a doorway by Seanan McGuire
Feed them silence by Lee Mandelo
My best friend's exorcism by Grady Hendrix
Tell me i'm worthless by Alison Rumfitt
¡Larga vida al trash! El cine de John Waters como nunca te lo habían contado by Valeria Vegas
La mala costumbre by Alana Portero (now is also in french, this book is one of the best i've read so far this year!!)
¿Y qué hacemos con los violadores? Perspectiva anarquista sobre cómo afrontar la violenca sexual y otras agresiones machistas by different authors (still reading)
The thief by Megan Whalen Turner
The Queen of Attolia by Megan Whalen Turner
The priory of the orange tree by Samathan Shannon (still reading)
Nothing by Janne Teller
#probably forgot something? but i think this is all i've so far read this year or still reading#yes yes i haven't yet read the third one of Megan do not kill me i got distracted
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books I read in 2023
I had a huge reading year this year because of my gruelingly long commute. The list below the cut is mostly for my own edification, but I’m a nosy person who supports other nosy people, so if you want to know what I’ve been up to, have at it. Almost everything I read this year was from the library.
1/12 A Charmed Life, Diana Wynne Jones
1/18 The Lesbiana’s Guide to Catholic School, Sonora Reyes
1/24 The Life-Changing Magic of
Tidying Up, Marie Kondo
1/25 Hotel Magnifique, Emily J. Taylor
1/30 Spark Joy, Marie Kondo
2/2 The House in the Cerulean Sea, TJ Klune
2/8 The Golden Enclaves, Naomi Novik
2/8 Delilah Green Doesn’t Care, Ashley Herring Blake
2/15 The Nile, Toby Wilkinson
2/23 The Painted Queen, Elizabeth Peters and Joan Hess
2/28 Ella Enchanted, Gail Carson Levine
3/5 Tipping the Velvet, Sarah Waters
3/12 Lord of the Silent, Elizabeth Peters
3/16 Marie Kondo’s Kurashi at Home, Marie Kondo
3/20 Shirley Jackson: A Rather Haunted Life, Ruth Franklin
3/20 The Art of Simple Living, Shunmyo Masuno
3/26 The Bird’s Nest, Shirley Jackson
4/11 Life Among the Savages, Shirley Jackson
4/12 A People’s History of the United States, Howard Zinn
4/18 The Yellow Wallpaper and Other Stories, Charlotte Perkins Gilman
4/21 Rest Is Resistance: A Manifesto, Tricia Hersey
5/1 Last Night at the Telegraph Club, Malinda Lo
5/3 Astrid Parker Doesn’t Fail, Ashley Herring Blake
5/10 Fight Like Hell: The Untold Story of American Labor, Kim Kelly
5/11 Conflict Resolution for Holy Beings, Joy Harjo
5/12 Why I’m No Longer Talking to White People About Race, Reni Eddo-Lodge
5/15 The Lottery and Other Stories, Shirley Jackson
5/18 The Lives of Christopher Chant, Diana Wynne Jones
5/29 A Little Devil in America, Hanif Abdurraqib
6/3 A Marvellous Light, Freya Marske
6/6 Ducks, Kate Beaton
6/8 Wild and Wicked Things, Francesca May (awful. Every character was an idiot. Why did I finish this)
6/10 Breathing Lessons: A Doctor’s Guide to Lung Health, Meilan K. Han, MD
6/19 The Three Body Problem, Cixin Liu
6/19 A Fortune for Your Disaster, Hanif Abdurraqib (I liked this even more than the last one I read. Maybe because it was an audiobook read by the author.)
6/22 Disjointed, Diana Jovin (ed) (skipped parts that were totally unrelated to me and some things that were also too technical)
6/22 The Lavender Scare, David K. Johnson
6/26 Enquête au collège, Jean-Phillipe Arrou-Vignod
6/28 The Thief, Megan Whalen Turner
7/3 Last Call, Elon Green
7/12 Cache Cache Petit Fantôme
7/13 Le Petit Prince, Antoine de Saint-
Exupéry
7/13 La fille qui navigua autour de féérie dans un bateau construit de ses propres mains, Catherynne M Valente
7/14 Lost in the Moment and Found, Seanan McGuire
7/14 Ich mag dich gesund sagte der Bär, Janosch
7/25 The Lies of Locke Lamora, Scott Lynch
7/31 The Adventures of Amina Al-Sirafi, Shannon Chakraborty
8/10 A Restless Truth, Freya Marske
8/16 Camp Damascus, Chuck Tingle
9/6 The Body in the Garden, Katherine Schellman
9/11 Silence in the Library, Katherine Schellman
9/13 When Things Get Dark, various
9/19 Death at the Manor, Katherine Schellman
9/25 Sorcery and Cecelia, Patricia C Wrede and Caroline Stevermer
10/3 The Grand Tour, Patricia C Wrede and Caroline Stevermer
10/6 Murder at Midnight, Katharine Schellman
10/12 The Mislaid Magician, Patricia C Wrede and Caroline Stevermer
10/18 Shakespeare Was a Woman and Other Heresies, Elizabeth Winkler
10/18 Harry Potter und der Stein der Weisen, JK Rowling
10/25 Poisoner in Chief: Sidney Gottlieb and the CIA search for Mind Control, Stephen Kinzer
11/1 Iris Kelly Doesn’t Date, Ashley Herring Blake
11/3 Nothing But Blackened Teeth, Cassandra Shaw
11/9 Unfuck Your Habitat, Rachel Hoffman
11/11 Safe and Sound, Mercury Stardust
11/12 Organizing Solutions for People with ADHD (revised and updated), Susan C. Pinskey
11/18 Red Seas under Red Skies, Scott Lynch
11/20 In With the Old: Classic Decor A to Z, Jennifer Boles
11/23 Habitat: The Field Guide to Decorating, Lauren Liess
11/24 Vermeer: The Complete Paintings, Norbert Schneider
11/29 The Conscious Closet, Elizabeth L. Cline
12/4 Leech, Hiron Ennes
12/6 The Star that Always Stays, Anna Rose Johnson
P12/14 The Republic of Thieves, Scott Lynch
12/15 An American Sunrise, Joy Harjo
12/20 The Wife Upstairs, Rachel Hawkins
12/22 How to Keep House While Drowning, KC Davis
12/30 The Gentle Art of Swedish Death Cleaning, Margareta Magnusson
Gave up on: The Woman Who Would Be King, Kara Cooney (too speculative/fictionalized)
A Scatter of Light, Malinda Lo (nothing really wrong, it just wasn’t holding my attention at all)
14 histoires pour avoir peur mais pas trop quand même (turned into full cast audio and the music between stories was really annoying)
Manhunt, Gretchen Felker-Martin (not in the right headspace maybe, maybe just not for me)
American Cozy, Stephanie Pedersen (got annoyed at how much of the information hinged on living in a huge suburban home with 18 closets and a husband and multiple children you can make do your chores for you)
The Curated Closet, Anuschka Rees (not bad just not what I was looking for)
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Read in 2022:
My Heart is a Chainsaw; Jade Daniels #1 – Stephen Graham Jones (Dec. 21-Jan 22)
We Have Always Lived in the Castle – Shirley Jackson (Jan)
All Systems Red; Murderbot Diaries #1 – Martha Wells (Jan)
The Wind’s Twelve Quarters short story collection – Ursula K. Le Guin (Jan)
Always Coming Home – Ursula K. Le Guin (UNFINISHED; SKIMMED – Jan)
A Desolation Called Peace; Teixcalaan #2 – Arkady Martine (Jan – May)
Death’s End; Three Body #3 – Liu Cixin (UNFINISHED – Jan – May – ?)
Artificial Condition; Murderbot Diaries #2 – Martha Wells (Feb – March)
Off the Edge: Flat Earthers, Conspiracy Culture, and Why People will Believe Anything – Kelly Weill (Feb – March)
The Appeal – Janice Hallett (Feb)
Black Leopard, Red Wolf; Dark Star #1 – Marlon James (Feb – March DNF AGAIN :( )
In Love – Amy Bloom (March)
Woman Eating – Claire Kohda (April)
Help/Thanks/Wow: The Three Essential Prayers – Anne Lamott (April)
We Had a Little Real Estate Problem: The Unheralded Story of Native Americans in Comedy – Kliph Nesteroff (Apr – May)
The Raven Tower – Ann Leckie (May – June)
Overdue: Reckoning with the Public Library – Amanda Oliver (May)
The Sign for Home – Blair Fell (May)
The Name of the Wind; Kingkiller Chronicle #1 – Patrick Rothfuss (May – still not finished)
The Fifth Season; Broken Earth #1 – N. K. Jemison (May – July)
Dracula; via the Dracula Daily read-along email club – Bram Stoker (May – Nov)
How to Keep House While Drowning: A Gentle Approach to Cleaning and Organizing – K.C. Davis
Rogue Protocol; Murderbot Diaries #3 – Martha Wells (June)
Sonnetts from the Portuguese – Elizabeth Barrett Browning (June)
The Cyrano Factor – Medievalchic on AO3 (June) (I read so little fanfiction and it was novella-length so I felt compelled to count it)
Harlem Sunset: Louise Lloyd #2– Nekesa Afia <3 (June – July)
“Drive” from Nobody’s Magic short story collection – Destiny O. Birdsong (June – July)
Something that May Shock and Discredit You – Daniel Lavery (June)
One Hundred Years of Solitude – Gabriel Garcia Marquez (June – Aug)
Get In Trouble short story collection – Kelly Link (July)
Devil House – John Darnielle (July)
The Swimmers – Julie Otsuka (July)
The Tale of Beren & Luthien – J.R.R. Tolkien (July)
The Goblin Emperor – Katherine Addison (July – Aug)
The Thief – Megan Whalen Turner (REREAD – DNF – Aug)
Lady Churchill’s Rosebud Wristlet (zine) #45 – (Aug)
Paths of Dissent: Soldiers Speak Out Against America’s Misguided Wars – ed. Andrew Bacevich & Daniel A. Sjursen (Aug)
Cyrano de Bergerac – Edmond Rostand (REREAD - first time since high school! - Aug – Sept)
Practical Magic – Alice Hoffman (REREAD – DNF – Sept)
Can’t We Talk About Something More Pleasant – Roz Chast (Sept)
Rosemary & Rue; October Daye #1 – Seanan McGuire (Sept)
Nona the Ninth; Locked Tomb #3 – Tamsyn Muir (Sept)
A Local Habitation; October Daye #2 – Seanan McGuire (Sept – Oct)
I’m Glad My Mom Died – Jennette McCurdy (Oct)
A Choir of Lies – Alexandra Rowland (Oct-Nov)
An Artificial Night; October Daye #3 – Seanan McGuire (Oct – Dec)
The Dawn of Everything: A New History of Humanity – David Graeber & David Wengrow (Nov 22 – ? still reading)
Leech – Hiron Ennes (Dec)
all told i've read a total of 48 books this year, which is way more than i thought i'd read when i was going through my list. technically it's probably closer to 40 because some of the books are DNFs or books i'm still trying to finish - but nonetheless i think i had a pretty varied and rewarding reading experience this year! the list for next year is everything i didn't read on this year's list, plus like two small steno pages of books i've written down since then - about 220 books. i'll probably add even more as the year goes on.
#i should post pics of what my lists look like they're crazy long#but i love keeping them in a physical little notepad#i should honestly make one for stuff i watch or sewing projects too but thats like ridiculous for shows#because i always get halfway through and then take a break and come back months later#which doesnt fit with my checking-off-a-finished-thing system#i COULD do it with the projects though and i think i will
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English Cast Announced For the Trigun Stampede Anime
The English cast has been announced for the Trigun Stampede anime: Johnny Yong Bosch is Vash Kristen McGuire is Vash (Young) Austin Tindle is Knives Megan Shipman is Knives (Young) Sarah Roach is Meryl Ben Bryant is Roberto Lydia Mackay is Rosa Emily Fajardo is Rem Additional voices: Jason Crawford Jordan Van Barr Jr. Dusty Feeney Marianne Bray Nicholas Markgraf Nazeeh Tarsha Matthew David…
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23 book I want to read in 2023
I've seen a few people do these lists, so here's mine
La Reine Margot – Alexandre Dumas
This one is a little cheating, since it’s on my TBR, but it’s not really a classic that really attracts me, especially with my last experience with a Dumas. (Sorry, when I was 12 I found D’Artagnan so dumb I couldn’t even finish the book, which just didn’t happen at that age)
The Queen’s Thief – Megan Whalen Turner
I heard so much about this serie from Booklr and it’s on Arhive.org, so I’m really excited for this one !
How the One-Armed Sister Sweeps Her House – Cherie Jones
Trying to read books from all over the world, and this title make it very intriguing. Though the summary leads me to think it will be a very though read.
Handicap à vendre – Thibault Petit
A book about disabled’s rights in french worplaces (and the utter shit it is), mostly about Intellectual Disabled I think.
Aya de Yopougon - Marguerite Aboue & Clément Oubrerie
This is a mildly famous Comic Serie in France, and I’ve never read it so I want to finally bridge that gap.
Middlegame - Seanan McGuire
Once again a pretty popular book on booklr, and as I liked Every heart a Doorway I’m very excited for this one !
The Bomb – Alcante, Bollée & Denis Rodier
French Comic about the making of the Atomic Bomb. One again a though read, but it got praised a lot in France.
Les Indes Fourbes - Alain Ayroles & Juanjo Guarnido
Another french comic that got praised a lot. Seems interesting, but since it’s a comedy about the American Conquest, i’m a little wary about representation…. Guess I’ll read and see.
The witcher, Season of Storm – Andrzej Sapkowski
My Witcher period is a little behind me, but it’s the only book i have left to read so it’s worth the shot.
If on a winter’s night a traveler – Italo Calvino
This one get praised a lot for its narration and writing. I wiish I could read it in italian, but french will hae to do.
Quest for Fire - J.H. Rosny Aîné
Fantasy in prehistoric times ? Sign me up. (It’s very old so there’s little chance I will love it, but eh. Sometimes an okay read is all you can ask for.)
Texaco – Patrick Chamoiseau
I liked another novel by the same author, and this one won a big french award back in 1994.
Tè Mawon – Michael Roch
I’ve been meaning to read a Michael Roch’s books for years – and I SWEAR that this year is THE year I finally do ! (Once I get a job)
Iron Widow - Xiran Jay Zhao
This has been recced by everyone and their sisters (my sister at least) so I’ll try to finally read it!
Assassin’s apprentice - Robin Hobb
Never read anything by Robin Hobb. I’m a fake fantasy fan.
The City we became - N.K. Jemisin
Another book loved by a lot of people. I absolutely loved How Long 'til Black Future Month so this is a book i’m sure to love.
In mother’s land - Élisabeth Vonarburg
Once again it’s a book I’ve been meaning to read for years. It’s a SF book, where mens are scarce. and basically describing the new society. Exactly my genre of book!
Postcolonial Love Poem – Natalie Diaz
I want to try to read poetry, and this one seems good.
A doll’s house – Henrik Ibsen
It’s a norwegian play from the 19th century. It was apparently very feminist for its time, so much that it stirred a controversy way beyond the world of theatre so I’m curious to read it.
Therese and Isabelle – Violette Leduc
A lesbian autofiction. Need I say more.
Harrow the Ninth – Tamsyn Muir
I don’t care about my wallet state. I WANT to read this book and the next so much
La Horde du Contrevent – Alain Damasio
A french SF classic. I borrowed this book from my sister about two years ago, so it’s time I read it. Fun fact, this book pages are numbered down instead of up, which probably the most french thing I’ve ever seen. so edgy.
Toward the Terra - Keiko Takemiya
A SF manga drawn by a shojo artist. Looks beautiful and I hope it will be interesting to read!
Here's to hoping I will not be stuck in a reading slump for six months like last year
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