#samantha sotto
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quotelr · 7 months ago
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Growing old is to be set free. It is a slow and long-simmering process that extracts you from what you are really made of. But it requires acceptance. You cannot put a flailing chicken in a boiling pot. You must accept the heat and the pain with serenity so that the full flavors of your life maybe released.
Samantha Sotto
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bestkahani · 5 days ago
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mavidin · 1 year ago
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Hi, I’m Shelley. Recently unemployed and avoiding reality.
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shecanswim · 2 years ago
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Nothing beats Love and Gravity as my top comfort book. I hear Marjorie, the name and the song, and it will pull me back to THAT book. It’s a short read and the story still lives inside even after all these years. What a sad excuse of a sappy memory.
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suburbanbeatnik · 3 days ago
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It's a great book, available at Amazon, Barnes & Noble and others! I wrote this review back when it was released, if you want to see what it's like.
Have you ever read Love and Gravity by Samantha Sotto? It's a time travel romance with Newton as the hero. I think you'd really like it.
OH MY GOD NO WHERE DO I FIND THIS 🙏
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quillandqueer · 5 days ago
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Weekly Reading Update | 19th January
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Finished Reading
Dogs of Summer: 166 pages of intense, unceasing obsession with genitals is a lot to deal with. 2/5
Scarlet: Meyer really put her whole entire Team Jacob fantasy in this one (and I ate it up) 4/5
In The Valley, A Shadow: A trans western sci-fi with diverse characters, Felix has my whole heart. 5/5
A Prayer For The Crown-Shy: This really didn't hit the way Psalm did, and I found Sibling Dex extremely annoying. 3/5
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Currently Reading
Physical Book Count Last Week: 345 This Week: 335 (I had a mini clear out of some middle grade books I was no longer interested in reading)
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bloodmaarked · 5 months ago
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water moon // samantha sotto yambao
first published: 2025 [to be released 16 january] read: 13 august 2024 - 18 august 2024 pages: 376 format: e-book [ARC]
genres: fiction; fantasy; romance, (new) adult, cosy favourite character(s): kei and hana, hana and kei least favourite character(s): hana's dad
rating: 🌕🌕🌕🌕🌗 thoughts: you know the subgenre of fiction where a person ends up stumbling upon an unassuming establishment - perhaps a library or a café - at just the right time in their life, where they will obtain knowledge that will reset their perspective and change the course of their life? so it goes with water moon, in which the establishment in question is a pawnbroker fronting as a ramen restaurant, and in which the knowledge they receive - or in this case, give away - is a regrettable life choice. now, in all honesty, i eat up this concept every time, having read several and with many more on my tbr. it seems to be hitting peak popularity at the moment and goodreads has already recommended me yet another based on this book. but water moon subverts the general formula early on and instead embarks on a sprawling and heart-warming fantastical adventure. it took me where i didn't expect me to go, made me feel things i didn't expect to feel, and is genuinely a reading highlight of the year so far.
as much as i didn't have massive expectations one way or the other before starting this book (this is my first introduction to sotto yambao's work), i was pulled in pretty much from chapter one and knew it would be good. the writing was so gorgeous and evocative. i felt immersed so early on and it only continued to grow. the magical world of Ikigai was joyful to be introduced to. not just the fantasy of it, but also its use as a foil of our own world and the way it was used to explore themes like choice and free will, and concepts of time; i found it so interesting.
i loved the cast of characters, and hana and keishin worked especially well as main characters. hana was perhaps a little harder to relate to, but we also see how kei experiences the same thing as she's very much a closed book. i think the dynamic of them both bouncing off of each other worked very well; hana might not have worked as well as a standalone character, unless perhaps the story was told from a first-person perspective.
this was such a good read. so cosy and whimsical, and also emotional in the best way. and i'm just in love with the cover. i'd definitely recommend reading this once it comes out early next year - and i might have to grab myself a physical copy!
massive thanks to Random House UK, Transworld Publishers, Bantam, and Netgalley for providing me with an advanced digital copy in exchange for an honest review! also, shoutout to @gabibookworm, without her post i might not have come across this book in the first place!
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theaologieslibrary · 2 days ago
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Water Moon is one of my most anticipated releases this year! I am so hoping it’s good because imo this is one of Illumicrate’s most gorgeous editions
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jetwhenitsmidnight · 16 days ago
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Water Moon by Samantha Sotto Yambao
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Release date: January 2025
Genre: adult fantasy/magical realism
Rating: ⭐⭐⭐💫
On a backstreet in Tokyo lies a pawnshop, but not everyone can find it. Most will see a cozy ramen restaurant. And only the chosen ones—those who are lost—will find a place to pawn their life choices and deepest regrets.
Hana Ishikawa wakes on her first morning as the pawnshop’s new owner to find it ransacked, the shop’s most precious acquisition stolen, and her father missing. And then into the shop stumbles a charming stranger, quite unlike its other customers, for he offers help instead of seeking it.
Together, they must journey through a mystical world to find Hana’s father and the stolen choice—by way of rain puddles, rides on paper cranes, the bridge between midnight and morning, and a night market in the clouds.
But as they get closer to the truth, Hana must reveal a secret of her own—and risk making a choice that she will never be able to take back.
Content warnings
Parental death, grief
Child abandonment
Violence, blood, mentions of torture, injury
Sexual content (mildly explicit)
Review
Thank you to NetGalley for an ARC!
Not gonna lie, I am not the biggest fan of magical realism, and I find it to be pretty hit or miss. Mostly misses.
The writing style feels flat to me, and I couldn't connect to the characters. I had zero investment in their romance and I don't feel like they had a lot of personality. I don't think the characters lacking personality is necessarily a drawback though; I find that magical realism as a genre tends to focus more on the magic and whimsy.
That being said, I was really not a fan of the whimsy here. Maybe it was my mood while reading this, or maybe I just lack whimsy in general, but I just could not bring myself to care about this world. I'm very aware that this is a me problem, and not a problem with the book. There are a lot of strange and wondrous settings that other readers would probably love, but I just couldn't vibe with it.
This review so far has been mostly complaints. HOWEVER. I absolutely LOVED the last 30% of this book! The plot as a whole moves really slowly, but it picks up towards the end, with crazy reveals I did not see coming. Each reveal is crazier than the last, it makes me glad I decided to keep going. I literally cannot emphasise enough how much I love this plot.
I have seen a lot of people describe this book as having whimsical Ghibli vibes, and it does, but like Ghibli, there are pretty serious themes being explored, and it actually gets pretty dark in certain places. I love how the darkness contrasts the whimsy, and it makes this world feel a lot more grounded.
All in all, I didn't vibe with Water Moon's... vibe. But I'm so grateful to have read this.
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meeghanreads · 17 days ago
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Top 5 anticipated books of Q1 2025
Hello friends!! Welcome to the first Top 5 Tuesday of 2025!! This week’s topic is top 5 anticipated books of Q1 2025!! Q1 being January to March 2025. Friends, it’s a new year, which means a new list of promises for me to break later in 2025. How exciting!! I will try not to break TOO many though… Well, I say this now. Who knows what September will look like. Picking only five books was weirdly…
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theliterarymess · 8 months ago
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‘Water Moon’ by Samantha Sotto Yambao. Out January 16th 2025
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‘Water Moon’ is a whimsical and immersive ghibli-esque adventure through the choices we make in life, the importance of free will and living for our own happiness.
Hana is about to take over the magical pawnshop hidden within a ramen restaurant in the backstreets of Tokyo once her father retires, but when she wakes up on her first day she realises everything is not what it seems. Along with scientist Minatozaki Keishin from our world, Hana jumps into puddles and travels through rumours to hunt down the choices that will lead to her father. But pawnshop owners are excellent manipulators, and important choices shift as easily as raindrops on skin…
This story was well-written and unpredictable from the very beginning. It’s a great fast paced read to get you out of a reading slump. Sometimes it felt as though the story moved too fast to keep up with, but this seemed like an intentional device used by the author to reflect the universe Hana lives in.
Many thanks to NetGalley and Del Ray for the opportunity to give an honest review on this story. ‘Water Moon’ releases January 16th 2025.
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quotelr · 7 months ago
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Fretting over how life ends, or anything else for that matter, is a complete waste of time.
Samantha Sotto
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judgingbooksbycovers · 9 months ago
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Water Moon: A Novel
By Samantha Sotto Yambao.
Cover art by Haylee Morice.
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insomniac-dot-ink · 21 days ago
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2025 Anticipated Book Releases
My reading goal for this year is the same for last year in that I want to read 70 books! And hopefully a few more nonfiction, as always. BUT my main 2025 New Years Resolution for reading is to read less broadly. I read very broadly last year which was good, but it kind of made me sad in the sense I wasn't reading as many books that are "for me." So! More fantasy this year.
January
Water Moon by Samantha Sotto Yambao (Jan 14th): Set in a pawnshop where people can sell their regrets and past choices. I am always a sucker for a slower magical realism story when done well.
Breath of the Dragon by Fonda Lee and Shannon Lee (Jan 7th): I usually strictly avoid YA at this point but adore Fonda Lee so I'll be reading everything she writes. This is an Asian-inspired fantasy work with dragons.
The Good Mother Myth: Unlearning Our Bad Ideas About How to Be a Good Mom by Nancy Reddy (Jan 25): I am always drawn to gender dynamics that are a little more invisible and have thought there is some absurdity to the idea it's "always the mother's fault." A nonfiction on socially constructed motherhood.
February
A Drop of Corruption by Robert Jackson Bennett (Feb 6th): !!! Probably my most anticipated read. The Tainted Cup was such a breath of fresh air in fantasy last year and the combination of epic fantasy and fun characters was perfect for me personally. This should me another murder mystery and I can't wait.
Emily Wilde's Compendium of Lost Tales (Emily Wilde 3) by Heather Fawcett (Feb 11th): I have already read this since I got an ARC but I did adore the ending! This installment started quiet slowly but ended on a much more high fantasy note than I expected in a good way.
March
Everything is Tuberculosis by John Green (March 18): I was surprised by how much I enjoyed John Green's nonfiction essay collection since I found his fiction a little rote. But his essay collection had a bittersweet thoughtfulness I really appreciated. As such, I am very interested in his next nonfiction work.
April
Great Big Beautiful Life by Emily Henry (April 25th): I am among the masses that have followed Emily Henry ever since I read "Book Lovers" and discovered her dialogue. Her work can get a little repetitive after a point, but this had such an interesting premise of two writers competing to write the biography of a reclusive famous author. I'm seated.
Authority by Andrea Long Chu (April 8th): An essay collection on the nature of authority in a world where "everyone thinks they know everything." I am fascinated by this topic.
May
My Friends by Fredrik Backman
Fredrik Backman is one of my authors. I read A Man Called Ove at such a challenging time in my life that it hit like a freight train and I've been following Backman's work ever since. I love when things hurt nicely--and a book about friendship from Backman? I am ready to hurt nicely.
OTHERS
Hemlock and Silver by T Kingfisher, a Snow White retelling (!!! another one of my authors, I adore Kingfisher)
Bury Our Bones in the Midnight Soil by Victoria E. Schwab (I've always been lukewarm on Schwab, but toxic lesbian vampires has my damn ears perked)
You Didn't Hear This From Me: (Mostly) True Notes on Gossip by Kelsey McKinney (I LOVE the Normal Gossip podcast and will be here for this)
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If there are any books you think I'll like, lmk! I'm always on the look out for stuff like Jade City or Naomi Novik's work.
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anchesetuttinoino · 20 days ago
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La giornalista Samantha Smith aveva indagato sui crimini commessi dalle grooming gang di pakistani ai danni di ragazzine bianche e fragili, definite “spazzatura bianca”, ma ha ricevuto intimidazioni dalle autorità britanniche. Per decenni, le autorità britanniche cercarono di nascondere sotto al tappeto le violenze, lo sfruttamento e gli omicidi di queste bande per “evitate tensioni razziali e derive razziste”. Ne ho parlato nel libro “Le vite delle donne contano”.
Francesca Totolo
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sera-thrandulian · 3 days ago
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Thought Provoking Books & Books That Have Important Voices! Pt. 3
21. Dead Poets Society by N.H. Kleinbaum (Coming-of-Age Novel/Life/Death/Carpe Diem/Poetry/Self-Expression/Power of Writing/Education/Rebellion against Conformity/Suicide)
22. The Yellow Wallpaper by Charlotte Perkins Gilman (Fiction/Short Story/Gothic Fiction/Feminist Literature/Horror/Mental Illness/Gender Roles/Self-Expression/Treatment of Women in Medicine)
23. Water Moon by Samantha Sotto Yambao (Magical Realism Fantasy/Regret/Power of Personal Agency/Japanese Cultural Influence/Coming-of-Age/Japanese Mythology)
24. Persephone Rises, 1860-1927: Mythology, Gender, and the Creation of a New Spirituality by Margot K. Lois (Literary Criticism/Greek Myth of Persephone Reinterpreted in Victorian Age to explore Contemporary Societal Issues related to Gender, Power Dynamics, the Female Experience/Gender Study/Cycle of Life and Death/Spiritual Perspective)
25. Cackle by Rachel Harrison (Horror/Dark Comedy/Self-Discovery/Societal Fear of Feminine Power/Societal Issues)
26. On Censorship: A Public Librarian Examines Cancel Culture in the U.S. by James LaRue (Complex Look at Censorship/Importance and Role of Libraries/Book Banning/Library Perspective)
27. Everything You Wanted to Know About Indians But Were Afraid to Ask by Anton Truer (Non-Fiction/Native American History, Culture, Identity/Indigenous Voice/Young Readers/Politics/Gender Roles/Tribal Enrollment/Terminology, Religion, and Societal Issues and Activism/Informative)
28. Meet the Neighbors: Animal Minds and Life in a More-Than-Human World by Brandon Keim (Science Book/Animal Lives and Human Relation to Them/Animal Rights/Empathy)
29. How to Protect Bookstores and Why: The Present and Future of Bookselling by Danny Caine (Non-Fiction/Books About Books/Politics/Business/Roles of Bookstores/Community Gathering/Source of New Ideas/Power of Small and Local Business)
30. Bite by Bite: Nourishments and Jamborees by Aimee Nezhukumatahil (Essays/Memoir/Relationship Between Food, Memory, Identity/Heritage/Nature/Personal Reflection/Botanical Facts)
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