#sorcery and cecelia
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I went to the used bookstore and found these!! I'd never seen the original Sorcery and Cecelia cover, and I can't stop giggling at tree!Oliver looking like some sort of damsel in distress. I'm also looking forward to comparing the original Talking to Dragons to the updated version.
#i know 80s covers look outdated but i love them so much#patricia c wrede#enchanted forest chronicles#sorcery and cecelia#talking to dragons#dealing with dragons
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oooh, loving the snippet from all the words i cannot say, thats some tasty description. why not do some more for it? happy wednesday!
aw thank you, and of course! Happy Wednesday to you too!
They arrive in England on a cold, gloomy Saturday, one of those days when rainwater coats the cobblestones and turns them dark gray, when it's better to just stay inside.
Thomas insists on wandering all over. He relishes being back with booksellers, and all sorts of entertainments, and James resigns himself to soaked clothes and water trickling under his collar as he trails Thomas around.
If he's being honest, he doesn't really mind.
But still, he wishes that it was a little less… wet.
#sorcery and cecelia#my writing#wip wednesdays#poor James I'm sorry the rain is so wet please forgive me
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From Sorcery & Cecilia: or The Enchanted Chocolate Pot by Patricia C. Wrede and Caroline Stevermer
An epistolary novel between two friends, Cecelia and Kate
Personally, I do not see that this follows at all logically, but I suppose the Marquis expects you to take his word for it. Men are like that.
-Cecy
On the one hand, he was shockingly rude to Oliver. On the other, I have often been shockingly rude to Oliver myself, and I understand the impulse.
-Kate
When Mr. Tarleton and I were quite finished snubbing each other with magnificent unconcern, Mrs. Porter escorted us to the side door.
-Cecy
I was struck with a sudden sense of unreasonable apprehension. (In addition to my perfectly reasonable apprehension, common to any girl foolish enough to lose herself at night in the woods of Vauxhall).
-Kate
...I stared at him for what seemed like years, with the stupidest expression on my face, I'm sure, because I felt stupid. For I couldn't imagine why he should say such an extraordinary thing. Finally, I realized he was waiting for me to say something.
I said, "I can't imagine why you should say such an extraordinary thing."
-Kate
"But I don't get an explanation, do I? No, all I get is roundaboutation and arrogance!"
-Kate
James also said that if you were anything at all like me, he did not know whether to send Thomas his felicitations or condolences.
-Cecy
There is nothing that is quite so reassuring in an awkward situation as knowing that one is well turned-out.
-Cecy
Thomas says he might have known James would display his usual masterly grasp of tactics. (I believe this is his way of saying that he is jealous of James for getting to hit Sir Hillary).
-Kate
From there he wishes to go on to several cities he thinks I ought to see. (Among other things, he insists he will perish if he cannot take me to Venice and watch me fall into a canal.)
-Kate
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sorcery and cecelia fandom, james x thomas, featuring various shenanigans and a failed slow burn but don't worry there's still angst
reblog and link the fanfic that you worked your absolute ass off on but not a lot of people read i’ll go first:
witcher fandom, lambert x aiden, 1920s rum runner and assassin au. entirely historically accurate.
#sorcery and cecelia#fanfic#my writing#still a wip because i have no motivation to finish it when i know no ones gonna read it
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A great deal is happening in London and the country this season. For starters, there's the witch who tried to poison Kate at the Royal College of Wizards. There's also the man who seems to be spying on Cecelia. (Though he's not doing a very good job of it--so just what are his intentions?) And then there's Oliver. Ever since he was turned into a tree, he hasn't bothered to tell anyone where he is. Clearly, magic is a deadly and dangerous business. And the girls might be in fear for their lives . . . if only they weren't having so much fun!
#book: sorcery and cecelia#author: patricia c. wrede#author: caroline stevermer#genre: fantasy#genre: historical fiction#genre: young adult#year: 1980s
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Title: Sorcery & Cecelia: or The Enchanted Chocolate Pot | Author: Patricia C. Wrede / Caroline Stevermer | Publisher: Harcourt (2004)
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📕
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WIP Wednesday time!
Filenames:
WIAFAch3
all the words I cannot say ch2
this restless darkness
Snippet: *from all the words I cannot say ch2*
When Thomas is allowed out of bed for the first time, James hovers by his side as he takes shaky laps around the doctor's tent. He's weak and not terribly coordinated, but he's alive, and he can walk. James tries to pretend that he's not staring at Thomas, at the sweep of his dark hair, his ferocious exression.
WIP Wednesday Game
It’s WIP Wednesday, time for a little accountability, sharing your work, and getting a kick in the pants.
Here’s how it works:
In a reblog (or new post w/ rules attached), post up to five (5) filenames of your WIPs; not titles, file names.
Post a snippet from one of them. Snippet must be words you wrote in the last 7 days. We’re posting progress here. If you haven’t made any, go make some and come back to post!
After you’ve posted, people can send you an ask with one of your file names. You must then write 3 sentences in that file. If the filename is one you can't share from (for example, an event fic), write 3 sentences on it anyway, and then 3 more on another to share.
That’s it! You can invite others to join in, or just post. If you tag me in your post, I will send you an ask request!
If you’re reading this, you’re invited!
If you see someone posting a WIP Wednesday Game snippet, send them an ask! Make them write.
Requested/Friend event mentions under the cut! If you'd like to be pinged next week, let me know!
friends @fiore-della-valle @redbirdblogs @greenbergsays @idkfandomwhatever @luckyspike @obaewankenope @mad-madam-m @sleepymccoy @eriquin @sosobriquet @qprstobin @spacebarrette @andavs @zainclaw @anonymousdandelion @flameraven @fractalgeometry / Requests @aparticularbandit @madnessfromthemountains @makeroftherunes @not-orpheus @1attheedge @preetsramblings
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Porsche Pachara Kittisawatd
dedicated to lovely @domsaysstuff whom I have endlessly ranted to when working on these web weaves
Elizabeth Kubler-Ross and David Kessler/Keith Ablow/Unknown/Mitch Albom, The Five People You Meet in Heaven/Kiera Cass, The Heir/ J.K. Rowling/John Mark Green/G. N. Solomon, Blood So Black/ Sorcery & Cecelia, Caroline Stevermer/Richelle Mead, Last Sacrifice/Haruki Murakami/Anais Nin/Carrol Bryant/Hanif Kureishi/C.J. Carlyon, The Cherry House/Che Guevara/Emilie Autumn, The Asylum for Wayward Victorian Girls/Glenn van Dekken/Tony Kushner/Unknown/Unknown/John Green/John Irving/Obert Skye, Leven Thumps and the Gateway to Foo (Leven Thumps, #1)/Victor Hugo/Jack Weatherford, The Secret History of the Mongol Queens: How the Daughters of Genghis Khan Rescued His Empire/Becky Chambers, To Be Taught, If Fortunate/Shane Koyczan/Elie Wiesel/Natalie C. Parker, Steel Tide (Seafire, #2)
#kinnporsche#porsche pachara#apo nattawin#kinnporschesource#toboysbeloving#userlotad#usernuria#tonanons#tosnimeat#ondreamytracks#userjap#userjyu#userspicy#usermor#usermone#userpharawee#tagnads#vishingwell#lightmiup#userbenka#userjjessi#tuserhidden#tusersilence#usergooseras#igtf edits#kpww
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NOVEMBER 2024 WRAP UP
[ loved liked okay nope dnf (reread) ]
Kicking Ice • (The Bride of the Blue Wind) • Animal Farm • The Lost Manuscript • Heart's Blood • Hotel • The Liar's Knot • The Education of Pip • The Glassblower • Terec and the Wall • (The Hands of the Emperor) • The Village Library Demon Hunting Society • One Good Turn • The Silence of Bones • (The Raven Tower) • The Art Thief • Safer Places • Letters to Half-Moon Street
* * * * * *
Letters to Half-Moon Street - an absolutely charming epistolary regency romance told mostly through letters between the main character, his siblings, and his love interest. The mc is gay and demi-sexual (and a younger son) in a queer-norm England where gender norms have been replaced by rules about birth order, and there's magic - it's very Sorcery & Cecelia meets KJ Charles (if not quite as good). As I said, very charming, but when I read the two shorter follow ups, One Good Turn and The Education of Pip, it was pretty clear that the epistolary format (and romance) helped cover a lot of hurts. I applaud the author for including an aromantic character and trying to write stories about finding your place and self-recovery without romance, but in her attempt to create comfort she sacrificed any real development to the characters or the plot. (also, while the rich upper class characters are exceedingly nice to the lower-class characters, we still almost never see any of their servants. hmm.) There's a few more books in the series that are romances (and at least one looks like it might be epistolary), so we'll have to see if she improves. Fantastic covers though!
Safer Places - a comic collection that was supposed to be for my book club but didn't quite work out unfortunately! These comics were very strange and dreamlike, making me not quite sure what happened but very much wanting to think about it. The artist also returned to a story idea several times, sometimes taking on an entirely new shape, and it really lent a sense of connection to the book as a whole. Would recommend!
The Art Thief - I'm not really one for more narrative-type nonfiction or for true crime, but non-violent crime involving fine art? I don't know why I find the fine-art world (and crime) so fascinating, but I do, and I enjoyed this! It was actually a fairly nice, chill read to distract myself with in the middle of the election.
The Raven Tower - revisiting my first Ann Leckie 5 years later - this was incredible! Slow yes, but watching the story build itself out of all the pieces was absolutely fascinating. 100% satisfied with the ending, but it was also a bit of a cliff-hanger? I'll be absolutely fascinated to see what kind of stories Leckie felt compelled to write that take up half of the Lake of Souls collection.
The Silence of Bones - DNF @ 11%. I was very interested in this as a historical mystery with a female protagonist set in Korea, but leery of it being YA. I admit I wasn't a big fan of the audiobook narrator, but an hour and a half into the audiobook I still hadn't hadn't settled into the story, so decided to drop it.
The Village Library Demon Hunting Society - This was very high on my watch-list for 2024 due to my love for CM Waggoner's first book Unnatural Magic, but was somewhat leery of the cozy-fantasy vibes it was giving. My first shock came when it turned out to have a fairly modern and contemporary setting and was not in a fantasy other-world, though as expected it was definitely going for the cozy-fantasy and elderly-person-solves-murder vibes that are popular right now, and with which I've personally had mixed results. Overall though, it was aiming to be a sort of meta-commentary on cozy mystery tropes, which I think it was successful at! I think it definitely did better than its sci-fi cousin, the Midsolar Murders series by Mur Lafferty. I just wish it had a better title, this one is a bit of a mouthful and only semi-relevant.
The Hands of the Emperor - started slowly rereading this a few months ago with the intention of getting around to my first reread of the sequel. Honestly, the perfect book to be reading during an absolutely horrible election, I imagine I'll be burying my head in the Nine Worlds a lot in the upcoming years.
I wasn't quite ready to head directly into AtFotS after finishing Hands, so jumped around to some of Victoria's short stories I hadn't read yet. Terec and the Wall is the second Terec story - I admit I really don't have much interest in this sub-series? This one in particular was at least interesting in the second half because of its crossover with the Greenwing & Dart series, so I recommend you don't read this until you've read that. The Glassblower was...fine. It showed promise, but it was so short! I hope the second part fleshes out more, but idk. It's also related to the Ysthar collection of books, which is the only part of the Nine Worlds that I haven't bothered to revisit yet. To skip ahead a bit, the third of the Sisters Avramapul novellas is finally out! It's been a while so I decided to reread the first two books, starting with The Bride of the Blue Wind. It's a Bluebeard retelling and deals with pregnancy/body horror and is not for the faint-hearted! Sardeet was SO YOUNG in this, I don't think I quite realized before. Good but not my favorite of the series.
The Liar's Knot - loved loved loved. These books are so good even if (or because?) all of the plot twists are somewhat soap-operatic. I think this is my favorite in the series because the characters are a bit more settled but also having to learn to trust each other. And all of the secret identity reveals!!! I had a wonderful time.
Hotel -DNF @ 8%. picked this up at a recent library sale because a mystery at a hotel sounds cool! Then I started it on audiobook and realized it was a thriller (not my thing) written by a guy in the 60's (ditto). What I read was certainly passable and maybe I could have gotten through it, but I lost interest.
Heart's Blood - I've seen Marillier's work around somewhere, and picked this one up at a library book sale at some point. I got so close to DNF'ing this early on and almost wish I had. It wasn't bad I think, it has some beauty-and-the-beast vibes, but it felt excruciatingly slow, and something that I couldn't quite put my finger on was annoying the heck out of me. It made me wish more times than I should admit that I was reading Chalice by Robin McKinley instead. I'm not entirely scared off of trying Marillier's other work, but I'd proceed with extreme caution.
The Lost Manuscript - DNF @ 19%. A surprisingly lighthearted novel told in letters about a woman who finds a manuscript in a hotel bedside table and proceeds to track down the original author, only to discover someone else had added to the manuscript at some point after he lost it. She and her contacts try and trace its history back to find the mystery author. Seemed very nice, if you're looking for something calm and lighthearted? Just not what I was looking for at the time.
Animal Farm - somehow managed to escape reading this for school, and a podcast I listen to loves recommending this, so I picked up a copy at the same sale as Heart's Blood. I feel like I spent most of the book sagely nodding my head, like yup, that's how it can be! Very smart book, not a favorite but I'm glad I read it.
Kicking Ice - backed this on Kickstarter ages ago when I was still deep in my Check, Please! fervor. Finally picked it up because it was short and I needed to finish another book for my owned-tbr challenge. It was ok. Maybe a better choice if you're a young girl interested in hockey or sports in general? I also didn't like the art style used for most of the book, so a pass from me. I'm sure a lot of the info about the NWHL is also outdated by this point.
#bec posts#book log#wrap up 2024#books#booklr#bookblr#book review#book reviews#kicking ice#victoria goddard#animal farm#the lost manuscript#heart's blood#juliet marillier#hotel#the liar's knot#letter's to half moon street#the village library demon hunting society#the raven tower#the silence of bones#the art thief#safer places#cm waggoner
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anyone out there a sorcery and cecelia fan? anyone? I feel like I never see people who are into these books...
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thanks for the book answer! would you share your fiction favorites in general?
Hi anon,
I'll post a few but I think to clarify - this is also kind of just going to be a list. I meant more like...are you looking for book recs? If so are you looking for specific things (eg: queer characters, fantasy and if so which subtype, sci fi and ditto, literary fiction, etc.) Or do you just like, want a list of books I have liked.
Anyway this is a list of a handful of books/series/authors that I'd count as favorites, loosely grouped, but I didn't go into any details about anything.
Fantasy I read a teen and has permanently shaped how I interact with fantasy fiction; some of this is YA
a large swathe of what Diana Wynne Jones has written
The Belgariad and Mallorean by David Eddings
The Old Kingdom series by Garth Nix
Sorcery and Cecelia by Caroline Stevermer and Patricia Wrede (this came up on the comfort reads panel I watched yesterday and it is indeed a comfort read for me) and Mairelon the Magician by Patricia Wrede (set in the same sort of world)
Lord of the Rings and the Hobbit by J.R.R. Tolkien
I read some of the Patternist series by Octavia Butler as a teen but then didn't revisit it until adulthood
Jonathan Strange and Mr Norrell by Susanna Clarke (Piranesi is very different and also excellent but that came out when I was an adult, but it's still a favorite)
The Hero and the Crown by Robin McKinley (I also read a bunch of her fairy tale-based books which I don't know if I'd call them favorites still but I do think they're an influence)
Sandman by Neil Gaiman
American Gods by Neil Gaiman
Middlegrade/YA fiction I read as a kid that also permanently shaped something
Several Ellen Raskin books but especially The Westing Game
Elizabeth Enright's books but especially the ones about the Melendy family and Gone-Away Lake
Fantasy and SF I read as an adult and would consider exceptional/a favorite
The Broken Earth Trilogy by N. K. Jemisen
The City and the City by China Mievelle
The Locked Tomb series by Tamsyn Muir
Phedre's trilogy of the Kushiel's Legacy series by Jacqueline Carey (have not read the others in the series so this isn't saying they're bad, I just can't speak to them)
The Southern Reach Trilogy by Jeff VanderMeer
The Left Hand of Darkness by Ursula K. Leguin
Arcadia by Iain Pears
The Terra Ignota series by Ada Palmer
The Raven Tower by Ann Leckie
The Vorkosigan Saga by Lois McMaster Bujold
The Night Watch books from Discworld by Terry Pratchett; I have read like, one other Discworld book and it didn't have Sam Vimes in it so I didn't really care
Stars in My Pocket Like Grains of Sand by Samuel R. Delaney
Literary fiction/not sf I read as a teen or adult
(there's notably a lot less of this because I do lean heavily towards fantasy but)
Catch-22 by Joseph Heller
Where'd You Go, Bernadette by Maria Semple
Gone Girl by Gillian Flynn
Drive Your Plow Over The Bones Of The Dead by Olga Tokarczuk
#answered#Anonymous#ngl I used to be a MASSIVE rereader but i do not have the time so this is based on a scan of my bookshelves#and the last 8 years of my goodreads#in addition to what i know i have reread a bunch#m's book recs
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10. Sleeper Hit: Not a book that you have to force into people's hands, but well-executed
This is a bit how @antikate pitched the Emily Wilde books to me and I wholeheartedly agree. Nothing lifechanging by any means, but just a good fun time especially if you are me and Sorcery and Cecelia was one of your favorite books as a kid.
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* ☔ : dialogue from the novel SORCERY & CECELIA by patricia c. wrede and caroline stevermer. ( adjust pronouns, etc. as needed. )
" so i set a trap, as you see, and you have fallen in. " " i find that most amusing, don't you? " " it's no concern of yours. just mind your own affairs. " " what a rude thing to say! " " you are odious. " " i didn't mean to snoop. " " what are you doing skulking about in these bushes and spying on us? " " assignations are not at all the thing for a young lady of quality. " " you are the most unprincipled man i have ever met. " " you aren't planning to do anything...indiscreet, now, are you? " " only—i was admiring the way you tie your cravat. " " how dare you accuse me of any such thing. " " i thought i told you to stay in well-lit ballrooms. " " ill met by moonlight, my dear _____. " " nothing elegant, but it ought to do the trick. " " you shed hairpins the way hansel and gretel shed crumbs. " " now let us return to light, safety, and society. " " i never meant to flirt with any of you. " " you must stay the night, at least. " " are you concerned what the local gossips will say? " " well, but one must be practical, after all. " " in that case, we must clearly do something. " " will you take some more tea, _____? " " do you really dislike me so much? " " i wish you would accept it as the first of many things i wish to give you. " " are you foxed? " " i need a fiancée rather urgently. " " you'll be perfectly free to cry off when the season is over, you know. " " i'm neither rich nor titled, and as for prospects... " " i hardly think our marriage will last long enough to inconvenience either of us. " " don't play the innocent with me. " " i won't let you tangle me up with your sardonic remarks. " " i believe i owe you an apology, _____. " " what are you planning to do, drown me? " " i don't know what to make of you. " " lie down until you've got your breath back. " " you're the one who almost got killed. don't you have any sense? " " i had no idea you were a wizard. " " oh, dear, i am so dreadfully sorry! i can't imagine how i came to be so clumsy. " " what _____ tells me is none of your affair. " " please use your common sense for once and stay home. " " you said you could handle things by yourself. plainly you are mistaken. " " thoughtful behavior from a man who looks as though he'd like to kill me himself. " " save a waltz for me at the ball next week. " " it is one of the most unethical, immoral uses of wizardry imaginable. " " that is hardly a lady's mount. " " so this is where i find you, playing cards and drinking claret. " " a lady has no knowledge of such pursuits. " " i wish i could insult you in turn, but you are looking very healthy indeed. " " remember the promise i made you once, that i would dance at your funeral? " " i do not think i would ever expect you to do anything sensible. " " just because you dislike magic, you think everyone who uses it must be wicked! " " these magical bonds can sometimes prove painful. " " how dreadful to be caught up in a game and have no idea of the rules. " " i won't offer you such a pleasant fate now. " " it will be amusing to witness their reaction to your death. " " what do you know about anything except to hurt people? " " i like the idea of marrying you. " " you can't steal my magic! "
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Favorite books I read in 2023
The Ones I Loved
Summer Sons by Lee Mandelo - (genre: horror) idk what to tell you about this book, but you should read it. It's about ghosts and grief and Nashville and relearning how to be alive. The romance in it is gay and slowburn. If you love the All For the Game series, this book is for you.
The Jasmine Throne by Tasha Suri - (genre: fantasy) One of the cleverest fantasies about empire and rebellion I've read in a long time. The female characters are fantastic and complicated, and it's so fun to be inside their heads. The gay romance at the heart of this book is tender and fucked up in all the best ways. Highly, highly recommend.
The Secret Lives of Country Gentlemen by K.J. Charles - (genre: regency romance) Lovers to enemies to allies to lovers! A poor lawyer inherits an Earldom and discovers that the leader of the local smugglers is someone he is intimately familiar with. Very sweet and well written gay regency romance.
A Nobleman's Guide to Seducing a Scoundrel by K.J. Charles - (genre: regency romance) A grumpy, embattled new Earl with a heart of gold meets a lonely, competent smuggler-turned-secretary with a ulterior motives. I can't overstate how much I loved this book, the characters and their relationship, the way they make each other's lives better and fuller, the way they come to make each other better people gah it's so good ;-; make sure to read the first book in this series first, even though it focuses on other characters
This is How You Lose the Time War by Amal El-Mohtar - (genre scifi/fantasy) I went into this book knowing nothing about it besides the meme, and I highly recommend that approach. It is gay, the writing is very lyrical and flower, and you will need to let go of the typical scifi genre expectation that the world in which the story takes place will be explained to you.
The Ones I Enjoyed a lot
The Hollow Places by T. Kingfisher - (genre: horror) relatable 30-something divorcee and 50-something gay barista find a passageway to another world. The world they find...is bad.
The Black Death: New Lessons from Recent Research by Dorsey Armstrong - (genre: nonfiction) summary of the latest research on the plague! V interesting and well explained. Originally a video but the audiobook is available on Hoopla.
Life in a Medieval Village by Francis Gies and Joseph Gies - (genre: nonfiction) great little deep dive into the daily life of Medieval peasants from how the legal system worked to marriage customs.
Ancillary Justice by Anne Leckie - (genre: scifi) the main character is the AI consciousness of a ship trapped in one of her ancillary bodies and her sidekick is one of her former lieutenants who was accidentally frozen for 1000 years and is having a very hard time about it.
Sorcery & Cecelia by Patricia C. Wrede & Caroline Stevermer - (genre: regency era fantasy romance) this was a re-read from my childhood and it held up!
The Wordhord: Daily Life in Old English by Hana Videen - (genre: nonfiction) did you know that "lady" evolved from the old english word for "loaf maker" and "lord" evolved from "loaf guardian"?
Role Model by Rachel Reid - (genre: romance) gay hockey romance between a hockey player and his new team's social media manager. Pretty standard romance novel but fun!
Silver in the Wood by Emily Tesh - (genre: fantasy) the green man of the forest is minding his own business when a young man shows up on his doorstep. english mythology vibes, also gay.
Heated Rivalry by Rachel Reid - (genre: romance) gay hockey players, enemies to lovers/fuck buddies to lovers romance. if this was originally geno/sid rpf i would not be surprised.
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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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