(breaking the rules for this)
Way better than the show. (1/2)
(breaking the rules for this)
Way better than the show. (1/2)
(breaking the rules for this)
Absolutely compelling, great characters, beautifully written, perfect for those who have mixed feelings about having attended an "elite" college. (Or maybe that's just me.)
(breaking the rules for this)
Absolutely compelling, great characters, beautifully written, perfect for those who have mixed feelings about having attended an "elite" college. (Or maybe that's just me.)
(breaking the rules for this)
I mean, obviously.
But also: there are two things I love about Tolkien. One, Eowyn, who got the best speech in the trilogy, and who spawned so many fantasy stories about warrior women. (1/2)
(breaking the rules for this)
I mean, obviously.
But also: there are two things I love about Tolkien. One, Eowyn, who got the best speech in the trilogy, and who spawned so many fantasy stories about warrior women. (1/2)
(breaking the rules for this)
This is an academic one, but deserves a wider audience. When I did my PhD, I put this on my fan studies reading list so I'd have a good excuse to engage with it. (1/3)
(breaking the rules for this)
This is an academic one, but deserves a wider audience. When I did my PhD, I put this on my fan studies reading list so I'd have a good excuse to engage with it. (1/3)
(breaking the rules for this)
The best of the Wayfarers series, where the character-driven storylines really come together in a meditation about the relationships between identity, community, and place. (1/3)
(breaking the rules for this)
The best of the Wayfarers series, where the character-driven storylines really come together in a meditation about the relationships between identity, community, and place. (1/3)
(breaking the rules for this)
Very under-read, very beautiful, refreshingly free of contrived romance (two! powerful! cross-gender! friendships!), post-apocalyptic ghost story. On my upcoming reread list. (1/2)
(breaking the rules for this)
Very under-read, very beautiful, refreshingly free of contrived romance (two! powerful! cross-gender! friendships!), post-apocalyptic ghost story. On my upcoming reread list. (1/2)
(breaking the rules for this)
I was fifteen when I met Mary Russell, fifteen years old and in need of a book while traveling in Venice, and I basically tripped over her. [IYKYK]
I adore her and have been half-jokingly accused of being her. (1/2)
(breaking the rules for this)
I was fifteen when I met Mary Russell, fifteen years old and in need of a book while traveling in Venice, and I basically tripped over her. [IYKYK]
I adore her and have been half-jokingly accused of being her. (1/2)
Source - full Trudeau statement here: globalnews.ca/news/1099337...
(1/2)
Source - full Trudeau statement here: globalnews.ca/news/1099337...
(1/2)
(I break the rules for this)
The most vivid first-person character voice I've ever read. I cannot say enough good things about Murderbot and everything it has to tell us about personhood, stories, power, and connection. (1/2)
(I break the rules for this)
The most vivid first-person character voice I've ever read. I cannot say enough good things about Murderbot and everything it has to tell us about personhood, stories, power, and connection. (1/2)
(breaking the no-comment rules)
There is no story of living as a woman--in rage and kindness, power and oppression, embrace and refusal of tradition, and rejection of gender essentialism (patriarchal or feminist)--that feels as true to me as this. (1/2)
(breaking the no-comment rules)
There is no story of living as a woman--in rage and kindness, power and oppression, embrace and refusal of tradition, and rejection of gender essentialism (patriarchal or feminist)--that feels as true to me as this. (1/2)
Liberation + Black joy + me, a White reader = a profound lesson in empathy and respect, in one of the most beautiful stories I've ever read
Liberation + Black joy + me, a White reader = a profound lesson in empathy and respect, in one of the most beautiful stories I've ever read