Need to finish this biography of Alexander I. before it drives me crazy....
todays bird
we're not kids anymore.
Cosmic Funnies

@theartofmadeline
Keni
Sweet Seals For You, Always
Today's Document
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if i look back, i am lost
Show & Tell
AnasAbdin
styofa doing anything

titsay

⁂
Claire Keane
wallacepolsom
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blake kathryn
Jules of Nature
I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
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@manuscripts-dontburn
Need to finish this biography of Alexander I. before it drives me crazy....
Early Bumblebee/Bombus pratorum/ängshumla. Värmland, Sweden (12 June 2022).
On one hand, I believe that anyone who wants to write a book absolutely should write it. Go Queen/King!
At the same time, I believe not every book should get published. Some of them should stay in the drawer.
Still making my way through this one. Reading approximately one essay a night, I should be done by, uh, July. Hopefully!
House of Splinters
Author: Laura Purcell
First published: 2025
Rating: ★★★★☆
I wish I had reread The Silent Companions first; then I would have probably caught more references, but overall, this book does work well even as a standalone. I really enjoy Laura Purcell´s writing, and her ability to tap the potential of a haunted house is still in full swing. The story evolves at an ever-increasing pace, the beginning being languid, and then the narrative keeps picking up speed once we reach a halfway point. Not the scariest of scary books, but still good.
Auschwitz-Birkenau: The Place Where You Are Standing
Author: Jadwiga Pindelska-Lech, Pawel Sawicki
First published: 2013
Rating: N/A
A collection of historical photographs capturing two transports of the Hungarian Jews into Auschwitz, put together with pictures of the same captured places within the camp, selected with great precision. Even if the match is not completely accurate, they are more than haunting. I bought this short book during my recent (and third) school trip, which I had organised for my students, and will definitely use it while teaching in the future. I do not feel like it should be rated, though, and so I will not.
The Goldfinch
Author: Donna Tartt
First published: 2013
Rating: ★★★☆☆
Like.... sure, this was fine. I was interested enough to finish it, but I did not particularly care about anyone in the story besides the dog. I get people who say this is good, but to me, it is far from the peak of literature. I guess I hoped for much more art stuff and got a lot more of under(and of)age drug abuse instead.
Hungerstone
Author: Kat Dunn
First published: 2025
Rating: ★★★☆☆
I thought this was pretty well written, and the gothic atmosphere certainly pervaded the whole narrative deliciously. The use of Carmilla also felt quite clever (a vampire as an impulse for a personal revolt is a new one to me), and I was not opposed to the ending at all. There were moments when the story felt repetitive regarding the recollections of the past, but this is still an interesting offering.
Notes on Grief
Author: Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
First published: 2021
Rating: ★★★★★
It doesn´t matter that you didn´t know Adichie´s father or that this account of her grief upon his passing is extremely personal to her. There are tones we all can hear and feel. Grief is wonderfully universal. Wonderfully, because it is, in the end, what makes us human.
The Last Murder at the End of the World
Author: Stuart Turton
First published: 2024
Rating: ★★★☆☆
A murderous fog had covered the entire world except for a small island. What remains is fewer than 200 people. One day, one of the leaders is found dead, and the barriers that had kept the fog at bay are down. And nobody remembers anything. A fantastic premise for a dystopian book, and I must say that the first half gave me the uneasy feelings of claustrophobia and existential dread (which is great; that is what books should do: make you feel as if you are a part of that story). It was all very cleverly constructed, and the ending I felt was satisfactory as well. Unfortunately, the investigation part itself felt much less urgent than I would have expected and at times, I felt all of the conclusions were being reached out of little more than the imagination of the main character rather than solid evidence. Still, I felt entertained throughout. One of those books that makes me wish we could give half stars on Goodreads, because it wasn´t exactly a four-star, but it was better than a three-star.
The Elsewhere Express
Author: Samantha Sotto Yambao
First published: 2026
Rating: ★★★★☆
Upon starting the book, I was afraid it would fall into the same pitfall as the author´s debut, the Water Moon - all enticing images, wordplay and vibes, but hardly any character development or plot. Fortunately, The Elsewhere Express, though definitely decorated with the enticing images and vibes, does take the reader on an interesting exploration of guilt, hope, denial and sacrifice, where characters are anything but one-dimensional. There is an aftertaste of saccharine sweetness; you do need to simply accept that time has no meaning, and it can make your head spin with the images and information you keep being fed on every page, but at the same time, I kept thinking, "I need to read this again sometime", which can surely only count as a positive.
The Fountains of Silence
Author: Ruta Sepetys
First published: 2019
Rating: ★★★☆☆
I wish I had read this when I was about 15. Ruta Sepetys, as is her habit, jumps into a turbulent time of events and serves it to young readers through the eyes of teenagers in short chapter servings. It reads easily and well, it brings attention to historical events that may not be overly familiar to a regular person, and just when you are ready to say this was really good, you are offered a somewhat half-baked anticlimax. I did like it, but wished for more.
Rules of the Heart
Author: Janice Hadlow
First published: 2026
Rating: ★☆☆☆☆
I can hardly believe this is by the same author as the utterly delightful The Other Bennet Sister. I could perhaps forgive the fact that the most interesting part of the main character´s life (for she was a real person) is skipped over in favour of her later years' doomed affair; I could perhaps cope with a strangely cold and impersonal tone of the narrative, and I would not even protest that the story is about a woman who never held onto any resolution because she was a slave to her passions. What I could not get over, though, was how repetitive the situations were and, most importantly, that instead of an intimate and interesting portrait we get a truly pathetic worship at the altar of the most abject self-pity. I don´t know what the real Harriet was like, but the book Harriet I could not stand. Then again, I could hardly stand anyone appearing in these pages.
H is for Hawk
Author: Helen Macdonald
First published: 2014
Rating: ★★★★★
I am not interested in birds, and personal memoirs often seem needlessly self-indulgent to me. What could Helen Macdonald offer me then? Surely this is not a book for me. At least that is what I thought when I bought this second-hand and then let it rest at the bottom of an endless pile of other books that populate my tin flat. The only reason why I eventually decided to give it a shot was my favourite booktuber BookOlive raving about it. (But she does love birds, so duh). I can honestly say this is the most beautiful book I have read all year and something I shall be returning to in years to come. There is so much more than just hawking - and even that I now find of interest. IT is a book about grief and complicated feelings towards oneself. It is about loss, confusion and depression. There are interesting historical and natural facts as well as one disturbing and incredibly fascinating life journey of a (fairly) famous writer. It has some of the most compelling and enchanting nature writing imaginable. You feel like you are taking the steps yourself while reading, like you are breathing the cold morning air, like you are the one with the hawk on your fist. And you feel everything, every word, deep within your soul. This is not really a book about hawking. It is about what is vulnerable in being human.
Summer in my room.
julian de narvaez piranesi illustration i will think about you every day for the rest of my life
The Picture of Dorian Gray, Oscar Wilde Modern Library (1954)
Bookhaul June 2026
New books:
The Dark Mirror
This Dark Night: Emily Brontë a Life
Auschwitz-Birkenau: The Place Where You Are Standing
The Unicorn Hunters
This Immortal Heart
Used books:
Anděl mi pověděl
Heart of the Fae
The Gift of the Magi
The Swan's Daughter
Sula
Wedded Wife: A Feminist History of Marriage
The Elopement
This Other Eden
Reginald's Christmas Revel
My Father Had a Daughter: Judith Shakespeare's Tale
A Confederacy of Dunces
The Children's life of the bee
Pnin
An Instance of a Fingerpost
Miss Buncle's Book
JOMP Challenge | August 3 | Summer
replica by alessio carnevali // st. mary magdalene from the santa lucia triptych, painted c1470 by carlo crivelli
Fall reading 🍁
its books like the everlasting that make me want to go back to school so i can talk about it with more people and write a paper on it
Oh this remindsme how I read historical novels by Ludmila Vaňková and gave them to my friends and they all collectively lost their minds and we all marathoned those one after another.... good times.
Macmillan Collector’s Library Classics
Source: pinterest.com/Monica Gonzales
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