The 12 Days of Christmas
November favorite
#12BooksOf2024
There was a lot of info here. Luckily, Goldberg writes in a very engaging, witty, and humorous way; other wise it would've read like a dry history text. The individual POVs from each side were interesting and enlightening and sometimes frustrating. Overall, a very worthy read.
This completed a second bingo for the month; yayyy!
79/62
#BookSpinBingo #MountTBR #ReadAway2024
"On the morning of the fine spring day, full of sunshine, that ended with my arrest in Gaza, I woke early from an uneven sleep, dressed, and pushed back to its proper place the desk meant to barricade the door of my hotel room."
Ok, a #BookSpinBingo book for another bingo that I actually have not read ?
#FirstLineFridays
@ShyBookOwl
https://www.chicagotribune.com/news/ct-illinois-prison-books-removed-inmate-educ...
Another depressing prison library story.
This one involved racially motivated censorship. Bullshit. Absolute bullshit. The prison removed several books including Frederick Douglass' memoire and The Souls of Black Folk. They even went as far as tearing the pages out of some books. I mean come on.
https://reason.com/2019/11/22/west-virginia-inmates-will-be-charged-by-the-minut...
Charging by the minute? I find it disgusting. Private prisons should be illegal. They try to squeeze every cent out of prisoners they can. Why punish them for trying to broaden their minds? Prison libraries are lacking enough as it is. Ebooks should be utilized.