A interesting read, I enjoy reading books about Deaf culture. 4/5 Read for #ReadHarderChallenge2021
A interesting read, I enjoy reading books about Deaf culture. 4/5 Read for #ReadHarderChallenge2021
I am posting one book per day from my to-be-read collection. No description and providing no reason for wanting to read it, I just do. Some will be old, some will be new - don‘t judge me I have a lot of books.
Join the fun if you want. This is day 280.
#bookstoread
#tbrpile
#bookstagram
Read this in less than a day. I got hooked the moment I started. Describes the story of a young deaf girl and how she struggles against discrimination and how she is countlessly misunderstood by the hearing community. I enjoyed this very much. I highly recommend it.
I read this for school, and otherwise I wouldn‘t have picked it up—high school romances don‘t really appeal to me. I did enjoy the discussion of what it is like to be Deaf in a hearing world, however, and think that this book could provoke interesting conversations.
YA novel following Maya in her senior year of high school. This is her first year as a Deaf student in a hearing school, and Maya has to navigate her way through the pitfalls and triumphs of being a teenager.
I absolutely love that the main character has a disability and that she isn't afraid to say that she's happy the way she is!
#IntegrateYourShelf
A few books I‘ve enjoyed are the tagged book, El Deafo by Cece Bell, and Get a Life, Chloe Brown by Talia Hibbert, and a couple I am looking forward to reading are the Six of Crows duology by Leigh Bardugo (all with #ownvoices rep).
The book I‘ve been attempting to write(different characters, different disablities)about my own life for the last five years
#bookreport #katies_always_booked
📖 A Woman is No Man
📖 Me and White Supremacy
🎧 The Woman in White
📖 Healthy Meal Prep - ARC
📖 The Inquisitors Tale
📖 Big Love Cooking - ARC
📖 A Wolf Called Wander
#currentlyreading
🎧 The Silence Between Us
📖 Rebound
#weeklyforcast
📖 Sometimes I Lie
🎧 You Should See Me In a Crown
I honestly signed up for an ASL course at the city college while reading this. So, I guess I enjoyed the book.
This is one that gets better the further you get into it. Maya is 17, deaf, and thanks to the new move - has to go to school with hearing students now as the closest deaf school is too far away. It‘s a good look into deaf culture which isn‘t well represented in YA lit. And I love this cover.
1. I don‘t plan reading at all.
2. Boggle?
3. That is a good question.
4. After a relatively plausible lie 7 or 8 years ago that went a bit overboard, I‘ve toned it down. Unfortunately.
#friyayintro @4thhouseontheleft @howjessreads
This YA book popped up on my Amazon recommendations. I thought it would be great for my son who is learning ASL, and I was not wrong. The author does a masterful job using ASL grammar as part of the dialogue of the characters. You gain an understanding of the rhythms of the language. You experience the tension of navigating the hearing world as a Deaf person. Everyone should read this book.
Pulling from her own experiences, Alison Gervais tells a story about a Deaf teen starting to attend a hearing school for her senior year. Obviously, it is a change that requires quite an adjustment—for both Maya and the students that befriend her—but it is worth it, making for a great read. #wintergames #merryreaders #tbrread
(I received a free copy of this book. All opinions expressed are my own.)
The book “The Silence Between Us“ was an easy read with a passionate message. The book is full of hope and love and delivers the message as long as you persevere you can accomplish anything. Though this is a very warming book it is cliche and predictable and I would not recommend it if you are looking for an insightful book or one that will capture and hold your attention.
#7days7covers #covercrush Day 1
This cover becomes more beautiful once you read the book 🧡💚💜
@squirrelbrain @SarahBradley @StayCurious Any of you want to play along?
I see it in your eyes
Passion you can't deny
Girl, we can live that life
I see it all🎶
#star
#ayupaugust
@Cinfhen @squirrelbrain
Google image
17 yo and deaf, Maya has been attending school with other nonhearers. But she must move to CO w her mom and brother (for Mom‘s job), and finish HS there at a hearing school. Lots of changes, lots on this family‘s collective plate. Oh and her little brother suffers from cystic fibrosis. 4 🌟
The font changes inside this book read accurately, text indicated in CAPS LOCK showing ASL usage in dialog verses what Maya is thinking in her head or other characters are verbally speaking-amazing! “No matter how hard you try to understand something, sometimes there‘s a personal connection to the cause that you‘re missing, something you may not ever reach, and that can make all the difference. That‘s why this is important to the real world.”[147]
*coming August ‘19* Relevant and touching story of 17 year-old Maya who is deaf and thrust into a new school filled with hearing people ( including a handsome classmate named Beau.) As she navigates this world and searches for acceptance, she begins to see that we all are guilty of presumptions and inadvertently judging others. A story that reminds to understand and respect our differences.
#OwnVoices is quickly becoming my favorite part of YA Lit. Having lost a lot of my own hearing just out of high school, I really related to this book. “No matter how hard you try to understand something, sometimes there‘s a personal connection to the cause that you‘re missing, something you may not ever reach, and that can make all the difference. That‘s why this is important to the real world.”[page 147] Thank you @blinkyabooks for the #ARC