Cool cookbook. I saved a bunch of recipes.
Cool cookbook. I saved a bunch of recipes.
Very short but educational graphic novel
I am working my way through all Rick
Graphic novel. Extremely beautiful
One woman. Two ship wrecks.
Nonfiction about early plane culture
Cute ya with a magical twist
A side adventure with the same old crew
Government control continues on
Dante basco memoir about his time in Hollywood. Not a lot of new information but interesting to hear it from his perspective.
A graphic novel about sports but more about race. It was very timely.
A very straight forward and classic style fantasy novel with a dragon and a quest.
Such a fun book. Romeo and Juliet in 1920s China. Also magic/drugs and gangs.
A quiet thriller I picked up at the used book store a while ago. Two woman who are maybe both gaslighting each other.
I really liked this volume one, which started to set up a cool world of magic and stories.
I never listened to the podcast (I was more of a night vale person) so I don‘t know how it stands up. But the book had good mysteries and a story that moved.
The story of Jackie robinsons daughter. Specifically in the year 1963.
A romance novel with magic and also actual fairy godmothers
A whole lot of cookie recipes
A new look at the Peter Pan story. Peter has to grow up a little to find his way back to never land. There is only one person who can help him but she hates pan.
Cozy mystery about a woman who owns a yarn shop. Good fun.
Nonfiction about being Asian American and how it is in the world of writing.
I sort of thought this would be more about Netflix, but it ended up mostly being about corporate culture. Interesting but not super useful if you aren‘t a ceo.
I am really into all these deep dives into p&p side characters. This one was Mary and I loved it. It gave her so much depth.
Book two started with me thinking I missed something between the books. There were new characters and a new setup. But I quickly got back into the swing of it.
Ya about a gypsy girl (I know that‘s not the preferred term now, but it‘s how the character refers to herself and her community) in Vienna at the start of wwii. Her family is taken from their home and she finds herself a prisoner but also an extra on a nazi movie set.
A ya about a girl who writes romance novels, gets thrown into a new school situation and attempts to put romance tropes into her own life.
Memoir-ish about a Native American guy, growing up and identity. Poetic.
A graphic novel about an eating disorder but also about magic chocolate that lets you go back and see your past.
In the perspective Anne de bourg from p&p. Starts from when she is young, through the book, and well after. Extremely well done. It took a character I never cared about and made me.
A graphic novel really for people who want to work in animation. Or move to la? Not really so much interesting otherwise.
A women hides from nazis by pretending to be married to a stranger.
Quick and straightforward recipes. Not a lot for vegetarians.
Historical fiction set in a time I didn‘t know much about, which is fun. Quebec independence fights told over the course of two generations.
A cute romance with a hockey player and a woman who is on the spectrum. Very self aware and informative while at the same time a romcom.
I wanted to try one of Stacey abrams‘s books but I didn‘t end up liking it. The main male character harasses the main female, doesn‘t listens to her, and demands answers he has no right to. The whole relationship felt very unhealthy and forced to me.
What struck me most about this historical fiction was how the main character was a female but the voice didn‘t sound like a woman at all. She kept saying things like “as a women she had never listened to politics” or “it didn‘t effect her because girls didn‘t pay attention to that sort of thing”.