1779. On tumultuous waters a girl is born as pirates board the ship . . .
Jiddy Vardy is a survivor.
Rescued at birth, she grows up in Robin Hood’s Bay, a community that harbours a dangerous secret that could get you killed.
Always the outsider, with her dark skin and hair, at sixteen Jiddy is clever, brave and headstrong, soon risking her life and freedom to play her part in the Bay’s clandestine activities.
Then, just as romance blossoms and Jiddy finally feels like she belongs, figures from the past threaten to tear her world apart, and she has to decide where her loyalties truly lie.
A thrilling tale of one girl’s search for identity and love, set against a backdrop of wild seas, smuggling and violence.
BOOK REVIEW
What an amazing piece of writing! Jiddy Vardy is born in violence, and we are thrown into the action immediately. The author’s ability to describe a scene while keeping the reader engaged is unparalleled. Jiddy is a strong woman, and you can’t help but cheer for her as she faces long odds, even from the day of her birth. Secrets abound, and I promise you will be glued to the page. The world Ruth Estevez has built is incredible and I definitely felt transported there. The theme of the “outsider” flows throughout the book. Captivating, highly descriptive, and unflinching, this is a book you will not want to put down.
I received a free copy of this book via The Write Reads Book Tours. My review is voluntary and the opinions expressed are my own.
BUY LINK
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Ruth Estevez was born in Yorkshire. Often the much-loved landscape is a third character in her novels. A career in theatre, TV, and a subscription library have influenced her work. Script writing for Bob the Builder morphed into novel writing. Very much a Northern writer with Latin touches. Interested in social differences, the outsider, and finding our place in the world.
Yes, I know it’s Monday, but I’m extending Indie Weekend long enough to post a review of an inspiring book. Indie Weekend is my effort to help Indie authors with marketing, which can be a daunting task. If I can help even a little, I’m happy to do it. You can help as well by sharing this post with all of your social media followers, so as many people as possible can hear about this book. Below is a Book Description, Review, Author Info, and a Buy Link for Better Dirty Than Done by Rick Czaplewski.
BOOK DESCRIPTION
A Cancer Diagnosis and a Relapse … Grim Medical Results … The Expiring Clock … The Unquenchable Thirst to Live and Thrive … Already facing a wretched cancer diagnosis, a young man’s prospects for survival dim as he learns his treatments have not worked. Writing against the clock, he feverishly authors a story of profound joy and sadness exploring the life he could have lived. Desperately told, his story takes you through poignant memories, intimate relationships, and fantastical triumphs in a quest to make sense of it all and leave a legacy behind. An addictive, inspiring memoir, Better Dirty Than Done will have you turning pages and questioning the value of your own time. What would you do if your life suddenly had an imminent expiration date? Grab a box of tissues and reflect on both the fragility of life and its limitless potential for joy. Beautifully told through an authentic, intimate voice Better Dirty Than Done will inspire anyone seeking to make sense of life.
BOOK REVIEW
This is an amazing memoir about the author’s fight with Hodgkin’s Lymphoma and his determination to write his own story. He allows us a seat in the room as he finds out he’s had a relapse, and then he begins to respond in his own way. We learn what it looks like when a college student has to leave school to fight cancer, and how it feels to go through chemo at the age of 21. And then we watch in admiration as Rick begins to write and fight his own way back.
Rick’s story raises the question: If you find out approximately how many days of life you have left, how would you live? What choices would you make, and how would you construct your own story going forward? What memories would stay with you and keep you going? The bits of fantasy woven into this memoir about Rick’s possible future life make this story even more compelling and intriguing. I would recommend this book to anyone who wants to read an inspiring account of a young man’s fight for life.
I received a free copy of this book. My review is voluntary and the opinions expressed are my own.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Rick first met Hodgkin’s Disease as a freshman in college and reacquainted with cancer only 18 months later when it relapsed. Determined to graduate, Rick dropped out of college, underwent chemotherapy, and returned to earn his degree.
As a survivor, Rick has fundraised thousands of dollars for the LLS and helped several other cancer fighters find hope. To Rick, survivorship means squeezing out every drop of experience life offers with the precious, finite time we have.
*If you read the book, please leave reviews on Amazon and Goodreads, as well as anywhere else you review books. Some people feel very daunted by writing a review. Don’t worry. You do not have to write a masterpiece. Just a couple of lines about how the book made you feel will make the author’s day and help the book succeed. The more reviews a book has, the more Amazon will promote it.
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I’ve had a few days off for Thanksgiving and they’ve been very restful. I had two great meals with my cousins, both Thanksgiving dinner and leftover lunch the next day. Leftover Lunch should be capitalized, I think. It’s pretty awesome. I’m just resting in the mountains for one more day before my busy work week starts Monday. I hope you all had a great week.
Fall in the mountains is beginning to switch over to winter, as you can see from these photos. The leaves have fallen and the weather is getting colder. The trees will eventually sleep in a blanket of snow off and on until they start to bud in the Spring.
Sunday I will review The Cash Countess and Better Dirty than Done for Indie Weekend. On Monday I will review The Art of Love and Lies by Rebecca Anderson. On Tuesday I will review Jiddy Vardy for a book tour sponsored by The Write Reads. On Friday I will participate in Book Blogger Hop if time permits. There are other reviews ready to go that I will post as well if time permits.
BOOK HAUL
A MURDER MOST FRENCH is the second book in the “AN AMERICAN IN PARIS,” featuring supporting character Julia Child. THE LILY OF LUDGATE HILL is the next book in The Belles of London series by Mimi Matthews. THE WHARTON PLOT is another great novel by Mariah Fredericks, as famed novelist Edith Wharton tries to solve a mystery in Gilded Age New York. I’m looking forward to all of these.
I realize not everyone is in the U.S., or celebrating Thanksgiving today, but I am thankful every day for all of you who visit this blog and share your unique writing, reviews, comments, and friendship. Have a wonderful day!
Sonya MacTavish is happy in her job and engaged to be married–until she walks in on her fiance and her cousin having sex in her bed. As her life’s plans are in an uproar, she is hit with another bombshell. Her late father, who was adopted, had a twin, and that twin has left Sonya a gorgeous estate in Maine. The only stipulation is that she has to live there for three years. Sonya ultimately decides to move to the estate and start over her life and her career. But the house has a history of “lost brides” and many ghostly inhabitants. And at least one of them does not want Sonya there.
This was just a wonderful reading experience. The characters and the story drew me in right away. I was immediately transported to this haunted mansion and caught up in the legend of the lost brides. The spirits, some of them fun-loving and one of them definitely not, make this book unique. The distinct personalities of al the spirits are so well portrayed. My only slight critique is that the book ends on a cliffhanger. I hope Book 2 comes out soon because I want to read more of this story!
Nora Roberts has hit a home run with this one, and I recommend it to anyone who enjoys magical realism.
I received a free copy of this book from St. Martin’s Press via Netgalley. My review is voluntary and the opinions expressed are my own.
Top Ten Tuesday is hosted by That Artsy Reader Girl. There is a new topic every week. For Thanksgiving week in the U.S., here are the Top Ten Reasons I’m Thankful for Books
As a Christian, #1 will always be that the Bible introduced me to God and to Jesus.
2. I get to travel in time. (St. Mary’s Chonicles)
3. I meet amazing characters. (Chronicles of St. Mary’s by Jodi Taylor, Fourth Wing (Empyrean Series), Lord of the Rings, Harry Potter)
4. I get to visit magical lands and worlds (Harry Potter, Lord of the Rings)
5. I learn something new. (The Woman With The Cure, Things We Didn’t Say, Songbird)
6. I visit important events in history (Things We Didn’t Say, Long Way Home)
7. I learn more about writing by reading talented authors (All of the above)
8. I get to try and solve a mystery (Murder at Wakehurst, Songbird)
9. I learn more about the place in which I live. (When Stone Wings Fly)
10. I get to revisit old friends whenever I want. (St. Mary’s Chronicles by Jodi Taylor, Harry Potter)
How about you? What are you most thankful for when it comes to books?
Indie Spotlight is my effort to help Indie authors with marketing. Marketing is the most difficult and time-consuming task for Indie/Self-Published authors, so if I can help even a little bit, I’m happy to do it. A spotlight does not include a book review. I will be reviewing this later. Below please see a book description, author bio, and buy links for “MISS I WISH YOU A BED OF ROSES,” by Sherri Moshman-Paganos, a memoir about teaching in Greece.
BOOK DESCRIPTION
Teaching: you’re frustrated and exhausted one day, gratified and fulfilled the next. Teaching is not like other careers; we teachers give our whole self to our students day after day.
Blending humorous memoir and classroom ideas, the author of “Miss, I wish you a bed of roses:” Teaching Secondary School English in Greece, looks back on her 40 years of teaching international students. She writes about her teaching insecurities, secondary school and college composition classes, the difficult and the great, the base and the sublime. She describes school grades, bells and meetings, routines of any high school, and although teaching in Greece has unique challenges, Greek teens are like teenagers everywhere, full of hopes and dreams for the future. Besides looking at her own career growth, the author offers advice for language and literature classes, and ideas for using poetry, songs and film to create a lively atmosphere for learning.
Whether you are a new teacher interested in suggestions for your classes, including ESL or EFL teachers, or an experienced teacher looking for new ideas, “Miss I wish you a bed of roses:” Teaching Secondary School English in Greece is for you. But not only teachers — anyone who has taken an English language or literature class or has children taking literature classes– will enjoy this spirited memoir, enhanced by the author’s poetry and student comments. Her main advice: content counts but more so, formulating your teaching philosophy. And don’t forget to keep your temper and your sense of humor!
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Sherri Moshman-Paganos taught English to international students in New York City before joining the American College of Greece faculty in 1983. Here she taught secondary school English and college freshman composition classes.
Since her retirement in 2018, she has devoted herself to writing. She publishes a travel/culture blog on her travels in Greece and life in Athens. (www.olivesandislands.home.blog). Besides “Miss I wish you a Bed ofRoses,” she is also the author of a fictionalized memoir on her years in Manhattan: Step Lively: New YorkCityTales of Love and Change, and a collection of poetry, Wanderings: Poems of Discovery.
BUY LINK
Click on the cover image to buy this on Amazon. Kindle Unlimited Subscribers can borrow this for free.
After five unsuccessful Seasons on the marriage mart, Miss Adelaide Duveen has resigned herself to the notion that she’s destined to remain a spinster forever–a rather dismal prospect, but one that will allow her to concentrate on her darling cats and books. However, when she inadvertently stumbles upon Mr. Gideon Abbott engaged in a clandestine activity during a dinner party, Adelaide finds herself thrust into a world of intrigue that resembles the plots in the spy novels she devours.
Former intelligence agent Gideon Abbott feels responsible for Adelaide after society threatens to banish her because of the distraction she caused to save his investigation. Hoping to return the favor, he turns to a good friend–and one of high society’s leaders–to take Adelaide in hand and turn her fashionable. When danger surrounds them and Adelaide finds herself a target of the criminals in Gideon’s case, the spark of love between them threatens to be quenched for good–along with their lives.
BOOK REVIEW
TO SPARK A MATCH is a delightful blend of mystery, humor, and inspirational romance. “Mystery alludes me because I’m simply not mysterious.” is Adelaide’s response to one of her mother’s many attempts to make her more attractive to the men on New York’s Gilded Age marriage mart after five seasons. She really seems to be headed back home once again to her books and her cats, which would be just fine with her. Then she finds herself in the middle of an adventure at one of the parties she has long been forced to endure.
This is such a captivating book. The dialogue is playful and humorous, and the author takes gentle but clever jabs at the “marriage mart.” The romance is sweet and clean, but the focus truly stays on Adelaide and her individuality. The portrayal is authentic and the reader will be transported to the Gilded Age. The mystery is bookish in nature, which was a pleasant surprise. I just can’t get over how FUNNY this is. In addition, it’s so witty, it’s bookish, and it has cats! Check this one out.
I received a free copy of this book from Bethany House via Austenprose PR. My review is voluntary and the opinions expressed are my own.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Named one of the funniest voices in inspirational romance by Booklist, Jen Turano is a USA Today bestselling author known for penning quirky historical romances set in the Gilded Age. Her books have earned Publishers Weekly and Booklist starred reviews, top picks from RT Book Reviews, and praise from Library Journal. She’s been a finalist twice for the RT Reviewers’ Choice Awards and had two of her books listed in the top 100 romances of the past decade from Booklist. She and her family live outside of Denver, Colorado.
“Turano charms with her offbeat characters, and she has a knack for funny, flirty dialogue…fans will find this irresistible.”— Publisher’s Weekly
“Turano delivers a rousing second installment in her THE MATCHMAKERS historical inspirational romance series set in New York’s Gilded Age. This is a delightful novel about individuality and unexpected love that balances humorous hijinks and the intrigue of criminal activity within the rare book world. It shimmers with spunk and stars a most admirable leading lady whose unapologetic acceptance of herself is what refreshingly captivates her hero’s heart.”— Booklist
“This book is full of ups and downs, twists and turns, hilarious encounters, slow burn romance, bookish characters, cats, and a dash of mystery! I highly recommend it, friends!”— Tasha, Clean Read Book Club
I have now read IRON FLAME on Kindle and listened to it on Audible. It’s every bit as good as the first book, FOURTH WING, and in some ways a lot better, as the story has moved forward in interesting and unexpected directions.
First of all, Andarna! I knew she was awesome but she BLOSSOMS in this book, and she’s my favorite character now. I won’t spoil it, but watch out reader! Andarna will surprise you.
I feel there was less sex in this one, though I didn’t count the sex scenes. Sex scenes to me are just filler between the action and intrigue, and we happily had more action and intrigue while the author is also beginning to strategically unfold the plot of the whole series.
The writing is fabulous. It is a rare treat for me to connect with characters like this, and I can only name a few series that make me feel that way: Harry Potter, Jodi Taylor’s St. Mary’s series, and this one. It is both action-packed and character-driven.
The world in this series is so well put together, and we are still learning secrets about it all the time. I like how the scribes are such a big part of the story, and Violet spends a lot of time reading and researching. Libraries are a huge part of the effort to win the war, uncover secrets and corruption, and protect the people, and I love that.
There is epistolary work at the beginning of each chapter, as in book one, comprised of letters, snippets from diaries, articles, and other forms of written communication. This is very successful.
There’s a cliffhanger at the end, and I don’t generally like cliffhangers, but there are still three books to come, and we’re going to get a lot more surprises, I’m sure.
Rebecca Soler and Teddy Hamilton do a great job with the audiobook narration. Soler narrates the bulk of it, and she is so good at relating battle scenes and communications between Violet, Xaden, and their dragons. I enjoyed the audiobook more than the Kindle version because of Soler’s narration. She really brought this story to life.
Anyone who enjoys fantasy, dystopian fiction, romance, and/or great characters should read this one. Highly recommend!
Warnings: Death, explicit sex scenes and lots of “f” bombs.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Rebecca Yarros is a #1 New York Times, USA Today, Sunday Times, and Wall Street Journal bestselling author of over fifteen novels, including FOURTH WING, and is always ready to bring on the emotions. She’s also the recipient of the Colorado Romance Writer’s Award of Excellence in New Adult for Eyes Turned Skyward from her Flight and Glory series.
She loves military heroes and has been blissfully married to hers for twenty-one years. She’s the mother of six children and lives in Colorado with her family, their stubborn English bulldog, feisty chinchillas, and Maine Coon cat who rules them all. Having fostered and then adopted their youngest daughter, Rebecca is passionate about helping children in the foster system through her nonprofit, One October.
Top Ten Tuesday is hosted by That Artsy Reader Girl. There is a new topic every week. This week’s topic is “Top Ten Mainstream Authors I Still Have Not Read.” I was not feeling that one, so I decided to do “Top Ten Books on my Netgalley Shelf.” I’m looking forward to all of these. The book descriptions below are all or part of the official book descriptions on Netgalley. You can click on the covers to learn more about the books.
It’s the summer of 1959 and the Palace of Versailles is hosting an event that will make history. It is an exclusive dusk-to-dawn ball in which a select group of American and French debutantes will be presented to international society and royalty. Four young women, all with something to prove, receive what some see as the invitation of a lifetime.
For all these young women, Paris and one transcendent night will change their lives forever. Bestselling author Danielle Steel extends an invitation to all, in The Ball at Versailles.
Jenna’s parents had finally given in, and there she was, at a New York club with her best friends, watching the legendary band Avenue A, carrying her demo in hopes of slipping it to the guitarist, Jake Kincade. Then, from the stage, Jake catches her eye, and smiles. It’s the best night of her life. It’s the last night of her life.
Minutes later, Jake’s in the alley getting some fresh air, and the girl from the dance floor comes stumbling out, sick and confused and deathly pale. He tries to help, but it’s no use. He doesn’t know that someone in the crowd has jabbed her with a needle—and when his girlfriend Nadine arrives, she knows the only thing left to do for the girl is call her friend, Lieutenant Eve Dallas.
Daughters are the Ang family’s curse.
In 1948, civil war ravages the Chinese countryside, but in rural Shandong, the wealthy, landowning Angs are more concerned with their lack of an heir. Hai is the eldest of four girls and spends her days looking after her sisters. Headstrong Di, who is just a year younger, learns to hide in plain sight, and their mother—abused by the family for failing to birth a boy—finds her own small acts of rebellion in the kitchen. As the Communist army closes in on their town, the rest of the prosperous household flees, leaving behind the girls and their mother because they view them as useless mouths to feed.
Without an Ang male to punish, the land-seizing cadres choose Hai, as the eldest child, to stand trial for her family’s crimes. She barely survives their brutality. Realizing the worst is yet to come, the women plan their escape. Starving and penniless but resourceful, they forge travel permits and embark on a thousand-mile journey to confront the family that abandoned them.
Vibrant and scrappy Maggie McCleod tried not to get fired from her wartime orchestra, but her sharp tongue landed her in trouble, so an overseas adventure with the USO’s camp show promises a chance at a fresh start. Wealthy and elegant Catherine Duquette signs with the USO to leave behind her restrictive life of privilege and to uncover the truth behind the disappearance of the handsome pilot whose letters mysteriously stopped arriving.
The two women are joined by an eclectic group of performers–a scheming blues singer, a veteran tap dancer, and a brooding magician–but the harmony among their troupe is short-lived when their tour manager announces he will soon recommend one of them for a coveted job in the Hollywood spotlight. Each of the five members has a reason to want the contract, and they’ll do whatever is necessary to claim it. As their troupe travels closer to the dangerous battlefront in Tunisia, personal crises and wartime dangers only intensify, putting not only their careers but also their lives on the line.
As 1754 is drawing to a close, tensions between the French and the British on Canada’s Acadian shore are reaching a fever pitch. Seamstress Sylvie Galant and her family–French-speaking Acadians wishing to remain neutral–are caught in the middle, their land positioned between two forts flying rival flags. Amid preparations for the celebration of Noël, the talk is of unrest, coming war, and William Blackburn, the British Army Ranger raising havoc across North America’s borderlands.
As summer takes hold in 1755 and British ships appear on the horizon, Sylvie encounters Blackburn, who warns her of the coming invasion. Rather than participate in the forced removal of the Acadians from their land, he resigns his commission. But that cannot save Sylvie or her kin. Relocated on a ramshackle ship to Virginia, Sylvie struggles to pick up the pieces of her life. When her path crosses once more with William’s, they must work through the complex tangle of their shared, shattered past to navigate the present and forge an enduring future.
When the Blitz imperils the heart of a London neighborhood, three young women must use their fighting spirit to save the community’s beloved library in this novel based on true events from the author of The Chilbury Ladies’ Choir.
When the new deputy librarian, Juliet Lansdown, finds that Bethnal Green Library isn’t the bustling hub she is expecting, she becomes determined to breathe life back into it. But can she show the men in charge that a woman is up to the task of running the library, especially when a confrontation with her past threatens to derail her?
Katie Upwood is thrilled to be working at the library, although she is only there until she heads off to university in the fall. But after the death of her beau on the front line and amid tumultuous family strife, she finds herself harboring a life-changing secret with no one to turn to for help.
Sofie Baumann, a young Jewish refugee, came to London on a domestic service visa only to find herself working as a maid for a man who treats her abominably. She escapes to the library every chance she can, finding friendship in the literary community and aid in finding her sister, who is still trying to flee occupied Europe.
When a slew of bombs destroys the library, Juliet relocates the stacks to the local Underground station where the city’s residents shelter nightly, determined to lend out stories that will keep spirits up. But tragedy after tragedy threatens to unmoor the women and sever the ties of their community. Will Juliet, Kate, and Sofie be able to overcome their own troubles to save the library? Or will the beating heart of their neighborhood be lost forever?
April,1912: It’s the perfect finale to a Grand Tour of Europe—sailing home on the largest, most luxurious ocean liner ever built. For the Fortune sisters, the voyage offers a chance to reflect on the treasures of the past they’ve seen—magnificent castles and museums in Italy and France, the ruins of Greece and the Middle East—and contemplate the futures that await them.
For Alice, there’s foreboding mixed with her excitement. A fortune teller in Egypt gave her a dire warning about traveling at sea. And the freedom she has enjoyed on her travels contrasts with her fiancé’s plans for her return—a cossetted existence she’s no longer sure she wants.
Flora is also returning to a fiancé, a well-to-do banker of whom her parents heartily approve, as befits their most dutiful daughter. Yet the closer the wedding looms, the less sure Flora feels. Another man—charming, exasperating, completely unsuitable—occupies her thoughts, daring her to follow her own desires rather than settling for the wishes of others.
Youngest sister Mabel knows her parents arranged this Grand Tour to separate her from a jazz musician. But the secret truth is that Mabel has little interest in marrying at all, preferring to explore ideas of suffrage and reform—even if it forces a rift with her family.
Each sister grapples with the choices before her as the grand vessel glides through the Atlantic waters. Until, on an infamous night, fate intervenes, forever altering their lives . . .
Set in New York City in the heady aftermath of World War II when the men were coming home, the women were exhaling in relief, and everyone was having babies, The Trouble With You is the story of a young woman whose rosy future is upended in a single instant. Raised never to step out of bounds, educated in one of the Sister Seven Colleges for a career as a wife and mother, torn between her cousin Mimi who is determined to keep her a “nice girl”—the kind that marries a doctor—and her aunt Rose who has a rebellious past of her own, Fanny struggles to raise her young daughter and forge a new life by sheer will and pluck.
When she gets a job as a secretary to the “queen” of radio serials—never to be referred to as soaps—she discovers she likes working, and through her friendship with an actress who stars in the series and a man who writes them, comes face to face with the blacklist which is destroying careers and wrecking lives. Ultimately, Fanny must decide between playing it safe or doing what she knows is right in this vivid evocation of a world that seems at once light years away and strangely immediate.
From the time she was a young girl, Luisa Voekler has loved solving puzzles and cracking codes. Brilliant and logical, she’s a natural to quickly climb the career ladder at the CIA. But while her coworkers have moved on to thrilling Cold War assignments—especially in the exhilarating era of the late 1980s—Luisa’s work remains stuck in the past decoding messages from World War II.
Journalist Haris Voekler grew up a proud East Berliner. But as his eyes open to the realities of postwar East Germany, he realizes that the Soviet promises of a better future are not coming to fruition. After the Berlin Wall goes up, Haris finds himself separated from his young daughter and all alone after his wife dies. There’s only one way to reach his family—by sending coded letters to his father-in-law who lives on the other side of the Iron Curtain.
When Luisa Voekler discovers a secret cache of letters written by the father she has long presumed dead, she learns the truth about her grandfather’s work, her father’s identity, and why she has never progressed in her career. With little more than a rudimentary plan and hope, she journeys to Berlin and risks everything to free her father and get him out of East Berlin alive.
As Luisa and Haris take turns telling their stories, events speed toward one of the twentieth century’s most dramatic moments—the fall of the Berlin Wall and that night’s promise of freedom, truth, and reconciliation for those who have lived, for twenty-eight years, behind the bleak shadow of the Iron Curtain’s most iconic symbol.
July 1982. Lydia Wienewski’s dream has finally come true: Lydia’s Lakeside Cafe and Bakery, selling delicious Polish-American fare on the shore of Lake Erie, is now open and her fortunes are looking up. Even her old nemesis and tutor, the irascible Madame Delphine, has made time to sample Lydia’s delectable pierogi, with some of her students in tow.
But when Lydia finds Madame Delphine dead in the water, her lakeside dream turns into a nightmare. Was it a bizarre suicide, or brutal murder? As Lydia and Grandma Mary investigate, they discover that there was more to Madame Delphine than meets the eye, and quickly find themselves drawn into an increasingly perilous situation! Can they uncover the truth about Madame Delphine’s untimely death?
How about you? What books on your shelf are you excited about reading?
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