Tumgik
#amazing books
mansnooziesmoosmutzel · 3 months
Text
Tumblr media
15 notes · View notes
crasybirdlady · 6 months
Text
Started rereading Rivers of London.
It’s still amazing and can I just point out how much humour the author has with this little gem:
So magic is real I said which makes you a …. What?
A wizard
Like Harry Potter?
Nightingale sighed No he said not like Harry Potter
In what way?
I’m not a fictional character said Nightingale
23 notes · View notes
earhartsease · 1 year
Text
still completely obsessed, decades after first reading The Dancing Bear by Peter Dickinson (a sort of early 70s ya novel set in Byzantium and a quest along the Danube), with the image of chariot races where the different teams are supported by members of different christian sects - so the crowd is cheering on the greens by yelling in unison SINGLE NATURE SINGLE NATURE because they're monophysites
don't know why that's so compelling for a secular jewish animist and feral buddhist but we've often found ourselves muttering single nature single nature to cheer ourselves on
3 notes · View notes
discordantstorm · 2 years
Text
reasons why the lord of the rings (also there and back again, the silmarillion, and beren and luthien, because those books count too) is the best book series ever (warning: swearing)
-everything about the elves, they're really cool and have a lot of history behind them!
-the fact that Sauron, the deceiver and the dark lord, creator of the one ring, destroyer of civilizations, basically a really powerful guy in general, was scared shitless of Luthien (and anyone related to her) just because she (and her descendants) beat the living crap out of him so much.
-"No living man am I! You look upon a woman! Éowyn I am, Éomund's daughter. Begone if you be not deathless! For living or dark undead, I will smite you, if you touch him!"
-it's like the only series in existence where the movies and books are both equally good (specifically for the main three, "there and back again"'s movies weren't as good).
-there's tons of lore to discover (like thousands of years of it) so if you like that, go to your local library and get these books ASAP.
-hobbit naming customs, it seems to be a common theme that girls are named stuff like "Mirabella" or "Asphodel," or "Belladonna," meanwhile boys are named shit like "Bingo," "Dudo," and "Mungo." the difference is that the girls have beautiful, amazing names, and boys have names that sound like someone was in a massive hangover and bashed their head against the keyboard, then spaced out the results until they just had random crap there. well, i guess sometimes the boys can have equally ridiculous stuff like "Meriadoc" sometimes, but the girls don't have the weird/stupid names, and i'm not sexist or anything but i think it's hilarious.
-in there and back again, the story literally happens because a wizard and bunch of dwarves barge into the protagonist's house and practically force him into an adventure.
-Sauron has so many names that it's not even funny. I can think of seven (including Sauron, it's that, Mairon, Annatar the Lord of Gifts, Artano, Gorthaur, Aulendil, and Tar-Mairon) off the top of my head, and I know there's more than that. Like, twenty of them. And most of them were used for, well, trying to deceive people. World's first funny bitch.
-for literally most of an entire book in the series we're introduced to a character named Strider, and he's called Strider, and he is Strider, until congratulations?? his name is Aragorn.
-because i said it was. as we all know i control every aspect of literary analysis and my opinion is law. now go read it
16 notes · View notes
rjdent · 1 year
Text
In My Library: A Clockwork Orange by Anthony Burgess.
More amazing books featured In My Library:
2 notes · View notes
aroaceoutinspace · 1 year
Text
Babel by RF Kuang
I finally finished Babel after a month! I finally think I'm shaking this reading slump though, and it was a brilliant book. I think it will take a while to fully process all the detail!
It was a truly amazing story and anybody who called it 'preachy' needs to take a look at their own values- it was a realistic portrayal of 1800s England and the racism imbued in it. She managed to invent a magical industry but also accurately predict the pitfalls it would have had.
Amazing work from RF Kuang as always, and I really enjoyed the linguistic focus, and how much she discusses meanings that get lost in translation, and how much viewpoints of nations can be seen through languages. It was intense and detailed, but that was honestly what made it as good as it was.
I also loved her clever technique of adding extra context at the bottom, even story relevant details that it would feel too clunky to add into dialogue. She managed to balance a complex historical and multicultural story while still enduring any reader could understand.
The characters were raw and real, and the effort she put into showing us the variety of viewpoints that still exist within the same side was so eye opening and honest. Her understanding of human motivation and psychology always blows me away.
4.5 stars from me ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️✨️, the 0.5 simply because I would have liked more information on the aftermath, but also understand there wasn't many characters to give it through (this will make sense if you've read it).
To me it is less fantasy focused than the Poppy Wars, so if it was only the aspect of Rin and shamans that you enjoyed in that book, you may not love this as much. However if you enjoyed the historical and political elements pick this up quickly!!
Thanks for reading 🥰
3 notes · View notes
mybookhaven · 2 years
Text
The Broken Earth Trilogy - N.K. Jemisin
Fantasy - SciFi - Post Apocalyptic
⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
This review will cover the three books of the Broken Earth trilogy at once since i've read them a while back and it's more of a complete story in my head than individual events.
I would put this series at the top of my favorite fantasy reads of all time. The magnificent world that N.K. Jemisin created within these books has captivated me, keeping me wondering months after reading them about the ingenious way Miss Jemisin used to blend all the intricate small details into a huge world of fascination.
Tumblr media
Cover Design: Lauren Panepinto - Wendy Chan
The story takes place in a post-apocalyptic world, and one thing that I found absolutely brilliant is the inclusion of “post-apocalyptic” people in the story. See the thing with post-apocalyptic books they're usually not so far in the future where you see how drastic changes affect the humans living through them, or at least in the ones I've read so far. So, it was wonderful to get to experience all the small and big differences between what a human is (today) and what a human could become in the hands of forced evolution.
A planet built on instability and destruction. A mother with a past that's about to catch up to her. A world that is yet again ending.
Essun, our mother, comes home to the beat-up corpse of her son with her husband and daughter nowhere to be found. What was a meager yet peaceful life she created for herself by running and hiding from her dark past ends as suddenly as it began. We follow her journey after the remaining members of her family in a world slowly becoming uninhabitable. It was incredibly beautiful and painful to live through Essun in a world where hate for what is “different” is dictated by law. We meet various characters that fall on a very huge scale of morality. I felt my own definition of what is "righteous" shake by the actions of these characters. Every little detail was beautifully weaved within the events of the story that it just blew my mind away when i got to the last book and slowly started seeing all the pieces fall into place. The final scenes will forever stick with me. They were so beautifully written and delivered that i felt the intense fluctuations of emotions taking over me.
This is a Trilogy that left me speechless, and I cannot recommend it enough.       
@nkjemisin   
This review is kept as vague as possible to avoid spoilers 
3 notes · View notes
magentasnail · 1 month
Text
the silly straws page wont leave my head
Tumblr media
12K notes · View notes
lovebooksforeversblog · 5 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
This is one of the best books to exist or to be written 🙌✨🤩😇
1 note · View note
viveela · 1 month
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Toxic exes and twink form canon? What a time to be alive...
6K notes · View notes
poorly-drawn-mdzs · 2 months
Text
Tumblr media
HOT, SINGLE, UNSTUDIED SPONGES. 3000 NAUTICAL MILES AWAY. Come sail the distance and read Tiger Tiger!
5K notes · View notes
crasybirdlady · 2 months
Text
All right says Elizabeth yes, Kuldesh had a council lock-up, no I’m not going to tell you where it is-
Garth raises his hand.
No Garth not even if you threaten to kill me.
On the fourth book in The Thursday murder club of wonder how it managing to be simultaneously hilarious and heartbreaking.
1 note · View note
fruit-teeth · 1 year
Text
Me: maybe I’m not cut out to be a writer…idk what if I’m not good enough
BookTok romance writers: ‘what if you were just a normal school teacher…but the MINOTAUR wanted to get you PREGNANT’
48K notes · View notes
eeriedragone · 1 month
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
he's great to combat artblock, beware though, if you make fun if him he WILL send you his fiercest soldier 🦂
Full page below:
Tumblr media
4K notes · View notes
egophiliac · 5 months
Text
Tumblr media
we were fucking ROBBED
6K notes · View notes
susanstriker · 1 year
Text
Are you looking for books that will inspire you and your children to be more creative and imaginative? Do you want to learn how to foster creativity in your classroom and at home? If yes, then you should check out these amazing books about creativity for teachers and parents!
0 notes