Ernest Hemingway’s A Moveable Feast is a memoir about his time in Paris as a budding writer. It reads as fiction and delves into his writing technique and his relationships with other writers in Paris at the time, including Gertrude Stein, F Scott Fitgerald, T. S. Eliot, among others. This is a very quick read, […]
Book Review: The Choice: Embrace the Impossible by Edith Eva Eger
Edith Eva Eger’s memoir was recommended to me by my mother who told me that I was going to love it, and I was skeptical though I had no real reason to be. But my Mom was right. The book is more or less divided into 4 parts: her childhood surviving the Holocaust, journeying to […]
Book Review: Grapes of Wrath by John Steinbeck
Grapes of Wrath somehow managed to be utterly heartbreaking and rather dull at the same time. And you know it tears at my heart to say anything bad about John Steinbeck, because I was thinking he was a strong contender to becoming my favorite writer (still is, to be fair) because I loved East of […]
Book Review: My Cousin Rachel by Daphne du Maurier
Daphne du Maurier is great at writing so that you get lost in the story; it seems so seamless and effortlessly atmospheric. Granted, Mary Anne wasn’t the same caliber, but the praise applies to Rebecca and My Cousin Rachel. I still like Rebecca a lot more, probably because I related to the new Mrs. de […]
Book Review: If Beale Street Could Talk by James Baldwin
I first read If Beale Street Could Talk in college, and I remember being struck by Baldwin’s writing. I was no less impressed on my second read. The book takes place right after the Civil Rights Movement in 1973, and it’s about a young woman fighting to get her fiance, Fonny, out of jail. Fonny […]
Book Review: A Gentleman in Moscow by Amor Towles
I’m finding this book very hard to review. I loved our protagonist, Count Rostov; I loved each individual story or happening that takes place; I loved the supporting characters, nearly all of which were gems; and I loved the history. Unfortunately, despite all of that, I didn’t love the experience of actually reading the book. […]
Book Review: People of the Book by Geraldine Brooks
The concept of People of the Book is extraordinary. I wanted to read it because The Weight of Ink by Rachel Kadish is one of my favorite books, and it has an extremely similar premise: intertwining past and present POVs as a scholar tries to figure out the history of an old manuscript. They both […]
Book Review: Emily Wilde’s Encyclopaedia of Faeries by Heather Fawcett
This is entirely out of the realm of my usual reading material, but I adored this little book. Perhaps partly because it can fall into the academia subgenre, which is becoming my favorite type of novel to read. Emily Wilde’s Encyclopaedia of Faeries is a fantasy novel about a scholar studying elusive faeries in a […]
2023 Bookish Year in Review
It’s that time of year again! Time to take stock of what I read this year in preparation for a new one. I read 22 books overall, only 5 of which I disliked. This year, I thought I’d divvy up the books I read into categories. In each category, I will list the books in […]
Ranking Ernest Hemingway’s Top 4 Novels
When I think of Ernest Hemingway’s writings as a whole, the word that comes to mind is “honest.” He mastered a style that was truly distinct. He would edit his works and strip out everything he thought was embellishment or superfluous. The sparser the sentence, the truer it was, and the more the reader could […]