
Another Day in the Death of America
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Saturday, November 23rd, 2013. It was just another day in America; an unremarkable Saturday on which...

American Smoke: Journeys to the End of the Light
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In American Smoke, Iain Sinclair hits the road to America in the tracks of the Beats. On the trail...

The Lie Tree: Illustrated Edition
Chris Riddell and Frances Hardinge
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Winner of the Costa Book of the Year 2015, The Lie Tree is a dark and powerful novel from...

Rufus Wainwright recommended La Divina by Maria Callas in Music (curated)

Better Habits
Productivity and Lifestyle
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Get hooked into forming the habits you want. More than a standard goal setting app, Better Habits is...

iTerminal HD - remote command line terminal
Utilities
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✭User-friendly and intuitive interface ✭ We have developed iTerminal HD with one goal – to...

Such a Fun Age
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Alix Chamberlain is a woman who gets what she wants and has made a living showing other women how to...
Fiction

ClareR (5879 KP) rated The Prophets in Books
Jan 5, 2021
The story centres around the slaves on the Elizabeth Plantation (also known as ‘Empty’ to the slaves), and in particular, Samuel and Isaiah. They are betrayed by the other slaves, as if by revealing their love, it will make their lives safer. Of course this is not the case, as we see when we read the chapters centred around some of the other slaves. We learn about the inhumane treatment of the slaves by their immoral white owners (or toubabs, as they are called by their black slaves). I felt that the white people in this book had a mad, mentally unhinged quality about them: after all, how else could you reconcile treating human beings worse than animals?
I found the chapters written from the African people’s perspective, as they were free then captured and imprisoned, so interesting. It made them even more real to me. These were real people (as opposed to the animals that they were seen as by the slavers) with families, traditions, lives, loves and beliefs. The scenes on board the slave ships were harrowing.
It has taken me over a week to tackle this review. This book really affected me deeply, and there were many times that I had to put the book down and walk away. Then, I would feel guilty that I had the luxury of doing just that, unlike the slaves who lived every moment of their lives as some white mans possession to do with as he saw fit.
I can’t believe that this is a debut novel. The writing is beautiful, even in the most horrific moments. The magical elements add a suggestion of hope and the indomitable spirit of these people. And the ending is just perfection. I’m sure that this book will win awards - it SHOULD win - and I’m glad that I’ve had the opportunity to read it.
Many thanks to the publisher for granting me access to this book via NetGalley. It has been a privilege to read it.

Color Picker - Pro
Business and Utilities
App
Color Pickers Pro is an app for your professional work with Color. It provide tools for: -...

Andrea D (21 KP) rated Sawkill Girls in Books
Jan 10, 2019
You are fragile. You can move mountains.
You are breakable. You will never break.
This power is mine. And now it is yours, too.
I love a good feminist fantasy novel.
This did not disappoint.
The horror aspect is there but it feels like a background to the character development of the 3 main female characters.
There's Zoey who is angry and it's good that she's angry, we'll celebrate her anger and fume along with her.
There's Val who is a victim of a controlling abusive force (or two) and always has been and we will grow and rebel and learn to love with her.
Then there's Marion who's always been the carer always carrying over peoples troubles on her shoulders, always the one to fix things and we will learn to let go with her, learn to be selfish if just for a few quiet moments in a stable with horses and a girl who needs to be loved.
The Asexual rep is excellent, the story is brilliant but it's secondary to these girls who through each chapter we fall a bit deeper in love with even when we think they're unforgivable Claire Legrand shows us how not everything is black and white.
Expect the tears to flow in those last few pages and your heart to leap with joy but always remember beware of the woods and the dark, dank deep.