
Life Lessons from Catsass
Book
From French graphic designer Claude Combacau comes a book of sassy, cat-themed coloring pages,...

Homeland Revealed
Book
An American soldier presumed killed in Iraq returns home eight years after disappearing. This is the...

Art of Hokusai: Explore His Life and Legacy and Learn to Paint in His Unique Style
Book
Beautifully illustrated throughout, Art of Hokusai takes you through his life, his work, his...

TravelersWife4Life (31 KP) rated Daughters of Northern Shores (Blackbird Mountain, #2) in Books
Feb 24, 2021

Jonah Hill recommended Inventing David Geffen (2012) in Movies (curated)

Jonas Carpignano recommended The Battle of Algiers (1966) in Movies (curated)

Jonas Carpignano recommended The Road (La Strada) (1954) in Movies (curated)

Note pad-Memo Note-simple note book for free
Business and Productivity
App
"Memo Notes" is a simple notes app. You can add or edit a note so easy. In addition,It can count the...

Literary Yarns
Book
Comics fans have action figures. Sports fans get trading cards. But what about literature lovers?...

Sophia (Bookwyrming Thoughts) (530 KP) rated Such Sweet Sorrow in Books
Jan 23, 2020
I personally liked Trouts version of Romeo as he journeys to Denmark in the quest to save Juliet from death - he's much more spunky, but he has his romantic elements as well that Shakespeare originally placed in him. Hamlet is just as cheeky as his original counterpart, if not more cheeky (<i>Hamlet</i> is my favorite Shakespeare play, and it's not actually because of the ending). Juliet, like Romeo, also has another side to her Trout creates - she's more badass. (<i>Romeo and Juliet</i> is my least favorite - interesting combo going on here honestly.)
But <i>Such Sweet Sorrow</i> can be overwhelming. Trout doesn't just have <i>Hamlet</i> mashed with <i>Romeo and Juliet</i> - she's got Norse mythology and Greek mythology and who knows what else (some reviewers on Goodreads say anything you can think of... Essentially). Regardless, there is definitely a mess of things going on throughout and I just decided to go with it rather than question the book in its entirety (like what other mythological aspects are involved).
For the first half of the book, Romeo and Hamlet are, for the most part, wandering around cluelessly through this place called the Afterjord - it can get boring pretty quickly, but there is so much going on with the creatures they come across, it's not actually boring (I'm too busy trying to keep track of what's going on so I'm not lost). <i>Such Sweet Sorrow </i>doesn't actually pick up until after Romeo and Hamlet finally rescue Juliet and try to make their way back to the mortal world.
But while there is so much going on throughout, I actually liked this strange little book in all its weird complexities. However...
I'm disappointed that a cliffhanger is involved and nowhere on Goodreads does it say <i>Such Sweet Sorrow</i> has a sequel in the works.
<a href="https://bookwyrmingthoughts.com/arc-review-such-sweet-sorrow-by-jenny-trou/" target="_blank">This review was originally posted on Bookwyrming Thoughts</a>