
On Life-Writing
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Chapter 12 of this publication is open access, available under the terms of a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0...

The Best of Jane Grigson
Elizabeth David and Jane Grigson
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Published to coincide with the anniversary of 25 years since her untimely death and having been out...
Bard of the Deal: The Poetry of Donald Trump
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From award-winning reporter and author of Pieces of Intelligence: The Existential Poetry of Donald...

Tennesse Williams: Mad Pilgrimage of the Flesh
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On 31 March 1945, at The Playhouse Theatre on Forty-Eight Street the curtain rose on the opening...

A Work in Progress: The Untold Story of the Crawley Writers’ Group
Alex Woolf, Martin Jenkins and Dan Brotzel
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They've all got a book in them, unfortunately. In December 2016, Julia Greengage, aspiring writer...

Collected Works
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"The Brontës had their moors, I have my marshes," Lorine Niedecker wrote of flood-prone Black Hawk...

The Heart A Rose
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The Heart A Rose: A Masterfully Crafted Poetic Journey Through Lifelong Love Are you a hopeless...
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Broken Silence (Rock Bottom #1)
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Justin Molina has secrets. He’s served his time but remains a prisoner of his past, unable to...
Contemporary MM Romance

Sam (74 KP) rated The Poet X in Books
Mar 27, 2019
I wish I’d had this when I decided that I really hated poetry throughout school and college because I feel that this teaches how form and structure can change the mood a poem better than any teacher can explain it to you. The form is constantly changing throughout the book and it always reflects the poet’s mood, which I found fascinating.
I do feel that the format did hold the plot back a bit, mainly because the plot had room for development but I felt that it was held back by being written in poetry format. There were a few parts that remained ambiguous because of the format meaning that events were sometimes lacking in detail.
I loved X, she’s strong and won’t let anyone tell her what to do, and she really just needs some love. However, it did annoy me how Aman took her back straight away after the way she treated him. I found that part frustrating because she acted horribly to him, but he seemed to just not care. I also wondered how she even had friends with the way she treated people around her. I understand that she had family problems, but she was absolutely horrible to some of her friends but they still stuck by her.
Even though I did get frustrated by these things, it didn’t stop me from enjoying the novel. The format made it fun and I did somehow finish it all in one day because it had me hooked.
It’s definitely worth reading, especially if you are into poetry – or even if you’re not!

Hazel (1853 KP) rated Stir of Shadows in Books
Jun 17, 2018
Here it is, book six in the never-ending Legend of Rhyme series by Jaime Lee Mann. Stir of Shadows takes readers back to the magical land of Coraira, reuniting everyone with the twins Asher and Ariana, the mermaid Teagan and all of their friends. Once again, the magical land is in trouble and all the characters are impacted in some way.
As with every book in this series, there are new characters introduced into the story – perhaps too many. And, of course, each individual has their own story to be told. The narrative is constantly switching between locations, often leaving the reader hanging with unresolved issues. Thankfully, the author separates these sections with short poems that sum up the general gist of the book as it progresses.
The Legend of Rhyme series feels overdone and the storyline in Stir of Shadows seemed to be snatching at straws, trying to piece something together. There are so many characters to keep track of, some who disappear for a while only to be reintroduced as if they had never been away.
There was no sense of danger or action in this instalment. Problems arose, only to be solved moments later. Unlike previous books where readers were overwhelmed with foreboding, the scenes were over and done within no time at all. The book, however, to give it its due, is fast-paced; I read it in less than two hours.
Perhaps it is not the storyline or authorship that is the problem, it could be my age. I am 26, whereas, Legend of Rhyme is targeted at people half that. There is little for an adult reader to latch onto and enjoy before it is snatched away by an easy solution.
Nonetheless, Jaime Lee Mann is great at ending her books on a cliffhanger. Stir of Shadows may not be anything to rave over, but I certainly want to know what happens next!