The Dead Wife's Handbook
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The Dead Wife's Handbook is the stunning emotional debut from author Hannah Beckerman. 'Today is my...
Remixology: Classic Cocktails, Reconsidered and Reinvented
Julia Hastings-Black and Michael Turback
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History tells us that once a cocktail achieved prominence at the bar, the impulse to invent...
The Art of Baking Bread: What You Really Need to Know to Make Great Bread
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Sidestep years of unwarranted trial and error and learn to bake like a professional without having...
The Joy of Winemaking: An Illustrated Handbook to Making Wine at Home
Deana Morin and Amanda Brackett
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Wine is an intimidating topic to many people, and making it at home might seem like too much of a...
The Wine Journal
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The perfect gift--for yourself or the wine lovers in your life. Wine consumption is on the rise...
Vegetarian Comfort Foods: The Happy Healthy Gut Guide to Delicious Plant-Based Cooking
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The Happy Healthy Gut Guide to Delicious Plant-Based Cooking More than seventy-five recipes to...
She's Still There: Rescuing the Girl in You
Chrystal Evans Hurst and Priscilla Shirer
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What's a woman to do if her life is not taking shape the way that she thought that it would? What...
The Gluten-Free Revolution: A Balanced Guide to a Gluten-Free Lifestyle Through Healthy Recipes, Green Smoothies, Yoga, Pilates, and Easy Desserts!
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An accessible healthy lifestyle should be the rule, not the exception. Who said pricey kitchen...
Alice (117 KP) rated The Enchanted in Books
Mar 3, 2021
My rating for this book is slightly confused because I went through a vast majority of the book feeling. "hey this book is really good I'm so glad it was recommended to me" but <i>only</i> feeling that. It didn't get me excited but it was still very, very good. However, the last couple of pages had such a huge impact and it really made the whole story come alive which meant I gave it the extra 0.5 for the pure sense of awe I felt after finishing.
When you read the title "The Enchanted" you expect it to be about fairies or some other sort of magical creature, the last thing that you expect is a book about a prisoner on death row but let me just say that this book is a gem. The language (especially as a debut novel) is exquisite. The use of metaphors and flowery almost pretty language juxtaposed perfectly to describe the scenes which should be gruesome and dark emphasising with the magic-realism style of the novel. Having the entire story told from the inmate's point of view made for an interesting read too because he was narrating the others' thoughts, so the only parts we know to be true are the things that he himself thought. As I mentioned above, the whole story is development, even as I was nearing the end no part truly felt like the climax.
All in all, I highly recommend this book even if you only read it for how beautiful the language is ( that's pretty much what inspired me to read it), it deals with harsh subject matters in a really raw way and makes you think and you will likely leave with more questions than with which you entered.

