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    Theodene Allen (0 KP)

    Word Piggy

    Wifey and mama, daughter of the Most High, entrepreneur and avid book reader.

I finished Payback by Fern Michaels this is the second book in the sisterhood series. I really enjoyed this book as much as the first. I really enjoy the characters and there is never a dull moment. I am excited to start book 3 Vendetta tomorrow on my way to work.
  
I really like Fern Michael's. I am listening to the sisterhood series. I just finished book 3 Vendetta, book 4 The Jury, book 5 Sweet Revenge, and book 6 Lethal Justice. Fern Michaels is one of my favorite authors so these are a 10 out of 10 and are going on my shelf to enjoy on another day.
  
Sister Outsider: Essays and Speeches
Sister Outsider: Essays and Speeches
Audre Lorde | 1984 | Fiction & Poetry, Gender Studies, LGBTQ+
(0 Ratings)
Book Favorite

"A remarkable collection of essays by a remarkable woman. Lorde’s views on race, gender, homophobia, xenophobia, class discrimination… To me this book is a manifesto of multiplicity. In an age in which we are all reduced to single identities and pushed into artificial tribes, Lorde’s intersectional and touchingly human approach is like a balm. It is a book about love, resilience and sisterhood."

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Jenna Bush Hager recommended Summer Sisters in Books (curated)

 
Summer Sisters
Summer Sisters
Judy Blume | 2018 | Fiction & Poetry
9.1 (9 Ratings)
Book Favorite

"Summer Sisters may just be the perfect summer read of all time. The queen, Judy Blume, writes a juicy story of friendship. My sister and I read this and then passed it on to many friends, the sisterhood of the traveling book. PS: My sister (ironically!) told me there is rumor of the book being made into a TV series."

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ClareR (6106 KP) rated Brigid in Books

Feb 26, 2026  
Brigid
Brigid
Kim Curran | 2026 | Fiction & Poetry, Science Fiction/Fantasy
10
10.0 (1 Ratings)
Book Rating
All of my favourite things in one book: historical fiction, fantasy, myth, retellings, Ireland and nuns!! What more could I want!!

Brigid is the daughter of a slave and a chieftain, and she narrowly escapes marriage to a man she doesn’t want, when a goddess hears her prayers. She helps her from this point on, and this is where the blurring between goddess/ paganism and catholicism starts - in a good way.

Brigid builds her sisterhood, cloaks it in religion and makes a safe haven for women in what would have been a brutal time for them. One of my favourite themes, found family, is prominent in this, along with sisterhood and religious politics.

I’m off to find The Morrigan, and I’m hoping that Kim Curran will continue to introduce us to the Irish folklore that I know far too little about.