
Your Heart is a Muscle the Size of a Fist
Book
A heart-stopping debut about protest and riot ...1999. Victor, homeless after a family tragedy,...
Essays on the Essay Film
Nora M. Alter and Timothy Corrigan
Book
The essay-with its emphasis on the provisional and explorative rather than on definitive...

Geek Sublime: Writing Fiction, Coding Software
Book
This is a great novelist on his twin obsessions: writing and coding. What is the relationship...

Scandalize My Name: Black Feminist Practice and the Making of Black Social Life
Book
From sapphire, mammy, and jezebel, to the angry black woman, baby mama, and nappy-headed ho, black...

In Search of the Dark Ages
Book
This edition of Michael Wood's groundbreaking first book explores the fascinating and mysterious...

Alice (117 KP) rated You and Me on Vacation in Books
Mar 3, 2021
I read Beach Read last year and I did enjoy it but it didn't blow me away, this one, however... WOW! That's all I can say. A book about travel was always going to be right up my street but a slowburn friends to lovers story about travel. I was positively OBSESSED! The relationship between these two characters was so raw and honest and you were truly rooting for them from the very beginning. I related so hard to the character of Poppy too, like way too hard, there were moments when I genuinely thought that Emily Henry had been spying on me with how accurate some of these seemingly random character traits were to my life and I loved exploring the world through her eyes. I also think Alex Nilsen may be the new literary love of my life. I'm just so so so in love with this story and I probably shouldn't be typing this at midnight but that's when you get my most honest thoughts. I just have so much love for this book and I can already see it being one of my favourites of the year!

David Koechner recommended Apocalypse Now (1979) in Movies (curated)

LoganCrews (2861 KP) rated Proof (2005) in Movies
Sep 21, 2020

Awix (3310 KP) rated The Living Daylights (1987) in Movies
Sep 22, 2020
Still, all the globetrotting, fights and chases and so on you would expect from a Bond film in the classic style, and Dalton brings enough of the literary Bond to the screen to make this satisfying for people who like the franchise in slightly grittier mode. Has a certain value as a historical oddity, given it concludes with Bond teaming up with (essentially) the Taliban to attack an airbase in Afghanistan. Dalton arguably never got a proper crack of the whip as Bond; in this film he shows enough promise to make that a real cause for regret.

Moving Kings
Book
One of the boldest voices of his generation, Joshua Cohen returns with Moving Kings, a powerful and...
Literary Fiction