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Why did they pronounce Maraschino cherries like Mara-SKEE-no? Is that how it’s supposed to be pronounced?? 😟
For anyone eye ball reading the book, how is it spelled?
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A Master of Djinn (Dead Djinn Universe, #1)
P. Djèlí Clark
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Spring 2026 Readalong
Read at least 1 book in the Spring 2026 Readalong.
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“This one’s American. From New York.” “I don’t believe such a place exists.”
I… huh? What? Sorry, what? Didn’t know we could just… not believe in the existence of major cities. Or of America, if that’s what he means. That’s… uh… okay? Weird take, man. Real weird.
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LaurasLibraryCard commented on matchalatei's update
matchalatei set their yearly reading goal to 30



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”The world sits at a precipice. Our ability to create has exceeded our ability to understand. We play with forces that could destroy us.” This is shockingly relevant, and really captures a lot of my opinion on AI-maybe a little more dramatically, but it also kind of describes human progress in general. I don’t know the specific context of what this is referring to, but this is applicable to so many things-gunpowder, nuclear and biological weaponry, the Industrial Revolution, social media to an extent, and artificial intelligence.
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LaurasLibraryCard commented on HapennyBooks's review of Honor
This is a really incredibly grim story, dressed up in a pretty colourful cover. The blurb obviously suggests how dark it is but… it really is dark.
Meena and Abdul were the heart of this story for me and I adored them so much. I wish we spent more time with them than with Smita.
While Smita and Mohan were both compelling characters, I struggled to believe there was any chemistry between them. I’m pretty sure this is because the author used Mohan so much as a surrogate for India, challenging Smita constantly about her mixed feelings towards her homeland.
I also felt like there were a few things that were left unfinished by the end, Smita lying to her dad and also WTF was going on with Nandini?! For a book with such sticky, heavy subject matter, I didn’t love that it basically ended with an airport run.
The writing style in the italicised Meena chapters is lovely. The Smita chapters are a lot more basic and matter of fact — presumably to reflect the fact that she’s a journalist, but I found it jarring to return to every time.
Overall I’m glad I read it, and I feel I definitely learnt a lot about a part of Indian culture that I know very little of.