LaurasLibraryCard started reading...

A Master of Djinn (Dead Djinn Universe, #1)
P. Djèlí Clark
LaurasLibraryCard commented on a post from the Pagebound Club forum
As I'm currently drowning in study, I decided to take a break to tell you all about an event planning assignment I'm working on. I planned a monthly PageBound book club to discuss the quests and meet other Boundlings at my local library.
As a part of the assignment I had to design promotional material. I chose to do a printed bookmark that would be slipped into the books that were a part of that season's quest line for customers to discover as they checked out books and I thought I'd share them in the comments just for fun!
I really leaned into the whole adventure and summer vibe for the upcoming season and accidentally matched the new badge which I hadn't even seen until a few moments ago. Disclaimer: I'm not a graphic designer, just a girl who enjoys being creative and spent a STUPID amount of time in Canva messing around. Coincidentally, the day I learned you can be doing your work AND procrastinating at the same time. Who knew?
The event was planned to be on the first of each month for a whole year and included fun things like a passport that you get stamped each time you come for the chance to win a year of Royalty at the year's end and a monthly giveaway of 3 months of Royalty as a lucky door prize for all who attend.
Anyhow, I better get back to it.
If you made it this far, I'd really appreciate some fun comments to come back to.
Note: I did seek permission from the PageBound Team to use their logo's for this.
P.S: If you saw me try and post this yesterday and delete it twice because I couldn't get the images to work? No, you didn't.
Post from the Love After the End: An Anthology of Two-Spirit and Indigiqueer Speculative Fiction forum
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LaurasLibraryCard commented on a post
Idk if it was just me but the story Seed Children just gave me a weird vibe. I think it was the close association to star children, which stems from racist pseudoscience. The plot is good but i think using different vocabulary would have been better.
Post from the Love After the End: An Anthology of Two-Spirit and Indigiqueer Speculative Fiction forum
LaurasLibraryCard commented on RachelsReading's update
LaurasLibraryCard DNF'd a book

Honor
Thrity Umrigar
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.
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Post from the Honor forum
LaurasLibraryCard commented on a post
I've long felt that loneliness is rampant, and I think it's hard for people to detect in others and also to identify within themselves. I think the pandemic's isolation made people have to confront themselves more, and realize how much we desire companionship and the nearness of others. I feel there was such a push over last... few decades to promote independence, self-sufficiency, drive, climbing of social and corporate ladders, girl bossification, etc. I think there are A LOT of people who have a very small group of friends or people around them, and who long for more connection and interaction.
LaurasLibraryCard finished a book

Out of This World
Ari Wright
LaurasLibraryCard commented on Strawberryy's review of Seek You: A Journey Through American Loneliness
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LaurasLibraryCard commented on crybabybea's update