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LaurasLibraryCard

she/her Love to read romance šŸ’š I'm 100% open to book discussions, debates, and recommendations!

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Monster Romance Series Starters
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Winter 2026 Readalong
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The Decagon House Murders (House Murders, #1)
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Middlemarch
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Invisible Women: Data Bias in a World Designed for Men
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Midnight Sun (The Twilight Saga, #5)
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Anxious People

Anxious People

Fredrik Backman

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  • Anxious People
    Thoughts from 72% (page 329)
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  • The Decagon House Murders (House Murders, #1)
    Thoughts from 28% (page 79) - end of ch. 2

    I can't decide if the 4th wall-breaking commentary about mystery fiction and armchair detectives is charming or overly clichƩ...

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  • The Decagon House Murders (House Murders, #1)
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  • The Decagon House Murders (House Murders, #1)
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    The Decagon House Murders (House Murders, #1)

    The Decagon House Murders (House Murders, #1)

    Yukito Ayatsuji

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    The Decagon House Murders (House Murders, #1)

    The Decagon House Murders (House Murders, #1)

    Yukito Ayatsuji

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  • The Decagon House Murders (House Murders, #1)
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    Thoughts from 4% // Prologue
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  • The Decagon House Murders (House Murders, #1)
    Thoughts from 1% (introduction)

    i looked up some reviews and realised that there's an edition of this book with an introduction to the honkaku genre written by shimada soji (also translated by ho-ling wong, i believe), which i think provides some very interesting context for anyone else who's as unfamiliar with japanese literature/the honkaku genre as me!

    In the manner of Van Dine, Ayatsuji also did away with focusing on the latest science in The Decagon House Murders, and set the murder and the solving of the case with an isolated house as its stage from start to finish. But he ruthlessly eliminated all the elements which Van Dine had thought necessary to make his stories ā€œliterary,ā€ such as the depiction of the American upper class; the witticisms; the attention to prideful women; the cheerful conversations while the wine is poured at dinner; the polite demeanour of the butler and servants. Thus his novel approached the form of a game more so than anything previously written.

    As a result, his characters act almost like robots, their thoughts depicted only minimally through repetitive phrases. The narration shows no interest in sophisticated writing or a sense of art and is focused solely on telling the story. To readers who were used to American and British detective fiction, The Decagon House Murders was a shock. It was as if they were looking at the raw building plans of a novel.

    People devoid of any human emotion, only moving according to electrical signals: a setting reminiscent of the inside of a videogame. Ayatsuji Yukito’s unique method of depicting such abstract murder theatre plays, in which he hides his murderers, follows the traditions of the ā€œwhodunitā€ game of the Kyoto University Mystery Club. The participants in this game are given nothing in print, but have to guess who the murderer is based on an oral reading of a detective story. In a tense situation like that, where every word disappears the moment it is spoken, there is no need for beautiful or witty writing.

    Ayatsuji Yukito first introduced this technique, dubbed ā€œSymbolic Characterisation,ā€ and his experiment The Decagon House Murders was also his debut novel. Some have mistakenly taken his calculated abstractness as inexperience in expressive power or even a lack of writing skill, and he was criticised harshly when the book was first released. However, he had his reasons for writing the book the way he did. And to everyone’s surprise, bot-like characters from videogames became widely popular soon after the book’s release, just as Ayatsuji’s style of detective fiction had already foretold. Thus Decagon found its place among other masterpieces. Anime (Japanese animation) which would soon take over the world, would also feature the closed-off worlds of the Ayatsuji school.

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    Fredrik Backman

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    The Shippers

    The Shippers

    Katherine Center

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  • Anxious People
    Thoughts from 15% (page 46)

    "Because the terrible thing about becoming an adult is being forced to realize that absolutely nobody cares about us, we have to deal with everything ourselves now, find out how the whole world works."

    I don’t agree with this. Becoming an adult doesn’t mean no one cares about us or that we have to deal with everything alone. Most of us have at least one person who cares — a friend, a partner, family — and we figure life out together with the people we choose to keep close.

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    Fredrik Backman

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  • Anxious People
    Thoughts from 7% (page 27)

    "Because that was a parent's job: to provide shoulders. Shoulders for your children to sit on when they're little so they can see the world, then stand on when they get older so they can reach the clouds, and sometimes lean against whenever they stumble and feel unsure."

    Such a beautiful quote and thing to think about. Not every child unfortunatally will of had experienced the steady shoulders of their parents. But hopefully at some point in life, even if it's their teachers' or friends' shoulders

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