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minsuni

Min ☆ she/her ☆ 25 ☆ pt ☆ always reading with a cup of tea ‪‪♡

22254 points

0% overlap
Top ContributorPride 2025
Blood Suckers
Winter 2026 Readalong
Sapphic Across Genres
My Taste
Bury Our Bones in the Midnight Soil
Daughter of No Worlds (The War of Lost Hearts, #1)
Hazelthorn
The Isle in the Silver Sea
The Bright Years
Reading...
Wuthering Heights
14%
Black Cake
32%
The Jasmine Throne (The Burning Kingdoms, #1)
36%

minsuni commented on asterisme's update

asterisme made progress on...

1h
Guardian: Zhen Hun (Novel) Vol. 1

Guardian: Zhen Hun (Novel) Vol. 1

Priest Priest

9%
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minsuni commented on a post

2h
  • Black Cake
    Thoughts from 30% ~ (covey chapter) 🎧
    spoilers

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    14
    comments 5
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  • minsuni commented on burntsunflowers's update

    burntsunflowers earned a badge

    12h
    Level 10

    Level 10

    17000 points

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    minsuni made progress on...

    15h
    Black Cake

    Black Cake

    Charmaine Wilkerson

    32%
    18
    0
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    minsuni made progress on...

    15h
    The Jasmine Throne (The Burning Kingdoms, #1)

    The Jasmine Throne (The Burning Kingdoms, #1)

    Tasha Suri

    36%
    20
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    minsuni commented on a post

    15h
  • The Jasmine Throne (The Burning Kingdoms, #1)
    Thoughts from 29%
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    9
    comments 4
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  • minsuni commented on SashaReads's update

    SashaReads earned a badge

    17h
    Mardi Gras + Carnival 2026

    Mardi Gras + Carnival 2026

    26
    5
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    minsuni commented on a post

    18h
  • Guardian: Zhen Hun (Novel) Vol. 1
    Thoughts from 59% (ch15)
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    12
    comments 7
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  • minsuni commented on minsuni's review of The Bright Years

    19h
  • The Bright Years
    minsuni
    Jan 31, 2026
    5.0
    Enjoyment: 5.0Quality: 5.0Characters: 5.0Plot: 5.0
    ❤️‍🩹
    📸

    The Bright Years is an amazing debut depicting addiction, grief and generational trauma while still being hopeful that there is a bright side through it all.

    This book is intense, honest and real and Sarah Damoff does not shy away from showing a raw perspective into this family’s life, how their choices affect themselves and everyone around them, how people deal with trauma in different ways, how hard it is to heal from that. But you also get to understand these characters, why they made these choices, and how important it is to communicate your pain and seek comfort in people that love you.

    The writing and the tone of narration pair extremely well with what the characters are going through in their lives. During darker times the writing is a lot heavier and emotionally harder to read, and during happier, lighter moments, the prose equals those emotions, making it easy to empathize with these characters.

    Alongside the writing, the pacing of the story also reflects the different stages of the characters’ lives and how that influences how they think and deal with what’s happening around them.

    Family comes in so many different forms and The Bright Years explores that perfectly. Family isn’t just the people of the same blood, it’s the people that are there for you, the friends that support you, the neighbors that care for you and the characters in this book experience all those types of love in their own way.

    I cried and laughed, felt anger and relief, understood the characters’ pain and got mad at their decisions. The Bright Years brings out so many emotions that while it’s a relatively shorter read, it’s still so beautifully complex.

    This is a book that will stay with me forever and I just can’t recommend it enough.

    43
    comments 6
    Reply
  • minsuni wrote a review...

    19h
  • The Bright Years
    minsuni
    Jan 31, 2026
    5.0
    Enjoyment: 5.0Quality: 5.0Characters: 5.0Plot: 5.0
    ❤️‍🩹
    📸

    The Bright Years is an amazing debut depicting addiction, grief and generational trauma while still being hopeful that there is a bright side through it all.

    This book is intense, honest and real and Sarah Damoff does not shy away from showing a raw perspective into this family’s life, how their choices affect themselves and everyone around them, how people deal with trauma in different ways, how hard it is to heal from that. But you also get to understand these characters, why they made these choices, and how important it is to communicate your pain and seek comfort in people that love you.

    The writing and the tone of narration pair extremely well with what the characters are going through in their lives. During darker times the writing is a lot heavier and emotionally harder to read, and during happier, lighter moments, the prose equals those emotions, making it easy to empathize with these characters.

    Alongside the writing, the pacing of the story also reflects the different stages of the characters’ lives and how that influences how they think and deal with what’s happening around them.

    Family comes in so many different forms and The Bright Years explores that perfectly. Family isn’t just the people of the same blood, it’s the people that are there for you, the friends that support you, the neighbors that care for you and the characters in this book experience all those types of love in their own way.

    I cried and laughed, felt anger and relief, understood the characters’ pain and got mad at their decisions. The Bright Years brings out so many emotions that while it’s a relatively shorter read, it’s still so beautifully complex.

    This is a book that will stay with me forever and I just can’t recommend it enough.

    43
    comments 6
    Reply
  • minsuni commented on a post

    20h
  • Black Cake
    catalina
    Edited
    🎧 | thoughts from 22% - the bennetts
    spoilers

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    10
    comments 14
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  • minsuni commented on a post

    20h
  • Black Cake
    Thoughts from 22% (page 62)
    spoilers

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    14
    comments 2
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  • minsuni wrote a review...

    1d
  • A Wizard’s Guide to Defensive Baking
    minsuni
    Jan 31, 2026
    3.0
    Enjoyment: 3.0Quality: 4.0Characters: 4.0Plot: 3.0
    🍞
    🧑‍🍳
    🪄

    My first T. Kingfisher book, and while I can’t say that I loved it, it was still really cute. The murder mystery kept me invested in the story trying to figure out, along with the main characters, the what, how, when and why, while also evolving into a more complex plot that would make the story more captivating.

    I loved Mona as the main character, even as a 14 year old, she’s incredibly smart, just, kind, understanding and independent. The writing is immersive in a way that it feels like you’re inside Mona’s head, living her live with her and understanding every one of her thoughts, actions and feelings.

    The characters around Mona were equally interesting and each would bring a different dynamic to the story (shout out to the gingerbread man, loved the little guy).

    The tone of the story is extremely light and funny. Not necessarily a cozy fantasy, as there were quite a lot of heavy moments, but something easy and enjoyable to read.

    16
    comments 0
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  • minsuni commented on a post

    1d
  • The Jasmine Throne (The Burning Kingdoms, #1)
    Thoughts from 22% (ch11/page 120)
    spoilers

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    9
    comments 2
    Reply