seema commented on a post
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seema commented on a feature request
We're adding 5 brand new avatars and adding more color variations to our existing avatars. This will be an ongoing project!
seema commented on a post
seema commented on a post


One thing I love about the found family trope is how differently it appears across fantasy (for example): • Cosy fantasy: people come together gently, low stakes, warm vibes. • Epic/high fantasy: mismatched groups form under pressure, often through shared struggle and trauma. • Urban & contemporary fantasy: families form through survival, secrecy, and trust. • Dark & gothic fantasy: relationships can be intense or morally complex, showing that found family isn’t always safe or easy.
I’m curious: • Which subgenre gives you your favorite found families? • Do you prefer families that form through comfort, through shared struggle, or a mix of both? • Does the story’s tone (cozy vs. dark/gritty) affect how strongly the family hits you emotionally?
For me personally, I’m all about epic fantasy and gothic/dark fantasy: those mismatched crews, forming bonds through trauma and facing danger together, just hit so deeply. That “we survive this together or not at all” dynamic is my absolute favourite. I love the dark, gritty moments where trauma-bonding turns a ragtag crew into family!
I’d love to hear your thoughts 🫶🏽 Which fantasy found families stick with you the most, and why?
seema commented on VioletPeanut's update
VioletPeanut started reading...

Somewhere Beyond the Sea (Cerulean Chronicles, #2)
T.J. Klune
seema commented on a post


If you like Stardew Valley, add Field Guide for the Formerly Villainous to your TBR. It's so cosy and feel-good even though our protagonist is a former cultist 🤣
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seema commented on marissa's update
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One of the things I think about when it comes to memoirs is that a good memoir often lingers long after I've finished reading, not because of the events themselves but because of the perspective it offers me. So I'm wondering, what’s a memoir that changed the way you see the world, or yourself, and why did it resonate so strongly with you?
I haven't read very many from this quest yet, but still, Know My Name by Chanel Miller is definitely my answer. I read it in 2022 and I still think about it all the time. When I was reading it, I was feeling (and learning!) just how much courage it takes to reclaim your own voice after something so horrific. It really made me think about how often society silences survivors and how important it is to listen and believe people’s experiences. I still find myself reflecting on my own assumptions and how I can be more empathetic in everyday life. It was so valuable to me.
I'm still looking for more recommendations from this quest so I'm hoping this question helps me find some gems ☺️
seema commented on a post
Greetings and Salutations! 👋 I am OhMyDio, the current holder of the Discworld Quest, here to invite you to a cross-quest readalong!
The Color of Magic by Sir Terry Pratchett is what I like to call a Triple Threat. This delightful tome is on three quests: Discworld, Epic Sci-Fi & Fantasy, and Iconic Series. So we're gonna do a three way cross-quest readalong!
What is the Discworld? The Discworld is a flat planet on the backs of 4 elephants standing on a giant space turtle. It is a comedy fantasy series spanning 41 books, and the Color of Magic is the first book, although not the only entry point into the series. There are multiple series within Discworld, ranging from witches to city watch guards to Death himself. The Color of Magic is the first book published, and the first installment of the Rincewind novels.
What's The Color of Magic about? Rincewind, a very incompetent wizard, is hired as the tour guide for Twoflower, an insurance agent and the very first tourist on holiday to Ankh-Morpork, a town with a lavishly rich underbelly not entirely safe for people with as much disposable income as Twoflower. With an oddly intelligent and feisty luggage trunk in tow, Rincewind is tasked with keeping Rincewind safe from peril in the city.
The Deets: We'll start the first week of February and go through the end of March. If you need (or want) to start earlier or end later, please do! There currently is not specific functionality for buddy reads, and to accommodate different reading styles and timelines we won't set a specific reading schedule. Read at your own pace and join us in the forums as you are able! I'll endeavor to post at consistent intervals, and I hope you all will join in and together we can make the forum lively and robust!
I've cross-posted this to the other two Quest forums (after consulting those Quest owners) so I hope we'll get a large gaggle of folks together - and hopefully we'll all be able to connect with more Bounders who share similar book tastes!
If you have questions please let me know! Thanks for reading this far & I hope you can join us, either now or following behind at a later time.
Happy reading! 💕🎉
seema commented on a feature request
(i really hope this hasn't been requested already, i couldn't find any previous requests along this line)
i only really add books to my plan if i'm reading for a readalong (seasonal, special, unofficial quest) or buddy reads. but there's been a lot more engagement with planning buddy reads and readalongs recently, and so my plans are filling up, which is awesome! i'd love if i could add a little note next to the books on my plan regarding what exactly i'm reading this for, for example, "buddy read starting on x date with x user". right now i have these notes written down on my notes app in my phone, but it would be cool if i could keep all that info within the app so that i don't have to keep clicking off this app to check :D
seema commented on seema's review of Lessons in Chemistry
It's possible I've never been quite so happy to be done with a book? It just wasn't for me (and other STEM girlies may also want to avoid...).
First off, what I thought the book was about didn't actually even start until the second half of it. Instead, the first half had a weird insta-love.plotline I didn't care for at all. I'll grant it that it also got funnier with the sassy quips in the second half, but the tone in the first half felt deeply confused as it tried to interweave humor with serious and upsetting subjects in a way that I felt ended up caricaturizing them. More things that rubbed me wrong: the second wave feminism was extremely heavy handed, which I don't understand the purpose of for the modern day audience which one could probably safely assume is already in agreement with the broad strokes of. The main character's neurodivergent woman in STEM casting was also extremely over the top and just immensely frustrating to read as someone who relates to those attributes yet obviously doesn't obnoxiously refer to salt as sodium chloride in daily conversation. It kind of felt disrespectful, like the MC was being made the butt of the joke? There were also EXTREMELY weird POV changes where mid chapter mid paragraph we jump to someone else's POV without any indication, and it happens constantly across any character that comes up in any capacity. I guess to end on a higher note since this was mostly a rant, I'll admit I was generally satisfied with how the story wrapped up and all the characters interconnected by the end of it, and I think the platonic relationships were by far the most compelling and interesting aspects of the book, so if you're most interested in those it may be worth your while.