avatarPagebound Royalty Badge

seema

head in the clouds, nose in a book ✨🌈 she/her

58314 points

0% overlap
Top ContributorEarly UserReadalong Completionist 2025
Cozy Fantasy
Pride 2025
Dark Academia
My Taste
Don't Let the Forest In
Bury Our Bones in the Midnight Soil
The House in the Cerulean Sea (Cerulean Chronicles, #1)
The Bear and the Nightingale (The Winternight Trilogy, #1)
From Here to Eternity: Traveling the World to Find the Good Death
Reading...
The Bright Years
52%
The Body Is Not an Apology: The Power of Radical Self-Love
40%
A Love Song, A Death Rattle, A Battle Cry
0%
Like Water for Chocolate
57%
The Picture of Dorian Gray
27%

seema made progress on...

4h
The Bright Years

The Bright Years

Sarah Damoff

52%
17
0
Reply

seema commented on ChaosReader's update

ChaosReader finished a book

6h
Violet Thistlewaite Is Not a Villain Anymore

Violet Thistlewaite Is Not a Villain Anymore

Emily Krempholtz

24
1
Reply

seema commented on a post

7h
  • Wuthering Heights
    seema
    Edited
    For those that watched the 2026 adaptation - let's discuss 👀
    spoilers

    View spoiler

    8
    comments 11
    Reply
  • Post from the Wuthering Heights forum

    7h
  • Wuthering Heights
    seema
    Edited
    For those that watched the 2026 adaptation - let's discuss 👀
    spoilers

    View spoiler

    8
    comments 11
    Reply
  • seema commented on jacklie's review of Midnight Sun (The Twilight Saga, #5)

    10h
  • Midnight Sun (The Twilight Saga, #5)
    jacklie
    Feb 16, 2026
    2.0
    Enjoyment: 1.0Quality: 1.0Characters: 2.0Plot: 1.0
    🧛
    🩸
    🛻

    I think I actually regret reading this book. To be clear, I did not go into this book with the intention to hate read it. My friend and I had celebrated Halloween by watching a re-showing of Twilight in theaters (incredible experience) and she lent me her copy of Midnight Sun after learning that I had never read it. She'd told me that it was awful, but coming off the high of seeing Twilight in theaters for the first time, I was genuinely excited to read it.

    Twilight got me back into reading when I was entering middle school. I remember borrowing the books from friends at school and staying up all night reading them to give them back the next day. I loved the series! Yes, they're not particularly well-written and a tad problematic at times but there's a reason why they were and continue to be so popular. They're fun to read!

    Especially when you're an angsty tween coming of age - it's wish fulfillment at its finest. Even as an adult woman, they're still fun to revisit for the same reason. It's still fun to detach from reality and pop back into Bella's story from time to time, even if it isn't quite as immersive and compelling to me as it was to my younger self.

    My issue with Midnight Sun is that it had all the worst parts of the original Twilight series with none of the good parts. Meyer's questionable writing and even more questionable portrayal of romantic relationships were on full display, but the story stopped being fun - mostly because Edward's POV is insufferable.

    From Bella's perspective, Twilight is about the magic of falling in love for the first time, of terrifying but thrilling discoveries, and of finally becoming the main character in your own life. From Edward's perspective, Twilight is about obsession and the self-loathing and anxiety that come from being unable to stop yourself from stooping to ever lower lows. It's not fun to read at best, and honestly a bit disturbing at worst.

    Edward comes out as a full-fledged stalker in this book. This is already pretty heavily hinted at in the books and movies, but I feel like it's as tastefully done as something like this can be. In Midnight Sun, Edward starts watching Bella sleep SO early in the book. Basically after they first meet. If that's not bad enough, we also learn that he effectively uses his mind reading to stalk her all day through the thoughts of others?! Absolutely insane.

    The book suffers from the fact that it's the same exact plot as Twilight just worse because of Edward's perspective. It's not as thrilling as Bella's - we already know his secret - and not as fun to read about. We do get some new information about the Cullens which I appreciate, but I would've much rather just picked that up in a guide book to the series or read it online.

    Accepting that this is what Edward's inner thoughts were like during all his brooding, silent moments would actually ruin the series for me so I'm just going to pretend like this book isn't canon and is some horribly written fanfiction by a misguided, but good-intentioned horny teen.

    Tread carefully with picking this one up! I opened Pandora's box with this one and am regretting it a little.

    8
    comments 6
    Reply
  • seema commented on KatieV's update

    KatieV earned a badge

    16h
    Level 14

    Level 14

    37000 points

    225
    68
    Reply

    seema commented on a post

    17h
  • Wuthering Heights
    seema
    Edited
    Thoughts from 50% (mid Ch16) - Nelly when I catch you...
    spoilers

    View spoiler

    15
    comments 14
    Reply
  • seema commented on a post

    19h
  • Let This Radicalize You: Organizing and the Revolution of Reciprocal Care (Abolitionist Papers)
    Thoughts from 57% (page 244, mid Ch9) - patience and allowing room for growth

    What they're saying about the importance of being patient with language and with people in general making mistakes as they perform activism does ring really true to me. It's hard, but there needs to be room to learn and evolve. There needs to be acceptance of the intention behind it and the commitment to keep showing up. If you want someone to sit through the discomfort of receiving feedback you have to also sit through the discomfort of giving it in a way that allows it to be well received, or even giving it at all rather than dismissing the whole person. The last line of this section, "many of us would not be in this work today if someone along the way had not been patient with us," just feels incredibly important to remember. We didn't come into the work fully grown in it.

    21
    comments 4
    Reply
  • seema commented on a post

    20h
  • Let This Radicalize You: Organizing and the Revolution of Reciprocal Care (Abolitionist Papers)
    karigan
    Edited
    Thoughts from 41%

    "A person who has done nothing can easily point to the fact that they have never failed but what have they built? What have they healed"

    This quote really spoke to me because it's something that has held me back in my own activism many times. Everything is so public these days. Even when you're trying to do the right thing, it can be skewed by assumptions of bad intent before you ever get to defend yourself. It takes strength to acknowledge that messing up publicly is a possibility when you put yourself out there but deciding to do it anyways.

    Edit to remove spoiler tag

    21
    comments 5
    Reply
  • seema commented on a post

    20h
  • Let This Radicalize You: Organizing and the Revolution of Reciprocal Care (Abolitionist Papers)
    Thoughts from 22% (page 96, mid Ch3)

    The police maintained "that they would shut us down and arrest us if they heard we were 'housing and feeding young people again.'"

    This should really be enough to radicalize anyone. I wish I could just say that the system is so so so so broken, but I'm pretty sure this is a feature, not a bug. It's just so soulless. Can you imagine? It's almost incomprehensible.

    42
    comments 12
    Reply
  • seema commented on a post

    1d
  • Half His Age
    Thoughts from 51% (page 139)
    spoilers

    View spoiler

    13
    comments 2
    Reply
  • seema commented on a post

    1d
  • Bury Our Bones in the Midnight Soil
    Thoughts from 21% (page 111)
    spoilers

    View spoiler

    13
    comments 1
    Reply
  • seema commented on a post

    1d
  • I Who Have Never Known Men
    curiosity and hope
    spoilers

    View spoiler

    25
    comments 5
    Reply
  • seema commented on seema's review of Wuthering Heights

    1d
  • Wuthering Heights
    seema
    Feb 15, 2026
    3.5
    Enjoyment: 3.0Quality: 4.0Characters: 3.5Plot: 3.5
    🏚️
    ⚰️
    🌫️

    I didn't expect this book to consist of first- second- third- hand gossip, but was pretty delighted to find that the case. Insufferable characters, biased unreliable perspectives, and generational grudges the likes of which rival Dynasty (affectionate). Also: intricate social class dynamics, cycles of abuse, mental health crises, and sympathy to be found for even the worst characters. A book that I'd love to dig into with friends as I'm sure everyone will have a slightly different take, but not one that I am likely to think of long beyond that (other than one specific part as an accompanying mental backdrop when listening to Paloma's Last Woman on Earth)

    30
    comments 2
    Reply
  • seema wrote a review...

    1d
  • Wuthering Heights
    seema
    Feb 15, 2026
    3.5
    Enjoyment: 3.0Quality: 4.0Characters: 3.5Plot: 3.5
    🏚️
    ⚰️
    🌫️

    I didn't expect this book to consist of first- second- third- hand gossip, but was pretty delighted to find that the case. Insufferable characters, biased unreliable perspectives, and generational grudges the likes of which rival Dynasty (affectionate). Also: intricate social class dynamics, cycles of abuse, mental health crises, and sympathy to be found for even the worst characters. A book that I'd love to dig into with friends as I'm sure everyone will have a slightly different take, but not one that I am likely to think of long beyond that (other than one specific part as an accompanying mental backdrop when listening to Paloma's Last Woman on Earth)

    30
    comments 2
    Reply
  • seema commented on lucyPagebound's update

    lucyPagebound made progress on...

    1d
    The Knight and the Moth (The Stonewater Kingdom, #1)

    The Knight and the Moth (The Stonewater Kingdom, #1)

    Rachel Gillig

    33%
    99
    13
    Reply

    seema commented on seema's update