seema commented on a post
seema commented on a post


Hellooo! 💜
I have been looking over this side quest and have had some feelings come up, and I was wondering if I was alone.
I noticed that all of the books included in this romance quest appear to be hetero-presenting couples, and there’s a distinct lack of queer MCs that Pagebound normally has. So I was wondering, how were these specific books chosen? I’m not sure if this is different when it’s a quest that is publisher specific! I really enjoy seeing a diverse set of romantic partners when reading romance, and I’m struggling to relate to a quest where I can’t see myself reflected in any of the books.
Not sure if anyone even has this answer, but it’s been on my mind. Thanks in advance, Boundlings! 🩷✨
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seema commented on seema's review of The Stepford Wives
I always say I wanna move to a quaint little town but may one like this NEVER find me. The first third was slow and definitely felt a bit dated with an MC I didn't particularly care for, but the last third was so unputdownable that I can easily see how the term Stepford Wife entered the cultural vernacular. Even beyond the social commentary that is exactly emblemic of what we now consider second wave feminism, for me the triumph of this book was the absolutely insane climax that had so much adrenaline flowing through my system that I was left physically nauseous from it. Certainly props to the audiobook narrator as well for how well uncanniness and paranoia and "hysteria" came across. Afterword was a bit strange (to put it nicely), with Peter Straub seemingly taking shots at the ignorance of readers and their inability to appreciate book construction, yet mistaking details from the book himself??
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seema wrote a review...
I always say I wanna move to a quaint little town but may one like this NEVER find me. The first third was slow and definitely felt a bit dated with an MC I didn't particularly care for, but the last third was so unputdownable that I can easily see how the term Stepford Wife entered the cultural vernacular. Even beyond the social commentary that is exactly emblemic of what we now consider second wave feminism, for me the triumph of this book was the absolutely insane climax that had so much adrenaline flowing through my system that I was left physically nauseous from it. Certainly props to the audiobook narrator as well for how well uncanniness and paranoia and "hysteria" came across. Afterword was a bit strange (to put it nicely), with Peter Straub seemingly taking shots at the ignorance of readers and their inability to appreciate book construction, yet mistaking details from the book himself??
seema submitted a feature request
After finishing a book I love that it stays on that currently reading bar and changes to prompt a review, but it disappears quicker than I can use it since I'm not ready to review immediately. Any chance the timing of it could be extended to stay until either a review is made or 24hrs passes, whichever comes first?
seema commented on seema's update
seema finished a book

The Stepford Wives
Ira Levin
seema finished a book

The Stepford Wives
Ira Levin
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seema commented on a post
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