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seema

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

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Top ContributorEarly UserReadalong Completionist 2025
Cozy Fantasy
Pride 2025
Dark Academia
My Taste
Bury Our Bones in the Midnight Soil
Don't Let the Forest In
Palimpsest
The House in the Cerulean Sea (Cerulean Chronicles, #1)
The Bear and the Nightingale (The Winternight Trilogy, #1)
Reading...
Goddess of the River
72%
A Love Song, A Death Rattle, A Battle Cry
0%
Like Water for Chocolate
65%

seema commented on InkDragon's update

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Goddess of the River

Goddess of the River

Vaishnavi Patel

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  • Palimpsest
    Thoughts from 21%

    I am a certified fan of purple prose but, even then, the fantastical elements of this book requires me to pay attention. I really appreciate weaving in and out of the city. It's like coming up for air before going back under to look for treasure.

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    Palimpsest

    Palimpsest

    Catherynne M. Valente

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    This Story Might Save Your Life: A Novel

    This Story Might Save Your Life: A Novel

    Tiffany Crum

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    seema commented on a post

    10h
  • Cosy with little to no romance!

    Any cosy recs here or not woth little to no romance? ☺️ shorter books (even short stories) preferred! Thank uuuuuu

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  • seema commented on a post

    10h
  • The Body Is Not an Apology: The Power of Radical Self-Love
    Thoughts from 67% (page 138, end of Ch3)

    This chapter was significantly weaker than the prior ones for me... and I am starting to understand why I've been recommended the workbook so much. This chapter is supposed to be the "okay so what do we do" chapter (I think) and yet the 4 pillars of building a radical self love practice are more vibes than action items. I had to read each one a few times to even understand what the throughline was or figure out a takeaway, especially since their names seem selected more to sound good than be readily interpretable. So maybe the workbook is more detailed and directly actionable?? Because this still feels very much like theory, and it sounds nice, in theory, but the actual practice of it is missing. It's the first time I'm feeling the book might be leaning too far into cerebral over the tangible.

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    19h
  • Goddess of the River
    Thoughts from 60%
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    19h
  • Goddess of the River
    LunarNova
    Edited
    Thoughts from 64% (page 252) Finished chapter 19
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    21h
  • Goddess of the River
    Thoughts from 56% (page 227, beginning of chapter 18)
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  • Goddess of the River
    thought on the Vasus, the curse and Ganga - up to chapter19
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    Goddess of the River

    Goddess of the River

    Vaishnavi Patel

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    seema commented on jordynreads's update

    seema commented on buggy1313's review of From Here to Eternity: Traveling the World to Find the Good Death

    1d
  • From Here to Eternity: Traveling the World to Find the Good Death
    buggy1313
    Feb 20, 2026
    3.0
    Enjoyment: Quality: Characters: Plot:
    Caitlin spends a lot of time in this criticizing the American/Western funeral industry and she’s completely right. 
    I think it’s important that a mortician of all people is being out spoken about this issue and how she actively advocates for reform. 

    She brings up how manipulative and rushed the process is for grieving families in America.

    They are forced to hurry up and make important and huge financial decisions when it comes to giving their loved ones proper burials.

    How outrageously expensive it is. Spending several thousands of dollars on a casket just to put it in the ground. (My words not hers) 

    And finally, how far removed the families are from their newly deceased loved ones in this whole process. 

    After a death, there is so much rush to hurry up and take care of it. Not giving the family any time to grieve before having to go through the hard time of burying their loved ones.

    And there are so many stipulations on keeping the family away or putting barriers between them. 

    In several of these cases of Caitlin traveling the world and seeing different ways other countries and cultures deal with death, these people are actively involved in the funeral processes and most of the time are doing it themselves without professionals like morticians. They are also close to their loved ones like in Spain, where they can sit in a room with their loved one separated by a glass casket but still being able to be in the room and grieve. 

    She also talks about how Westerner/Americans are so uncomfortable with the idea of death and dead people. 

    So much so, that we refuse to talk about what we want after we’re gone with our families because we are superstitious that talking about it will bring on our untimely demise. And maybe that is the result of what our funeral industry is like because we are so far removed from the process in putting a loved one to rest and seeing it be done 

    I think she’s totally right.

     I am respectful of tradition and love learning about different cultures and their rituals but I was (as an American) bewildered and uncomfortable of how some of these cultures dealt with the dead. 

    And it’s not coming from a place of  judgement, it’s more of a place of curiosity and shock because we as Americans, are so removed from and so uncomfortable of the reality of death so it’s not usual for us. 

    This book was really reflective in that way and made me think about what I want for my body 

    I have always said I want to give back to the Earth in some way which is why I liked the chapters from North Carolina and Bolivia.

    I had never heard of this process of turning corpses into compost and the idea does unsettle me a little bit, especially if I was the person to be planting with corpse soil but it’s a totally sustainable way of completely disposing of your body that won’t harm the environment but in fact contributes more to it by being able to plant new life with it which is beautiful. And yes, I would love to be the soil underneath a willow tree or rose bush.

    When I first heard of sky burials, I genuinely considered this process for my body and the way Caitlin talked about it, sold it to me even more. It’s another completely sustainable way of disposing of your body, you’re giving back to nature and like she said, we all eat animals after they’re dead, so why not give your body back to the animals? 

    The other chapters I enjoyed were:
    Colorado, Mexico, and Japan. 

    I’ve always been interested in the idea of funeral pyres and I didn’t know any had still existed in the world (same with the sky burials).

    I had no idea how long cremations had been going on for. For example, they talk about the discovery of the Mungo Lady bones in 1960 and concluded they were from 42,000 years ago where she was cremated when she died! That’s nuts. 

    I also didn’t know they produced so much pollution but it makes sense when you think about it. The popularity in cremations growing scares me for the state of our environment. 

    The Mexico chapter was so emotional. I always loved the tradition of Día de los muertos. Keeping the memory of your loved ones alive by dedicating an altar to them with their favorite things is so sweet. 

    Sarah’s story was so heartbreaking and the way she found healing in Frida Kahlo’s artwork where she had went though the same thing was really touching. 

    Japan is so advanced and they just have everything figured out over there. 

    The idea of the Ruriden is so cool. 
    Easily being able to find your loved ones plot by scanning a card and it lighting up for you is awesome. 

    They also talk about how Japan has a low birth rate and how a quarter of the population is over the age of 65 with the life expectancy being high. So there are old people providing care for even older people and a lot of these people sometimes die alone because they don’t have any family which is really sad.

    In America, where they would probably put someone who had no family to claim them or have the money to bury or cremate someone in an unmarked grave/plot. 

    The Ruriden provides a final resting place for them. The creator of it goes in every day and is able to type in that days date and see a light for everyone who died that day. Then, he says a prayer and lights and incense so they are not forgotten and I think that is so sweet.

    I liked Caitlin’s other book more, “Will My Cat Eat My Eyeballs?” It was a little more light hearted and less morbid. I was uncomfortable at times with the descriptions of dead or mummified bodies (still American over here) I still enjoyed it and always love learning new things. I will eventually read her other book someday 


    I didn’t expect to write such a lengthy review but thank you for reading this if you made it this far 

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  • seema commented on ruichimi's review of From Here to Eternity: Traveling the World to Find the Good Death

    1d
  • From Here to Eternity: Traveling the World to Find the Good Death
    ruichimi
    Aug 30, 2025
    4.5
    Enjoyment: 4.5Quality: 5.0Characters: 3.5Plot: 4.0
    💀
    🫂
    ⚰️

    « Death avoidance is not an individual failing; it’s a cultural one. »

    An incredible read that really changed my perspective and my relationship with death and what it means to grieve. Each chapter is a small glimpse on how different cultures around the world come to term with death, and how some of them embrace it fully. Not only was it a fascinating read, it ended up being also quite comforting seeing how people embrace their departed ones with care and love.

    My only « qualm » with it would be that with so many places around the world that hold different death rituals, I wish the US wasn’t featured more than once. I did enjoy how it highlighted the strangeness of the death industry (in the US, but most likely in western countries in general), as well as how we tend to hide the reality of death in the west instead of embracing it. I hope this helps open the discussion on the important question such as what we want to do with our own body when the end comes, or just the willingness to talk about death in general.

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  • seema commented on seema's review of From Here to Eternity: Traveling the World to Find the Good Death

    1d
  • From Here to Eternity: Traveling the World to Find the Good Death
    seema
    Sep 06, 2024
    5.0
    Enjoyment: 5.0Quality: 5.0Characters: 5.0Plot: 5.0
    🤯
    🫂
    💀

    This was an unbelievable read, I already know I will carry it with me through the rest of my life. Towards the end, Doughty describes the importance of deathcare as "these are human acts, acts of bravery and love in the face of death and loss." I think that's actually a perfectly apt summary of the books contents. All of the rituals described are absolutely fascinating, and prompted me to really reconsider my own views of death and the treatment of the dead, and examine beliefs I often didn't know I held. Doughty's narrational voice was incredibly engaging and knowledgeable and even humorous at times as she leads you around the world to tie together wildly different, yet somehow ultimately similar, practices. I was really pleasantly surprised by the commentary on the roles that commercialization, technology, and the efforts of marginalized and disadvantaged groups have played in deathcare too. There is SO much food for thought, I truly think every single person should read this.


    A few quotes that really spoke to me from one of my favorite chapters, about composting corpses (yes, seriously) :

    "It is worth noting that the main players in the recomposition project are women - scientists, anthropologists, lawyers, architects. Educated women, who have the privilege to devote their efforts to righting a wrong."

    "For those who have been socialized female the [anti-aging] pressure is relentless. So decomposition becomes a radical act. It's a way to say 'I love and accept myself.' ... There is a freedom found in decomposition, a body rendered messy, chaotic, and wild. I relish this image when visualizing what will become of my future corpse."

    "Maybe a process like recomposition is our attempt to reclaim our corpses. Maybe we wish to become soil for a willow tree, a rosebush, a pine - destined in death to both rot and nourish on our own terms."

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