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seema

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

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Top ContributorPride 2025Early User
Readalong Completionist 2025
Cozy Fantasy
Dark Academia
My Taste
The House in the Cerulean Sea (Cerulean Chronicles, #1)
The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue
The Very Secret Society of Irregular Witches
The Bear and the Nightingale (The Winternight Trilogy, #1)
The Starless Sea
Reading...
Let This Radicalize You: Organizing and the Revolution of Reciprocal Care (Abolitionist Papers)Bury Our Bones in the Midnight SoilA Love Song, A Death Rattle, A Battle CryLike Water for Chocolate

seema commented on a post

7h
  • Bury Our Bones in the Midnight Soil
    Thoughts from 7% (page 39)
    spoilers

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    24
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  • seema commented on a post

    7h
  • Bury Our Bones in the Midnight Soil
    Thoughts from 3% (page 18, end of María Ch II)
    spoilers

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  • seema commented on a post

    8h
  • Bury Our Bones in the Midnight Soil
    Thoughts from 5% (page 25)

    “… but Alice likes games, because games come with rules, and it’s easier to be bold when there are boundaries, edges, and ends).”

    This feels entirely relatable.

    25
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  • Bury Our Bones in the Midnight Soil
    Thoughts from 4% (pg 25, end of Alice Ch I)

    And then she sees the girl on the bed.

    Girl on the bed girl on the bed call me an owl the way I'm saying who who who

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  • seema commented on a post

    9h
  • Bury Our Bones in the Midnight Soil
    Thoughts from 4% (page 21)

    Maria cracking a cherry pit with her teeth is actually insane, I was eating cherries at work while I read that, I can't even imagine accomplishing that

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  • seema commented on seema's update

    seema made progress on...

    9h
    Bury Our Bones in the Midnight Soil

    Bury Our Bones in the Midnight Soil

    Victoria Schwab

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    seema made progress on...

    9h
    Bury Our Bones in the Midnight Soil

    Bury Our Bones in the Midnight Soil

    Victoria Schwab

    5%
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    seema commented on a post

    9h
  • Let This Radicalize You: Organizing and the Revolution of Reciprocal Care (Abolitionist Papers)
    Thoughts from 52% (page 222, Ch8) - Active Hope

    It's really fascinating to posit that "active hope" doesn't require optimism, and you can (and should) be actively hopeful in scenarios that make you feel hopeless. That seemed really counterintuitive to me, but I'm understanding that what they're suggesting here is that you can keep a practice of hope that doesn't rely on waiting to feel hopeful, only on having the intention to express hope. That it's less a passive experience of hope and more an active commitment to it. And because of that, because it doesn't require positivity but really just a faith in what is within your own agency, you can practice hope while also practicing grief, and they do not have to be mutually exclusive. I think that framing is really interesting.

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  • seema commented on a post

    9h
  • Tender Is the Flesh
    Thoughts from 4% (page 8, end of Ch1) - this isn't that bad at all so far?

    Okay. Evidently an unpopular opinion gauging by all the other posts from up to this point, but I'm not that disturbed. As someone who doesn't read horror I was expecting to by nauseous by page 2 but like... While obviously it's messed up, it's still primarily conceptual, and pretty interesting at that. Not much different than any other dystopian speculative fiction so far. I imagine it's going to get a lot more graphic and repulsive but yeah at this point I'm definitely not experiencing what a lot of others seem to be, I'm actually pretty interested in the commentary on the social forces that have shaped this world

    38
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  • seema commented on a post

    9h
  • Bury Our Bones in the Midnight Soil
    Thoughts from 4%
    spoilers

    View spoiler

    6
    comments 1
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  • Bury Our Bones in the Midnight Soil
    Thoughts from 3% (page 18, end of María Ch II)
    spoilers

    View spoiler

    10
    comments 3
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  • seema commented on a post

    10h
  • Bury Our Bones in the Midnight Soil
    Thoughts from 3% (page 23)

    Referring to a bright red weed: "Careful. In nature, beauty is a warning. The pretty ones are often poisonous."

    Two pages later: Maria's hair is described as a liquid molten copper color that has gotten brighter as she has gotten older, and her looks as 'wild', striking, and undeniable, with all the men turning their heads and staring.

    Hmmm I see what you did there VE Schwab. I'm going in blind and can't WAIT to see where this goes! :DDD

    28
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  • seema commented on a post

    10h
  • Bury Our Bones in the Midnight Soil
    Thoughts from 3%
    spoilers

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    7
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  • seema commented on An.nA's review of Piranesi

    20h
  • Piranesi
    An.nA
    Mar 28, 2025
    5.0
    Enjoyment: Quality: Characters: Plot:
    🌀
    🏛️
    🌊

    my personal entry for the fifth day of the fourth week of the month of march in the year of the toucan came to the south eastern halls of itapira. i resolved to take up this book and its companion, the audiobook, and to read them. i sat on my chair overlooking the city lights, then ascended the staircase and lay upon my bed. i opened the book and read. in the span of two moons, it was finished. it was excellent.

    28
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  • seema commented on robyn00's review of Piranesi

    20h
  • Piranesi
    robyn00
    May 21, 2025
    4.5
    Enjoyment: 4.5Quality: 5.0Characters: 4.0Plot: 5.0

    This was very good. Very confusing at times. I think Piranesi and Sister Michael in Derry Girls would get along. They both enjoy a good statue.

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    comments 1
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  • seema wrote a review...

    21h
  • Piranesi
    seema
    Dec 27, 2025
    5.0
    Enjoyment: 5.0Quality: 5.0Characters: 5.0Plot: 4.5
    🏛️
    🌊
    📝

    I really adored this book. It is incredibly unique in structure and language and premise as well. Allegorical, mythological, fantastical, philosophical, psychological, emotional, and just damn interesting. The beginning absolutely takes some investment to acclimate to the writing and the world, but once you're in you are absolutely in, and from part 3 (when it became more plot than vibes) I was just flying through. That's not to knock the vibey parts though, I genuinely loved getting to see the world through Piranesi's eyes even when doing so forced me to slow down. I don't say this a lot, but I think this is a book I'd really like to reread. There was such an incredible attention to detail and so many subtle touches that I'm sure I missed the majority, and that I hope I'd be able to catch and appreciate more my second time through. All in all I think I'm leaving my read with a slightly different view of the world than I had going into it, which is really all I would ever ask for.

    A few other books came to mind as I read that I'd really recommend for how they dive into some similar aspects to this book. The Starless Sea, for the portal fantasy and academic glimmers. Flowers for Algernon, for the similar voice in the MC and exploration of changing perspective and identity. From Here to Eternity: Traveling the World to Find the Good Death, for nonfiction anthropological work exploring death practices across cultures.

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