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seema

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

61331 points

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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...
Goddess of the River
26%
A Love Song, A Death Rattle, A Battle Cry
0%
Like Water for Chocolate
65%
From Here to Eternity: Traveling the World to Find the Good Death
32%

seema commented on Isabela's review of Yellow Wallpaper

1h
  • Yellow Wallpaper
    Isabela
    Mar 07, 2026
    4.5
    Enjoyment: Quality: Characters: Plot:
    🤒
    🧠
    🏚️

    Unbelievable how the experience of being a woman with a “mysterious illness” has barely changed from 1892 to today. Really highlights the isolation of feeling bad but being told you’re healthy, the doctors didn’t find anything wrong.

    Some quotes that struck me:

    “If a physician of high standing, and one’s husband, assures friends and relatives that there is really nothing the matter with one but temporary nervous depression — a slight hysterical tendency — what is one to do?”

    “Nobody would believe what an effort it is to do what little I am able — to dress and entertain, and order things.”

    “I think sometimes that if I were only well enough to write a little, it would relieve the press of ideas and rest me. But I find I get pretty tired when I try.”

    “I cry at nothing, and cry most of the time.”

    “I wish I could get well faster.” 💔

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  • seema commented on jae-jae's update

    jae-jae started reading...

    2h
    Dream On, Ramona Riley

    Dream On, Ramona Riley

    Ashley Herring Blake

    9
    2
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    seema commented on seema's update

    seema made progress on...

    10h
    Goddess of the River

    Goddess of the River

    Vaishnavi Patel

    26%
    28
    1
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    seema commented on a post

    5h
  • From Here to Eternity: Traveling the World to Find the Good Death
    Thoughts from 32% (page 76, end of Indonesia)
    spoilers

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    9
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  • seema commented on irib99's update

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    4d
    From Here to Eternity: Traveling the World to Find the Good Death

    From Here to Eternity: Traveling the World to Find the Good Death

    Caitlin Doughty

    17%
    14
    3
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  • From Here to Eternity: Traveling the World to Find the Good Death
    Thoughts from 32% (page 76, end of Indonesia)
    spoilers

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    9
    comments 2
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  • seema commented on seema's update

    seema made progress on...

    8h
    From Here to Eternity: Traveling the World to Find the Good Death

    From Here to Eternity: Traveling the World to Find the Good Death

    Caitlin Doughty

    32%
    24
    6
    Reply

    seema made progress on...

    8h
    From Here to Eternity: Traveling the World to Find the Good Death

    From Here to Eternity: Traveling the World to Find the Good Death

    Caitlin Doughty

    32%
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    6
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  • From Here to Eternity: Traveling the World to Find the Good Death
    seema
    Edited
    Thoughts from 20% (page 48, mid Indonesia)

    I can't with how funny this book is. Like there are such important and serious discussions, yes, but then we also get sections like this:

    Paul, who sometimes breaks into abandoned copper and pumice mines in the Los Angeles area (because, of course he does), crawled away. The tails of his velvet frock coat disappeared into the hole. My cellphone, my only source of light, was at 2 percent battery life, so I powered it down and sat in the dark among the skulls. Minutes went by, maybe five, maybe twenty, when a lantern broke through the darkness. It was a family: a mother and several teenagers, Indonesian tourists from Jakarta. From their perspective, I must have looked like a possum trapped by car headlights against a garage wall. In gracious, elevated English, a young man positioned himself at my elbow and said, "Excuse me, miss. If you will direct your attention to the camera, we will create an Instagram." Flashes started going off, sending my image to #LondaCaves. Strange as this felt in the moment, I could see why the discovery of a six-foot-tall white girl in a polka-dot dress in the corner of a cave filled with skulls would be an Instagrammable moment. They took several pictures with me in different poses before moving on.

    It's so funny and it does such a great job at lightening the tone of this book. Like sitting in the dark in a cave full of skulls COULD be scary, or, it could be just another slightly strange day. Like if anything, the polka-dot dress is more remarkable than the skulls. And that can be okay! It can be funny and light and not solemn and scary.

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  • Post from the Goddess of the River forum

    9h
  • Goddess of the River
    Thoughts from 15% (page 45, end of Ch5) - her one request
    spoilers

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    7
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  • seema commented on a post

    9h
  • Goddess of the River
    Thoughts from chapter 6
    spoilers

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    13
    comments 6
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  • seema commented on a post

    9h
  • Goddess of the River
    Thoughts from 12% (page 47) - Question
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  • seema commented on a post

    9h
  • Goddess of the River
    Thoughts from 7%
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  • seema made progress on...

    10h
    Goddess of the River

    Goddess of the River

    Vaishnavi Patel

    26%
    28
    1
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    seema commented on seema's review of Palimpsest

    14h
  • Palimpsest
    seema
    Mar 05, 2026
    5.0
    Enjoyment: 5.0Quality: 5.0Characters: 5.0Plot: 4.5
    ☣️
    🎴
    🫴

    Okay looks like this is my hear me out book... So please walk with me here and hear me out. You'll need that kind of patience anyway if you're going to read this book.

    To get it out of the way first because I know you saw the cover and maybe read the blurb: yes, this book is a portal fantasy about a sexually transmitted city. Accordingly, this book contains a lot of sex. However, the sex in this book is NOT sexy. The branding suggests that it will be, you would expect it to be, but it is not (and that is the point), and I do think that's helpful to know going into it. If you are looking for a steamy smutty saucy book, this is not it. If you are interested in thinking about sex not just as a corporeal but as a cerebral act, and you are comfortable getting extremely uncomfortable with highly intentional portrayals of taboo and addiction and even murky consent, absolutely keep reading.

    Now, that said, the book description does purport the book to be a "lyrically erotic spell of a place where the grotesque and the beautiful reside," and with that I cannot disagree. Even before saying anything about the structure of the book or characters, let me try to throw some more words at you full of contradictions that attempt to capture the atmosphere of this book and its themes and yet surely fall short. Erotic and grotesque and beautiful, yes. Whimsical and industrial. Full of devotion and torment. Quicksand and tar and freedom. Desperation. Things terrible and devastating. Lush, cloying. Fanatical. Expansive. It is offensive, abrasive, challenging, unpalatable. It's also wonderous, beautiful, fantastical, unbelievable. Gripping. A fever dream. Parasitic. A bloody sacrificial thing. Haunting. Hopeful. Visceral, but spiritual as well. A biblically accurate angel. Not dystopia or utopia but heaven and hell and purgatory. Alive. Catching. Reverent. Obsessive. Damnation and absolution. It festers. A book that is all dissonance and likely not for well adjusted healthy people. You might find rainbows and butterflies and it will cost you.

    Still on board? Intrigued? Then let me get more specific as I sing Valente's praises. The premise is fascinating and bold, obviously. The narrative voice was one of the most interesting I've read in a long, long time. The characters were so distinct and strange (positive) and I managed to get pretty deeply attached to most of them without seeing it coming. The multiculturalism I felt was done really well, and while I can't find confirmation, the main characters seem very autistic-coded too, in a highly nuanced way. Queerness is implicit. The way the POVs were interwoven was also so ambitious and I'd say shockingly successful. There were some intense religious and political themes which totally snuck up on me, and I was really pleased with how this book folded in that commentary and sort of pulled the reader to that unexpected place, with so many turns that leave you in the same place you started but with a completely different view. I think in many ways, the reader becomes a character too. The writing is absolutely gorgeous; if you hate purple prose you will despise this book, but if you love it grab a highlighter and a dictionary while you're at it because I think Valente was a thesaurus in a past life. There is a LOT of dark and triggering content (self harm, suicide, incest, violence, body horror, addiction, fatphobia, ableism, and I'm sure others) so please be aware and look into that first if you need to.

    All that said, if you read all this and are interested in being taken to this world on the other side of sleep which drives people to madness, buckle up and maybe I'll see you there.

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  • seema entered a giveaway...

    17h

    Sourcebooks giveaway

    How to Kill a Witch: The Patriarchy's Guide to Silencing Women

    How to Kill a Witch: The Patriarchy's Guide to Silencing Women

    Zoe Venditozzi & Claire Mitchell

    Nothing brings people together like a common enemy, and witches were the greatest enemy of all. Scotland, 1563: Crops failed. People starved. And the Devil's influence was stronger than ever—at least, that's what everyone believed. If you were a woman living in Scotland during this turbulent time, there was a very good chance that you, or someone you knew, would be tried as a witch. During the chaos of the Reformation, violence against women was codified for the first time in the Witchcraft Act—a tool of theocratic control with one chilling to root out witches and rid the land of evil. What followed was a dark and misogynistic chapter in history that fanned the flames of witch hunts across the globe, including in the United States and beyond. In How to Kill a Witch, Zoe Venditozzi and Claire Mitchell, hosts of the popular Witches of Scotland podcast, unravel the grim yet absurdly bureaucratic process of identifying, accusing, trying, and executing women as witches. With sharp wit and keen feminist insight, they reveal the inner workings of a patriarchal system designed to weaponize fear and oppress women. This captivating (and often infuriating) account, which weaves a rich tapestry of trial transcripts, witness accounts, and the documents that set the legal grounds for the witch hunts, exposes how this violent period of history mirrors today's struggles for justice and equality. How to Kill a Witch is a powerful, darkly humorous reminder of the dangers of superstition, bias, and ignorance, and a warning to never forget the past… while raising the question of whether it could ever happen again.

    print10 copiesUS & Canada