sunmaecal TBR'd a book

Existential Physics: A Scientist's Guide to Life's Biggest Questions
Sabine Hossenfelder
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A River Enchanted (Elements of Cadence, #1)
Rebecca Ross
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sunmaecal TBR'd a book

Last Sacrifice (Vampire Academy, #6)
Richelle Mead
sunmaecal commented on SailorSunshine's update
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Post from the The Truth about the Titanic forum
Gracie has such a way with words. It doesn't at all surprise me that he authored at least one other book before this. Coming off of the highly academic writing style of Lawrence Beesley, this is a super refreshing read.
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The Truth about the Titanic
Archibald Gracie
sunmaecal wrote a review...
This was such an interesting read, and as someone gearing up to write a fiction novel set onboard the Titanic, all of the detail that Lawrence Beesley gives within this book is absolutely incredible. His descriptions of the sea, the sky, and the ship itself are so poetic and attention-grabbing, and it goes without saying that I will be rereading soon with a highlighter and a handful of sticky notes at the ready.
I will admit, it certainly is hard to adapt to reading Edwardian writing thanks to all of the run-on sentences alone, but an easy remedy for that is listening along to the audiobook as you read, or just opting for the audiobook alone.
I think the by far most surprising thing about this account of all that happened onboard the Titanic was just how calm the passengers were according to LB. Even the movie (absolutely still a favorite of mine) feels a touch dramatized by comparison, which definitely wasn't something I expected.
Overall, this is a wonderful read for anyone with a vested interest in the Titanic and her passengers. There's a good amount of fun facts about maritime travel in general, too, which is a bonus!
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sunmaecal TBR'd a book

Lobster
Guillaume Lecasble