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#Anne-Mari O’Farrell
annemariewrites · 9 months
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List of all the books I’ve read
just wanted to keep a list of what I’ve read throughout my life (that I can remember)
Fiction:
“The Outsiders,” SE Hinton
“The Weirdo,” Theodore Taylor
“The Devil’s Arithmetic,” Jane Yolen
“Julie of the Wolves series,” Jean Craighead George
“Soft Rain,” Cornelia Cornelissen
“Island of the Blue Dolphins,” Scott O’Dell
“The Twilight series,” Stephanie Mayer
“To Kill a Mockingbird,” Harper Lee
“Gamer Girl,” Mari Mancusi
“Redwall / Mossflower / Mattimeo / Mariel of Redwall,” Brian Jacques
“1984,” and  “Animal Farm,” George Orwell
“Killing Mr. Griffin,” Lois Duncan
“Huckleberry Finn,” Mark Twain
“Rainbow’s End,” Irene Hannon
“Cold Mountain,” Charles Frazier
“Between Shades of Gray,” Ruta Sepetys
“Great Short Works of Edgar Allan Poe,” Edgar Allen Poe
“Lord of the Flies,” William Golding
“The Great Gatsby,” F Scott Fitzgerald
“The Harry Potter series,” JK Rowling
“The Fault in Our Stars,” “Looking for Alaska,” and “Paper Towns,” John Green
“Thirteen Reasons Why,” Jay Asher
“The Hunger Games series,” Suzanne Collins
“The Perks of Being a Wallflower,” Stephen Chbosky
“Fifty Shades of Grey,” EL James
“Speak,” and “Wintergirls,” Laurie Halse Anderson
“The Handmaid’s Tale,” Margaret Atwood
“Mama Day,” Gloria Naylor
“Jane Eyre,” Charlotte Bronte
“Wide Sargasso Sea,” Jean Rhys
“The Haunting of Hill House,” Shirley Jackson
“The Chosen,” Chaim Potok
“Leaves of Grass,” Walt Whitman
“Till We Have Faces,” CS Lewis
“One Foot in Eden,” Ron Rash
“Jim the Boy,” Tony Earley
“The Vanishing Act of Esme Lennox,” Maggie O’Farrell
“A Land More Kind Than Home,” Wiley Cash
“A Parchment of Leaves,” Silas House
“Beowulf,” Seamus Heaney
“The Silence of the Lambs / Red Dragon / Hannibal / Hannibal Rinsing,” Thomas Harris
“Cry the Beloved Country,” Alan Paton
“Moby Dick,” Herman Melville
“The Hobbit / The Lord of the Rings trilogy / The Silmarillion,” JRR Tolkien
“Beren and Luthien,” JRR Tolkien, edited by Christopher Tolkien
“Children of Blood and Bone / Children of Virtue and Vengeance,” Tomi Adeyemi
“Soundless,” Richelle Mead
“The Girl with the Louding Voice,” Abi Dare
“A Song of Ice and Fire series / Fire and Blood,” GRR Martin
“A Separate Peace,” John Knowles
“The Bluest Eye,” and “Beloved,” Toni Morrison
“Brave New World,” Aldous Huxley
“The Giver / Gathering Blue / Messenger / Son,” Lois Lowry
“The Ivory Carver trilogy,” Sue Harrison
“The Grapes of Wrath,” and “Of Mice and Men,” John Steinbeck
“The God of Small Things,” Arundhati Roy
“Fahrenheit 451,” Ray Bradbury
“The Night Circus,” Erin Morgenstern
“Sunflower Dog,” Kevin Winchester
“The Catcher in the Rye,” JD Salinger
“The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian,” Sherman Alexie
“The Good Girl,” Mary Kubica 
“The Last Unicorn,” Peter S Beagle
“Slaughterhouse Five,” Kurt Vonnegut Jr
“The Joy Luck Club,” Amy Tan
“The Sworn Virgin,” Kristopher Dukes
“The Color Purple,” Alice Walker
“Their Eyes Were Watching God,” Zora Neale Hurston
“The Light Between Oceans,” ML Stedman
“Yellowface,” RF Kuang
“A Flicker in the Dark,” Stacy Willingham
“One Piece Novel: Ace’s Story,” Sho Hinata
Non-fiction:
“Anne Frank: Diary of a Young Girl,” Anne Frank
“Night,” Elie Wiesel
“Invisible Sisters,” Jessica Handler
“I Am Malala,” Malala Yousafzai
“The Interesting Narrative,” Olaudah Equiano
“The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks,” Rebecca Skloot
“Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl,” Harriet Jacobs
“The Princess Diarist,” Carrie Fisher
“Adulting: How to Become a Grown Up in 468 Easy(ish) Steps,” Kelly Williams Brown
“How to Win Friends and Influence People,” Dale Carnegie
“Carrie Fisher: a Life on the Edge,” Sheila Weller
“Make ‘Em Laugh,” Debbie Reynolds and Dorian Hannaway
“How to be an Anti-Racist,” Ibram X Kendi
“Maus,” Art Spiegelman
“I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings,” Maya Angelou
“Wise Gals: the Spies Who Built the CIA and Changed the Future of Espionage,” Nathalia Holt
“Persepolis,” and “Persepolis II,” Marjane Satrapi
“How to Write a Novel,” Manuel Komroff
“The Nazi Genocide of the Roma,” Anton Weiss-Wendt
“Children of the Flames: Dr. Josef Mengele and the Untold Story of the Twins of Auschwitz,” Lucette Matalon Lagnado and Sheila Cohn Dekel
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literateish · 1 year
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books i’ve read in 2023
astrid parker doesn’t fail by ashley herring blake
anxious people by fredrik backman
shadow & bone by leigh bardugo
lessons in chemistry by bonnie garmus
siege & storm by leigh bardugo
red dragon by thomas harris
ruin & rising by leigh bardugo
romeo and juliet by william shakespeare
convenience store woman by sayaka murata
small things like these by claire keegan
alice’s adventures in wonderland by lewis carroll
black widow: shield’s most wanted
black widow: the name of the rose
the history of mary prince by mary prince
brighton rock by graham greene
hook, line, and sinker by tessa bailey
five survive by holly jackson
ethel and ernest by raymond briggs
the midnight library by matt haig
all of you every single one by beatrice hitchman
hamlet by william shakespeare
set on you by amy lea
if we were villains by m. l. rio
the woman in white by wilkie collins
the guernsey literary and potato peel pie society by annie barrows and mary ann shaffer
i’m glad my mom died by jennette mccurdy
the interesting narrative and other writings by olaudah equiano
vicious by v. e. schwab
confessions of an english opium eater by thomas de quincey
november 9 by colleen hoover
a thousand ships by natalie haynes
open water by caleb azumah nelson
the necessity of stars by e. catherine tobler
exes and o’s by amy lea
alice in wonderland by lewis carroll (reread)
on earth we’re briefly gorgeous by ocean vuong
the little prince by antoine de saint-exupery
the bell jar by sylvia plath
the web of black widow
black widow: deadly origin
up at the villa by w. somerset maugham
black widow: the ties that bind
black widow: i am black widow
black widow: die by the blade
the death of captain america
black widow: welcome to the game
the death of captain america 2
winter soldier: the longest winter
the death of captain america 3
winter soldier: broken arrow
winter soldier: black widow hunt
winter soldier: electric ghost
black widow: the name of the rose
frankenstein by mary shelley
black widow: kiss or kill
black widow: itsy bitsy spider
young avengers: complete collection
twelfth night by william shakespeare
romeo and juliet by william shakespeare
drunk on love by jasmine guillory
trespasses by louise kennedy
fahrenheit 451 by ray bradbury
icebreaker by hannah grace
captain america: symbol of truth
captain america: sentinel of liberty
northanger abbey by jane austen
the wrongs of woman by mary wollstonecraft
the history of mary prince by mary prince
swimming in the dark by tomasz jedrowski
brokeback mountain by annie proulx
fourth wing by rebecca yarros
arthur and teddy are coming out by ryan love
black widow: the finely woven thread
black widow: the tightly tangled web
zodiac academy 1 by caroline peckham
black widow: last days
zodiac academy 2 by caroline peckham
carrie soto is back by taylor jenkins reid
zodiac academy 3 by caroline peckham
zodiac academy 4 by caroline peckham
zodiac academy 5 by caroline peckham
zodiac academy 6 by caroline peckham
athena’s child by hannah lynn
legends and lattes by travis baldtree
the burning chambers by kate mosse
jeoffrey the poets cat by oliver soden
the retreat by sarah pearse
zodiac academy 7 by caroline peckham
twisted love by ana huang
medusa by jessie burton
the housekeeper and the professor by yōko ogawa
the hike by lucy clarke
beautiful world where are you by sally rooney
fix her up by tessa bailey
love theoretically by ali hazelwood
the american roommate experiment by elena armas
hester by laurie lico albanese
the definitive black widow by stan lee
sense and sensibility by jane austen
civil war by mark millar
transcendent kingdom by yaa gyasi
hamnet by maggie o’farrell
wuthering heights by emily brönte
a room of one’s own by virginia woolf
northanger abbey by jane austen
the grasmere journals by dorothy wordsworth
things fall apart by chinua achebe
the adoption papers by jackie kay
sense and sensibility by jane austen
just like home by sarah gailey
pride and prejudice by jane austen
chéri by colette
zodiac academy 8 by caroline peckham
nervous conditions by tsitsi dangarembga
persuasion by jane austen
new animal by ella baxter
mansfield park by jane austen
the night watch by sarah waters
zong by marlene nourbese philip
chronicle of youth by vera brittain
faces in the water by janet frame
iron flame by rebecca yarros
beloved by toni morrison
fen by daisy johnson
regeneration by pat barker
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tinacalder · 2 years
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Dublin Harper To Perform At Belfast Music Festival Concert This Weekend
Dublin Harper To Perform At Belfast Music Festival Concert This Weekend
By Zahra Baz Dublin-native Anne-Marie O’Farrell will be taking to the stage this weekend as one of the many harpers due to perform at the Harps Alive│An Chruit Bheo│Harps Leevin festival Gala Finale Concert. Growing up surrounded by music and with Mary O’Hara serving as an inspiration, Anne-Marie’s passion for music and the harp in particular has established her as the leading lever harpist of…
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kantrips · 2 years
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2021 Reading Log
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In 2021 I read 71 books, beating my reading goal of 50! I was in two book clubs last year. For 2022 I’m dropping to one – I found the reading manageable but not the meetings.
I mainly read books that were slow paced, 300-499 pages long and reflective, emotional and dark. My top three genres were Classics, Literary and Historical.
Full list under the cut. Please recommend me things at will! For 2022 I want to read more poetry and am aiming to hit at least 70 books again.
The Overtstory – Richard Powers
The Song of Achilles – Madeline Miller
Homesick for Another World – Ottessa Moshfegh
The American Fiancée - Éric Dupont
The Silent Companions – Laura Purcell
The New Wilderness – Diane Cook
The Driver’s Seat – Muriel Spark
Emma – Jane Austen (comfort reread)
The Fellowship of the Ring – J.R.R. Tolkien (comfort reread)
The History of Bees – Maja Lunde
The Two Towers – J.R.R Tolkien (comfort reread)
My Year of Rest and Relaxation – Otessa Moshfegh (reread for book club)
The Return of the King – J.R.R Tolkien (comfort reread)
Hamnet – Maggie O’Farrell (a new favourite!)
Such a Fun Age – Kiley Reid (a new favourite!)
The Memory Police – Yoko Ogawa
The Catcher in the Rye – J.D. Salinger
The New Me – Halle Butler
The Radium Girls – Kate Moore
The Bell Jar – Sylvia Plath (reread for book club)
The Dutch House – Ann Patchett (a new favourite!)
Convenience Store Woman – Sayaka Murata (a new favourite!)
The Cost of Living – Deborah Levy
Wide Sargasso Sea – Jean Rhys
Rebecca – Daphne du Maurier (comfort reread)
Eggshell Skull – Bri Lee
Far from the Madding Crowd – Thomas Hardy (comfort reread)
Burial Rites – Hannah Kent (reread for book club)
Beauty – Bri Lee
The Silence of the Girls – Pat Barker
The Death of the Heart – Elizabeth Bowen (a new favourite!)
The Turn of the Key – Ruth Ware
The Thirty-Nine Steps – John Buchan (reread for book club)
The Road – Cormac McCarthy
In a Dark, Dark Wood – Ruth Ware
The Bass Rock – Evie Wyld
Starve Acre – Andrew Michael Hurley
The Labyrinth – Amanda Lohrey
The Winter People – Jennifer McMahon (contains offensive racial stereotyping)
Beautiful World, Where Are You – Sally Rooney
Useless Magic – Florence Welch
The Great Gatsby – F. Scott Fitzgerald
High Fidelity – Nick Hornby
A Few Days in the Country and Other Stories – Elizabeth Harrower
Brideshead Revisited – Evelyn Waugh
The Last Time I Lied – Riley Sager
The Museum of Modern Love – Heather Rose
The Silent Patient – Alex Michaelides
Frankenstein: The 1818 Text – Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley
The Mercies: A Novel – Kiran Millwood Hargrave
The Guest List – Lucy Foley
Life Before Man – Margaret Atwood
Unsheltered – Clare Moleta
The Mysterious Affair at Styles – Agatha Christie
Nocturnes: Five Stories of Music and Nightfall – Kazuo Ishiguro
Mr Salary – Sally Rooney
I Hope We Choose Love: A Trans Girl’s Notes from the End of the World – Kai Cheng Thom
The Yellow Wall-Paper – Charlotte Perkins Gilman
Exciting Times – Naoise Dolan
Persuasion – Jane Austen (comfort reread)
The Woman in Cabin 10 – Ruth Ware
The Harp in the South – Ruth Park
Upstream: Selected Essays – Mary Oliver
Cloud Atlas – David Mitchell
Little Eve – Catriona Ward
Collected Stories – John Cheever
Before the Coffee Gets Cold – Toshikazu Kawaguchi
The Go-Between – L.P. Hartley (a new favourite!)
Lady Oracle – Margaret Atwood (a new favourite!)
Final Girls – Riley Sager (I quite disliked the previous book I read by this author but forgot and picked this up from a street library!)
The Plague – Albert Camus
And currently reading: Girl, Woman, Other – Bernardine Evaristo
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duine-aiteach · 3 years
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Irish Writers - Adult
Cecelia Ahern
Sara Baume
Gerard Beirne
Maeve Binchy
John Boyne [gay]
Maeve Brennan
Anna Burns [NI]
Mary Costello
Roddy Doyle
Anne Enright
Rónán Hession
Norah Hoult
James Joyce
Claire Keegan
Marian Keyes
Mary Lavin
Una Mannion
Mike McCormack
John McGahern
Eimear McBride
Dervla McTiernan
Roisin Meaney
Edna O’Brien
Joseph O’Connor
Maggie O’Farrell
Sally Rooney
Donal Ryan
Colm Tóibín [gay]
James White (sci-fi)
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wolveswithoutteeth · 4 years
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any book recs? ✨
of course! my goodreads has more recommendations and i’ve created shelves for certain themes/time periods/genres but here are some favorites:
fiction:
the secret history by donna tartt
the goldfinch by donna tartt
red, white & royal blue by casey mcquiston
the song of achilles by madeline miller
the hours by michael cunningham
tipping the velvet by sarah waters
deathless by catherynne m valente
the round house by louise erdrich
ghost wall by sarah moss
on earth we’re briefly gorgeous by ocean vuong
if we were villains by m.l. rio
normal people by sally rooney (the tv adaptation is now available on hulu!)
conversations with friends by sally rooney
lie with me by philippe benson
girl with a pearl earring by tracy chevalier
homegoing by yaa gyasi
trumpet by jackie kay
tin man by sarah winman
little fires everywhere by celeste ng
everything i never told you by celeste ng
burial rites by hannah kent  
the remains of the day by kazuo ishiguro
the underground railroad by colson whitehead
americanah by chimamanda ngozi adichie
young adult:
we are okay by nina lacour
everything leads to you by nina lacour
the grisha trilogy by leigh bardugo
six of crows by leigh bardugo 
the winternight trilogy by katherine arden
shatter me series by tahereh mafi 
i’ll give you the sun by jandy nelson
19th and 20th century american lit:
moby dick by herman melville
little women by louisa may alcott
behind a mask (and other stories) by louisa may alcott
cecil dreeme by theodore winthrop
the awakening by kate chopin
the house of mirth by edith wharton
ethan frome and other stories by edith wharton
giovanni’s room by james baldwin
all of toni morrison’s books! (i recommend reading her work in publication order if you can but my favorites are beloved and the song of solomon)
victorian:
the moonstone by wilkie collins
lady audley’s secret by mary elizabeth braddon
jane eyre by charlotte bronte
villette by charlotte bronte
wuthering heights by emily bronte
the picture of dorian gray by oscar wilde
middlemarch by george eliot
bleak house by charles dickens
british modernism:
wide sargasso sea by jean rhys
good morning, midnight by jean rhys
voyage in the dark by jean rhys
mrs dalloway by virginia woolf
maurice by e.m. forster
the return of the soldier by rebecca west
collected stories by katherine mansfield
rebecca by daphne du murier
poetry:
devotions by mary oliver
crush by richard siken
war of the foxes by richard siken
collected poems by edna st. vincent millay
collected poems by christina rossetti
selected poems by edith wharton
undercurrent by rita wong
the wild iris by louise gluck
useless magic: lyrics and poetry by florence welch (if you’re a fan of florence + the machine, this hardcover book is beautifully published and includes poems, lyrics, illustrations, photography, etc.)
graphic novels:
all of isabel greenberg’s books!
through the woods by emily carroll (very spooky! and the art is beautiful!)
and the ocean was our sky by patrick ness 
short story collections:
the bloody chamber and other stories by angela carter
how to breathe underwater by julie orringer
by light we knew our names by anne valente
st lucy’s home for girls raised by wolves by karen russell
kissing the witch: old tales in new skins by emma donoghue
interpreter of maladies by jhumpa lahiri
the thing around your neck by chimamanda ngozi adichie
the last animal by abby geni
nonfiction/theory:
upstream: selected essays by mary oliver
into the wild by jon krakauer
hunger by roxane gay
braiding sweetgrass: indigenous wisdom, scientific knowledge and the teachings of plants by robin wall kimmerer
playing in the dark: whiteness and the literary imagination by toni morrison
in the wake: on blackness and being by christina sharpe
forms by caroline levine
touching feeling by eve kosofsky sedgwick
TBR books i’m excited to read as soon as this semester is over:
the starless sea by erin morgenstern
frankissstein by jeanette winterson
glass town by isabel greenberg
supper club by lara williams
the night watchman by louise erdrich
writers & lovers by lily king
her body and other parties by carmen maria machado
the library book by susan orlean
my life in middlemarch by rebecca mead
my year of rest and relaxation by ottessa moshfegh
the lonely city by olivia laing
the women’s prize postponed their winner announcement to september so i’ll be reading from the longlist this summer (and some previous winners/longlisters to celebrate the prize’s 25th anniversary this year!) this year’s list is really strong but a few books i’m most excited about:
hamnet by maggie o’farrell
girl, woman, other by bernadine evaristo
a thousand ships by natalie haynes
weather by jenny offill
red at the bone by jacqueline woodson
lastly, support independent book stores (if you can!) i ordered two books last month that i’m excited to read:
crude by olivia laing
a little book on form by robert haas
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poetlcs · 4 years
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books I’ve read in 2020 (so far) + their ratings  
(update books 60-70)  /  7.10.20
non-fiction
crossing the line: australia’s secret history in the timor sea by kim mcgrath
hood feminism: notes from the women that a movement forgot by mikki kendall
the uninhabitable earth: life after warming by david wallace-wells
homo deus: a brief history of tomorrow by yuval noah harari
SPQR: a history of ancient rome by mary beard
sister outsider by audre lorde
all boys aren’t blue by george m. johnson
under a biliari tree i born by alice biari smith
the lost world of british communism by raphael samuel
the ethnic cleansing of palestine by ilan pappé
stamped from the beginning: the definitive history of racist ideas in America by ibram x. kendi
catch and kill: lies, spies and a conspiracy to protect predators by ronan farrow
classics
maurice by e.m forster
emma by jane austen
perfume by patrick suskind
the color purple by alice walker
a study in scarlet by arthur conan doyle
dracula by bram stoker
the tenant of wildfell hall by anne bronte
fantasy
the diviners by libba bray (reread)
lair of dreams by libba bray (reread)
before the devil breaks you by libba bray (reread)
the king of crows by libba bray
clockwork princess by cassandra clare (reread)
we unleash the merciless storm by tehlor kay mejia
wolfsong by t.j klune
the fate of the tearling by erika johansan
girl, serpent, thorn by melissa bashardoust
crier’s war by nina varela (reread)
we hunt the flame by hafsah faizal
ghosts of the shadow market by cassandra clare + others
a storm of swords: part two by george r.r martin
amarah by l.l mcneil
chain of gold by cassandra clare
the gilded wolves by roshani chokshi (reread)
the silvered serpents by roshani chokshi
girls of storm and shadow by natasha ngan
science fiction
This is How You Lose the Time War by Amal El-Mohtar and Max Gladstone
not your sidekick by c.b lee
the martian by andy weir
speculative fiction:
the deep by rivers solomon
how long ‘til black future month? by n.k jemisin
terra nullius by claire g. coleman
magical realism
blanca & roja by anna-marie mclemore
mystery
the family upstairs by lisa jewell
the hand on the wall by maureen johnson
the lake house by kate morton
contemporary fiction
maybe in another life by taylor jenkins reid
girl, woman, other by bernadine evaristo
tin heart by shivan plozza
a little life by hanya yanigahara
a girl like that by tanaz bhathena
little fires everywhere by celeste ng
stay gold by tobly mcsmith
everything leads to you by nina lacour
the falling in love montage by ciara smyth
normal people by sally rooney
the glass hotel by emily st john mandel
only mostly devastated by sophie gonzales
historical fiction
half of a yellow sun by chimamanda ngozi adichie
hamnet by maggie o’farrell
all the light we cannot see by anthony doerr
romance:
get a life, chloe brown by talia hibbert
poetry:
on earth we’re briefly gorgeous by ocean vuong
clap when you land by elizabeth acevedo
translated fiction:
princess bari by hwang sok-yong (south korean)
graphic novels:
laura dean keeps breaking up with me by mariko tamaki and rosemary valero-o'connell (illustrations)
anthology:
meet me at the intersection edited by rebecca lim and ambelin kwaymullina
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ellasbookdiary · 4 years
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All the books I read in 2019:
1. The Dreamers by Karen Thompson Walker
2. Late In The Day by Tessa Hadley
3. The Labyrinth Of Spirits by Carlos Ruiz Zafon
4. The Binding by Bridget Collins
5. The Weight Of Water by Sarah Crossan
6. The Lost Man by Jane Harper
7. Last Ones Left Alive by Sarah Davis-Goff
8. The Heavens by Sarah Newman
9. Spring by Ali Smith
10. Sweet Sorrow by David Nicholls
11. We Come Apart by Sarah Crossan and Brian Conaghan
12. How To Fail by Elizabeth Day
13. Machines Like Me by Ian McEwan
14. Enigma Variations by Andre Aciman
15. Toffee by Sara Crossan
16. Fingers In The Sparkle Jar by Chris Packham
17. Ghost Wall by Sarah Moss
18. Everything You Ever Wanted by Luiza Sauma 
19. The Long Forgotten by David Whitehouse
20. On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous by Ocean Vuong
21. City Of Girls by Elizabeth Gilbert
22. Fleishman Is In Trouble by Taffy Brodesser-Akner
23. Naturally Tan by Tan France
24. One More Croissant For The Road by Felicity Cloake
25. Sweet Home by Wendy Erskine
26. The Hiding Game by Naomi Wood
27. Lake Success by Gary Shteyngart
28. Crossfire by Malorie Blackman
29. Five Quarters Of The Orange by Joanne Harris
30. An American Marriage by Tayari Jones
31. Find Me by Andre Aciman
32. One Of Us Is Lying by Karen M. McManus
33. The Giver Of Stars by Jojo Moyes
34.  Ask Again, Yes by Mary Beth Keane
35.  I Never Said I Loved You by Rhik Samadder
36.  The Man Who Saw Everything by Deborah Levy
37. The Dutch House by Ann Patchett
38.  My Last Supper by Jay Rayner
39. Olive, Again by Elizabeth Strout
40. Circe by Madeleine Miller
41. The Testaments by Margaret Atwood
42. The Starless Sea by Erin Morgenstern
43. The Secret Commonwealth and Philip Pullman
44. The Cockroach by Ian McEwan
45. No Mercy by Martina Cole
46. Gilead by Marilynne Robinson
47. Greatest Hits by Laura Barnett
48. This Is Going To Hurt by Adam Kay
49. Hamnet by Maggie O’Farrell
50. Silver Sparrow by Tayari Jones
51. All The Old Knives by Olen Steinhauer
52. Permanent Record by Mary HK Choi
53. Finding Chika by Mitch Albom
54. Three Women by Lisa Taddeo
55. The Glass Hotel by Emily St John Mandel
56.  One Of Us Is Next by Karen McManus
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adaletgunlugu · 6 years
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Istanbul to host International Ethno Music Festival
Istanbul to host International Ethno Music Festival
Istanbul will host the International Ethno Music Festival on April 1.  (more…)
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tinacalder · 2 years
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Dublin Harper To Perform At Belfast Music Festival Concert This Weekend
Dublin Harper To Perform At Belfast Music Festival Concert This Weekend
By Zahra Baz Dublin-native Anne-Marie O’Farrell will be taking to the stage this weekend as one of the many harpers due to perform at the Harps Alive│An Chruit Bheo│Harps Leevin festival Gala Finale Concert. Growing up surrounded by music and with Mary O’Hara serving as an inspiration, Anne-Marie’s passion for music and the harp in particular has established her as the leading lever harpist of…
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herwitchinesss · 6 years
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ruthi’s books read in 2018 so far
first update 5/29/2018
total - 75
“The Ice-Cream Makers” by Ernest van der Kwast “Emergency Contact” by Mary HK Choi “We Need to Talk About Kevin” by Lionel Shriver “Shallow Graves” by Kali Wallace “Dread Nation” by Justina Ireland “The Accidental Apprentice” by Vikas Swarup “Tornado Weather” by Deborah E Kennedy “Swing Time” by Zadie Smith “The Dying Game” by Asa Avdic “Amberlough” by Lara Elena Donnely “The Mars Room” by Rachel Kushner “Poison” by Galt Niederhoffer “The Bloody Chamber & other stories” by Angela Carter “Summer Hours at the Robbers Library” by Sue Halpern “The Good Girl” by Mary Kubica “The Party” by Robyn Harding “The Woman in Cabin 10″ by Ruth Ware “The Girl on the Train” by Paula Hawkins “Dark Exodus” by Thomas L Sniegoski  “The Demonists” by Thomas L Sniegoski “The Arrangement” by Sarah Dunn “A Line In the Dark” by Malinda Lo “Alias Grace” by Margaret Atwood “Huntress” by Malinda Lo “Of Sorrow and Such” by Angela Slatter “Jane Steele” by Lyndsay Faye “Erotic Stories for Punjabi Widows” by Bali Kaur Jaswal “Quackery: A Brief History of the Worst Ways to Cure Everything” by Lydia Kang “Unearthly Things” by Michelle Gagnon “Dancing With the Tiger” by Lili Wright “Viva, Rose!” by Susan Krawitz “Pride & Prejudice” by Jane Austen “Gweenpool vol 3″ “The Masked City” by Genevieve Cogman “The Afterlife of Holly Chase” by Cynthia Hand “Shadow Girl” by Liana Liu “The Kindness of Enemies” by Leila Aboulela “The Wood” by Chelsea Bobulski “Genuine Fraud” by E. Lockhart “Bad Girls with Perfect Faces” by Lynn Weingarten “The Lying Game” by Sara Shepard “I Stop Somewhere” by TE Carter “People Like Us” by Dana Mele “The Wangs vs The World” by Jade Chang “Tulip Fever” by Deborah Moggach “Wedding Night” by Sophie Kinsella “Beasts Made of Night” by Tochi Onyebuchi “I am I am I am” by Maggie O’Farrell “The Invisible Library” by Genevieve Cogman “It’s Not Like It’s a Secret” by Misa Sugiura “The Wedding Date” by Jasmine Guillory “Zoo City” by Lauren Beukes “The Passion of Dolssa” by Julie Berry “Dreams & Shadows” by C Robert Cargill “Rivers of London: Detective Stories” “The Hanging Tree” by Ben Aaronovitch “This Is the Story of a Happy Marriage” by Ann Patchett “They Both Die at the End” by Adam Silvera “Spider-Man & Deadpool vol 2″ “The Immortalists” by Chloe Benjamin “Hearts & Other Body Parts” by Ira Bloom “The Girl Who Wrote In Silk” by Kelli Estes “Ms Marvel Vol 3″ “Ms Marvel vol 2″ “Spiderman & Deadpool vol 1″ “Foxglove Summer” by Ben Aaronovitch “Lady Killers: Deadly Women Throughout History” by Tori Telfer “Kids of Appetite” by David Arnold “The Answers” by Catherine Lacey “Broken Monsters” by Lauren Beukes “Her Body & Other Parties” by Carmen Maria Machado “Sweet Bean Paste” by Durian Sukegawa “If There’s No Tomorrow” by Jennifer L Armentrout “The City of Brass” by SA Chakraborty “Den of Wolves” by Juliet Marillier
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siafamanequi · 4 years
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Popol Vuh — For You And Me (1991)
Album Overview
Artist: Popol Vuh
Release date: 1991
Genre: Dance/Electronic
Style: Folk Rock, Krautrock
Label: Milan Records
Tracklist
1. For You And Me 5:27
2. Wind Of The Stars In Their Eyes 3:04
3. Little Bazaari 7:51
4. Compassion 5:05
5. When Love Is Calling You 4:13
6. In Your Eyes 1:02
7. OM Mani Padme Hum 1 1:12
8. OM Mani Padme Hum 2 2:48
9.OM Mani Padme Hum 3 4:32
10. OM Mani Padme Hum 4 5:19
11. For You
Credits
Guitar — Daniel Fishelscher
Piano — Florian Ficke
Harp — Anne-Marie O’Farrell
Keyboard, Guitar — Guido Hieronymus
Vocals — Renate Knaup
Producer — Popol Vuh
Fun Fact: Released in 1991, For You and Me is the seventeenth album by German musical collective—Popol Vuh. “For You And Me” is an album the is huge on moods and worth. The instrumentation beautifully & effortlessly blend to create a rich sonic-tapestry for listening pleasure. Renate Knaup’s vocalizations add an ethereal & dreamy paunch to the flowing instrumentation. “For you & Me” is very good for relaxation, because of its transportive nature. The Album art is really interesting, artistically.
This musical ensemble was established by keyboardist Florian Fricke in 1969 with the talented Holger Trülzsch, Frank Fiedler and Bettina Fricke. Other important members included Djong Yun, Renate Knaup, Conny Veit, Daniel Fichelscher, Klaus Wiese, and Robert Eliscu.
The name of the band seemed to have been inspired by Popol Vuh, a narrative filled with mythology and history of the Kʼicheʼ people, who are part of the ancient Maya civilization.
Below is a YouTube link to Popol Vuh’s “For You and Me” (1991)
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adherantnerdhi · 7 years
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#TropLaSerie #EvelyneBrochu @icitoutv Verotv bande announce trailer, fan EN subs 中字 https://youtu.be/I-wmob34ueI http://www.cbc.radio-canada.ca/fr/centre-de-presse/2016/09/20/ Isabelle par Evelyne Brochu Anaïs, petite souer d'Isabelle par Virginie Fortin Manuela, amie meilluere d'Isabelle par Alice Pascual Marc-Antoine, ex d'Isabelle par Éric Bruneau Sophie, copine de Marc-Antoine par Noémie O’Farrell Romain, voisin d'Isabelle par Pierre-Yves Cardinal Samir, cohabitant de Manuela par Mehdi Bousaidan Myriam, nouvelle patronne d'Isabelle par Anne-Marie Cadieux Carole, mère d'Isabelle et Anaïs par Louise Portal Official fanspage https://www.facebook.com/Troplaserie will be shown on https://www.facebook.com/icitoutv Trop la serie fans' twitter, updating you as more as possible related news about the cast and the writer. FR-EN Charlotte Burelle CHT/Sync adherantnerdhi translation in creatives commons ALL  RIGHTS RESERVED TO THEIR RESPECTIVE OWNERS
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tvhaberlerim-blog · 6 years
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Uluslararası Etno Müzik Festivali başlıyor!
Uluslararası Etno Müzik Festivali başlıyor!
6 ülkeden 16 sanatçının sahne alacağı Uluslararası Etno Müzik Festivali, bu yıl ilk kez müzikseverlerle buluşacak İBB Kültür Daire Başkanlığı tarafından bu yıl ilk kez düzenlenecek olan Uluslararası Etno Müzik Festivali başlıyor. Gazete Habertürk’teki habere göre; festival özel olarak hazırlanan ‘Arakan’ konseriyle savaş ve katliamların devam ettiği ülkelerin acılarını paylaşmak üzere farklı…
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bookish-thinking · 4 years
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Coming Soon ...
It just keeps going ... This year is seriously packed with amazing new releases, and March is no exception. 
On March 3rd alone, no less than eight books will be published that I want to recommend will be published:
“The Night Watchman” by Louise Erdrich, a novel about the Native American fight against dispossession. 
“These Ghosts are Family” by Maisy Card, which explores trauma and ghosts, as well as finding individuality within a family. 
“Anne K. A Love Story” by Jenny Lee, an Asian-American YA retelling of Anna Karenina.
“Sharks in the Time of Saviors” by Kawai Strong Washburn, a magic-realism novel of Hawaiian myth. 
“Barn 8″ by Deb Olin Unferth, a piece of environmentalist fiction about the right measure of action to create change.
“Under the Rainbow” by Celia Laskey, where a “task force of queer volunteers” is send to change the mindsets and spread tolerance in the “most homophobic town in the U.S.”
“Docile” by K.M. Szpara explores a modern, sci-fi version of slavery, in which your body and soul belong to the person who holds your contract.
“The Kingdom of Back” by Marie Lu, a historical fantasy novel about the unexplored potential of the sister of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart.
Excuse that this will become such a long post, but there is more. 
March 5th: “One Year of Ugly” by Caroline Mackenzie, a novel about the tumultuous lives of a Venezuelan family in Trinidad. 
March 10th: “A Good Neighborhood” by Therese Anne Fowler, a Romeo-and-Juliet-story about race, class, and living peacefully alongside each other.
Also March 10th: “My Dark Vanessa” by Kate Elizabeth Russell, a novel about the affair between a student and her teacher, which comes into a new light amidst the Me Too movement.
March 17th, “Darling Rose” by Stephanie Wrobel: after her childhood was stolen by a mother who pretended she was sick, frail and allergic to everything, a daughter plans to take revenge. 
March 24th: “The City We Became” by N.K. Jemisin, the beginning of an urban fantasy series, in which cities have souls, and New York City - which has five - has to defend itself against evil.
March 31st, “Hamnet” by Maggie O’Farrell, a story about Shakespeare, Hamlet, creativity, forgotten figures of history, and the loss of a child. 
And finally, also on March 31st, “Hex” by Rebecca Dinerstein Knight, a dark academia novel about obsession and love, ambition, poison and research.
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