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#Katherine J Chen
fleurlungs · 2 years
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“Sometimes there is no space, so one has to make a space, to carve it out in order to keep alive. And it is the same rule with life. If there is no space for you, then you must create it.”
— Joan, Katherine J. Chen
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nakedinashes · 2 years
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books cristina read in 2022: joan - katherine j chen
“When one dies, the moment of death is very brief. One instantly wakes again, as if roused from a light sleep, and the soul is transported between heartbeats to another world. The child will find herself in a meadow, a place unlike any other. On every wildflower, a butterfly. In every tree, a songbird. The sun never shines too bright, for the hands of the angels moderate its rays, and from their mouths, they blow cooling breezes so the climate is eternally spring. It is a place God reserved for only His most loved, the most innocent souls He has called back to Him.”
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inabooknook · 2 years
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Joan: A Novel of Joan of Arc by Katherine J. Chen
This novel was breathtaking. Every step of the way, I wanted the book to end differently than we all know it inevitably does. Chen breathes new life into the story of Joan of Arc and turns her from a holy maiden to a warrior. The story, as one can assume, follows the life of Joan, but in a way we have not seen before. She focuses on the humanity of the woman, and turns her from a faithful believer to someone more feminist and strong than we could have ever imagined. I thoroughly enjoyed the book but as all good books are, this one ends too soon. It ends wrong, but such is the way of books based on true stories. She died too young, but we can learn from this book. The author subtly teaches us that we need not take the road paved for us, but the road that will take us to the place we belong, and that may be somewhere people like us have never gone before. Joan of Arc was seen as an anomaly in her time, but now we realize that she was one of the west's best known and most recognizable early feminist icons. Read this book, even if you don't like historical fiction. You will be dazzled.
This ebook was provided by NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.
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wherekizzialives · 9 months
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August Reads
As I’ve mentioned elsewhere, I ran up against the limitations of my body this August and so the months reviews are a little late (although I’ve back dated the post so it is in the correct order on my blog) and I didn’t read anywhere near as much as I did in July because I have been trying to properly rest when I can rather than “rest” by crocheting and reading at the same time. Of the six,…
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shakespear-esque · 1 year
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I decided, if I am to scream, let it be in battle. There is no chance for peace except at the point of a sword.
From Joan, by Katherine J. Chen
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kammartinez · 1 year
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She learned that day: When one man beats you, it invites others to try, too. People can smell out weakness. Only strength keeps them at bay.
Joan: A Novel, by Katherine J. Chen
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kamreadsandrecs · 1 year
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Title: Joan: A Novel of Joan of Arc Author: Katherine J. Chen Genre/s: historical Content/Trigger Warnings: suicide, rape (implied), emotional and physical abuse of a child, emotional and physical abuse of a spouse, animal death, death of a child, death of a sibling, war-related violence typical for the period Summary (from publisher website): 1412. France is mired in a losing war against England. Its people are starving. Its king is in hiding. From this chaos emerges a teenage girl who will turn the tide of battle and lead the French to victory, becoming an unlikely hero whose name will echo across the centuries. In Katherine J. Chen’s hands, the myth and legend of Joan of Arc is transformed into a flesh-and-blood young woman: reckless, steel-willed, and brilliant. This meticulously researched novel is a sweeping narrative of her life, from a childhood steeped in both joy and violence, to her meteoric rise to fame at the head of the French army, where she navigates the perils of the battlefield and the equally treacherous politics of the royal court. Many are threatened by a woman who leads, and Joan draws wrath and suspicion from all corners, while her first taste of fame and glory leaves her vulnerable to her own powerful ambition. With unforgettably vivid characters, transporting settings, and action-packed storytelling, Joan is a thrilling epic, a triumph of historical fiction, as well as a feminist celebration of one remarkable—and remarkably real—woman who left an indelible mark on history. Buy Here: https://bookshop.org/p/books/joan-a-novel-of-joan-of-arc/18860873 Spoiler-Free Review: I’m familiar with Saint Joan of Arc, mostly thanks to a Catholic school education and a general curiosity about the lives of these people whom the Church seemed to think were pretty damn important, if they were powerful enough to bend God’s ear on behalf of us mere mortals. Like most Catholics I’m familiar with the general outline of her life story: how as a girl she had visions encouraging her to save France; how she spoke to the Dauphin and convinced him to give her an army; how she succeeded in battle until she didn’t; and then was burnt at the stake by the English for heresy. However, the memory of her victories continued to live in the memory of the French people (not least because her achievements were crucial to France winning the Hundred Years’ War), and almost five hundred years after her execution she’d be canonized as a saint, thus cementing her legendary status. It’s a good story - a VERY good story. It’s why Joan is one of the most memorable saints in the Church’s immense roster, and why even non-religious folk know who she is and the general outline of her life and eventual death. It also helps that there are PLENTY of fictionalized depictions of her, both in print and in film, and there are almost as many non-fictional accounts of her life too. If you want to go down a rabbit hole of everything Saint Joan, you can easily do that and get lost down there for a good long while. So: with all of these books and movies already out there, many of which are considered to be quite good, what makes Chen’s novel, in particular, stand out? Personally, I think it’s that her take on Joan is, firstly, very human, and secondly, there’s little of the divine to be seen anywhere in this story. Those two things are tied together: throughout the novel Joan’s perspective on her achievements is that SHE has accomplished them, no one else. Oh, sure, she’s aware that her talents are likely God-given, (and there’s a brief moment in the novel where she contemplates God taking those talents away and gets really scared), but more in the manner of a seed being planted in her - a seed that was nurtured under the abusive hand of her father Jacques d’Arc, and which she then found use for as she grew older. This doesn’t mean she’s an atheist, of course, nor even an agnostic. No: Joan believes in God, but her relationship with God is different. Instead of begging and pleading to him when she prays, she bargains with him. There’s a couple scenes in the novel where she talks about how her prayers to God go, and it’s generally her talking about all these things she has done and wants to do, and then telling God “So: what do you think? Maybe we can help each other out here.” This is very different from the other depictions of Joan that I’ve seen, which have portrayed her as completely devoted to God and moving only as he (through her visions) commands her to. Speaking of visions: there’s none of that to be seen here. Oh sure, Joan has dreams, but not the visions (or hallucinations) of the saints that a lot of material out there says she had. Instead, Joan’s motivations are entirely - and heartbreakingly - human. I won’t go into the details because that way lie spoilers, but suffice to say that what gets Joan out of her home and to the court of the Dauphin has very, VERY little to do with divine inspiration, but A LOT MORE to do with entirely human (and, therefore, probably more relatable) motivations. But that raises the question: where DID all those stories of visions and divine inspiration come from in the first place? In Chen’s novel, those are all part of a propaganda push, orchestrated by certain members of the Dauphin’s court, in order to get the Dauphin off his butt and moving in fighting back against the English and the Burgundians, and then later, after her initial victories, rumors and stories concocted by people who had encountered her and were looking for something hopeful to hang onto in the face of the despair and tragedy of the war. Again I won’t get into that too much because spoilers, but it soon becomes clear to the reader that in the novel, the legend of Joan was something other people created, and that she herself didn’t have much to do with its creation except through her actions - actions which were then taken by others and spun this way and that for their own purposes. In the novel, Joan is entirely aware of these stories, and how she deals with them is interesting to read about too. Interesting, too, is how she is aware she is being used, but decides to take that in stride and find her own way of using others in turn to achieve her own ends. Overall, this is a very good read, largely because I like this take on Joan: not  a saint, and not a madwoman, but someone thoroughly human, who wanted to do what she could with what she had - and accomplished a great deal, even as she went against the grain of what was expected of her as a woman. However, just as her own motivations and desires were entirely human, so too were the challenges that stood in her way - and while some she could overcome, there were more that she could not, like systemic misogyny and political maneuvering. Despite knowing the end of her story even before the novel begins, reading about this particular take on a familiar figure was quite fun, and I think other people will enjoy it too. Rating: five fleur de lys
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quo-usque-tandem · 1 year
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Joan by Katherine J. Chen
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crowclubkaz · 1 month
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😈📚 characters from hazbin hotel as books 📚😈
i finally got around to posting all of these on my bookstagram, and i figured i'd post them here too! putting this together was so much fun that i just had to share. full book list below the cut!
👑 Charlie: - Tress of the Emerald Sea by Brandon Sanderson - One Last Stop by Casey McQuiston
✖️ Vaggie: - The Bandit Queens by Parini Shroff - Hopepunk by Preston Norton
🎥 Angel Dust: - Rented Heart by Garrett Leigh - Gay Bar: Why We Went Out by Jeremy Atherton Lin ♣️ Husk: - The Lost Weekend by Charles Jackson - The Gambler by Fyodor Dostoevsky
📻 Alastor: - A Certain Hunger by Chelsea G. Summers - Lost Signals by Max Booth III
🧹 Niffty: - Maid by Stephanie Land - The Dead Janitor's Club by Jeff Klima
🍎 Lucifer: - Angels Before Man by rafael nicolás - Dayspring by Anthony Oliveria
🐍 Sir Pentious: - Soulless by Gail Carriger - Boneshaker by Cherie Priest
💣 Cherri Bomb: - Girls to the Front by Sara Marcus - We Sold Our Souls by Grady Hendrix
🚬 Valentino: - Snuff by Chuck Palahniuk - Getting Off: Pornography and the End of Masculinity by Robert Jensen
📺 Vox: - Universal Harvester by John Darnielle - White Noise by Don DeLillo
📱 Velvette: - The Devil Wears Prada by Lauren Weisberger - Followers by Megan Angelo
🎸 Adam: - Fifty Shades of Grey by E.L. James - Why Men Love Bitches by Sherry Argov
🗡️ Lute: - Joan by Katherine J. Chen - The Valkyrie by Kate Heartfield
😇 Sera: - The Five People You Meet in Heaven by Mitch Albom - Dark Rise by C.S. Pacat
👼 Emily: - Halo by Alexandra Adornetto - Blue Skies by T.L. Martin
🥀 Rosie: - In the Garden of Spite by Camilla Bruce - Woman Eating by Claire Kohda
👸 Lilith: - Lilith by Eve Marmery - Jezebel by Megan Barnard
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acotars · 1 year
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books read in 2023
january
sweep in peace by ilona andrews
one fell sweep by ilona andrews
a court of mist and fury by sarah j. maas
sweep of the blade by ilona andrews
sweep with me by ilona andrews
my best friend’s exorcism by grady hendrix
kiss her once for me by alison cochrun
the seven husbands of evelyn hugo by taylor jenkins reid
i’m glad my mom died by jennette mccurdy
love and other words by christina lauren
sweep of the heart by ilona andrews
the only living girl on earth by charles yu
witches get stuff done by molly harper
you had me at hola by alexis daria
her vigilante by lillian lark
inconvenient daughter by lauren j. sharkey
anon pls. by deuxmoi
you are eating an orange. you are naked. by sheung-king
legends & lattes by travis baldree
bad vibes only (and other things i bring to the table) by nora mcinerny
signs of cupidity by raven kennedy
bonds of cupidity by raven kennedy
crimes of cupidity by raven kennedy
read: 23
february
exciting times by naoise dolan
sweethand by n.g. peltier
you made a fool of death with your beauty by akwaeke emezi
something wilder by christina lauren
highly suspicious and unfairly cute by talia hibbert
you deserve each other by sarah hogle
this is how you lose the time war by amal el-mohtar and max goldstone
would you rather by allison ashley
read: 8
march
meet me in the margins by melissa ferguson
king of battle and blood by scarlett st. clair
the exotic by hampton sides
river of shadows by karina halle
alone with you in the ether by olivie blake
lovelight farms by b.k. borison
the soulmate equation by christina lauren
before i let go by kennedy ryan
haunting adeline by h.d. carlson
the lies i tell by julie clark
one jump at a time by nathan chen
our wives under the sea by julia armfield
all systems red (the murderbot diaries #1) by martha wells
before the coffee gets cold by toshikazu kawaguchi
read: 14
april
funny you should ask by elissa sussman
make a scene by mimi grace
sweeter than chocolate by lizzie shane
the kiss quotient by helen hoang
my favorite half-night stand by christina lauren
romantic comedy by curtis sittenfeld
icebreaker by a.l. graziadei
the wedding proposal by john swansiger
circling back to you by julie tieu
by the book by amanda sellet
a lady’s guide to mischief and mayhem by manda collins
love in the time of serial killers by alicia thompson
if the shoe fits by julie murphy
whispers of you by catherine cowles
the kiss curse by erin sterling
by the book by jasmine guillory
honey & spice by bolu babalola
one night on the island by josie silver
the bodyguard by katherine center
the reunion by kayla olson
the neighbor favor by kristina forest
crooked kingdom by leigh bardugo
do i know you? by emily wibberley & austin siegemund-broka
just my type by falon ballard
delilah green doesn’t care by ashley herring blake
happy place by emily henry
dating dr. dil by nisha sharma
icebreaker by hannah grace
count your lucky stars by alexandria bellefleur
stone cold fox by rachel koller croft 
fake it till you bake it by jamie wesley
read: 31
may
the dead romantics
motherthing by ainslie hogarth
the woman in the library by sulari gentill
artificial condition (the murderbot diaries #2) by martha wells
the last word by taylor adams
you shouldn’t have come here by jeneva rose
read: 6
june
fourth wing (the empyrean #1) by rebecca yarros
the very secret society of irregular witches by sangu mandanna
love, theoretically by ali hazelwood
read: 3
july
the traitor queen (the bridge kingdom #2) by danielle l. jensen
the beast by katee robert
baldur's gate: descent into avernus by by james introcaso et. al
forget me not by julie soto
the wishing game by meg shaffer
read: 5
august
the true love experiment by christina lauren
pachinko by min jin lee
almond by sohn won-pyung, translated by joosun lee
hook, line, and sinker by tessa bailey
read: 4
september
hey, u up? (for a serious relationship): how to turn your booty call into your emergency contact by emily axford & brian murphy
everyone knows your mother is a witch by rivka galchen
fangs by sarah andersen
a room with a view by e.m. forster
juniper bean resorts to murder by gracie ruth mitchell
one's company by ashley hutson
the mysterious affair at styles by agatha christie
solita: a gothic romance by vivien rainn
you, again by kate goldbeck
the undertaking of hart and mercy by megan bannen
my roommate is a vampire by jenna levine
the picture of dorian gray by oscar wilde
the vampires of el norte by isabel cañas
her body and other parties by carmen maria machado
evil eye by etaf rum
the seven year slip by ashley poston
read: 17
october
keeper of enchanted rooms by charlie n. holmberg
the serpent and the wings of night by carissa broadbent
shy by max porter
down comes the night by allison saft
the unfortunate side effects of heartbreak and magic by breanne randall
the hurricane wars by thea guanzon
read: 6
november
a witch's guide to fake dating a demon by sarah hawley
the wake-up call by beth o'leary
when in rome by sarah adams
the view was exhausting by mikaella clements and onjuli datta
hello stranger by katherine center
practice makes perfect by sarah adams
do your worst by rosie danan
read: 7
december
bookshops & bonedust by travis baldree
the fake mate by lana ferguson
read: 2
final count: 127/100
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luxe-pauvre · 4 months
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JANUARY 2024
Read:
Bless this mess
Booksmart
Joan by Katherine J. Chen
Watched:
Slow Horses (S3)
The Tourist (S2)
Killers of the Flower Moon
Listened To:
No Cars Go by Arcade Fire
Destroy Everything You Touch by Ladytron
Hang Me up to Dry by Cold War Kids
This Modern Love by Bloc Party
Time to Pretend by MGMT
Loneliness by Tomcraft
Murder on the Dancefloor by Sophie Ellis Bextor
Went To:
Nothing of note.
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its-tortle · 11 months
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tortle's 2023 reads
persuasion by jane austen - ●●●●○
ragtime by e.l. doctorov - ●●●○○
a study in pink & the sign of the four by arthur conan doyle - ●●●○○
convenience store woman by sayaka murata - ●●●○○
jane eyre by charlotte brontë - ●●●●○
just kids by patti smith - ●●●○○
hamnet by maggie o'farrel - ●●●●○
gruppenbild mit dame by heinrich böll - ●●●●○
(rr) six of crows duology by leigh bardugo - ●●●●●
(rr) i'll give you the sun by jandy nelson - ●●●●○
in the skin of a lion by michael ondaatje - ●●●○○
brief an den vater by franz kafka - ●●●●○
when we were orphans by kazuo ishiguro - ●●○○○
one flew over the cuskoo's nest by ken kesey - ●●●○○
piranesi by suzanne collins - ●●●●●
the hundred secret senses by amy tan - ●●●●○
liebesperlen by mariana leky - ●●●●○
franny & zooey by j.d. salinger - ●●●●○
the overstory by richard powers - ●●●●●
the virgin suicides by jeffrey eugenides - ●●●●○
our wives under the sea by julia armfield - ●●●○○
everything i know about love by dolly alderton - ●●●●●
cat's cradle by kurt vonnegut - ●●●○○
untamed by glennon doyle - ●●●●○
der grosse sommer by ewald arenz - ●●●○○
(rr) mosquitoland by david arnold - ●●●●○
the grass is singing by doris lessing - ●●○○○
people person by candice carty-williams - ●●●●○
the tennant of wildfell hall by anne brontë - ●●●●○
the island of missing trees by elif shayak - ●●●●●
briefe an einen jungen dichter by rainer maria rilke - ●●●●○
white teeth by zadie smith - ●●●●○
this is how you lose the time war by amal el-mohtar and max gladstone - ●●●●○
braiding sweetgrass by robin wall kimmerer - ●●●○○
wanderer, kommst du nach spa... by heinrich böll - ●●●●○
a hundred years of solitude by gabriel garcìa marquez - ●●●○○
matrix by lauren groff - ●●●○○
daisy jones and the six by taylor jenkins reid - ●●●●○
the age of innocence by edith wharton - ●●●●○
die frau auf der treppe by bernhard schlink - ●●●●○
midnight in the garden of good and evil by john berendt - ●●●●●
joan by katherine j. chen - ●●●●○
pigs in heaven by barbara kingsolver - ●●●●●
the seven husbands of evelyn hugo by taylor jenkins reid - ●●●●○
percy jackson and the olympians (5 book series) - ●●●○○
i'm glad my mom died by jennette mccurdy - ●●●●○
(rr) the unbearable lightness of being by milan kundera - ●●●●●
the circle by dave eggers - ●●○○○
die blechtrommel by günter grass - ●●●●○
the secret history by donna tartt - ●●●●○
the hunger games (trilogy) by suzanne collins - ●●●●○
the ballad of songbirds and snakes by suzanne collins - ●●●○○
young mungo by douglas stuart - ●●●●●
ninth house by leigh bardugo - ●●●○○
last night at the telegraph club by melinda lo - ●●●○○
my book ranking system, for insight:
●●●●● -- loved loved loved this. it might have made me cry. i will be recommending this to everyone ●●●●○ -- nice!! a good read. would possibly reread and will be keeping it all pretty on my shelf ●●●○○ -- t'was a book! maybe not quite my genre or not what i needed in that moment, but no ragrets. i still got something out of it ●●○○○ -- eh. didn't really need to read this. it was kind of unoriginal and/or not my thing. will give away my copy ●○○○○ -- could not finish. who published this and why.
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darkside-cookies · 9 months
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για το book ask, από βιβλία που έχω διαβάσει και κανώ rec:
house of leaves mark z. danielewski (horror με πολυ ενδιαφερον τροπο παρουσιασης του χρησιμοποιόντας και το πως ειναι τυπωμενο το βιβλιο), the left hand of darkness ursula le guin (science fiction που μελετάει εμμεσα το θεμα του κοινωνικου και βιολογικού φύλου), broken april ismail kadare (στοχαστικό ιστορίκο που αφορά το Κανούν στην Αλβανία και τις βεντέντες αίματος), happening annie ernaux (nonfiction βιογραφικο που αφορά την άμβλωση το 1963 στην Γαλλία)
απο βιβλία που δεν εχω διαβασει ακομα αλλα νομίζω θα σου αρέσουν:
the memory police yoko ogawa (dystopian science fiction), fledgling octavia e. butler (fantasy horror), angels before man rafael nicolas (fantasy(?)/religious fiction), joan katherine j. chen (historical fiction)
ΣΕ ΛΑΤΡΕΥΩ ευχαριστώ για όλα τα ρεκς και επίσης ομγ το γούστο σου <33
house of leaves / Mark Z. Danielewski
never heard of | never read | want to read | terrible | boring | okay | good | great | a favorite
είναι απλά στο tbr ΤΟΣΟ καιρό ΘΑ το διαβάσω
the left hand of darkness / Ursula K. Le Guin
never heard of | never read | want to read | terrible | boring | okay | good | great | a favorite
απλώς το αγαπώ, το αγαπώ σαν βιβλίο, το αγαπώ σαν thought experiment το αγαπώ το αγαπώ επίσης σου προτείνω να διαβάσεις και το δοκίμιο "είναι το φύλο αναγκαίο;" (την αναθεωρημένη του έκδοση) που μιλάει για τις σκέψεις της για το τι ήθελε να κάνει σχετικά με το φύλο στο βιβλίο και για την κριτική που δέχτηκε και για κάποια πράγματα που αναθεώρησε κλπ κλπ
 Broken April / Ismail Kadare
never heard of | never read | want to read | terrible | boring | okay | good | great | a favorite
του Κανταρέ έχω και τον στρατιώτη της νεκρής στρατιάς και γενικά είναι από τους συγγραφείς που μου έχουν πει άπειροι άνθρωποι απλώς διάβασέ τον, θα το βάλω τώρα και αυτό το βιβλίο προτεραιότητα
Happening / Annie Ernaux
never heard of | never read | want to read | terrible | boring | okay | good | great | a favorite
ακούγεται πολύ βαρύ και πολύ ενδιαφέρον και το μέγεθος το κάνει ξαφνικά πολύ ελκυστικό και απερίσκεπτη αγορά όταν είμαι ήδη τίγκα στα βιβλία
The Memory Police / Yōko Ogawa
never heard of | never read | want to read | terrible | boring | okay | good | great | a favorite
αυτό το είχα δει πρόσφατα που το διάβαζε κάποι@ μιουτουαλ στο goodreads αλλά δεν το είχα ανοίξει να το κοιτάξω ακούγεται πολύ ελκυστικό
fledgling / Octavia E. Butler
never heard of | never read | want to read | terrible | boring | okay | good | great | a favorite
octavia e. butler?? είχα στο μυαλό μου να διαβάσω κάποια στιγμή το bloodchild. αλλά αυτό έχει βαμπίρια?? κουλ??
angels before man / rafael nicolás
never heard of | never read | want to read | terrible | boring | okay | good | great | a favorite
ωωω ριτέλινγκ της ιστορίας του λούσιφερ?? ναις
Joan / Katherine J. Chen
never heard of | never read | want to read | terrible | boring | okay | good | great | a favorite
και βιβλίο για την Ιωάννα της Λωρραίνης??
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kammartinez · 1 year
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When one sits at a great height, it is easy to enjoy many favors. One can live one’s whole life never knowing what it means to give, to sacrifice.
Joan: A Novel, by Katherine J. Chen
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veehaela · 26 days
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messy Jeanne D'Arc art
all I probably do is messy art because I'm too lazy 👹
she's my roman empire tbh (one of my 'roman empires' lol). I'm currently finishing reading the historical novel by Katherine J. Chen about Joan of Arc and I love it. It inspires me to do more doodles and drawings of this woman
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jeanmoreaux · 1 year
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*✧ — april 2023 wrap up
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i finally read deathless!!! who is surprised it ended up being a new favourite? not me, but probably none of you either (big thanks to everyone who told me to read it because they thought it sounds like something i’d enjoy. you were right.) i had a great reading moths in general and the slump i was fearing didn’t manifest in the end, which i’m so happy about. nevertheless, this might be my last massive wrap up for the first half of the year. i assume may and june will be much shorter simply because of uni and an urge to get back into watching tv shows. i guess will see how things develop from here on out :)
2023 goal: 74/100 books
as alway, feel free to drop book recs, questions, or opinions in my inbox; i am always happy to talk to you about books!
* –> newly added to my favorites shelf
follow my goodreads | follow my storygraph | previous wrap ups
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Summer Sons by Lee Mandelo | 3.75★ | review
Big Swiss by Jen Beagin | 2.5★ | review
Trespasses by Louise Kennedy | 3★
On Murder Considered as One of the Fine Arts by Thomas De Quincey | 4★
The Beautifull Cassandra by Jane Austen | 3★
Really Good, Actually by Monica Heisey | 3.25★
Die Physiker by Friedrich Dürrenmatt | 4★
Demon in the Wood by by Leigh Bardugo, Dani Pendergast (illustrator) | 4★
Cleopatra and Frankenstein by Coco Mellors | 4.25★
Happy Hour by Marlowe Granados | 4★
* Deathless by Catherynne M. Valente | 5★ | review
War of the Foxes by Richard Siken | 5★ | review
Old Babes in the Wood by Margaret Atwood | 3★ | review
Finlay Donovan Knocks 'Em Dead by Elle Cosimano | 3.5★ 
* Joan by Katherine J. Chen | 5★ | review
A Dowry of Blood by S.T. Gibson | 4.5★ | review
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rereads
The Bear and the Nightingale by Katherine Arden | 4.25★
Ruin and Rising by Leigh Bardugo | 4.5★ | review
Six of Crows by Leigh Bardugo | 5★
Crooked Kingdom by Leigh Bardugo | 5★
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