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#louise may alcott
rafaelmartinez67 · 8 months
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"¡Animo, corazón mío! Siempre hay luz detrás de las nubes".
Louisa May Alcott
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The chapter in the book Little Women/Good Wives, and the scene in the movies of Jo's proposal and married life are So Important. They show the heroine living a happy and unconventional lifestyle: It says that this life she leads with work, marriage, and very little money is a good, wholesome life. That is so important.
But - I think an overlooked chapter in the books (not depicted in the films that I have seen) is the one in which Meg tries to cook and preserve currant jam. She has a miserable day, turned even worse when her husband John brings home a friend for dinner. For once, Meg snaps at him and he snaps back when provoked.
Eventually, Meg takes some good advhice from Marmee, and she brings peace. The chapter ends with a line about married life foe these two not being perfect - it will always have its difficulties, but peace has been preserved and quarrels will be managed.
In another chapter, after Meg has had twins, she understandable becomes so wrapped up in them that she neglects both herself and her husband. Neither the book nor I are saying that one partner should be a servant to the other. But in marriage, we have promised something of ourselves to them*. Meg has isolated herself from the world and grown irritable while she rarely sees John who spends time at his friend's house instead of being nagged at home.
Again, Meg takes initiative and fixes it. This is a bit of a pattern that we see the world over today, in which women usually take the emotional burden in the home. I have no comment to make on that, it's not the point of this post.
The point is: The book has made a few excellent points through everyday, domestic scenes about marriage which are not (or only rarely) shown on film. The glamour, unpredictability and excitement of Jo's publishing, marriage to the Professor, work and, from a plot-based POV, the fact that she is the main character, mean that her storyline is in the spotlight. I love her storyline. But I also think that Meg's has something important to teach us: If you choose the more traditional path, your life is just as full of adventure and growth, difficulties, pain and pleasures.
*talking about non-toxic nd non-abusive relationships.
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jrich103 · 10 months
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I am not afraid of storms, for I am learning how to sail my ship. –Louise May Alcott
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weirdesplinder · 7 months
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La mia top ten dei classici della letteratura americana
Eccoci a un nuovo post della serie dedicata ai Classici della letteratura e oggi tocca ai classici americani che io amo in particolare.
E intendo America come continente, non gli Sati Uniti solamente.
Naturalmente come sempre è una lista super soggettiva, non odiatemi se non nomino grandi della letteratura americana come Hemingway, Kerouac, Melville, Jack London, Francis Scott Fitzgerald, Faulkner o Harper Lee, vanno certamente letti e nominati, ma era una top ten e purtroppo ho dovuto escludere molti e lasciarmi guidare dai libri che io personalmente ho amato leggere.
Non vedo l'ora di scoprire invece i vostri preferiti di questa categoria, mi raccomando segnalatemeli in commento.
La mia top ten:
1. Radici, di Alex Haley
Link: https://amzn.to/45frRl8
Trama: Nella seconda metà del Settecento il giovane Kunta Kinte viene strappato dal suo villaggio africano e portato in America come schiavo. La sua vita cambierà, come quella dei suoi discendenti: Bell, Kizzy, Chicken George e tutti gli altri, fino a giungere ad Alex Haley, l'autore di queste pagine.
2. La valle del'Eden, di John Steinbeck
Link: https://amzn.to/3s922EI
Trama: Nel paese di Nod, a est del giardino dell'Eden, dove la progenie di Caino andò a vivere secondo la leggenda biblica e che nel romanzo di John Steinbeck corrisponde simbolicamente alla valle percorsa dal fiume Salinas nella California settentrionale, si intrecciano le storie di due famiglie, gli Hamilton e i Trask. Protagonisti della saga, che va dalla Guerra civile alla Prima guerra mondiale, da una parte il vecchio Samuel Hamilton, immigrato dall'Irlanda; e, dall'altra, Cyrus Trask insieme ai figli Adam e Charles, e ai nipoti Aron e Caleb, gemelli nati dalla misteriosa Cathy Ames.
3. Piccole donne, di Louisa May Alcott
Link: https://amzn.to/45jdTPh
Trama: Meg, Jo, Beth e Amy, quattro sorelle dal carattere molto diverso, si trovano improvvisamente ad affrontare la guerra: devono cambiare la propria vita per sostenere la mamma, mentre il padre è nell'esercito. Decidono così di fronteggiare le difficoltà con allegria e spirito di iniziativa..
4. Ti ucciderò, di Mickey Spillane
Link: https://amzn.to/3KLclpc
Trama: Quando Jack Williams viene trovato ucciso a colpi d’arma da fuoco, il detective Pat Chambers chiama il suo conoscente e amico più intimo di Jack, l’investigatore privato Mike Hammer. Ai tempi in cui avevano combattuto insieme, Jack era stato colpito da una baionetta giapponese per salvare Hammer, perdendo il braccio. Hammer giura di identificare l’assassino prima della polizia per compiere la sua vendetta personale. Il punto di partenza è l’elenco degli ospiti a una festa a casa di Jack la notte in cui è morto: la fidanzata di Jack, ex tossicodipendente, una bellissima psichiatra, due sorelle gemelle, uno studente universitario e un mafioso. Ma mentre li rintraccia, così fa anche l’assassino, e in poco tempo non sarà solo Jack a essere trovato morto. Ad attenderli, infatti, un’automatica calibro 45 munita di silenziatore. E anche Hammer è saldamente nel suo mirino...
5. Tarzan delle scimmie, di Edgar Rice Burroughs  
Link: https://amzn.to/44eCCTB
Trama: Nel cuore della giungla più selvaggia il piccolo Lord Greystoke viene sottratto a un destino di morte certa dalla gorilla Kala, che lo adotta e lo alleva teneramente. Ma per quel suo corpo completamente privo di peli, il cucciolo d'uomo è osteggiato dagli altri membri della tribù. Determinato a non diventare cibo per Sabor, la leonessa, o per Sheeta, il leopardo, riesce a sopravvivere grazie alla sua forza fisica e alla sua intelligenza, che gli permettono di affrontare con audacia i pericoli della giungla, guadagnarsi il rispetto dei gorilla e diventare loro re. Da quel momento si farà chiamare Tarzan delle scimmie e il suo urlo selvaggio e terrificante riecheggerà nella foresta. Ma c'è una nuova e insolita sfida che Tarzan, ormai adulto, dovrà affrontare quando nella giungla arriveranno i suoi simili e con loro la bellissima Jane¿
6. La lettera scarlatta, di Nathaniel Hawthorne
Link: https://amzn.to/3QKeV2b
Trama: La giovane Ester Prynne, condannata per adulterio nella puritana Boston, sarà costretta a portare per sempre sul seno una fiammeggiante, scarlatta, lettera "A", da lei stessa ricamata. Ester non ha mai voluto rivelare il nome del suo "complice" che infine lacerato tra ansia di schiettezza e orgoglio, e perseguitato dal marito della giovane - cederà, confessando la sua colpa.
7. Il gabbiano Jonathan Livingstone, di Richard Bach
Link: https://amzn.to/3OEpJMH
Trama: Il gabbiano Jonathan Livingston non è come tutti gli altri. Là dove i suoi simili, schiavi di becco e pancia, si limitano a viaggetti per procurarsi il cibo inseguendo le barche da pesca, lui intuisce nel volo una bellezza e un valore assoluti. Tanto basta per meritargli il marchio dell'infamia e l'allontanamento dallo stormo Buonappetito. Solo, audace, sempre più libero, Jonathan il Reietto scopre l'ebbrezza del volo acrobatico e varca i confini di altri mondi, altre dimensioni abitate da gabbiani solitari simili a lui nella spasmodica fame e sete di perfezione. Ne diventa la guida, il maestro, il capo indiscusso, e tra i compagni incontrerà chi senza saperlo è pronto a raccogliere la sua eredità.
8. La casa degli spiriti, di Isabel allende (Cile)
Link: https://amzn.to/3P4EZUQ
Trama: Alle Tre Marie, splendida tenuta di proprietà di Esteban Trueba, si intrecciano le passioni dei diversi protagonisti: Clara, la moglie del proprietario, trascorre un’esistenza avvolta nei ricordi; Férula, sorella di Esteban, dedica la sua vita agli altri; Blanca è innamorata di un servo del padre, Pedro, che avrà parte nella guerriglia della rivoluzione; Alba, la nipote, dovrà invece affrontare la dittatura mentre Esteban scoprirà, proprio a causa dei tragici eventi politici del suo paese, di amare innanzitutto la sua famiglia.
9. Cent'anni di solitudine, di Gabriel García Márquez (Colombia)
Link: https://amzn.to/45tmf6y
Trama: Grandezza e decadenza della città di Macondo e della famiglia Buendia, in una successione appassionante di avvenimenti favolosi e grotteschi tra cronistoria e leggenda.
10. Anna dai capelli rossi, di Lucy Maud Montgomery (Canada)
Link: https://amzn.to/47zoU0v
Trama: Matthew e Marilla conducono una vita abitudinaria nel pacifico paesino di Avonlea. Ormai anziani, decidono di adottare un orfano che li aiuti a mandare avanti la fattoria. Ma invece del ragazzo promesso dall’orfanotrofio, a casa Cuthbert arriva Anna, una bambina dotata di una inesauribile immaginazione che finirà per conquistare tutti.
Onorevoli menzioni:
Uno yankee alla corte di re Artù, di Mark Twaine
Link: https://amzn.to/3YCvO0R
Trama: il protagonista, Hank Morgan, lo yankee del Connecticut, un capo officina della fabbrica d'armi Colt di Hartford, a causa di un violento alterco con un operaio a lui sottoposto, riceve in testa un colpo sferrato con una spranga di ferro e quando si risveglia scopre che è finito in Inghilterra, esattamente nel giorno 20 giugno dell'anno 528… Da qui, la sfrenata girandola senza fine di situazioni che ne derivano, alle prese con re Artù, i cavalieri della Tavola Rotonda, Lancillotto, Ginevra, il mago Merlino, la fata Morgana ecc.
. L'ultimo dei Mohicani, di James Fenimore Cooper
Link: https://amzn.to/46eO1ER
Trama: Ambientato nella colonia di New York durante la guerra franco-indiana, racconta la storia di un cacciatore bianco: Natty Bumpoo, soprannominato “Lungo Fucile” per la sua abilità con quest’arma. Bumpoo ha abbandonato la vita civile per vivere a contatto con la natura e rifugiarsi nella foresta con due suoi compagni, gli ultimi due pellerossa superstiti di una razza tra le più rispettate e antiche: i Mohicani. I tre personaggi si troveranno a dover aiutare le due figlie del generale inglese Munro, rapite dal nemico comune Magua, capo tribù degli Irochesi, alleati dei francesi, nemico giurato sia del generale Munro che di Occhio di Falco e dei suoi due amici: Cinghachgook e suo figlio Uncas. La storia ha come sfondo la guerra con frequenti battaglie tra gli eserciti francesi e inglesi che in guerriglie e scontri tra gli indiani schierati da una parte o dall’altra. La vittoria si deciderà con una tipica battaglia indiana, tra le tribù dei Mohicani e degli Irochesi con la morte del giovane Uncas, appunto l’ultimo dei Mohicani e di una delle figlie di Munro. Il racconto si chiude con il mesto presagio del capo dei Mohicani che sente avvicinarsi la fine del suo popolo.
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missmagicalelf · 3 months
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Sharing one of the best masterpieces of literature this story is very dear to my heart with deep relatable characters and inspiring quotes and the march girls with always have a special place in it
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fizzingwizard · 5 months
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"'You said, Mother, that criticism would help me. But how can it, when it's so contradictory that I don't know whether I've written a promising book or broken all the ten commandments?" cried poor Jo, turning over a heap of notices, the perusal of which filled her with pride and joy one minute, wrath and dismay the next. 'This man says, "An exquisite book, full of truth, beauty, and earnestness. All is sweet, pure, and healthy..." The next, "The theory of the book is bad, full of morbid fancies, spiritualistic ideas, and unnatural characters." Now, as I had no theory of any kind, don't believe in Spiritualism, and copied my characters from life, I don't see how this critic can be right... Some make fun of it, some overpraise, and nearly all insist that I had a deep theory to expound, when I only wrote it for the pleasure and the money...' ... And when the first soreness was over, she could laugh at her poor little book, yet believe in it still, and feel herself the wiser and stronger for the buffeting she had received. 'Not being a genius, like Keats, it won't kill me,' she said stoutly." - Good Wives, Louisa May Alcott
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forestal-ramblings · 3 months
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Little women is better tradwife propaganda than the ballerina farm and all those twitter accounts.
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symphonyoflovenet · 7 months
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Simple, sincere people seldom speak much of their piety; it shows itself in acts, rather than in words...
Louisa May Alcott, Little Women
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thedavinoparadox · 9 months
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Reading Wrap-Up (July) 🌻📚
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"Breathe the sweetness that hovers in August." - Denise Levertov
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Happy August everybody!
July has been quite a turbulent month, filled with a lot of hard decisions and important events. Although from an outsider’s perspective it might have been my first “truly free” month, it still often felt like the opposite, being caged in the expectations of other people (or what I assumed them to be…). I’m actually pleasantly surprised by the amount I still accomplished to read in the last 31 days.
Unsurprisingly, I mostly seek my comfort in literature and due to this, most of the books I have succumbed to this month were so-called comfort reads.
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Hard Land by Benedict Wells (2021)
Some might call this cheating, as it was still June when I finished this exceptional novel but it would have felt wrong to never mention it in a blog post at all. Although I am a little bit late to reading this book (even though I was lucky to be part of a live reading a few years back), I still believed it to be a wonderfully heartfelt novel about the troubles of coming-of-age and the coming to terms with some hard truths about love, friendship and family (no pun intended…). Additionally, the 80s vibes were incredible and made me long for a vision of America I never lived in. Of course, this book sort of awakened the hypochondriac in my soul but it also brought me close to the point of shedding a tear or two.
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A Clash of Kings & A Storm of Swords by George R. R. Martin (1998 & 2000)
Probably one of the most rebellious things I did after having finished all my A-level exams was to finally start the “A Song of Ice and Fire” book series by George R. R. Martin. And although I was almost convinced to regret it after the second or third book, I’m still having the grandest of grand old times with these books. Frankly, I did believe them to be a tad overhyped before opening them, but was quickly proven wrong by just how alive and… breathing this world feels, that he has created. It’s the little details and fleshed out characters which make these books so worth reading. They are just the thing to help you escape reality when things get a little too stressful.
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Little Women by Louisa May Alcott (1868)
No, I have not watched the movie yet. This is a sentence which I think I said to about twenty people over the course of the last year when being questioned on my thoughts on Little Women. Simply because I was so fixed on the idea of first finishing the book before even watching the trailer of the movie. And I think this has been one of the best decisions I have made this year. For this is one of the coziest, most heartfelt books I have ever laid my hands upon and the characters in it are just beautifully fleshed out, versatile and overall simply lovable. All of them. You can definitely stay tuned for a more in-depth review on this particular novel (and maybe even the movie…). Totally besides the point, but look at that gorgeous edition…
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The Betrayed by Ursula Poznanski (2012)
I found this in my Audible library, quickly checked if I liked the voice of the audiobook (which can make or break a book to me…) and spontaneously decided to give it a try. Let me preface this by saying I'm not an avid reader of dystopian novels (aside from the occasional Orwell) and didn't really know what to expect. Well, I was met with well-rounded characters, a nicely done plot and very interesting world building. However, the whole starting point seemed to me quite typical for this genre. Nonetheless, Ursula Poznanski just never disappoints and is one of my absolute safe-picks when choosing an author. I would probably read a phone book, if it was written by her.
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The Inkheart Trilogy by Cornelia Funke (2003 - 2007)
I have to be careful with my words here because this is one of my twin sister's absolute favorite book series and as we share this blog, it would be rather unwise to be unreasonably harsh. (Fortunately for me, these books really are brilliant and can’t be criticized easily).  I think for the amount of times she checked it out of the library, they could have given them to her for good. Well, this month she finally decided to get them for herself and naturally I got the right to read them immediately after she had finished them. Well how could I not after she had been raving about them every chance she got? And indeed, these books just feel like a warm hug from a person you have known your entire life. Like one of those cold, rainy summer evenings with a big cup of warm cocoa, a fuzzy blanket and the soft patter of rain on the windows. It's such a beautiful kind of whimsical fantasy with characters that seem to jump off the page (literally…). You just can’t help to fall in love with some of them and absolutely despise other ones. (And as I was looking up the pictures for this book I discovered that a new one is coming out this October! Finally I could be the bearer of good news and the smiles of readers whose favorite series is getting a follow-up is just priceless.)
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biarritzzz · 1 year
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Rewatching Little Women 2019 remake because it's the right period for it and watching some interviews with Greta Gerwig and the cast, I'm struck try the absolute refusal of straight women to acknowledge that a woman whose creation/work they enjoyed was actually a lesbian. In this instance: Louisa May Alcott.
Greta Gerwig is obviously talented, educated and intelligent. She must know this yet she states over and over that Louisa May Alcott never married and never had kids. Yeah. BECAUSE SHE WAS A LESBIAN.
The word lesbian never passes her lips. A supposedly feminist film, directed by a woman, with a cast comprised of mostly women. Yet saying lesbian is still taboo. 
Sespursongles said it best and I will quote her:
“But of course there are also lots of very talented lesbian writers, the problem being then that no one acknowledges them as lesbians, because lesbophobia — or they don’t want to be recognised as “lesbian writers” as it might kill their career. The “lesbian lit is crap” belief doesn’t hold when we know that many gifted artists and writers in history were lesbians, but 1) you can’t point it out because all nonlesbians would start obsessively dissecting their lives to prove het attraction, and 2) of course they couldn’t apply their gift to writing about lesbians (or themselves) because then they would never have become literary figures; only bihet people are allowed to write about their experience. This might have created in some cases a kind of catch-22 where the talented lesbian writers who knew they had a chance of making it big didn’t write about lesbian stuff because that might have killed their chances, while the less-gifted writers who knew they weren’t likely to become great literary figures were the ones who wrote lesbian stuff since they weren’t afraid of having something bigger to lose.”
In this case, there’s the added bonus that Jo is clearly Louisa May Alcott herself (self-insert) and if LMA had had her say, Jo would have remained a spinster (aka a lesbian) but a lot of straight women identify with her character because she is the most interesting, complex and frankly cool character in the book. Nobody is identifying with boring Meg who only wants to get married and pop babies, that’s for sure. 
So admitting that Jo is lesbian-coded would mean for straight women that they can longer project themselves onto/identify with Jo. Because god forbid they would identify with a lesbian. 
No way. 
This reminds me of the shitshow that occurred a few years ago with the movie Ammonite and how FURIOUS straight feminists were that Mary Anning had been turned into a lesbian. The horror. Granted, we don’t know whether Mary Anning was a lesbian. The fact is, she never married. 
Which was het feminists’ entire reasoning: why don’t we let her be single! why can’t women be single! Why does romance always have to be pushed on women! blablabla
Meltdown ensues.
Hum. Funny you’re all saying that when you never choose that life for yourself. You know: the single, childfree life. Funny you’re now super invested that a woman who is considered to be the first paleontologist and who never married should apparently remain single because she is being portrayed as a lesbian in one movie that you will never watch anyway. 
It’s almost funny how they can’t hide their prejudice and lesbophobia when it’s clear that the default for them should be heterosexuality and what bothered them so much was the lesbian representation. 
So let’s recap: Louisa May Alcott: Lesbian
Marguerite Yourcenar: Lesbian
Vivian Maier: Lesbian
Louise Michel: Lesbian
Anne Lister: Lesbian (hard to deny, this one)
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tarotenvelhecida · 1 year
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pick a card– which book speaks to your soul?
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You read something which you thought only happened to you, and you discover that it happened 100 years ago to Dostoyevsky. This is a very great liberation for the suffering, struggling person, who always thinks that he is alone. This is why art is important.
—Conversations with James Baldwin.
this is my love letter to all the bookworms in the tarot community— pick a pile & i'll give you a list of genres + book suggestions carrying important messages to you.
I. THE FIRST
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To the daydreamers and the escapists; to the ones that need to rest before following what you need follow.
RELEVANT GENRES & CONCEPTS– fiction in general; romance; fantasy; fairytale; poetry; ‘happy ever after’ endings; hopeful endings; fantasy; magic; dreamy.
AUTHORS – Ursula K. Le Guin; Louise Gluck; Mary Oliver; Jane Austen.
BOOKS FOR YOU–
‘The Paper Garden: An Artist Begins Her Life’s Work at 72 – Molly Peacock'
‘Good Bones – Maggie Smith’
‘If Not, Winter: Fragments of Sappho – Translation by Anne Carson’
‘Owls and Other Fantasies – Mary Oliver’
‘Dog Songs – Mary Oliver’
‘Emma – Jane Austen’
‘Howl’s Moving Castle – Diana Wynne Jones’
‘The Little Prince – Antoine de Saint-Exupéry’
‘Death Comes for the Archbishop – Willa Cather’
‘Sonnets from the Portuguese – Elizabeth Barrett Browning’
‘The Hawk and the Dove – Penelope Wilcock’
‘The Secret Life of the Lonely Doll: The Search for Dare Wright’
‘The Ink Dark Moon – Ono no Komachi & Izumi Shikibu’
‘Alice in Wonderland – Lewis Carroll’
‘The Letters of Vita Sackville-West and Virginia Woolf’
‘Little Women – Louisa May Alcott’
‘Anne of Green Gables – L.M. Montgomery’
‘Kissing the Witch: Old Tales in New Skins – Emma Donoghue’
II. THE SECOND
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For the ones that carry the ache to learn and know everything; to the ones bored with life's commodities & seriousness. For the ones that question everything around them – as they should do.
You do not need to fit in. Don't change yourself for other people. If they want to see you this way, then become the proud witch in the edge of the woods.
RELEVANT GENRES & CONCEPTS– books on 'niche' knowledge; science; philosophy; true crime; drama; scandalous romances; adventure, magical realism; YA thriller & horror; comedy & sardonic comedy; ‘controversial’/'weird' books.
AUTHORS– Carmen Maria Machado, Kate Moore, Grady Hendrix.
BOOKS FOR YOU–
‘My Sister, The Serial Killer – Oyinkan Braithwaite'
‘The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat and Other Clinical Tales – Oliver Sacks'
‘St. Lucy’s Home for Girls Raised by Wolves – Karen Russell'
‘Spook: Science Tackles the Afterlife – Mary Roach’
‘The Hitchhiker Guide to Galaxy – Douglas Adams'
‘Inferno – Dante Alighieri'
'Magic for Beginners – Kelly Link'
‘Lace Bone Beast: Poems & Other Fairytales for Wicked Girls – N.L. Shompole'
‘Severed: A History of Heads Lost and Heads Found – Frances Larson’
'The Woman They Could Not Silence – Kate Moore'
‘The Dictionary of Lost Words – Pip Williams'
‘She Kills Me: The True Stories of History’s Deadliest Women – Jennifer Wright’
‘Anatomy: A Love Story – Dana Schwartz'
‘Pretty Dead Queens – Alexa Donne'
‘I’m Glad My Mom Died – Jennette McCurdy'
'Rabid: A Cultural History of the World's Most Diabolical Virus – Bill Wasik'
‘Chilling Adventures of Sabrina – Roberto Aguirre-Sacasa’
III. THE THIRD
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You need to put your sadness somewhere. If you can't, remember that someone has done it before – and transformed it into a story. Let the words you'll read be the resting place for whatever you're feeling right now; let yourself remember that not even your pain is lonely in this world.
RELEVANT GENRES AND CONCEPTS— poetry; gothic horror; thrillers; murder mysteries; tragedies; cathartic stories; biographies.
AUTHORS– Shirley Jackson, Osamu Dazai, Clarice Lispector, Sylvia Plath.
BOOKS FOR YOU—
'The Year of Magical Thinking – Joan Didion'
‘The Dead – James Joyce'
‘What The Living Do – Marie Howe'
‘The Hour of the Star – Clarice Lispector'
‘Why This World: A Biography of Clarice Lispector’
‘Some of Us Did Not Die – June Jordan'
Somewhere Towards the End – Diana Athill'
‘We Have Always Lived in The Castle – Shirley Jackson'
'Heaven: A Novel – Mieko Kawakami'
'Journal of a Solitude – May Sarton'
'Jane Eyre – Charlotte Bronte'
'Grief is the Thing with Feathers – Max Porter'
‘Carrie – Stephen King'
'Of Dogs and Walls – Yuko Tsushima'
'Frankenstein – Mary Shelley'
'The Stepping Off Place – Cameron Kelly'
'Letters to Milena – Franz Kafka'
‘Beloved – Toni Morrison'
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Read George Eliot. Read Louisa May Alcott. READ L.M. MONTGOMERY. Read Sylvia Plath. Read Gwendolyn Brooks. Read Maggie Smith. READ LOUISE GLÜCK. Read Eloise Jarvis McGraw. Read Edith Wharton. Read Laurie Halse Anderson.
READ! JANE! AUSTEN!
...then listen to Taylor again
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jrich103 · 5 months
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I am not afraid of storms for I am learning how to sail my ship. — Louise May Alcott
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wistful-giselle · 1 year
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❆ literature for winter & snowscapes ❅
Winter Recipes for the Collective ~ Louise Glück *
The Snow Man ~ Wallace Stevens *
Snowdrops ~ Louise Glück
Between Autumn Equinox and Winter Solstice, Today ~ Emily Jungmin Yoon
Winter Trees ~ William Carlos Williams
Frost at Midnight ~ Samuel Taylor Coleridge
The Snow Queen ~ Hans Christian Anderson
The Snow Child ~ Angela Carter *
White Boots ~ Noel Streatfeild *
Wintering: The Power of Rest and Retreat in Difficult Times ~ Katherine May
A Christmas Carol ~ Charles Dickens
A Winter Book ~ Tove Jansson
Little Women ~ Louisa May Alcott
Carol ~ Patricia Highsmith
Ice ~ Anna Kavan *
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bellasbookclub · 2 months
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BBC Read Along - A Long, Fatal Love Chase by Louise May Alcott
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What time is it? Time for a sexy priest 🥵💦
This month's read along is Chapter 12 - Behind The Grating on the American March 13th and the Aussie Thursday 14th of March!
How does the read-along work?
Jump onto the Bella's Book Club Discord
Just here to listen? Go to our voice channels (at the bottom of channel list with a speaker icon🔊)
Connect your audio (we suggest joining muted by clicking on the mute button)
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4. Want to take a turn reading? Let the mods know in the #read-along-chat channel before you click on over to the voice channels and join in the chin wagging!
5. Reader turns are usually approx. 10 minutes each (mods will keep track and ping you at the 1 minute mark.) Read along from your own copy or keep track via our livestream of the text.
Have fun!
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adharagranley-writer · 5 months
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autumn book recs
Dracula - Bram Stoker
Frankenstein - Mary Shelley
The Picture of Dorian Gray - OScar Wilde
The Phantom of the Opera - Gaston Leroux
The Great Gatsby - F. Scott Fitzgeralds
Carmilla - J. Sheridan Le Fanu
The crimes of morgue Street - Edgar Allan Poe
The Canterville Ghost - Oscar Wilde
Hamlet - Shakespeare
Sherlock Holmes - Arthur Conan Doyle
Pride and Prejudice - Jane Austen
Little Women - Louise May Alcott
Any by Agatha Christie
18 notes · View notes