I really love your longer videos, because I always listen to them while I'm doing house chores, today I had to change my bedsheets (hate to do that) and you really helped me with that :'D
I absolutely love Emily's reviews, but I love her rants even more. Also, watching her has given me the courage to dnf a book or be more vocal about when I don't like a book.
Clawdia: How dare you do anything WITHOUT ME!!! I AM THE QUEEN OF THIS HOUSEHOLD!!! EVERYTHING REVOLVES AROUND ME!! I'm glad to hear something other than absolute praise for everything under the sun stephen king writes. It's rare that I hear someone talk about faults or issues or nuanced stuff in his books
Thank you for this wrap up. I enjoy listening to you talk about books, cats, and life updates. Looking forward to your video on spoiling books you didn't finish.
Just wanted to say thank you for creating content. ❤ I’ve been struggling after having surgery and I’ve been binge watching your videos. They bring me comfort during tough times. I want to read so many of your recommendations!
If you haven’t read The Frozen River by Ariel Lawhon, I recommend it to go with your non-fiction about midwives. The main character was a real midwife in the late 1700s and had to deal with a smug male doctor.
Love all your videos 💖 Thanks for putting out so much content for us lately! Can we please get an updated "All about my cats" video for Christmas this year?🥰
thank you for freeing me from the age of magical overthinking. my copy got returned to the library before i could finish it and now i know to not borrow it again!🎉
Oh boy, German here and we actually read Kafka in school. I always laugh when you say you did not have to read Shakespeare since you are French Canadian. We had him in like 3 classes, including German in different years. It’s so interesting to hear what different people had to read in school. Super interested in the “light horror” book. Love the author but really do not enjoy horror. Thanks for the long video..
For The Interview With A Vampire, the context is kinda important. Yeah, the kid thing was messed up, I agree. But the period when it was written (before the rise of popularity of vampire books and other media, not to mention that wast majority of vampires in popular culture back then were either pulp horror or straightup joke), Anne Rice's personal situation, cultural context, they all play a role. That being said, none of that can make you enjoy the book, I get that. What I'm getting at is that already in a first few pages of the second book, written years later, we get informed that Louis was an extremely unreliable narrator. And then Anne Rice basically either explains or changes stuff and creates the whole vampire lore that has since pretty much bled all over the genre :) So while I 100% respect your opinion on this book, I would none the less suggest if not reading other books (I'm just now reading the second, after doing my research), then at least checking out some general info about the whole series, it might give you a bit more context and improve the overall vibe that you got from the first book.
I love audiobooks but when it comes to In the dreamhouse, reading the physical book was way better for me. It took the reading experience to another level, and brought me closer to her as a person for some reason. As if I needed to take in her words in my own way and in my own pace. Something about the layout of the book with the shorter chapters, gave a more poetic feel to it, and made the book feel quite original, if that makes sense. A strong and engaging read!
15:05 I can always trust your reviews!! I read past the 50% of the book and I hated it!! then I went to goodreads, read the reviews and I felt like I had read a completely different book than most people. And after skim reading the twist I am so glad that I decided to put the book down when I did. Such a joke of a book lol
I had a surplus of dinosaur and fox books, so I made up Dinofoxtember to churn through em! The best were -Her Spell that Binds Me by Luna Oblansky (spicy sapphic romantasy with witches and a fox familiar) -The Fox Wife by Yangsze Choo (historical mystery with a magical fox spirit in 1900s China) -The Fossil Hunter by Tea Cooper ( very good historical dual timeline mystery set in Australia) -Kingdom of Exiles by Maxym M Marrineau (about a "beast charmer" which is like a magical Pokemon trainer and had a couple foxish beasts) -reread The Shadow of the Fox by Julie Kagawa (fav YA series) -The Bird King by Willow G Wilson ( historical fantasy set during the Spanish Inquisition I really enjoyed it)
Fifteen! That’s a great month. I finished four in September. One was David Copperfield which is a chunker, but the Victorian writing slowed down my reading pace. I’m glad I took it slowly though. It was good. Now I am prepared for Demon Copperhead for a bookclub in October.
I'm so pleased to hear that you loved Gone Girl. I really hope Gillian Flynn writes another book! She's the best psychological thriller writer out there. I definitely want to read How to Solve Your Own Murder. I'm on the waiting list at my library for it. And I definitely need to read my first Octavia E Butler this year ☺
In the Dream House I would highly recommend reading physically cos it has a interactive thing at one point! It might be more helpful to read it that way.
My 10th grade teacher read Metamorphosis by Kafka aloud to my class. She kept laughing about what a funny story it was while we all stared at her confused.
I was really surprised at how much I enjoyed the Janice Hallett book I read (The Mysterious Case of the Alperton Angels). It's written in a similar format. It took me a bit to get into, but I ended up loving it.
I'm reading We Solve Murders, about a third of the way through it. I love the laidback humor in it. And, a cat named Trouble, you can't go wrong. The main character is admonished by his cat when he stops rubbing his head, funny. My next one will be Apprentice to the Villain.
On the topic of words the word robot comes from the Czech word for slave, it's from a 1920s book originally written in Czech called The Universal Robot. Also technically we could say everyone has a vagina bc v's are "invaginations" and p's are "envaginations", so we can use language in a more equal way!
I was watching this video in bed before sleeping but I dropped my phone in my face and I guess that's my sign to go to sleep and finish this tomorrow 😢😢😢
September was a pretty productive reading month for me as well! I finally got around reading Vicious by V. E. Schwab and I loved it. I had problems with Vengeful, but overall enjoyed it too. I saw that there's a third book coming, supposedly? I hope so, I didn't like the abrupt conclusion of the story haha. I also read Graveyard Shift by M. L. Rio, which was one of my most anticipated releases for the end of the year, and it was perfectly atmospheric for fall! The story wasn't much, but the vibes were exactly what I wanted.
The ends of Never Lie & Perfect Marriage are so bad lol Also Age of Magical Overthinking was all over the place! A shame, cause I also enjoyed Wordslut & Cultish.
Maybe the main character from Frugal Wizard's Handbook needed that self-sabotage help book. haha And I think I'm the only one who liked Frugal Wizard's Handbook because I can really relate to how the main character felt like a failure among people he grew up with becoming more successful.
Oh, I don't blame you for being disappointed with/DNF'ing Freda McFadden's books. I picked up The Teacher from the library recently after hearing people rave about it and I was appalled by the storytelling, the characters and the writing. I smiled when you mentioned the focus on clothes because in this book, the main character is obsessed with shoes. When you look up ending of books you DNF'ed, you should check out the summary of The Teacher just for kicks - the twists and turns are just ludicrous. Now that I know that this was initially self-published, this makes a bit more sense, but I agree wholeheartedly with you - didn't the publisher have anything else better to publish? (They are probably making lots of money with those books, unfortunately, so I guess they probably don't care too much about the quality.)
They are throw away beach read books in my opinion, take no real thinking, are fast page turners and a bit ridiculous, they are not gonna cut it with the really widely read reader so…..I think that’s where the divide is. She’s trying to be another Lisa Jewell but isn’t quite as good - and Lisa Jewell isn’t really amazing either
The Frugal Wizard's Handbook was by far the worst of the Secret Projects. I think you will enjoy the other two better, they're more "serious" than the first two.
The Devil’s Playground by Craig Russell. It was like reading a supernatural film noir, set in multiple timelines, but centered on old Hollywood during the Silent Film era.
I'm very much with you on wishing Gillian Flynn would write more! She started a publishing imprint and all the books she picked have really cool premises. I read one of the first ones and it was just middling, unfortunately. But I want to try one about a queer nun solving crimes, although the reviews are meh.
Emily, I’ve enjoyed Kindred, and the Parable of the Sower, Parable of the Talents books. I wasn’t crazy about Dawn sadly. Where should I go next for Butler?
I recently read the escape room by L.D Smithson and I think Its my favourite thriller I have read this year its soo entertaining,its reality tv with escape rooms
I am a writer and I write a lot of stories. I am a black woman and most of my characters are white people and I love their stories and I love all my characters. But this time I am writing a book about all black people and the main character is me. 😂 I don't know how the protagonist became me but yeah she's me. In real life I have long jet black hair but in my novel I have dreadlocks. I didn't use my real name but I used my real last name which is Williams, so when people call me Ms. Williams in the book it feels like I am writing about my life even though it's fiction and not about my life. It just feels weird because the lady is me.
I don't know how my protagonist ends up being me. She even has my last name in the novel which is Williams. I am a writer and I am a very private person because I am not going to use my government name on any of my books I will use a pen name for my first name and even my last name or I might just go anonymous. My main character is me and I.can write the other characters in the book but as soon as I get to the lady who is me I have to pause for a second and stop writing the book because this character is me but I am not going to lie it's a good urban fiction story. It's a really good story.
i didn't like The mountain is you because at first it felt like it was delivering a good message but within like 30 ish pages i quickly got the tone that the book was sort of blaming the reader for everything? Like it had the tone of everything is your fault for the issues that arise in your life sort of message. Plus it became really repetitive after a certain point. The book probably could've been summarized in like 50 pages or less.
I DNFd The Appeal because I was doing the audio version. Listening to the to and from headers over and over again was tiresome. I didn't make it to the murder. I'm very curious if you think the story is worth suffering through the format. I know she has a new book out. I was interested in checking that one out.
Check out my October TBR to see what's coming: ruclips.net/video/-mwZqRO7iN0/видео.html
When you said "if you are not gonna make them interesting, at least make them sparkly", i bursted out laughing 😅
LOL... that paw under the door... 😺
"That was mean. I loved it". Yes.
Nothing beats a good rant sesh!
I really love your longer videos, because I always listen to them while I'm doing house chores, today I had to change my bedsheets (hate to do that) and you really helped me with that :'D
That's so good to hear! I was starting to feel like my videos were getting too long XD
I absolutely love Emily's reviews, but I love her rants even more. Also, watching her has given me the courage to dnf a book or be more vocal about when I don't like a book.
Clawdia: How dare you do anything WITHOUT ME!!! I AM THE QUEEN OF THIS HOUSEHOLD!!! EVERYTHING REVOLVES AROUND ME!!
I'm glad to hear something other than absolute praise for everything under the sun stephen king writes. It's rare that I hear someone talk about faults or issues or nuanced stuff in his books
Thank you for this wrap up. I enjoy listening to you talk about books, cats, and life updates.
Looking forward to your video on spoiling books you didn't finish.
That's my toxic reading habit, I like to read the last couple pages of books I'm not enjoying to see if they're worth finishing.
I should do that but once I give up on the book I just don't care to find out XD
Reading spoilers of DNF's is a cool idea! Looking forward to that video :)
Your vids are such a treat, we appreciate how often you are uploading!
Come for Emily's reviews, stay for Clawdia's antics. 😸
Just wanted to say thank you for creating content. ❤ I’ve been struggling after having surgery and I’ve been binge watching your videos. They bring me comfort during tough times. I want to read so many of your recommendations!
I'm sorry you've been struggling. Hope you'll feel better ❤
Did anyone else see the blue thing (ball, cat toy) pop up from Emilys lap at 17:52? 😮😂❤ Claudia is playing, perhaps? 😸
There’s a very boring explanation but let’s pretend it’s ✨magic✨
If you haven’t read The Frozen River by Ariel Lawhon, I recommend it to go with your non-fiction about midwives. The main character was a real midwife in the late 1700s and had to deal with a smug male doctor.
Love all your videos 💖 Thanks for putting out so much content for us lately! Can we please get an updated "All about my cats" video for Christmas this year?🥰
I LOVED Poe's Fall of the House of Usher :)!
thank you for freeing me from the age of magical overthinking. my copy got returned to the library before i could finish it and now i know to not borrow it again!🎉
Perfect lol
Oh boy, German here and we actually read Kafka in school. I always laugh when you say you did not have to read Shakespeare since you are French Canadian. We had him in like 3 classes, including German in different years. It’s so interesting to hear what different people had to read in school. Super interested in the “light horror” book. Love the author but really do not enjoy horror. Thanks for the long video..
Check out "The Hollow Places" by T.Kingfisher. It's great.
For The Interview With A Vampire, the context is kinda important. Yeah, the kid thing was messed up, I agree. But the period when it was written (before the rise of popularity of vampire books and other media, not to mention that wast majority of vampires in popular culture back then were either pulp horror or straightup joke), Anne Rice's personal situation, cultural context, they all play a role. That being said, none of that can make you enjoy the book, I get that. What I'm getting at is that already in a first few pages of the second book, written years later, we get informed that Louis was an extremely unreliable narrator. And then Anne Rice basically either explains or changes stuff and creates the whole vampire lore that has since pretty much bled all over the genre :)
So while I 100% respect your opinion on this book, I would none the less suggest if not reading other books (I'm just now reading the second, after doing my research), then at least checking out some general info about the whole series, it might give you a bit more context and improve the overall vibe that you got from the first book.
I agree. The Vampire Lestat was soooo good and really sucked me in.
Agreed, I found The Vampire Lestat more enjoyable than the 1st one
I love audiobooks but when it comes to In the dreamhouse, reading the physical book was way better for me. It took the reading experience to another level, and brought me closer to her as a person for some reason. As if I needed to take in her words in my own way and in my own pace. Something about the layout of the book with the shorter chapters, gave a more poetic feel to it, and made the book feel quite original, if that makes sense. A strong and engaging read!
Woohoo! Took one book out of my Goodreads TBR shelf! "That was was mean. I loved that!"
Agreed.
this format really suits me
15:05 I can always trust your reviews!! I read past the 50% of the book and I hated it!! then I went to goodreads, read the reviews and I felt like I had read a completely different book than most people. And after skim reading the twist I am so glad that I decided to put the book down when I did. Such a joke of a book lol
I had a surplus of dinosaur and fox books, so I made up Dinofoxtember to churn through em!
The best were
-Her Spell that Binds Me by Luna Oblansky (spicy sapphic romantasy with witches and a fox familiar)
-The Fox Wife by Yangsze Choo (historical mystery with a magical fox spirit in 1900s China)
-The Fossil Hunter by Tea Cooper ( very good historical dual timeline mystery set in Australia)
-Kingdom of Exiles by Maxym M Marrineau (about a "beast charmer" which is like a magical Pokemon trainer and had a couple foxish beasts)
-reread The Shadow of the Fox by Julie Kagawa (fav YA series)
-The Bird King by Willow G Wilson ( historical fantasy set during the Spanish Inquisition I really enjoyed it)
Fifteen! That’s a great month. I finished four in September. One was David Copperfield which is a chunker, but the Victorian writing slowed down my reading pace. I’m glad I took it slowly though. It was good. Now I am prepared for Demon Copperhead for a bookclub in October.
This is by far the most books I’ve read in a month this year! Classic are definitely slow to go through. I’ll be curious to hear how they compare!
I enjoyed the twist of The Perfect Marriage. There was a reason she was seemingly being a terrible attorney lol
Because she set him up?
I thought it was super predictable 😅 and I’m terrible with predicting plots😂
I'm so pleased to hear that you loved Gone Girl. I really hope Gillian Flynn writes another book! She's the best psychological thriller writer out there. I definitely want to read How to Solve Your Own Murder. I'm on the waiting list at my library for it. And I definitely need to read my first Octavia E Butler this year ☺
In the Dream House I would highly recommend reading physically cos it has a interactive thing at one point! It might be more helpful to read it that way.
I might have to give a second shot!
My 10th grade teacher read Metamorphosis by Kafka aloud to my class. She kept laughing about what a funny story it was while we all stared at her confused.
I was really surprised at how much I enjoyed the Janice Hallett book I read (The Mysterious Case of the Alperton Angels). It's written in a similar format. It took me a bit to get into, but I ended up loving it.
Free our baby girl Claw-dia. 😂
I’m the one that’s locked in!! I have to, or I won’t be able to be productive at all because of her 😂
She fills the void in my heart left by snow globe Emily 😂
SGE is actually facing me when I'm filming... I'm constantly being surveilled XD
Posted 33 seconds ago. I'm on you tube too much!🎉
Worth it to be first though 💅
I read The Age of Magical Overthinking and I agree with everything you've said here! It pissed me off for the exact same reasons.
The thumbnail 😍😍 it gives me 2020-2021 Emily and I love it!! 🎉 12+ books per month? Not a problem 🔥👌🏼
It's like double what I've been reading monthly this year it's crazy! Lots of shorter books but... 5 non fictions??? Who am I??
I'm reading We Solve Murders, about a third of the way through it. I love the laidback humor in it. And, a cat named Trouble, you can't go wrong. The main character is admonished by his cat when he stops rubbing his head, funny. My next one will be Apprentice to the Villain.
The Perfect Marriage was Jeneva Rose’s first book. She is putting out a revised and reworked edition this fall.
On the topic of words the word robot comes from the Czech word for slave, it's from a 1920s book originally written in Czech called The Universal Robot.
Also technically we could say everyone has a vagina bc v's are "invaginations" and p's are "envaginations", so we can use language in a more equal way!
Love interview with a vampire one of my favorite books and films too 🖤🍂🎃🍂🖤🖤👻🍁🍁👻👻🖤🖤🤎📖📚📚📚📖📚📚📚📖📙📙📖📖📙📙📖📚📚📖📙📖📖🤎🖤🍂🎃🎃🍂🤎🤎🖤🍂🍁🍁🍁🍁🖤💛💛💛
How to solve your own murder is my work book club pic for October. Glad you liked it, and I will def pick up the audio book.
I hope you'll enjoy it!
I was watching this video in bed before sleeping but I dropped my phone in my face and I guess that's my sign to go to sleep and finish this tomorrow 😢😢😢
LOL it will be there waiting for you when you can hold your phone!
September was a pretty productive reading month for me as well! I finally got around reading Vicious by V. E. Schwab and I loved it. I had problems with Vengeful, but overall enjoyed it too. I saw that there's a third book coming, supposedly? I hope so, I didn't like the abrupt conclusion of the story haha.
I also read Graveyard Shift by M. L. Rio, which was one of my most anticipated releases for the end of the year, and it was perfectly atmospheric for fall! The story wasn't much, but the vibes were exactly what I wanted.
The ends of Never Lie & Perfect Marriage are so bad lol Also Age of Magical Overthinking was all over the place! A shame, cause I also enjoyed Wordslut & Cultish.
Maybe the main character from Frugal Wizard's Handbook needed that self-sabotage help book. haha
And I think I'm the only one who liked Frugal Wizard's Handbook because I can really relate to how the main character felt like a failure among people he grew up with becoming more successful.
Stephen King's book The Dead Zone is set before Cujo, and there's a reference in Cujo to something that happens in The Dead Zone.
I've read that but I don't remember the reference lol
Oh, I don't blame you for being disappointed with/DNF'ing Freda McFadden's books. I picked up The Teacher from the library recently after hearing people rave about it and I was appalled by the storytelling, the characters and the writing. I smiled when you mentioned the focus on clothes because in this book, the main character is obsessed with shoes. When you look up ending of books you DNF'ed, you should check out the summary of The Teacher just for kicks - the twists and turns are just ludicrous. Now that I know that this was initially self-published, this makes a bit more sense, but I agree wholeheartedly with you - didn't the publisher have anything else better to publish? (They are probably making lots of money with those books, unfortunately, so I guess they probably don't care too much about the quality.)
They are throw away beach read books in my opinion, take no real thinking, are fast page turners and a bit ridiculous, they are not gonna cut it with the really widely read reader so…..I think that’s where the divide is. She’s trying to be another Lisa Jewell but isn’t quite as good - and Lisa Jewell isn’t really amazing either
I haven’t seen a video of yours since the Stephen King backlog where you read them all!
'That was mean. I loved it.' Ahahha me too)
The “Year of Magical Overthinking” is a play on the well known book by J Didion called “The year of magical thinking, which was a memoir.
Is it? It's the age of magical overthinking" though. Either way. I haven't tried that, is it good?
Fun fact about Cujo the thing with the red dye in cereal causing problems really happened when they originally launched Frankenberry
Also the dad from Cujo was just in Stephen King's new book in the story Rattlesnakes
That thumb 😭
Stephen King and I have the same relationship! Recently I've been listening to Fairytale by Stephen King.. I highly recommend it!
The Frugal Wizard's Handbook was by far the worst of the Secret Projects. I think you will enjoy the other two better, they're more "serious" than the first two.
I'm slowly going through them but so far 2/2 I didn't love :/
"that was mean, i loved it" 😭😭😭 but seriously i wanted to read that book, thanks for clarifying that the title has nothing to do with the book 😬
Great job Emily with all books you read in September 🤎🖤🍁💛💛🍁🍂🤎🍂🍁📙🍃🍃🍃🍃📙🖤🍂🍂📖🎃🍁🎃📖📖🤎🍃📙📙📙🍃🍂🍂🤎🍃📙📙📖📖💛🎃🎃🖤📖💛🎃🎃🍁🍂🍂🍃📚
What’s the best book (or worst one!) you’ve read this month?)
I read the entirety of the Silo series by Hugh Howey and really loved it!
I just finished My heart is a chainsaw. Five stars 😀
Empire of the Vampire has been my favorite read this month and very possibly this year.
The Devil’s Playground by Craig Russell. It was like reading a supernatural film noir, set in multiple timelines, but centered on old Hollywood during the Silent Film era.
@@amyschmid2404that’s next on my list!
I'm very much with you on wishing Gillian Flynn would write more! She started a publishing imprint and all the books she picked have really cool premises. I read one of the first ones and it was just middling, unfortunately. But I want to try one about a queer nun solving crimes, although the reviews are meh.
Why every time you dislike a book I hate, I feel vindicated? 😂😂😂
Haha I feel the same when others confirmed it sucks in the comments!!
I've finished 6 books but 5 of them were manga. The sole prose one was a Moomin book, oh well 😅 They were all very enjoyable
I agree about Apt Pupil and Never Lie. 😧🙄
Emily, I’ve enjoyed Kindred, and the Parable of the Sower, Parable of the Talents books. I wasn’t crazy about Dawn sadly. Where should I go next for Butler?
I’d go with Bloodchild next!
@@BookswithEmilyFox thank you!
I finished the Sword of Kaigen!! (finally, lol)
just quick question. where do you usually listen to audiobooks?
Libby! A lot of library cards can be linked on it!
@@BookswithEmilyFox thank u!
Your lipstick from ?
I had the opposite month and only read 3 books, but at least two very good ones 😊 (Kindred and the very secret society of irregular witches)
2/3 is awesome! I'm trying to put down books more often when I'm not enjoying them so I'll increase my loved vs hated stat XD
I’ve still yet to read a Stephen King book 🥲
I have read one. It was not particularly good. So you are not missing out on anything. 😢
I feel so validated whenever people dislike the perfect marriage because I think it’s one of the worst books I’ve read in a long time 🤣
I recently read the escape room by L.D Smithson and I think Its my favourite thriller I have read this year its soo entertaining,its reality tv with escape rooms
I am a writer and I write a lot of stories. I am a black woman and most of my characters are white people and I love their stories and I love all my characters. But this time I am writing a book about all black people and the main character is me. 😂 I don't know how the protagonist became me but yeah she's me. In real life I have long jet black hair but in my novel I have dreadlocks. I didn't use my real name but I used my real last name which is Williams, so when people call me Ms. Williams in the book it feels like I am writing about my life even though it's fiction and not about my life. It just feels weird because the lady is me.
I highly recommend a hard copy or Kindle version of In the Dream House. Audio was probably not the best way to read it tbh.
i am SO here for the freida hate! i've read two of hers and i don't get the hype at all.
Usually I understand why a book is popular even if they didn't work for me but... I'm genuinely confused about her!
Im in a reading slump 😢 i loved the appeal, im a bit hot and miss with the author, loved 50% of her books not too fussed over the other 50%
I don't know how my protagonist ends up being me. She even has my last name in the novel which is Williams. I am a writer and I am a very private person because I am not going to use my government name on any of my books I will use a pen name for my first name and even my last name or I might just go anonymous. My main character is me and I.can write the other characters in the book but as soon as I get to the lady who is me I have to pause for a second and stop writing the book because this character is me but I am not going to lie it's a good urban fiction story. It's a really good story.
Try reading The Dream House.
I dnfed The Age of Magical Overthinking after the first chapter. Awful. Loved Cultish...on the fence about trying Wordslut.
i didn't like The mountain is you because at first it felt like it was delivering a good message but within like 30 ish pages i quickly got the tone that the book was sort of blaming the reader for everything? Like it had the tone of everything is your fault for the issues that arise in your life sort of message. Plus it became really repetitive after a certain point. The book probably could've been summarized in like 50 pages or less.
I cannot believe she hate Freida McFadden and Jeneva Rose books. Never heard anybody hating it.
I wanted to love them but they're genuinely some of the worst books I've tried to read
I DNFd The Appeal because I was doing the audio version. Listening to the to and from headers over and over again was tiresome. I didn't make it to the murder. I'm very curious if you think the story is worth suffering through the format. I know she has a new book out. I was interested in checking that one out.
Oh god I can imagine! Some books cannot be audiobooks!
❤📚🐱
Read Shark Heart 🦈
This was not the best secret project. Most people I know have rated this at the bottom of the 4
Where are your cats???
The Perfect Marriage has a big twist. She’s smarter than you think she is.
I thought it was predictable😅 I actually guess it in the very beginning 😭 she was just so obvious 😭
Why would you torture a yazi? Like why? It's not okay and it is still illegal.
Metamorphosis 🫣the way that it was taught in class was awful and that book still makes me want to run and hide