Category: Review
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PS I Like You
Lily has a secret pen-pal, a fellow Chemistry student who shares her love for music and eventually begins to share more about his life with he
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The Young Queens
The world of Three Dark Crowns is back with this prequel novella that gives us insight into the lives of the three queens before they had to start attempting to kill each other.
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The Power
The Power, explores what we think we know about gender roles, the human body and the human condition, and imagines a world you want to read more and more about.
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Truly Devious
A kidnapping, a boarding school mystery as old as the school itself, a new girl in town, and a suspicious death. It’s a recipe for a great book, and it’s the recipe Maureen Johnson used to craft Truly Devious
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Reign of the Fallen
Fantasy, magic, bisexual protagonists, and people coming back from the dead. If those things pique your interest, Reign of the Fallen might be the book for you
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Rereading My Least Favorite Harry Potter Book
One of my 2018 goals is to finish my reread of the beloved Harry Potter series, and I really do love this series, but I still have a “least favorite” and that is Order of the Phoenix.
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I Finally Read Catcher in the Rye
I am the worst English major ever, because I am 22 years old, in my final semester of college, and I just read Catcher in the Rye for the first time.
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Lucky in Love
Kasie West, the queen of contemporary YA romance, tackles a lottery wine, an Asian love interest, and big money problems in Lucky in Love.
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5 Things I Forgot Happened in the Goblet of Fire
I’ve probably read the books a few times in my life and seen the movies, especially Goblet of Fire, hundreds of times, and yet on this re-read a couple things caught my attention as things I had completely forgot happened
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Love, Life, and the List
Kasie West’s Love, Life, and the List is a must-read for all YA contemporary romance readers. I haven’t related so much to a book in a long time.
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Wonder
After seeing Wonder in theaters with my third grade sister’s class, I felt compelled to read the book, and I’m glad I did. The movie, directed by Stephen Chbosky, author of The Perks of Being a Wallflower, was a pretty good adaptation of the book and the casting was amazing, but I enjoyed the book…
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Emma in the Night
Psychological thrillers are my bread and butter these days, and I was not disappointed by Wendy Walker’s take on narcissistic personality disorder and a missing persons case that is cracked wide open.