domingo, 9 de outubro de 2022

Sunday Post. Did I Buy Too Many Books?

Sunday Post is a meme hosted by Caffeinated Book Reviews.

When I wrote, "see you next Sunday," I was naive and had too much hope. 😋 I still have to perfect my blogging schedule. I just spent a long time without blogging, and I need to learn how to balance work, life, and blogging again. It might take me longer than I want to, but I will do it! 🤞

What has been happening in my life:

🌻 Happy Halloween month! Like last year, I'm currently watching one spooky film per day until the end of the month. 👻💀🎃🍂 So far, I've only watched two films that I had watched previously (Corpse Bride and House of Wax), and it had been such a long time since I last watched them that I could not remember most of the story. Now, what should I watch today?
🌻 My PhD and other research activities are taking most of my time (I'm writing this post while working on a paper). But it's okay when you do something you love (even if I constantly doubt myself -- you know, the famous impostor syndrome).
🌻 I have read three books since the month began. I'm currently reading The Undead Truth of Us -- I was expecting to love it a bit more. However, I really want to understand the "zombie mystery," so I cannot put it down.
🌻 My Scribd subscription ends this month. If you know someone who wants to subscribe to it, here's my link. Although I'm more financially secure due to the researchship, books (and life in general) are more expensive than ever, so I use Scribd for research and blog purposes.

            ✨ I did not think I still had it in me to write discussion posts, but I did it! This week, I wondered if my favourite book and my comfort book are all the same.
                         
                        Jeff Bezos is evil, and Amazon is a capitalist/consumerist hell. Nevertheless, when you do not have that many places to buy books from (there is not a single bookshop where I live, and an up-to-date library that harbours English books is non-existent), it's hard to resist their book sales. I got Janella Angeles's When Night Breaks, Rose Szabo's What Big Teeth, Ryan Douglass's The Taking of Jake Livingston, and Sherri L. Smith's Orleans. I will have to order from other places to redeem myself -- any bookshops with free European shipping that you can recommend besides Book Depository? 
                         
                        After a very nice e-mail from the publisher and me asking how I could request the book since NetGalley only let me "wish" for it, I received Moniquill Blackgoose's To Shape a Dragon Breath. It is my first 2023 ARC, and I can't wait to read it.

                        How have you been? What have you been up to? What are you currently reading
                         
                        If you like my blog and would like to support it, you may use my Book Depository affiliate link, my Scribd referral, my Perlego referral, or buy me a coffee. You may also buy some bookish items from my RedBubble store. 
                         

                        terça-feira, 27 de setembro de 2022

                        Favourite Books & Comfort Books, All the Same?

                        Discussion article alert! 😁 I confess, I did not think I still had the ability to write discussion posts -- okay, blog discussion posts because I think that what I do for a living can be described as a 10k to 200k words "discussion post." But inspiration comes from the strangest places -- okay, Twitter is not the most bizarre or odd place to find inspiration. I saw this tweet about one's favourite book and comfort book a thousand years ago, and it was the kick-off for this discussion. So, is my favourite book different from my comfort book?

                        🌻 Foremost, here is the tweet that inspired this discussion post:

                           "i’m convinced there’s a difference between your favorite book and your comfort book" -- Twitter @eveliaswaffle

                        I should begin by sharing my answer right away: YES! I do believe there is a difference between my favourite book and my comfort book.

                        As many of you already know, I'm terrible at narrowing down my choices (as I'm also awful at remembering book titles, characters' names, towns' names, etc.). 😅 Picking my favourite book is like looking for a needle in a haystack, and it's simply impossible. I promise I will not digress, but for the sake of not making me plunge into a haystack looking for my favourite book ever, I shall change the question from "favourite book" to "favourite books." It's easier to pick an example without feeling I'm making a compromise -- I do not like making compromises with my books.

                        I love all of my books. 💛

                        Juliet Marillier's Heart's Blood, a Beauty and the Beast retelling, is one of my favourite books -- this was the book that a decade ago made me fall in love with reading all over again. Of course, I haven't read it since then. Why? I'm too scared that a second reading will disappoint me. What if I hate the characters and the plot? What if it isn't as brilliant as I thought it was? What if I no longer cherish it? I do not want to wonder why I loved the story so much. I also haven't finished Sabaa Tahir's Ember Quartet for that exact reason. I promised myself I would re-read the first three books, what seems like a century ago, before picking the last one. However, I have not been able to do so because I fear I might not love the series as much as I initially did. If you remember, I gushed so much about Laia (even though so many people "hated" her) and Elias and their deadly journey. I obsessed with these books for months! I STILL DO! I just do not want to lose this feeling.

                        Re-reading old favourites, which I have very fond memories of, seems a daunting task -- one of those tasks you keep postponing because you are terrified of them. Like going through all your unread books and find something you want to unhaul. Or looking at your TBR pile and hear their judgemental whispers about when you will be reading them. And, if I fear reading these books, none of my favourite books can be my comfort books. No matter what, I cannot easily pick these books from my bookshelf, wrap myself in a warm blanket, and re-read them. So, yes, this is why I'm very much convinced there's a difference between my favourite book and my comfort book.

                        The most perfect reading kit.

                        What can possibly be my comfort book, then? On the one hand, I can go back to my comfort books and re-read them over and over again without fearing or caring about not loving them. On the other hand, reading these books gives me warm feelings, and I'm not constantly worried that I might hate it. I do not dread that my experience will be ruined. As a matter o fact, I find myself falling in love with these books more and more as I read them.

                        By the way, we all have our definition of a comfort book. When I write or say "comfort book," you might have thought that I was talking about some cute contemporary novels. But no. Darkness brings me comfort. Okay, clarification: not horror gore. Darkness does not mean horror/terror. Don't get me wrong. I love watching horror TV films and shows (I think it's time to re-watch Malignant, which is freaking brilliant), but I don't think I'm very fond of horror books -- apart from Mexican Gothic, but that is because of all the Gothic vibes. I always find something amiss.

                        The spooky season is upon us...
                        I'm the happiest when reading about emotionally broken characters rebuilding their world, eerie settings and ruinous atmospheres, terrible secrets, monsters lurking in the shadows, and good and evil being nothing more than shades of grey. I'm the happiest when I'm reading about all the creepy tropes you can imagine. Some books in which I can find this comfort are This Savage Song (my precious August and my badass Kate), The Archived (Fine! Everything Schwab writes brings me comfort -- but some books are easier to get back to than others; I don't think I will ever go back to Shades because all those pages are daunting), The Hunger Games trilogy (Don't ask why. This book is just everything to me. Even with that ending -- I hated it so much the first time that I gave the book an awful rating, and now I'm like "all the stars"); the second time around, I loved it -- and I might have cried about the cat).

                        As written above, this statement also made me consider the genres that bring me comfort. When I need some cheering up, I find myself leaning towards YA dystopian novels -- btw we need another dystopian boom. And fantasy worlds. But not high fantasy with a hundred books in a series. Extensive world-building is awful for someone to whom, when you ask, "what's the plot about?" all that comes out of her mouth is a rambling mess. Many of my comfort books do not have what you would call a traditional happy ending, and since I don't want to spoil the plot, let me just say that there is a lot of hurt, but also hope -- and because the endings are so hopeful, I always get back to them. Isn't hope what we all need? No matter how old we are?

                        Heimlich never gave up hope.

                        The darkest the story is, the more comforting I will find a book. Just give me heart-wrenching pain, and I will find some hope to light up the day. As someone wrote, “sometimes in the darkest places, we find the brightest light” (no, I never read the book; I just quote it a lot -- maybe I should read it, but first, I must remember the title).

                        🌻 So, yes, my favourite books and my comfort books (and genre, if I care to add) are far from the same.

                        Do you think your comfort book and your favourite book are the same? If not, what are your comfort books?

                        If you like my blog and would like to support it, you may use my Book Depository affiliate link, my Scribd referral, my Perlego referral, or buy me a coffee.
                        You may also buy some bookish items from my RedBubble store.

                         

                        domingo, 4 de setembro de 2022

                        Sunday Post. One More Hiatus

                        Sunday Post is a meme hosted by Caffeinated Book Reviews.

                        Some days, you wake up thinking, "Blogging is no longer for me." Other days, you wake you with a thousand post ideas popping in your head and think, "There are so many book conversations I want to have." So, after another return followed by a hiatus, which I thought would end my blogging hobby, here I am, AGAIN! 😅 I'm not sure if "Sunday Post" is still an active meme, but this has always been the perfect spot to begin anew after a long time without writing.

                        What happened in the last months:

                        🌻 Last time I wrote, I was back doing research for my thesis. Now, I want to share that I'm back at participating in academic conferences -- I have joined four conferences since June (the last was just yesterday). These are always so much fun, and I learn a lot. However, I always end up feeling like an imposter, and whatever I do is never good enough *IMPOSTER SYNDROME ALERT*
                        🌻 I'm finally once again reading more often than not. Now, it's time to try to read every single day. By the way, if you know someone who would like to subscribe to Scribd, here's my link (my subscription is over, and that is how I read most books 🥺).
                        🌻 Okay, I don't think I have anything else to share. It seems like the last months have been all about reading, writing, researching, and academic conferences. And resting. I'm starting to realize that "resting" and "being lazy" are not the same thing -- I can't keep beating myself up constantly for not doing something I see as productive. Sometimes, your mind and body need an hour or two of doing nothing.
                        🌻 Last but not least, Nina has passed away. This is actually the first time I'm writing anywhere that my Nina has crossed the rainbow. I miss her purring. I miss her blue eyes. I miss her mood swings. I miss how she bossed the other cats around. I miss her! She would be turning fifteen this month. ❤️
                                     
                                      
                                    Did I get a lot more books in the past months? I did! Am I in the mood to search for the covers, put them all together in Photoshop, and then work on the HTML code to ensure the resolution is perfect? No, I'm not. But I really need to share with you some great books I got through NetGalley (did something happen to NetGalley? It's so empty these days!), whose reviews I need to share with you ASAP.  Anyway, I'm just showing you a book I got this week from the Kobo store for free: Indigenous Resurgence, Decolonization, and Movements for Environmental Justice, edited by Jaskiran Dhillon. Yes, I got it for a future presentation -- that is, if my paper is accepted.

                                    How have you been? What are you reading? Are you excited about September's book releases? See you next Sunday! 🤞🏻

                                    If you like my blog and would like to support it, you may use my Book Depository affiliate link, my Scribd referral or buy me a coffee.
                                    You may also buy some bookish items from my RedBubble store.
                                     
                                     

                                    terça-feira, 17 de maio de 2022

                                    TTT. 7 Books I Was SO EXCITED to Get, but Still Haven’t Read

                                    Top Ten Tuesday is a weekly meme hosted by The Artsy Reader Girl.
                                     
                                    Top Ten Tuesday wants to shame us all this week. It's calling out our compulsive book-buying habits and exposing the happiness of finally getting the book we wanted only to put it on the TBR pile and never pick it ever again. Okay, "ever again" is too harsh. Let me replace it by "only picking it a thousand years later after cleaning the dust and some spiderwebs." Better, right? 😋 Now it's time to start my guilt trip with seven books I wanted so freaking much, but I have yet to plunge into their worlds.
                                     
                                    Gallant, by V.E. Schwab | Bought on 02/03/2022
                                    For the Wolf, by Hannah Whitten | Bought on 17/11/2021
                                    This Poison Heart, by Kalynn Bayron | Bought on 17/11/2021
                                    House of Hollow, by Kristen Sutherland | Bought on 18/10/2021
                                    Yolk, by Mary H.K. Choi | Bought on 11/01/2022
                                    A Phoenix First Must Burn, edited by Patrice Caldwell | Bought on 28/05/2021
                                    Porcelain: A Gothic Fairy Tale, by Benjamin Read & Chris Wildgoose | Bought on 28/12/2021

                                    Are you feeling as guilty as I'm after putting together this post? Have you read any of the books I mentioned? Or did you buy any of them only to add to your TBR pile?

                                    If you like my blog and would like to support it, you may use my Book Depository affiliate link, my Scribd referral, or buy me a coffee.
                                    You may also buy some bookish items from my RedBubble store.
                                     

                                    domingo, 15 de maio de 2022

                                    Sunday Post. No More I'm Back

                                    Sunday Post is a meme hosted by Caffeinated Book Reviews.

                                    HELLO! I think it is time to stop writing "I'm back!". 😅 The last few months have been pretty eventful -- I fear I have been on an unlucky strike -- and blogging just wasn't a priority. In fact, even reading was not a priority. After flying through the pages in January, I had trouble reading one book per month. But now that my PhD studentship has begun, I'll be back to the reading and writing world -- and hopefully, to the blogging world too.

                                    What happened this week:

                                    🌻 I'm back doing research for my thesis, and I missed it so freaking much -- I missed doing research in general. Reading fiction and non-fiction, writing down my ideas on paper, looking for new books to add to my TBR pile with the excuse "it's for academic purposes." I missed it all!
                                    🌻 I finished reading a book -- a massive accomplishment for someone who did not finish a single book the month before. By the way, if you know someone who would like to subscribe to Scribd, here's my link (my subscription is over, and that is how I read most books 🥺).
                                    🌻 Signed up for online seminars and conferences -- I need to get my groove back.
                                    🌻 Looked for new books, but I have no clue what has been released in the past five months. Any good recommendations?
                                    🌻 Lots of crime shows & YouTube crime podcasts -- is that how we call them? 🤔
                                    🌻 Kena: Bridge of Spirits is so freaking cute! If you haven't played it yet, you should. Now, let's play some Spyro.
                                                 
                                                The Gothic lover in me had to get her hands on Anatomy: A Love Story by Dana Schwartz (I probably misspelled the name and can't find it). And it was being sold almost half the price, so I really could not pass up the chance of having it. Skin of the Sea by Natasha Bowen had been under my radar since its release -- not only because of its beautiful cover, but also due to its alluring premise ("Simi prayed to the gods, once. Now she serves them as Mami Wata--a mermaid--collecting the souls of those who die at sea and blessing their journeys back home" 😍).

                                                How have you been? Did you get new books this week?

                                                If you like my blog and would like to support it, you may use my Book Depository affiliate link, my Scribd referral or buy me a coffee.
                                                You may also buy some bookish items from my RedBubble store.
                                                 
                                                 

                                                domingo, 6 de fevereiro de 2022

                                                Monthly Wrap-Up. January

                                                Goodbye, January! 🥳 Usually, the first month of the new year goes very slowly, but I have got to say that January has gone by pretty quickly. Just yesterday, I was celebrating the arrival of the new year, and now it is February -- and I'm worried because I haven't finished a single book, nor completed a paper I will be presenting very soon, nor updated my blog regularly as I expected.

                                                What I've been up in January:

                                                🌻 I read six books, and two of them were five-stars readings. Six books is a considerable number for someone who had not been able to read a book since November.
                                                🌻 Did I share with you that I finally won a PhD Research Studentship? Because I did! 🎉 And, this week, I received my signed contract. I will start in May.
                                                🌻 Regarding research, I submitted two new abstract proposals for events -- one will take place in Dublin, so I really hope my abstract is accepted. Sadly, I had to withdraw from the Uncharted book project. Many people were no longer going to submit their essays, and I would not be able to write a 10k words one. I still hope to write and publish my essay on Posthumanism in the franchise.
                                                🌻 I'm once again addicted to Sims 4. I'm trying the Not So Berry challenge -- not that I will be able to complete it because 1) I don't have the patience and 2) I do not have all the required expansions.
                                                🌻 Work, work, and more work...
                                                               
                                                               


                                                              This is what happens when you get yourself a Kobo gift card. 😋 I got myself Big Girl Small Town by Michelle Gallen, Queen by Candice Carty-Williams, Yolk by Mary H. K. Choi, The Watchers by A.M. Shine, The Snow Song by Sally Gardner, and The Thirteenth Tale by Diane Setterfield. Most of these books are outside my comfort zone -- yes, some are spooky tales with Gothic vibes, but most are contemporary novels, which is not what I read. I'm really excited to give them a try.

                                                               
                                                              How was your January? How many news books made their way into your bookshelf?

                                                              If you like my blog and would like to support it, you may use my Book Depository  affiliate link, use my Scribd referral, or buy me a coffee. You may also buy some bookish items from my RedBubble store
                                                               

                                                              terça-feira, 4 de janeiro de 2022

                                                              TTT. Can't Wait Books of 2022


                                                              My yearly can't wait books lists are usually much longer, but I've decided to take it slow since I'm returning from a long unwanted hiatus. I picked one book per month -- actually, I must confess, choosing one book was far from easy, with all the great books that are coming out this year. Anyway, shall we take a look at my list?
                                                               
                                                              Daughter of the Moon Goddess by Sue Lynn Tan. If you remember, I'm always up for a retelling. Also, I can't resist mythology and legendary creatures.
                                                               
                                                              Girl Who Fell Beneath the Sea by Axie Oh. I'm in love with the cover. It's beautiful! 😍 I'm too in love with the premise and dying to plunge into the Spirit Realm.
                                                               
                                                              Gallant by V.E. Schwab. Forever and always reading anything this woman writes. Although, I confess I'm a few books behind.
                                                              Goodreads || Book Depository
                                                              Queen of the Tiles by Hanna Alkaf. I might be awful at playing Scrabble, but The Weight of Our Sky is one of my favourite books (and I'm waiting for my copy of The Girl and the Ghost).

                                                              Not Good for Maidens by Tori Bovalino. "Gothic" plus "Retelling" equals "Book that I must read". 😋 The cover is a bit terrifying, but I like it a lot.
                                                               
                                                              The Dream Runners by Shveta Thakrar. The blurb is super intriguing ("harvesting mortal dreams for the consumption of the naga court"), and the cover is just stunning.
                                                              The Darkening by Sunya Mara. I was caught by the premise of a "city trapped in the eye of a cursed storm."
                                                               
                                                              The Undead Truth of Us by Britney S. Lewis. I fell in love with the cover (sunflowers are my favourites), but I stayed for the premise -- even though I think it will break my heart.
                                                               
                                                              The Sunbearer Trials by Aiden Thomas. I never read anything by Thomas, but a book that is being marketed as "Percy Jackson meets The Hunger Games" seems the perfect book to begin.
                                                              One Dark Window by Rachel Gillig. A gothic fantasy where the main character has a monster trapped in her head? Count me in!
                                                               
                                                              Bloodmarked by Tracy Deonn. I adored Legendborn -- it tackled racial issues and intergenerational trauma -- and I cannot wait to know what happens next. I'm aware I'm on the wrong ship, but Bree and Sel are perfect.
                                                               
                                                              Scorched Earth by Danielle L. Jensen. I haven't read any book in the series yet, but I love anything Jensen writes. How can I not be excited?
                                                              Goodreads || Book Depository


                                                              Which 2022 book releases are you dying to read?

                                                              If you like my blog and would like to support it, you may use my Book Depository affiliate link, my Scribd referral, or buy me a coffee.
                                                              You may also buy some bookish items from my RedBubble store.