Sorry to my coworkers who no longer get to experience daily updates about medieval debt collection
Reviews and Comments
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mouse finished reading Legal Plunder by Daniel Lord Smail
mouse finished reading System Collapse by Martha Wells(duplicate)
mouse stopped reading Those Beyond the Wall by Micaiah Johnson
mouse started reading Those Beyond the Wall by Micaiah Johnson
I re-read The Space Between Worlds to refresh my memory when I saw that this was out, and I was nervous to see what this would be, since that story felt.. concluded. But seeing that it's following different characters is a relief! I'm curious to see where it goes.
mouse commented on The Book of Margery Kempe by Margery Kempe
mouse commented on The Book of Margery Kempe by Margery Kempe
mouse commented on The Book of Margery Kempe by Margery Kempe
mouse finished reading Abarat by Clive Barker
mouse reviewed The West Passage by Jared Pechaček
Fantastic Planet does the Book of Kells
No rating
This book is so visual and imaginative, and thrives when walking you through the surreal, psychedelic, illuminated manuscript of a world. But while it was always interesting, I found it hard to stay engaged with the story at times, particularly in the middle. The ending compelled me, and I wish I'd had more of that connection to the plot and characters through the rest of the book.
mouse started reading Baking with Fortitude by Dee Rettali
mouse commented on As I Remember Him by Hans Zinsser
mouse started reading As I Remember Him by Hans Zinsser
mouse reviewed Spectred Isle by KJ Charles
Ivy
No rating
Growing up, English ivy was an acutely troublesome invasive species -- in the region generally and in my family's yard specifically. My neighbors had, foolishly, planted it, and it would grow up trees and deprive them of their nutrients, and send vines into crevices of buildings, damaging them. At a formative age, I learned about this: how ivy sends these little creeping tendrils into all the small holes it finds. And I would sit in the back yard, imagining the ivy crawling up my body, planting little roots in my pores and feeding on me until I was a desiccated husk.
The point being, I had a hard time with the fact that ivy showing up was a good thing in this story, because to me the appearance of an inexplicable ivy leaf could not be a more ominous sign. So if you have my extremely specific aversion to the …
Growing up, English ivy was an acutely troublesome invasive species -- in the region generally and in my family's yard specifically. My neighbors had, foolishly, planted it, and it would grow up trees and deprive them of their nutrients, and send vines into crevices of buildings, damaging them. At a formative age, I learned about this: how ivy sends these little creeping tendrils into all the small holes it finds. And I would sit in the back yard, imagining the ivy crawling up my body, planting little roots in my pores and feeding on me until I was a desiccated husk.
The point being, I had a hard time with the fact that ivy showing up was a good thing in this story, because to me the appearance of an inexplicable ivy leaf could not be a more ominous sign. So if you have my extremely specific aversion to the plant, be aware I guess?