Sonja's bookshelf: all en-US Tue, 29 Apr 2025 21:47:20 -0700 60 Sonja's bookshelf: all 144 41 /images/layout/goodreads_logo_144.jpg Doggerel: Poems 216296476 One of Literary Hub's Most Anticipated Books of 2025



Doggerel is a revelatory meditation on Blackness, masculinity, and vulnerability from one of poetry’s boldest voices.


Reginald Dwayne Betts is our foremost chronicler of the ways prison shapes and transforms American life. In Doggerel, Betts examines this subject through a more prosaic—but equally rich� dogs. He reminds us that, as our lives are broken and put back together, the only witness often barks instead of talks. In these poems, which touch on companionship in its many forms, Betts seamlessly and skillfully deploys the pantoum, ghazal, and canzone, in conversation with artists such as Freddie Gibbs and Lil Wayne.


Simultaneously philosophical and playful, Doggerel is a meditation on family, falling in love, friendship, and those who accompany us on our walk through life. Balancing political critique with personal experience, Betts once again shows us “how poems can be enlisted to radically disrupt narrative� (Dan Chiasson, The New Yorker)—and, in doing so, reveals the world anew.


�. . . every story becomes a multiplication,


If the naming is filled less with names than


With the best parts, the barking & everything


Else, because who among us hasn’t been


As mangy as a rescue, even on our best


Days, desiring mostly to be loved.�


—from “Rings”]]>
93 Reginald Dwayne Betts 1324089261 Sonja 5 4.67 2025 Doggerel: Poems
author: Reginald Dwayne Betts
name: Sonja
average rating: 4.67
book published: 2025
rating: 5
read at: 2025/04/29
date added: 2025/04/29
shelves:
review:
“…desiring mostly to be loved.�
]]>
Casualties of Truth 214339549 From the author of Book of the Little Axe, nominated for the Hurston/Wright Legacy Award, a riveting literary novel with the sharp edges of a thriller about the abuses of history and the costs of revenge, set between Washington, DC, and Johannesburg, South Africa

Prudence Wright seems to have
it a loving husband, Davis; a spacious home in Washington, DC; and the
past glories of a successful career at McKinsey, which now enables her to
dedicate her days to her autistic son Roland. When she and Davis head out for
dinner with one of Davis’s new colleagues on a stormy summer evening filled
with startling and unwelcome interruptions, Prudence has little reason to think
that certain details of her history might arise sometime between cocktails and
the appetizer course.

Yet when Davis’s colleague turns out to be Matshediso, a man from Prudence’s past, she is transported back to the formative months she spent as a law student in South Africa in 1996. As an intern at a Johannesburg law firm, Prudence attended sessions of the Truth and Reconciliation hearings, which uncovered the many horrors and human rights abuses of the Apartheid state, and which fundamentally shaped her sense of righteousness and justice. But Prudence experienced personal horrors in South Africa as well, ones she long resolved to keep carefully hidden and ones which Matshediso threatens now to expose. When Matshediso finally reveals the real reason behind his sudden reappearance, he will force Prudence to examine her most deeply held beliefs and to excavate inner reserves of resilience and strength.

Lauren Francis-Sharma’s previous two novels have established her as a deft chronicler of history and its intersections with flawed humans struggling to find peace in unjust circumstances. With keen insight and gripping tension, Casualties of Truth explosively mines questions of whether we are ever truly able to remove the stains of our past and how we may attempt to reconcile with unquestionable wrongs.]]>
272 Lauren Francis-Sharma 0802163785 Sonja 0 to-read 4.07 2025 Casualties of Truth
author: Lauren Francis-Sharma
name: Sonja
average rating: 4.07
book published: 2025
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/04/29
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
Something About Living 205275668 81 Lena Khalaf Tuffaha 1629222739 Sonja 0 to-read 4.47 2024 Something About Living
author: Lena Khalaf Tuffaha
name: Sonja
average rating: 4.47
book published: 2024
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/04/27
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
The Tartar Steppe 83017 198 Dino Buzzati 1567923046 Sonja 0 to-read 4.24 1940 The Tartar Steppe
author: Dino Buzzati
name: Sonja
average rating: 4.24
book published: 1940
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/04/27
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
<![CDATA[Born Sacred: Poems for Palestine]]> 219916558

Vulnerable, eloquent, compassionate, and enduring,Born Sacred is an in-time reflection honouring the shared histories of Indigenous Peoples of North America and of the people in Palestine. Sumac offers this collection as a small piece of life dedicated to Palestinians and resounds the collective call for solidarity in our shared liberation.]]>
160 Smokii Sumac 1773637258 Sonja 5 3.86 Born Sacred: Poems for Palestine
author: Smokii Sumac
name: Sonja
average rating: 3.86
book published:
rating: 5
read at: 2025/04/24
date added: 2025/04/27
shelves:
review:
100 poems for Palestine by a woman from the Ktunaxa nation in Canada. The poet’s feelings for Palestine and the genocide alongside her daily life and the micro aggressions she experiences. How do we turn this around is the big question.
]]>
<![CDATA[Havana Girls (Queenpin Chronicles, #3)]]> 217178599
Miami, 1979. Sally Fontana, a university research assistant whose life has been turned upside down from her recent divorce, uncovers a trail of clues left by her mother, the late investigative reporter Imogene Fuchs. What begins as a personal quest soon plunges Sally into a dangerous world where the glamour of 1940s Havana collides with the gritty reality of 1970s Miami.

L.L. Kirchner's gripping third installment of The Queenpin Chronicles, Havana Girls , weaves a tapestry of intrigue spanning four

A daughter's search for truth about her mother's mysterious pastOld friends reunited by circumstances they never could have imaginedThe far-reaching consequences of choices made in the heat of revolutionAs Sally delves deeper, she finds herself entangled

Thelma Miles Wright, a woman with a shadowy present and a tumultuous historyKathleen Young, the puppet master who holds the key to long-buried secrets A politician on a crusade against viceThe organized crime network that brings them all together on a path of justice and redemptionUnlikely romanceHavana Girls delivers a potent blend

Meticulously researched historical detail from Cuba to FloridaStrong women navigating personal demons and societal upheavalA twisting plot that connects Cold War intrigue to the modern War on DrugsPerfect for fans of Beatriz Williams's dual-timeline narratives, Kate Quinn's fierce heroines, and Kate Atkinson’s immersive worlds, Havana Girls explores how the echoes of the past reverberate through generations. As Sally unravels a mystery decades in the making, she must confront powerful enemies and her own fears to bring long-buried truths to light.

Will the sins of the past destroy carefully built lives, or pave the way for unexpected redemption?

Buy Havana Girls and dive into its sun-soaked, danger-filled world today.]]>
L.L. Kirchner Sonja 0 to-read 0.0 Havana Girls (Queenpin Chronicles, #3)
author: L.L. Kirchner
name: Sonja
average rating: 0.0
book published:
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/04/26
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
Confession of the Lioness 23941325 A dark, poetic mystery about the women of the remote village of Kulumani and the lionesses that hunt them.

Told through two haunting, interwoven diaries, Mia Couto’s Confession of the Lioness reveals the mysterious world of Kulumani, an isolated village in Mozambique whose traditions and beliefs are threatened when ghostlike lionesses begin hunting the women who live there.

Mariamar, a woman whose sister was killed ina lioness attack, finds her life thrown into chaos when theoutsider Archangel Bullseye, the marksman hired to kill the lionesses, arrives at the request of the village elders. Mariamar’s father imprisons her in her home, where she relives painful memories of past abuse and hopes to be rescued by Archangel. Meanwhile, Archangel tracks the lionesses in the wilderness, but when he begins to suspect there is more to them than meets the eye, he starts to lose control of his hands. The hunt grows more dangerous, until it’s no safer inside Kulumani than outside it. As the men of Kulumani feel increasingly threatened by the outsider, the forces of modernity upon their traditional culture, and the danger of their animal predators closing in, it becomes clear the lionesses might not be real lionesses at all butspirits conjured by the ancient witchcraft of the women themselves.

Both a riveting mystery and a poignant examination of women’s oppression, Confession of the Lioness explores the confrontation between the modern world and ancient traditions to produce an atmospheric, gripping novel.]]>
208 Mia Couto 0374710953 Sonja 0 to-read 3.69 2012 Confession of the Lioness
author: Mia Couto
name: Sonja
average rating: 3.69
book published: 2012
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/04/26
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
come from 220633871 115 Janan Alexandra 1960145673 Sonja 0 to-read 5.00 come from
author: Janan Alexandra
name: Sonja
average rating: 5.00
book published:
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/04/25
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
Becoming Ghost: Poetry 220161487 The long-awaited sophomore poetry collection by award-winning writer Cathy Linh Che, on familial estrangement, the Vietnam War, and Francis Ford Coppola’s Apocalypse Now.

The follow-up to her acclaimed poetry debut Split, Becoming Ghost documents Cathy Linh Che’s parents� experiences as refugees who escaped the Vietnam War and then were cast as extras in Francis Ford Coppola’s film Apocalypse Now, placing them at the margins of their own story. The poetry collection uses persona, speculation, and the golden shovel form as a means of moving Vietnamese voices from the periphery to the center. The speaker’s disownment raises questions about the challenges of using parents as poetic subjects, telling familial stories to a broader public, and the meaning of forgiveness.]]>
128 Cathy Linh Che 1668088924 Sonja 0 to-read 4.30 Becoming Ghost: Poetry
author: Cathy Linh Che
name: Sonja
average rating: 4.30
book published:
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/04/25
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
Cautery 216748860 Cautery offers us two women (one real, one imagined) who share one final vision of true happiness—burning it down and beginning again.]]> 236 Lucía Lijtmaer 1917260067 Sonja 0 to-read 3.88 2022 Cautery
author: Lucía Lijtmaer
name: Sonja
average rating: 3.88
book published: 2022
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/04/25
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
<![CDATA[The Devil That Danced on the Water: A Daughter's Quest]]> 109939
Mohamed Forna was a man of unimpeachable integrity and enchanting charisma. As Sierra Leone faced its future as a fledgling democracy, he was a new star in the political firmament, a man who had been one of the first black students to come to Britain after the war. He stole the heart of Aminatta’s mother to the dismay of her Presbyterian parents and returned with her to Sierra Leone. But as Aminatta Forna shows with compelling clarity, the old Africa was torn apart by new ways of western parliamentary democracy, which gave birth only to dictatorships and corruption of hitherto undreamed-of magnitude. It was not long before Mohamed Forna languished in jail as a prisoner of conscience, and worse to follow.

Aminatta’s search for the truth that shaped both her childhood and the nation’s destiny began among the country’s elite and took her into the heart of rebel territory. Determined to break the silence surrounding her father’s fate, she ultimately uncovered a conspiracy that penetrated the highest reaches of government and forced the nation’s politicians and judiciary to confront their guilt. The Devil that Danced on the Water is a book of pain and anger and sorrow, written with tremendous dignity and beautiful precision: a remarkable, and important, story of Africa.
]]>
416 Aminatta Forna 0802140483 Sonja 0 to-read 4.04 2002 The Devil That Danced on the Water: A Daughter's Quest
author: Aminatta Forna
name: Sonja
average rating: 4.04
book published: 2002
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/04/25
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
Dream Count 219521090 A publishing event ten years in the makinga searing, exquisite new novel by the best-selling and award-winning author of Americanah and We Should All Be Feminists�the story of four women and their loves, longings, and desires.

Chiamaka is a Nigerian travel writer living in America. Alone in the midst of the pandemic, she recalls her past lovers and grapples with her choices and regrets. Zikora, her best friend, is a lawyer who has been successful at everything until � betrayed and brokenhearted � she must turn to the person she thought she needed least. Omelogor, Chiamaka’s bold, outspoken cousin, is a financial powerhouse in Nigeria who begins to question how well she knows herself. And Kadiatou, Chiamaka’s housekeeper, is proudly raising her daughter in America � but faces an unthinkable hardship that threatens all she has worked to achieve.

In Dream Count, Adichie trains her fierce eye on these women in a sparkling, transcendent novel that takes up the very nature of love itself. Is true happiness ever attainable or is it just a fleeting state? And how honest must we be with ourselves in order to love, and to be loved? A trenchant reflection on the choices we make and those made for us, on daughters and mothers, on our interconnected world, Dream Count pulses with emotional urgency and poignant, unflinching observations on the human heart, in language that soars with beauty and power. It confirms Adichie’s status as one of the most exciting and dynamic writers on the literary landscape.]]>
416 Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie 059380273X Sonja 0 to-read 3.94 2025 Dream Count
author: Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie
name: Sonja
average rating: 3.94
book published: 2025
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/04/25
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
<![CDATA[love belongs to those who do the feeling]]> 6378200 272 Judy Grahn 1597091219 Sonja 0 currently-reading 4.35 2008 love belongs to those who do the feeling
author: Judy Grahn
name: Sonja
average rating: 4.35
book published: 2008
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/04/24
shelves: currently-reading
review:

]]>
<![CDATA[The Hidden History of Burma: Race, Capitalism, and the Crisis of Democracy in the 21st Century]]> 44075878

As historian, former diplomat, and presidential advisor, Thant Myint-U saw the cracks forming. In this insider’s diagnosis of a country at a breaking point, he dissects how a singularly predatory economic system, fast-rising inequality, disintegrating state institutions, the impact of new social media, the rise of China next door, climate change, and deep-seated feelings around race, religion, and national identity all came together to challenge the incipient democracy. Interracial violence soared and a horrific exodus of hundreds of thousands of Rohingya refugees fixed international attention. Myint-U explains how and why this happened, and details an unsettling prognosis for the future.


Burma is today a fragile stage for nearly all the world’s problems. Are democracy and an economy that genuinely serves all its people possible in Burma? In clear and urgent prose, Myint-U explores this question—a concern not just for the Burmese but for the rest of the world—warning of the possible collapse of this nation of 55 million while suggesting a fresh agenda for change.]]>
304 Thant Myint-U 1324003294 Sonja 0 to-read 4.13 2019 The Hidden History of Burma: Race, Capitalism, and the Crisis of Democracy in the 21st Century
author: Thant Myint-U
name: Sonja
average rating: 4.13
book published: 2019
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/04/24
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
<![CDATA[Son of Elsewhere: A Memoir in Pieces]]> 58885793 An enlightening and deliciously witty collection of essays on Blackness, faith, pop culture, and the challenges--and rewards--of finding one's way in the world, from a BuzzFeed editor and podcast host.

"A memoir that is immense in its desire to give . . . a rich offering of image, of music, of place."--Hanif Abdurraqib, author of A Little Devil in America: Notes in Praise of Black Performance

ONE OF THE MOST ANTICIPATED BOOKS OF 2022--The Millions

At twelve years old, Elamin Abdelmahmoud emigrates with his family from his native Sudan to Kingston, Ontario, arguably one of the most homogenous cities in North America. At the airport, he's handed his Blackness like a passport, and realizes that he needs to learn what this identity means in a new country.

Like all teens, Abdelmahmoud spent his adolescence trying to figure out who he was, but he had to do it while learning to balance a new racial identity and all the false assumptions that came with it. Abdelmahmoud learned to fit in, and eventually became "every liberal white dad's favorite person in the room." But after many years spent trying on different personalities, he now must face the parts of himself he's kept suppressed all this time. He asks, "What happens when those identities stage a jailbreak?"

In his debut collection of essays, Abdelmahmoud gives full voice to each and every one of these conflicting selves. Whether reflecting on how The O.C. taught him about falling in love, why watching wrestling allowed him to reinvent himself, or what it was like being a Muslim teen in the aftermath of 9/11, Abdelmahmoud explores how our experiences and our environments help us in the continuing task of defining who we truly are.

With the perfect balance of relatable humor and intellectual ferocity, Son of Elsewhere confronts what we know about ourselves, and most important, what we're still learning.]]>
288 Elamin Abdelmahmoud 059349685X Sonja 0 to-read 4.17 2022 Son of Elsewhere: A Memoir in Pieces
author: Elamin Abdelmahmoud
name: Sonja
average rating: 4.17
book published: 2022
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/04/24
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
<![CDATA[The Book of Alchemy: A Creative Practice for an Inspired Life]]> 217245588 A guide to the art of journaling—and a meditation on the central questions of life—by the bestselling author of Between Two Kingdoms, with contributions from Hanif Abdurraqib, Jon Batiste, Salman Rushdie, Gloria Steinem, George Saunders, and many more

“The Book of Alchemy proves on every page that a creative response can be found in every moment of life—regardless of what is happening in the world.”—Elizabeth Gilbert, author of Eat Pray Love

From the time she was young, Suleika Jaouad has kept a journal. She’s used it to mark life's biggest occasions and to weather its most ferocious storms. Journaling has buoyed her through illness, heartbreak, and the deepest uncertainty. And she is not alone: for so many people, keeping a journal is an essential tool for navigating both the personal peaks and valleys and the collective challenges of modern life. More than ever, we need a space for puzzling through.

In The Book of Alchemy, Suleika explores the art of journaling and shares everything she’s learned about how this life-altering practice can help us tap into that mystical trait that exists in every human: creativity. She has gathered wisdom from one hundred writers, artists, and thinkers in the form of essays and writing prompts. Their insights invite us to inhabit a more inspired life.

A companion through challenging times, The Book of Alchemy is broken into themes ranging from new beginnings to love, loss, and rebuilding. Whether you’re a lifelong journaler or new to the practice, this book gives you the tools, direction, and encouragement to engage with discomfort, ask questions, peel back the layers, dream daringly, uncover your truest self—and in doing so, to learn to hold the unbearably brutal and astonishingly beautiful facts of life in the same palm.

Also includes essays from: Martha Beck � Nadia Bolz-Weber � Alain de Botton � Susan Cheever � Lena Dunham � Melissa Febos � Liana Finck � John Green � Marie Howe � Pico Iyer � Oliver Jeffers � Quintin Jones � Michael Koryta � Hanif Kureishi � Kiese Laymon � Cleyvis Natera � Ann Patchett � Esther Perel � Adrienne Raphel � Jenny Rosenstrach � Sarah Ruhl � Sharon Salzberg � Dani Shapiro � Mavis Staples � Linda Sue Park � Nafissa Thompson-Spires � Jia Tolentino � Lindy West � Lidia Yuknavitch � And many others]]>
336 Suleika Jaouad 0593734637 Sonja 0 to-read 4.47 2025 The Book of Alchemy: A Creative Practice for an Inspired Life
author: Suleika Jaouad
name: Sonja
average rating: 4.47
book published: 2025
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/04/24
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
Woman, Life, Freedom 199469832
Marjane Satrapi, author of Persepolis , returns to graphic art with this collaboration of over 20 activists, artists, journalists, and academics working together to depict the historic uprising, in solidarity with the Iranian people and in defense of feminism.

On September 13th 2022, a young Iranian student, Mahsa Amini, was arrested by the religious police in Tehran. Her only crime was that she wasn’t properly wearing the headscarf required for women by the Islamic Republic. At the police station, she was beaten so badly she had to be taken to the hospital, where she fell into a deep coma. She died three days later.

A wave of protests soon spread through the whole country, and crowds adopted the slogan “Woman, Life, Freedom”—words that have been chanted around the world during solidarity rallies.

In order to tell the story of this major revolution happening in her homeland, Marjane Satrapi has gathered together an array of journalists, activists, academics, artists, and writers from around the world to create this powerful collection of full-color, graphic-novel-style essays and perspectives that bear



Woman, Life, Freedom demonstrates that this is not an unexpected movement, but a major uprising in a long history of women who have wanted to affirm their rights. It will continue.]]>
272 Marjane Satrapi 1644214059 Sonja 5 This has led to a nonstop wave of protests by women in Iran. We can’t turn away from these courageous sisters. This is a revolution.
A very powerful statement led by Satrapi who wrote the great Persepolis and lives in Paris even though she is Iranian.

“I’m gone from this world, but don’t forget me.
I’m Mahsa Amini. Don’t forget me.�

From The Guardian
“For Satrapi, the book was about giving people an insight into “something huge that’s going on. Every single thing we are talking about: the war in Ukraine, Gaza, Houthis in the Red Sea � all of that is related to what is happening in Iran.”]]>
4.43 2023 Woman, Life, Freedom
author: Marjane Satrapi
name: Sonja
average rating: 4.43
book published: 2023
rating: 5
read at: 2025/04/24
date added: 2025/04/24
shelves:
review:
Such an important book. It is a collective effort by 17 Iranian poets and artists in response to the imprisonment of Mahsa Amini, a 22-year-old Kurdish-Iranian woman who was not properly wearing the Islamic headscarf in 2022. She was killed in custody.
This has led to a nonstop wave of protests by women in Iran. We can’t turn away from these courageous sisters. This is a revolution.
A very powerful statement led by Satrapi who wrote the great Persepolis and lives in Paris even though she is Iranian.

“I’m gone from this world, but don’t forget me.
I’m Mahsa Amini. Don’t forget me.�

From The Guardian
“For Satrapi, the book was about giving people an insight into “something huge that’s going on. Every single thing we are talking about: the war in Ukraine, Gaza, Houthis in the Red Sea � all of that is related to what is happening in Iran.�
]]>
Prison Poems 17923965 118 Mahvash Sabet 0853985693 Sonja 0 to-read 4.26 2013 Prison Poems
author: Mahvash Sabet
name: Sonja
average rating: 4.26
book published: 2013
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/04/24
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
Someone Like Us 201102290
With Hannah and their two-year old son back in Paris, Mamush sets out on an unexpected journey across America in search of answers to questions he'd been told never to ask. As he does so, he begins to understand that perhaps the only chance he has of saving his family and making it back home is to confront not only the unresolved mystery around Samuel's life and death, but his own troubled memories, and the years spent masking them. Breath-taking, commanding, unforgettable work from one of America's most prodigiously gifted novelists.]]>
272 Dinaw Mengestu 0385350007 Sonja 0 to-read 3.53 2024 Someone Like Us
author: Dinaw Mengestu
name: Sonja
average rating: 3.53
book published: 2024
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/04/24
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
<![CDATA[An Apprenticeship or The Book of Pleasures]]> 53492652 Passion According to GH with a book that looks suspiciously like a romance novel?

In The Apprenticeship, or The Book of Pleasures, Clarice Lispector tries to discover how to bridge the gap between people, or how to even begin to try.

A woman struggles to emerge from solitude and sadness into love, including sexual love: her guide on this journey is Ulisses, who (yes) leads her patiently into the fullness of life.

The Apprenticeship was a bestseller and, as her biographer Benjamin Moser writes, "This accessible love story surprised many readers. When it came out, an interviewer said: 'I thought The Book of Pleasures was much easier to read than any of your other books. Do you think there’s any basis for that?' Clarice answered: 'There is. I humanized myself, the book reflects that.'”]]>
176 Clarice Lispector 0811230619 Sonja 0 to-read 4.25 1969 An Apprenticeship or The Book of Pleasures
author: Clarice Lispector
name: Sonja
average rating: 4.25
book published: 1969
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/04/24
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
allostatic load 194025261 96 Junie Désil 1772016063 Sonja 0 to-read 0.0 allostatic load
author: Junie Désil
name: Sonja
average rating: 0.0
book published:
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/04/22
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
The Road to the Country 198563650 A sweeping, heart-racing, mystical novel about a university student in Lagos trying to save his brother, and himself, amid the chaos of Nigeria’s civil war—a story of love, friendship, and personal triumph by the two-time Booker Prize finalist and “the heir to Chinua Achebe� (New York Times)

“A wondrous novel.”—Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah, author of Chain-Gang All Stars, finalist for the National Book Award

“Chigozie Obioma is that rare thing: an original. His world is a mix of the real and the folkloric, and his writing sounds like no one else’s.”�The Wall Street Journal

The first images of the vision are grainy—like something seen through wet glass. But slowly it clears, and there appears the figure of a man.

Set in Nigeria in the late 1960s, The Road to the Country is the epic story of a shy, bookish student haunted by long-held guilt who must go to war to free himself. When his younger brother disappears as the country explodes in civil war, Kunle must set out on an impossible rescue mission. Kunle’s search for his brother becomes a journey of atonement that will see him conscripted into the breakaway Biafran army and forced to fight a war he hardly understands, all while navigating the prophecies of a local Seer, he who marks Kunle as an abami eda—one who will die and return to life.

The story of a young man seeking redemption in a country on fire, Chigozie Obioma’s novel is an odyssey of brotherhood, love, and unimaginable courage set during one of the most devastating conflicts in the history of Africa. Intertwining myth and realism into a thrilling, inspired, and emotionally powerful novel, The Road to the Country is the masterpiece of Chigozie Obioma, a writer Salman Rushdie calls “a major voice� in literature.]]>
384 Chigozie Obioma 0593596978 Sonja 0 to-read 3.79 2024 The Road to the Country
author: Chigozie Obioma
name: Sonja
average rating: 3.79
book published: 2024
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/04/22
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
Edinburgh 272433 212 Alexander Chee 0312305036 Sonja 0 currently-reading 4.13 2001 Edinburgh
author: Alexander Chee
name: Sonja
average rating: 4.13
book published: 2001
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/04/21
shelves: currently-reading
review:

]]>
The Dream Hotel 219094176 A novel about one woman’s fight for freedom, set in a near future where even dreams are under surveillance.

Sara has just landed at LAX, returning home from a conference abroad, when agents from the Risk Assessment Administration pull her aside and inform her that she will soon commit a crime. Using data from her dreams, the RAA’s algorithm has determined that she is at imminent risk of harming the person she loves most: her husband. For his safety, she must be kept under observation for twenty-one days.

The agents transfer Sara to a retention center, where she is held with other dreamers, all of them women trying to prove their innocence from different crimes. With every deviation from the strict and ever-shifting rules of the facility, their stay is extended. Months pass and Sara seems no closer to release. Then one day, a new resident arrives, disrupting the order of the facility and leading Sara on a collision course with the very companies that have deprived her of her freedom.

Eerie, urgent, and ceaselessly clear-eyed, The Dream Hotel artfully explores the seductive nature of technology, which puts us in shackles even as it makes our lives easier. Lalami asks how much of ourselves must remain private if we are to remain free, and whether even the most invasive forms of surveillance can ever capture who we really are.]]>
385 Laila Lalami 0593317610 Sonja 0 to-read 3.74 2025 The Dream Hotel
author: Laila Lalami
name: Sonja
average rating: 3.74
book published: 2025
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/04/21
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
Swan: Poems and Prose Poems 7961474
As the Los Angeles Times noted, innumerable readers go to Oliver’s poetry “for solace, regeneration and inspiration.� Few poets express the immense complexities of human experience as skillfully, or capture so memorably the smallest nuances. Speaking, for example, of stones, she writes, “the little ones you can / hold in your hands, their heartbeats / so secret, so hidden it may take years / before, finally, you hear them.� It is no wonder Oliver ranks, according to the Weekly Standard, “among the finest poets the English language has ever produced.”]]>
96 Mary Oliver 0807068993 Sonja 0 to-read 4.27 2010 Swan: Poems and Prose Poems
author: Mary Oliver
name: Sonja
average rating: 4.27
book published: 2010
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/04/21
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
The Laugh of the Medusa 11080013
"The Laugh of the Medusa" is an extremely literary essay and well-known as an exhortation to a "feminine mode" of writing; the phrases "white ink" and "écriture féminine" are often cited, referring to this desired new way of writing. It is a strident critique of logocentrism and phallogocentrism, having much in common with Jacques Derrida's earlier thought. The essay also calls for an acknowledgment of universal bisexuality or polymorphous perversity, a precursor of queer theory's later emphases, and swiftly rejects many kinds of essentialism which were still common in Anglo-American feminism at the time. The essay also exemplifies Cixous's style of writing in that it is richly intertextual, making a wide range of literary allusions.

(From Wikipedia)]]>
20 Hélène Cixous Sonja 0 to-read 4.20 1975 The Laugh of the Medusa
author: Hélène Cixous
name: Sonja
average rating: 4.20
book published: 1975
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/04/21
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
The Philistine 40411843 320 Leila Marshy 1988130727 Sonja 5 Nadia, a Canadian-Palestinian, lives with a boyfriend in Montreal but goes to Cairo to find her father who had left their family a while ago. She arrives in Cairo and during the delay around meeting her father she meets Manal, a powerful woman, an artist, who entices Nadia and ignites her love. This is not simply love for a particular person. It recalls Sappho and her wondrous community. is Nadia falling in love with her Arabic culture, her Palestinian part? But all the while the pressures of the patriarchy hover. You can’t live as a lesbian. A relationship with a woman cannot sustain. Going through life loving women in a patriarchal world is unrealistic. What does one do?
The story is fascinating because it takes place in Egypt and Nadia does not consider herself a tourist. It is fascinating because her father is Palestinian and is working to help his people and Nadia wants to connect. She loves learning Arabic, too. There is much going on in this beautifully written novel and much to think about. It spoke to me personally in so many ways. I am so grateful for it.
And I never knew Filistine was the word for Palestinian.]]>
4.24 2018 The Philistine
author: Leila Marshy
name: Sonja
average rating: 4.24
book published: 2018
rating: 5
read at: 2025/04/19
date added: 2025/04/20
shelves:
review:
We live in a patriarchal world. What place does love between women have! The problem is not solved by legalizing same-sex marriage. Does it become merely a copy of the heteronormative life? A way to make ends meet and have a life in this time? I don’t mean to say this is what the novel is about. These are my thoughts. This lesbian story is not based on the question of sexual identity but on the protagonist finding love in another culture, finding her ethnic identity.
Nadia, a Canadian-Palestinian, lives with a boyfriend in Montreal but goes to Cairo to find her father who had left their family a while ago. She arrives in Cairo and during the delay around meeting her father she meets Manal, a powerful woman, an artist, who entices Nadia and ignites her love. This is not simply love for a particular person. It recalls Sappho and her wondrous community. is Nadia falling in love with her Arabic culture, her Palestinian part? But all the while the pressures of the patriarchy hover. You can’t live as a lesbian. A relationship with a woman cannot sustain. Going through life loving women in a patriarchal world is unrealistic. What does one do?
The story is fascinating because it takes place in Egypt and Nadia does not consider herself a tourist. It is fascinating because her father is Palestinian and is working to help his people and Nadia wants to connect. She loves learning Arabic, too. There is much going on in this beautifully written novel and much to think about. It spoke to me personally in so many ways. I am so grateful for it.
And I never knew Filistine was the word for Palestinian.
]]>
The Ardent Swarm 56449198
Sidi lives a hermetic life as a bee whisperer, tending to his beloved “girls� on the outskirts of the desolate North African village of Nawa. He wakes one morning to find that something has attacked one of his beehives, brutally killing every inhabitant. Heartbroken, he soon learns that a mysterious swarm of vicious hornets committed the mass murder—but where did they come from, and how can he stop them? If he is going to unravel this mystery and save his bees from annihilation, Sidi must venture out into the village and then brave the big city and beyond in search of answers.

Along the way, he discovers a country and a people turned upside down by their new post–Arab Spring reality as Islamic fundamentalists seek to influence votes any way they can on the eve of the country’s first democratic elections. To succeed in his quest, and find a glimmer of hope to protect all that he holds dear, Sidi will have to look further than he ever imagined.

In this brilliantly accessible modern-day parable, Yamen Manai uses a masterful blend of humor and drama to reveal what happens in a country shaken by revolutionary change after the world stops watching.]]>
174 Yamen Manai 1542020468 Sonja 0 to-read 4.10 2017 The Ardent Swarm
author: Yamen Manai
name: Sonja
average rating: 4.10
book published: 2017
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/04/20
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
<![CDATA[Homecoming: Essays on African and Caribbean Literature, Culture and Politics]]> 490541 Book by 175 Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o 0882080369 Sonja 0 to-read 4.32 Homecoming: Essays on African and Caribbean Literature, Culture and Politics
author: Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o
name: Sonja
average rating: 4.32
book published:
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/04/20
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
<![CDATA[Women of Algiers in Their Apartment (Caribbean and African Literature)]]> 301501 Women of Algiers in Their Apartment, her first work to be published in English, was named by the American Literary Translators Association as an ALTA Outstanding Translation of the Year. Now available in paperback, this collection of three long stories, three short ones, and a theoretical postface by one of North Africa's leading writers depicts the plight of urban Algerian women who have thrown off the shackles of colonialism only to face a postcolonial regime that denies and subjugates them even as it celebrates the liberation of men. Denounced in Algeria for its political criticism, Djebar's book quickly sold out its first printing of 15,000 copies in France and was hugely popular in Italy. Her stylistically innovative, lyrical stories address the cloistering of women, the implications of reticence, the connection of language to oppression, and the impact of war on both women and men. The Afterword by Clarisse Zimra includes an illuminating interview with Djebar.]]> 232 Assia Djebar 0813918804 Sonja 0 to-read 3.68 1980 Women of Algiers in Their Apartment (Caribbean and African Literature)
author: Assia Djebar
name: Sonja
average rating: 3.68
book published: 1980
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/04/20
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
Legends 8488014 276 Amy Lowell 1417917296 Sonja 0 to-read 4.67 2004 Legends
author: Amy Lowell
name: Sonja
average rating: 4.67
book published: 2004
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/04/19
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
After Sappho 61089551 What did we want? To begin with, we wanted what half the population had got by just being born.

It’s 1895. Amid laundry and bruises, Rina Pierangeli Faccio gives birth to the child of the man who raped her � the man she has been forced to marry. Unbroken, she determines to change her name and, alongside it, her life.

1902. Romaine Brooks sails for Capri. She has barely enough money for the ferry, nothing for lunch; her paintbrushes are bald and clotted. But she is sure she can sell a painting � and is fervent in her belief that the island is detached from all fates she has previously suffered.

In 1923, Virginia Woolf writes: I want to make life fuller � and fuller.

Told in a series of cascading vignettes, featuring a multitude of voices, After Sappho reimagines the lives of a brilliant group of feminists, sapphists, artists and writers in the late nineteenth and early twentieth century as they battle for liberation, justice and control over their own lives.

Sarah Bernhardt, Colette, Eileen Gray, Lina Poletti: these are just a few of the women (some famous, others hitherto unsung) sharing the pages of a novel as fierce as it is luminous. Lush and poetic, furious and funny, After Sappho celebrates the women and trailblazers of the past � and offers hope for our present, and our futures.]]>
272 Selby Wynn Schwartz 1324092319 Sonja 0 currently-reading 3.46 2022 After Sappho
author: Selby Wynn Schwartz
name: Sonja
average rating: 3.46
book published: 2022
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/04/19
shelves: currently-reading
review:

]]>
<![CDATA[The Ballad of Jacquotte Delahaye]]> 220160175 This epic, dazzling tale based on true events illuminates a woman of color’s rise to power as one of the few purported female pirate captains to sail the Caribbean, and the forbidden love story that will shape the course of history.In the tumultuous town of Yáquimo, Santo Domingo, Jacquotte Delahaye is an unknown but up-and-coming shipwright. Her dreams are bold but her ambitions are bound by the confines of her life with her self-seeking French father. When her way of life and the delicate balance of power in the town are threatened, she is forced to flee her home and become a woman on the run along with a motley crew of refugees, including a mysterious young woman named Teresa. Jacquotte and her band become indentured servants to the infamous Blackhand, a ruthless pirate captain who rules his ship with an iron fist. As they struggle to survive his brutality, Jacquotte finds herself unable to resist Teresa despite their differences. When Blackhand hatches a dangerous scheme to steal a Portuguese shipment of jewels, Jacquotte must rely on her wits, resourcefulness, and friends to survive. But she discovers there is a grander, darker scheme of treachery at play, and she ultimately must decide what price she is willing to pay to secure a better future for them all. An unforgettable tale told in three parts, The Ballad of Jacquotte Delahaye is a thrilling, buccaneering escapade filled with siege and battle, and is also a tender exploration of friendship, love, and the search for freedom and home.]]> 368 Briony Cameron 1668051036 Sonja 0 to-read 4.50 2024 The Ballad of Jacquotte Delahaye
author: Briony Cameron
name: Sonja
average rating: 4.50
book published: 2024
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/04/19
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
The Dream of the Celt 12980712
A subtle and enlightening novel about a neglected human rights pioneer by the Nobel Laureate Mario Vargas Llosa

In 1916, the Irish nationalist Roger Casement was hanged by the British government for treason. Casement had dedicated his extraordinary life to improving plight of oppressed peoples around the world—especially the native populations in the Belgian Congo and the Amazon—but when he dared to draw a parallel between the injustices he witnessed in African and American colonies and those committed by the British in Northern Ireland, he became involved in a cause that led to his imprisonment and execution. Ultimately, the scandals surrounding Casement’s trial and eventual hanging tainted his image to such a degree that his pioneering human rights work wasn’t fully reexamined until the 1960s.

Vargas Llosa, who has long been regarded as one of Latin America’s most vibrant, provocative, and necessary literary voices—a fact confirmed when the Peruvian writer was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 2010—brings this complex character to life as no other writer can. This masterful work, sharply translated by Edith Grossman, tackles a controversial man whose story has long been neglected, and in so doing, pushes at the boundaries of historical novel.
]]>
368 Mario Vargas Llosa 0374143463 Sonja 5 Roger Casement, first a UK diplomat in Africa, the Congo then a humanitarian activist for the colonized world. His castigation of colonialism in Africa and then in Peru, in the rubber industry, was very courageous. Supposedly Casement’s comparison of these imperialist acts to the UK’s Irish oppression within the country is what landed him in prison in 1916. He had actively sought German help for Irish rebels.
There was another reason the British government wanted to hang Casement—it was because he was homosexual.
I thought Vargas Llosa’s exploration of this in the Dream of the Celt incredibly brave. Written in 2010 when he had not yet received the Nobel Prize, it was very risky for a cis author like him to write about a gay anti-colonialist. For that I admire him. And for his other novels too.
Unfortunately, although Llosa had supported socialism and the Cuban Revolution, at a certain point he turned more toward the right wing, even in participating actively in politics in Peru.
No one knows the reason people make these shifts of beliefs in their lives. Yet it is paradoxical that the man who wrote Dream of the Celt, the Time of the Hero, and other books that exposed corruption and colonialism became a rightist.
The Nobel Prize was given to Llosa “for his cartography of structures of power and his trenchant images of the individual’s resistance, revolt, and defeat…� Roger Casement played an important role in defending indigenous people in a terrible time of exploitation in the rubber industry in Peru. May there be many more Roger Casements!]]>
3.80 2010 The Dream of the Celt
author: Mario Vargas Llosa
name: Sonja
average rating: 3.80
book published: 2010
rating: 5
read at:
date added: 2025/04/16
shelves:
review:
Mario Vargas Llosa, a huge figure in Latín American literature, died a few days ago. I read a lot of his novels and even his essays a few years ago but the one that sticks in my mind the most is The Dream of the Celt translated by Edith Grossman. The life of Roger Casement, a brave international worker and anti-colonialist was an inspiration to read. Fictionalized biography is such a great way to get the essence of a person out to the world.
Roger Casement, first a UK diplomat in Africa, the Congo then a humanitarian activist for the colonized world. His castigation of colonialism in Africa and then in Peru, in the rubber industry, was very courageous. Supposedly Casement’s comparison of these imperialist acts to the UK’s Irish oppression within the country is what landed him in prison in 1916. He had actively sought German help for Irish rebels.
There was another reason the British government wanted to hang Casement—it was because he was homosexual.
I thought Vargas Llosa’s exploration of this in the Dream of the Celt incredibly brave. Written in 2010 when he had not yet received the Nobel Prize, it was very risky for a cis author like him to write about a gay anti-colonialist. For that I admire him. And for his other novels too.
Unfortunately, although Llosa had supported socialism and the Cuban Revolution, at a certain point he turned more toward the right wing, even in participating actively in politics in Peru.
No one knows the reason people make these shifts of beliefs in their lives. Yet it is paradoxical that the man who wrote Dream of the Celt, the Time of the Hero, and other books that exposed corruption and colonialism became a rightist.
The Nobel Prize was given to Llosa “for his cartography of structures of power and his trenchant images of the individual’s resistance, revolt, and defeat…� Roger Casement played an important role in defending indigenous people in a terrible time of exploitation in the rubber industry in Peru. May there be many more Roger Casements!
]]>
On a Woman's Madness 61244744 A classic of queer literature that’s as electrifying today as it was when it originally appeared in 1982, On a Woman’s Madness tells the story of Noenka, a courageous Black woman trying to live a life of her choosing. When her abusive husband of just nine days refuses her request for divorce, Noenka flees her hometown in Suriname, on South America's tropical northeastern coast, for the capital city of Paramaribo. Unsettled and unsupported, her life in this new place is illuminated by the passionate romances of the present but haunted by society’s expectations and her ancestral past.

Translated into sensuous English for the first time by Lucy Scott, Astrid Roemer’s intimate novel—with its tales of plantation-dwelling snakes, rare orchids, and star-crossed lovers—is a blistering meditation on the cruelties we inflict on those who disobey. Roemer, the first Surinamese winner of the prestigious Dutch Literature Prize, carves out postcolonial Suriname in barbed, resonant fragments. Who is Noenka? Roemer asks us. “I’m Noenka,� she responds resolutely, “which means Never Again.”]]>
265 Astrid H. Roemer 1949641430 Sonja 5 The story is told poetically and non- linearly. It is well done. I learned about Suriname and the Native cultures of South America, of the terrible history, of how some survived. There is so much to learn about the world and women. And it is so complex.
First published in 1982, Astrid Roemer wrote it in Dutch. It was translated into English by Lucy Scott. I wonder if it will ever be published in Sranan Tongo.]]>
3.34 1982 On a Woman's Madness
author: Astrid H. Roemer
name: Sonja
average rating: 3.34
book published: 1982
rating: 5
read at: 2023/09/19
date added: 2025/04/16
shelves:
review:
A unique book. A woman’s book. A book from the point of view of a woman of color. It’s not madness, it appears like madness in the heteronormative world we live in, the world of the nuclear family, of colonialism and under the strict Christian laws of capitalism. Noenka rebels against this world like many before her. Noenka is finding her way in life, first through her mother and father, then through a black husband, then through a lover who dies and finally in Gabrielle. But they get caught in the system. They want each other. They want to live. But the world does not want them.
The story is told poetically and non- linearly. It is well done. I learned about Suriname and the Native cultures of South America, of the terrible history, of how some survived. There is so much to learn about the world and women. And it is so complex.
First published in 1982, Astrid Roemer wrote it in Dutch. It was translated into English by Lucy Scott. I wonder if it will ever be published in Sranan Tongo.
]]>
Tom Lake 216038747 In this beautiful and moving novel about family, love, and growing up, Ann Patchett once again proves herself one of America’s finest writers.

In the spring of 2020, Lara’s three daughters return to the family's orchard in Northern Michigan. While picking cherries, they beg their mother to tell them the story of Peter Duke, a famous actor with whom she shared both a stage and a romance years before at a theater company called Tom Lake. As Lara recalls the past, her daughters examine their own lives and relationship with their mother, and are forced to reconsider the world and everything they thought they knew.

Tom Lake is a meditation on youthful love, married love, and the lives parents have led before their children were born. Both hopeful and elegiac, it explores what it means to be happy even when the world is falling apart. As in all of her novels, Ann Patchett combines compelling narrative artistry with piercing insights into family dynamics. The result is a rich and luminous story, told with profound intelligence and emotional subtlety, that demonstrates once again why she is one of the most revered and acclaimed literary talents working today.]]>
320 Ann Patchett 0063327538 Sonja 0 to-read 3.84 2023 Tom Lake
author: Ann Patchett
name: Sonja
average rating: 3.84
book published: 2023
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/04/15
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
<![CDATA[Selected Poems (Penguin Modern Classics)]]> 214371 368 Paul Celan 0140189203 Sonja 0 to-read 4.42 1970 Selected Poems (Penguin Modern Classics)
author: Paul Celan
name: Sonja
average rating: 4.42
book published: 1970
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/04/13
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
Theory & Practice 213619983 With echoes of Shirley Hazzard and Virginia Woolf, a new novel of startling intelligence from prize–winning author Michelle de Kretser, following a woman looking back on her young adulthood, and grappling with the collision of her emotions and her values

In the late 1980s, the narrator of Theory & Practice—a first generation immigrant from Sri Lanka who moved to Sydney in her childhood—sets up a life in Melbourne for graduate school. Jilted by a lover who cheats on her with another self-described "feminist," she is thrown into deeper confusion about her identity and the people around her.

The narrator begins to fall for a man named Kit, who is in a “deconstructed relationship� with a woman named Olivia. She struggles to square her feminism against her jealousy toward Olivia—and her anti-colonialism against her feelings about Virginia Woolf, whose work she is called to despite her racism.

What happens when our desires run contrary to our beliefs? What should we do when the failings of revered figures come to light? Who is shamed when the truth is told? In Theory & Practice, Michelle de Kretser offers a spellbinding meditation on the moral complexities that arise in this gap. Peopled with brilliantly drawn characters, the novel also stitches together fiction and essay, taking up Woolf’s quest for adventurous literary form.]]>
192 Michelle de Kretser 1646222873 Sonja 0 to-read 3.63 2024 Theory & Practice
author: Michelle de Kretser
name: Sonja
average rating: 3.63
book published: 2024
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/04/13
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
The Frozen River 112975658 A gripping historical mystery inspired by the life and diary of Martha Ballard, a renowned 18th-century midwife who defied the legal system and wrote herself into American history.

Maine, 1789: When the Kennebec River freezes, entombing a man in the ice, Martha Ballard is summoned to examine the body and determine cause of death. As a midwife and healer, she is privy to much of what goes on behind closed doors in Hallowell. Her diary is a record of every birth and death, crime and debacle that unfolds in the close-knit community. Months earlier, Martha documented the details of an alleged rape committed by two of the town’s most respected gentlemen—one of whom has now been found dead in the ice. But when a local physician undermines her conclusion, declaring the death to be an accident, Martha is forced to investigate the shocking murder on her own.

Over the course of one winter, as the trial nears, and whispers and prejudices mount, Martha doggedly pursues the truth. Her diary soon lands at the center of the scandal, implicating those she loves, and compelling Martha to decide where her own loyalties lie.

Clever, layered, and subversive, Ariel Lawhon’s newest offering introduces an unsung heroine who refused to accept anything less than justice at a time when women were considered best seen and not heard. The Frozen River is a thrilling, tense, and tender story about a remarkable woman who left an unparalleled legacy yet remains nearly forgotten to this day.]]>
432 Ariel Lawhon 0385546874 Sonja 0 to-read 4.37 2023 The Frozen River
author: Ariel Lawhon
name: Sonja
average rating: 4.37
book published: 2023
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/04/13
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
Village Weavers 174712161 From award-winning author Myriam J.A. Chancy, comes an extraordinary and enduring story of two families—forever joined by blood, by country, and by long held secrets—and two girls with a bond that refuses to be broken. In 1940s� Port-au-Prince, Gertie and Sisi become fast childhood friends, despite being on opposite ends of the social and economic ladder. As young girls, they build their unlikely friendship—until a deathbed revelation ripples through their families and tears them apart. After François Duvalier's rule turns deadly in the 1950s, Sisi moves to Paris, while Gertie marries into a wealthy Haitian family. Across decades and continents, through personal success and failures, they are parted and reunited, slowly learning the strange truth of their singular relationship. Finally, six decades later, with both women in the United States, a sudden phone call brings them back together once more to reckon with and—perhaps—forgive the past.
Told with power and frankness, Village Weavers confronts the silences around class, race, and sexuality, charts the moments when lives are irrevocably forced apart, and envisions two girls—connected their entire lives—who try to break inherited cycles of mistrust and find ways back into each other’s heart.]]>
352 Myriam J. A. Chancy Sonja 4
Myriam Chancey’s reach is long, her book, although not long, embraces much that is important and much we can learn from. I am glad she included a lesbian theme, however minor, but making the point—we exist and we must be acknowledged.

“We don’t need men to give us women value.�
“We’re both Black Dominicans, but not Haitian. Of course, we could be—if we climbed back into the ancestral trees. We all were once.�

Does anyone remember that the DR dictator Trujillo had 20,000 Haitian sugar cane workers and their families killed because they were Haitian? That’s why divisions and prejudices stayed. Imagine how families that are mixed feel?

We also hear about Haitian history which is so important in the history of our continent but often ignored and erased. The activism in Paris (the Negritude Movement) also forgotten but taking place during the Algerian Revolution was one of the most fascinating parts of the novel. I love the way Chancey easily showed the history affecting individual lives. (Could Gertie’s well-off Dominican family have helped one of the victims of repression?)

It is a novel rich in themes, rich in culture, rich in history. My only question was the structure. I did not understand how the going back and forth in time was important for the storytelling. But I greatly appreciate this novel and hope to read more of Myriam Chancey’s work.]]>
3.97 Village Weavers
author: Myriam J. A. Chancy
name: Sonja
average rating: 3.97
book published:
rating: 4
read at: 2025/04/12
date added: 2025/04/13
shelves:
review:
This book was a pleasure to read. The story of two sisters who didn’t know they were sisters and when they found out had a falling out until late in life. In addition to the story of the women’s lives when they are apart, we read about the story of Haiti, the pain and strains of severe oppression and violence and the effects of homophobia and class and colorism on families. We even learn about the barriers between those born in Haiti and those in the Dominican Republic.

Myriam Chancey’s reach is long, her book, although not long, embraces much that is important and much we can learn from. I am glad she included a lesbian theme, however minor, but making the point—we exist and we must be acknowledged.

“We don’t need men to give us women value.�
“We’re both Black Dominicans, but not Haitian. Of course, we could be—if we climbed back into the ancestral trees. We all were once.�

Does anyone remember that the DR dictator Trujillo had 20,000 Haitian sugar cane workers and their families killed because they were Haitian? That’s why divisions and prejudices stayed. Imagine how families that are mixed feel?

We also hear about Haitian history which is so important in the history of our continent but often ignored and erased. The activism in Paris (the Negritude Movement) also forgotten but taking place during the Algerian Revolution was one of the most fascinating parts of the novel. I love the way Chancey easily showed the history affecting individual lives. (Could Gertie’s well-off Dominican family have helped one of the victims of repression?)

It is a novel rich in themes, rich in culture, rich in history. My only question was the structure. I did not understand how the going back and forth in time was important for the storytelling. But I greatly appreciate this novel and hope to read more of Myriam Chancey’s work.
]]>
Leaving Home at 83 219503411 So, You Think 83 is Too Late to Start Over? Think Again!Join Sandra Butler as she leaves her home and community of fifty years to move into a residential facility in an unfamiliar city. With meals, activities and proximity to her children, what could possibly go wrong? Well, as it turns out-just about everything.

Butler vividly portrays the intricate challenges of this late-life transition, capturing the struggle to adapt to an institutional setting with whatever cheer could be mustered. Each day was a new adventure, pretending all is well for her children, trying to make conversation through masks and faulty hearing aids, and the anticipation of a dinner that might, just might, be flavorful.

Butler's funny, honest account brings a welcome and necessary perspective to the inevitable moment when we end one chapter and begin whatever comes next.

Praise for Leaving Home at 83 "It's a 'zine! It's a movie! It's a sit-com! Actually, it's an intimate glimpse into Sandra Butler's personal journal as an 83-year-old queer Jewish feminist activist leaving her Bay Area home to live close to her daughters in the Red State of Arizona. The ensemble of characters at Desert Manor are hilarious, jaw-clenching, at times worthy of a Jack Russell Terrier head tilt. "Caught between not wanting to be a burden and wanting to be taken care of," Butler's writing is tender, funny and unequivocally relatable." —Karen Lee Erlichman, D.Min, LCSW is a psychotherapist, spiritual director, writer, and mentor

"Butler's irreverent account of pulling up roots and attempting to replant them in unfamiliar soil illuminates some of the inevitable truths of our old and getting older lives.

She invites the reader to accompany her as she enters her new life with the unforgettable characters of Desert Manor. What was lost and what is eventually found is at the heart of her remarkable story. Reading her words is like sitting in a café with a witty and wise friend and savoring the openhearted truth-telling that comes from years of intimacy." —Naomi Newman, actor, director, playwright, co-founder of A Traveling Jewish Theater

"Sandra Butler is an extraordinary storyteller. Accompanying her as she leaves home to live near her daughters, I was swept into the unexpected complexity of this late-life transition, one she navigates with humor and hard-won self-awareness." —Terry Greenblatt. women's peace and justice activist, Senior Advisor, Plowshares

"Sandra Butler addresses the unspoken realities of women's lives with curiosity, intelligence, and an insistence on honoring these still concealed truths. Now, she has written "Leaving Home at 83," chronicling a precipitous change in her life. With her keen intellect, honesty, and humor, she chronicles the losses, challenges, and freedoms of leaving home. Butler is a trustworthy guide, and I am grateful for her well-earned wisdom. —Jan Holmgren, president emerita, Mills College]]>
176 Sandra Butler 1955826668 Sonja 3 3.00 Leaving Home at 83
author: Sandra Butler
name: Sonja
average rating: 3.00
book published:
rating: 3
read at: 2025/04/13
date added: 2025/04/13
shelves:
review:

]]>
The Book Censor's Library 175678711
The new book censor hasn’t slept soundly in weeks. By day he combs through manuscripts at a government office, looking for anything that would make a book unfit to publish―allusions to queerness, unapproved religions, any mention of life before the Revolution. By night the characters of literary classics crowd his dreams, and pilfered novels pile up in the house he shares with his wife and daughter. As the siren song of forbidden reading continues to beckon, he descends into a netherworld of resistance fighters, undercover booksellers, and outlaw librarians trying to save their history and culture.

Reckoning with the global threat to free speech and the bleak future it all but guarantees, Bothayna Al-Essa marries the steely dystopia of Orwell’s 1984 with the madcap absurdity of Carroll’s Alice in Wonderland, resulting in a dreadful twist worthy of Kafka. The Book Censor’s Library is a warning call and a love letter to stories and the delicious act of losing oneself in them.]]>
272 Bothayna Al-Essa 1632063344 Sonja 0 to-read 3.93 2019 The Book Censor's Library
author: Bothayna Al-Essa
name: Sonja
average rating: 3.93
book published: 2019
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/04/11
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
<![CDATA[To Save and to Destroy: Writing as an Other]]> 217446823 From the Pulitzer Prize–winning author of The Sympathizer (now an HBO series) comes a moving and unflinchingly personal meditation on the literary forms of otherness and a bold call for expansive political solidarity.

Born in war-ravaged Vietnam, Viet Nguyen arrived in the United States as a child refugee in 1975. The Nguyen family would soon move to San Jose, California, where the author grew up, attending UC-Berkeley in the aftermath of the shocking murder of Vincent Chin, which shaped the political sensibilities of a new generation of Asian Americans.

The essays here, delivered originally as the prestigious Norton Lectures, proffer a new answer to a classic literary What does the outsider mean to literary writing? Over the course of six captivating and moving chapters, Nguyen explores the idea of being an outsider through lenses that are, by turns, literary, historical, political, and familial.

Each piece moves between writers who influenced Nguyen’s craft and weaves in the haunting story of his late mother’s mental illness. Nguyen unfolds the novels and nonfiction of Herman Melville, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Ralph Ellison, William Carlos Williams, and Maxine Hong Kingston, until aesthetic theories give way to pressing concerns raised by war and politics. What is a writer’s responsibility in a time of violence? Should we celebrate fiction that gives voice to the voiceless—or do we confront the forces that render millions voiceless in the first place? What are the burdens and pleasures of the “minor� writer in any society? Unsatisfied with the modest inclusion accorded to “model minorities� such as Asian Americans, Nguyen sets the agenda for a more radical and disquieting solidarity with those whose lives have been devastated by imperialism and forever wars.]]>
144 Viet Thanh Nguyen 0674298179 Sonja 0 to-read 4.21 To Save and to Destroy: Writing as an Other
author: Viet Thanh Nguyen
name: Sonja
average rating: 4.21
book published:
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/04/11
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
My Private Property 54142892
Personalia

When I was young, a fortune-teller told me that an old woman who wanted to die had accidentally become lodged in my body. Slowly, over time, and taking great care in following esoteric instructions, including lavender baths and the ritual burial of keys in the backyard, I rid myself of her presence. Now I am an old woman who wants to die and lodged inside me is a young woman dying to live; I work on her.

Mary Ruefle is the author of Trances of the Blast; Madness, Rack, and Collected Lectures, a finalist for the 2013 National Book Critics Circle Award in criticism; and Selected Poems, winner of the William Carlos Williams Award. She has published ten other books of poetry, a book of prose (The Most of It), and a comic book, Go Home and Go to Bed!; she is also an erasure artist whose treatments of nineteenth-century texts have been exhibited in museums and galleries as well as published in the book A Little White Shadow. Ruefle is the recipient of numerous honors, including an Award in Literature from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, a Guggenheim fellowship, a National Endowment for the Arts fellowship, and a Whiting Award. She lives in Bennington, Vermont and teaches in the MFA program at Vermont College.]]>
128 Mary Ruefle 195026825X Sonja 0 to-read 4.21 2016 My Private Property
author: Mary Ruefle
name: Sonja
average rating: 4.21
book published: 2016
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/04/10
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
<![CDATA[Portraits at the Palace of Creativity and Wrecking]]> 195274816 'Kaleidoscopic and beguiling . . . A singular and thrilling debut that shows what happens when objective truth and meaning are drowned in the shifting river of history and politics' ANDREW McMILLAN

'Strange, intriguing, exhilarating' CAMILLA GRUDOVA


The almost daughter is almost normal, because she knows how to know and also not know.

She knows and does not know, for instance, about the barracks by the athletics field, and about the lonely woman she visits each week. She knows - almost - about ghosts, and their ghosts, and she knows not to have questions about them. She knows to focus on being a on training her body and dreaming only of escape.

Then, the almost daughter meets Oksana. Oksana is not even almost normal, and the questions she has are not normal at all.

Portraits at the Palace of Creativity and Wrecking is the story of a young woman coming of age in a town reckoning with its brutal past, for readers of Milkman and A Girl is a Half-Formed Thing.]]>
286 Han Smith 1399814265 Sonja 0 to-read 4.05 Portraits at the Palace of Creativity and Wrecking
author: Han Smith
name: Sonja
average rating: 4.05
book published:
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/04/09
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
<![CDATA[People of the Lie: The Hope for Healing Human Evil]]> 4451 The Road Less Traveled, Further Along the Road Less Traveled, and The Road Less Traveled and Beyond � Dr. M. Scott Peck brilliantly probes into the essence of human evil.

People who are evil attack others instead of facing their own failures. Peck demonstrates the havoc these people of the lie work in the lives of those around them. He presents, from vivid incidents encountered in his psychiatric practice, examples of evil in everyday life.

This book is by turns disturbing, fascinating, and altogether impossible to put down as it offers a strikingly original approach to the age-old problem of human evil.]]>
272 M. Scott Peck 0684848597 Sonja 0 to-read 3.99 1983 People of the Lie: The Hope for Healing Human Evil
author: M. Scott Peck
name: Sonja
average rating: 3.99
book published: 1983
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/04/09
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
<![CDATA[The Light Eaters: How the Unseen World of Plant Intelligence Offers a New Understanding of Life on Earth]]> 217432723 304 Zoë Schlanger 0063073862 Sonja 0 to-read 3.80 2024 The Light Eaters: How the Unseen World of Plant Intelligence Offers a New Understanding of Life on Earth
author: Zoë Schlanger
name: Sonja
average rating: 3.80
book published: 2024
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/04/08
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
For the Best 221607866
In Nia Mahmud’s sophomore collection of poems, aches don’t disappear, they just change shape. From curt conversations to wordy prose poems, this chapbook explores what it’s like to look at a wound and not always know the cure.]]>
Nia Mahmud 1962390721 Sonja 0 to-read 0.0 For the Best
author: Nia Mahmud
name: Sonja
average rating: 0.0
book published:
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/04/07
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
A Leopard-Skin Hat 88564033 122 Anne Serre 0811234517 Sonja 0 to-read 3.55 A Leopard-Skin Hat
author: Anne Serre
name: Sonja
average rating: 3.55
book published:
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/04/06
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
Song of My Softening 210826371 Recommended by Cosmopolitan, USA Today, Shondaland, & Book Riot




“It’s not often that fat women feel such thorough representation of themselves not only in poetry but in any media and not only in the beautiful moments but in the sorrowful ones, ranging throughout life. James does a brilliant job of portraying this and all her themes brilliantly; highly recommended.”�—Starred review by Library Journal




The raw poems inside Song of My Softening studies the ever-changing relationship with oneself, while also investigating the relationship that the world and nation has with Black queerness. Poems open wide the questioning of how we express both love and pain, and how we view our bodies in society, offering themselves wholly, with sharpness and compassion.]]>
140 Omotara James 1948579480 Sonja 5 5.00 2024 Song of My Softening
author: Omotara James
name: Sonja
average rating: 5.00
book published: 2024
rating: 5
read at: 2025/04/06
date added: 2025/04/06
shelves:
review:

]]>
<![CDATA[On for Young and Old: Australian Intergenerational Radical Lesbian Feminist Anthology]]> 39802362
"Lesbians Are Everywhere" by Robin Gregory
"Who Would Have Thought It? Radical Feminism Now" by Sue Leigh
"Truth Telling" by Barbary Clarke
"Globetrotting as Radical Lesbian Separatist" by Claudia Huber
"A Radical Lesbian Mother Carves a Pathway to Equality for Children" by Viv Ray
"Underground" by Robyn Peck
"Being Together" by Chris Sitka
"The Women Around Me" by Jessica Megarry]]>
294 Long Breast Press 0980356849 Sonja 5
Three Years Human: poems and stories is Meg Irwin’s fabulous book of poems stories and photos published by Long Breast Press in Australia.
“The Feeling That Comes� is one of my favorite poems but there are so many more.
These lines end the poem

that we have lost and will lose

all that we are

all that we love


even as everything is here


I am speechless after finishing this book and don’t want to let it go. So glad I have a copy I can treasure. I met Met on Lesbians WriteOn and enjoyed her readings whenever she read. Just LOVE]]>
4.00 2017 On for Young and Old: Australian Intergenerational Radical Lesbian Feminist Anthology
author: Long Breast Press
name: Sonja
average rating: 4.00
book published: 2017
rating: 5
read at: 2025/04/06
date added: 2025/04/06
shelves:
review:
I did not find the Long Breast Press book I was reading here on ŷ so I used this as a placeholder.

Three Years Human: poems and stories is Meg Irwin’s fabulous book of poems stories and photos published by Long Breast Press in Australia.
“The Feeling That Comes� is one of my favorite poems but there are so many more.
These lines end the poem

that we have lost and will lose

all that we are

all that we love


even as everything is here


I am speechless after finishing this book and don’t want to let it go. So glad I have a copy I can treasure. I met Met on Lesbians WriteOn and enjoyed her readings whenever she read. Just LOVE
]]>
Vinyl Moon 57800570 A teen girl hiding the scars of a past relationship finds home and healing in the words of strong Black writers. A beautiful sophomore novel from a critically acclaimed author and poet that explores how words have the power to shape and uplife our world even in the midst of pain.

When Darius told Angel he loved her, she believed him. But five weeks after the incident, Angel finds herself in Brooklyn, far from her family, from him, and from the California life she has known.

Angel feels out of sync with her new neighborhood. At school, she can't shake the feeling everyone knows what happened--and how it was her fault. The only place that makes sense is Ms. G's class. There, Angel's classmates share their own stories of pain, joy, and fortitude. And as Angel becomes immersed in her revolutionary literature course, the words from novels like The Bluest Eye and Push speak to her and begin to heal the wounds of her past.

This stunning novel weaves together prose, poems, and vignettes to tell the story of Angel, a young woman whose past was shaped by domestic violence but whose love of language and music and the gift of community grant her the chance to find herself again.]]>
176 Mahogany L. Browne 0593176448 Sonja 0 to-read 3.93 2022 Vinyl Moon
author: Mahogany L. Browne
name: Sonja
average rating: 3.93
book published: 2022
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/04/06
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
Felix Ever After 51931067 From Stonewall and Lambda Award-winning author Kacen Callender comes a revelatory YA novel about a transgender teen grappling with identity and self-discovery while falling in love for the first time.

Felix Love has never been in love—and, yes, he’s painfully aware of the irony. He desperately wants to know what it’s like and why it seems so easy for everyone but him to find someone. What’s worse is that, even though he is proud of his identity, Felix also secretly fears that he’s one marginalization too many—Black, queer, and transgender—to ever get his own happily-ever-after.

When an anonymous student begins sending him transphobic messages—after publicly posting Felix’s deadname alongside images of him before he transitioned—Felix comes up with a plan for revenge. What he didn’t count on: his catfish scenario landing him in a quasi–love triangle....

But as he navigates his complicated feelings, Felix begins a journey of questioning and self-discovery that helps redefine his most important relationship: how he feels about himself.

Felix Ever After is an honest and layered story about identity, falling in love, and recognizing the love you deserve.]]>
368 Kacen Callender 0062820257 Sonja 0 to-read 4.21 2020 Felix Ever After
author: Kacen Callender
name: Sonja
average rating: 4.21
book published: 2020
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/04/05
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
<![CDATA[The Highest Common Denominator: Using Convergent Facilitation to Reach Breakthrough Collaborative Decisions]]> 56383551 324 Miki Kashtan 0990007367 Sonja 0 to-read 4.35 The Highest Common Denominator: Using Convergent Facilitation to Reach Breakthrough Collaborative Decisions
author: Miki Kashtan
name: Sonja
average rating: 4.35
book published:
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/04/04
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
Wandering Stars 220687890 A TIME MOST ANTICIPATED BOOK � The Pulitzer Prize-finalist and author of the breakout bestseller There There delivers a masterful follow-up to his already classic first novel. Extending his constellation of narratives into the past and future, Tommy Orange traces the legacies of the Sand Creek Massacre of 1864 and the Carlisle Indian Industrial School through three generations of a family in a story that is by turns shattering and wondrous.

Colorado, 1864. Star, a young survivor of the Sand Creek Massacre, is brought to the Fort Marion prison castle,where he is forced to learn English and practice Christianity by Richard Henry Pratt, an evangelical prison guard who will go on to found the Carlisle Indian Industrial School, an institution dedicated to the eradication of Native history, culture, and identity. A generation later, Star’s son, Charles, is sent to the school, where he is brutalized by the man who was once his father’s jailer. Under Pratt’s harsh treatment, Charles clings to moments he shares with a young fellow student, Opal Viola, as the two envision a future away from the institutional violence that follows their bloodlines.

In a novel that is by turns shattering and wondrous, Tommy Orange has conjured the ancestors of the family readers first fell in love with in There There—warriors, drunks, outlaws, addicts—asking what it means to bethe children and grandchildren of massacre. Wandering Stars is a novel about epigenetic and generational trauma that has the force and vision of a modern epic, an exceptionally powerful new book from one of the most exciting writers at work today and soaring confirmation of Tommy Orange’s monumental gifts.]]>
336 Tommy Orange 0593311442 Sonja 0 to-read 4.15 2024 Wandering Stars
author: Tommy Orange
name: Sonja
average rating: 4.15
book published: 2024
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/04/04
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
Name 216775156 'One of the most compulsive voices I've read in years' Olivia Laing, Observer

'You can't help but think of her work falling in the tradition of Annie Ernaux, just edgier. Her prose is gorgeously spare and practical' Irish Independent

In the twin worlds of the French bourgeoisie and aristocracy, names are everything. By contrast, our narrator insists on shedding her surname, indelibly associated with France's political and colonial past. In Name, she explores how this name is bound to the complex grief she feels for her father's recent passing and her mother's overdose many years earlier, as well as the murky practices of a political dynasty - a family life built around substance abuse, buried trauma and elitist pride.

Written in sharp prose that has been lauded by Rachel Kushner, Maggie Nelson, Olivia Laing and others, Debré's third novel is a fresh feat of restrained yet explosive writing.]]>
144 Constance Debré 1800819889 Sonja 0 to-read 3.83 2022 Name
author: Constance Debré
name: Sonja
average rating: 3.83
book published: 2022
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/04/04
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
Blue 58180146
Airports are distillations of the world. I like thinking of them that way. The hope of leaving and the desire to come home, existing side by side. Any voyage is possible. My mind flies off toward the blue province once again. I don’t know, anymore, why I always associate it with blue. It isn’t even my favorite color.

Traveling alone from Miami to Port-au-Prince, our narrator finds comfort at the airport. She feels free to ponder the silence that surrounds her homeland, her mother, her aunts, and her own inner thoughts. Between two places, she sees how living in poverty keeps women silent, forging their identities around practicality and resilience. From a distance, she is drawn inevitably homeward toward her family and the glittering blue Caribbean Sea.

Blue comes alive through vivid images crowding the page, just as memories do in real life, as if the author is trying to sort through them, to come to grips with her own emotional conflict. Balancing the pain and anger are spiritual bonds that connect the author to the women who have come before her, who have created her, and with Haiti itself, her motherland. No amount of glittering opportunity up north can prevent her from finding her way home.]]>
128 Emmelie Prophète 1542031311 Sonja 4 3.56 2007 Blue
author: Emmelie Prophète
name: Sonja
average rating: 3.56
book published: 2007
rating: 4
read at:
date added: 2025/04/03
shelves:
review:

]]>
a body more tolerable 205543996 Ferocious and vulnerable poems about redefining acts of creation, destruction, deconstruction, and recreation, from a singular Indigiqueer point of view


a body more tolerable is a collection of powerful and haunting poems full of mythos, fairy tales, allusion, and magic. Divided into three parts, the book takes an intimate exploration of Indigenous grief, trans identity, and frustrated desires in ways that reject perception. Author jaye simpson conjures up dazzling multiverses throughout their mythic journey as they dance and run wild in their own manifestation of girlhood.


In these visceral poems, teeth gleam, graze skin, or sink into flesh, becoming bloodied and exposing the animalistic hunger that lies within. Pulsating with yearning and possibility, a body more tolerable is a book that resists typical notions of physicality and sex to dream of a world more divine.]]>
88 jaye simpson 155152967X Sonja 0 to-read 4.36 2025 a body more tolerable
author: jaye simpson
name: Sonja
average rating: 4.36
book published: 2025
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/04/03
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
<![CDATA[If Not, Winter: Fragments of Sappho]]> 150253 416 Sappho 1844080811 Sonja 5 4.44 -550 If Not, Winter: Fragments of Sappho
author: Sappho
name: Sonja
average rating: 4.44
book published: -550
rating: 5
read at: 2025/04/03
date added: 2025/04/03
shelves:
review:

]]>
The Paris Express 214151304 Emma Donoghue, the “soul-stirring� (Oprah Daily) nationally bestselling author of Room, returns with a sweeping historical novel about an infamous 1895 disaster at the Paris Montparnasse train station.

Based on an 1895 disaster that went down in history when it was captured in a series of surreal, extraordinary photographs, The Paris Express is a propulsive novel set on a train packed with a fascinating cast of characters who hail from as close as Brittany and as far as Russia, Ireland, Algeria, Pennsylvania, and Cambodia. Members of parliament hurry back to Paris to vote; a medical student suspects a girl may be dying; a secretary tries to convince her boss of the potential of moving pictures; two of the train’s crew build a life away from their wives; a young anarchist makes a terrifying plan, and much more.

From an author whose “writing is superb alchemy� (Audrey Niffenegger, New York Times bestselling author), The Paris Express is an evocative masterpiece that effortlessly captures the politics, glamour, chaos, and speed that marked the end of the 19th century.]]>
288 Emma Donoghue 1668082799 Sonja 0 to-read 3.28 2025 The Paris Express
author: Emma Donoghue
name: Sonja
average rating: 3.28
book published: 2025
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/04/01
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
My Heart 55098820 An intimate work of autobiographical fiction by one of ex-Yugoslavia's greatest writers about his family's experience as refugees from the Bosnian war--a timeless story of love, memory, and the resilience of the human spirit.

"Today, it seems, was the day I was meant to die." When a writer suffers a heart attack at the age of fifty, he must confront his mortality in a country that is not his native home. Confined to a hospital bed and overcome by a sense of powerlessness, he reflects on the fragility of life and finds extraordinary meaning in the quotidian. In this affecting autobiographical novel, Semezdin Mehmedinovic explores the love he and his family have for one another, strengthened by trauma; their harrowing experience of the Bosnian war, which led them to flee for the United States as refugees; eerie premonitions of Donald Trump's presidency; the life and work of a writer; and the nature of memory and grief.

Poetically explosive and pure to the core, My Heart serves as a kind of mirror, reflecting our human strengths and weaknesses along with the most important issues on our minds--love and death, the present and the past, sickness and health, leaving and staying.]]>
228 Semezdin Mehmedinović 1646220072 Sonja 0 to-read 4.06 2017 My Heart
author: Semezdin Mehmedinović
name: Sonja
average rating: 4.06
book published: 2017
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/03/31
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
The Accidentals: Stories 211004813 The Accidentalsis the brilliant new book from International Booker-shortlisted duo Guadalupe Nettel and Rosalind Harvey.]]> 144 Guadalupe Nettel 1639734929 Sonja 0 to-read 4.05 2023 The Accidentals: Stories
author: Guadalupe Nettel
name: Sonja
average rating: 4.05
book published: 2023
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/03/31
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
Nevada 58837536 A beloved and blistering cult classic and finalist for the Lambda Literary Award for Transgender Fiction finally back in print, Nevada follows a disaffected trans woman as she embarks on a cross-country road trip.

Maria Griffiths is almost thirty and works at a used bookstore in New York City while trying to stay true to her punk values. She's in love with her bike but not with her girlfriend, Steph. She takes random pills and drinks more than is good for her, but doesn't inject anything except, when she remembers, estrogen, because she's trans. Everything is mostly fine until Maria and Steph break up, sending Maria into a tailspin, and then onto a cross-country trek in the car she steals from Steph. She ends up in the backwater town of Star City, Nevada, where she meets James, who is probably but not certainly trans, and who reminds Maria of her younger self. As Maria finds herself in the awkward position of trans role model, she realizes that she could become James's savior—or his downfall.

One of the most beloved cult novels of our time and a landmark of trans literature, Imogen Binnie's Nevada is a blistering, heartfelt, and evergreen coming-of-age story, and a punk-smeared excavation of marginalized life under capitalism. Guided by an instantly memorable, terminally self-aware protagonist—and back in print featuring a new afterword by the author�Nevada is the great American road novel flipped on its head for a new generation.]]>
290 Imogen Binnie 0374606617 Sonja 0 to-read 3.93 2013 Nevada
author: Imogen Binnie
name: Sonja
average rating: 3.93
book published: 2013
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/03/31
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
<![CDATA[Unravelling the Silk Road: Travels and Textiles in Central Asia]]> 90311007 352 Chris Aslan 1785789864 Sonja 0 to-read 4.25 Unravelling the Silk Road: Travels and Textiles in Central Asia
author: Chris Aslan
name: Sonja
average rating: 4.25
book published:
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/03/30
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
<![CDATA[The Serviceberry: Abundance and Reciprocity in the Natural World]]> 208840291 From the #1 New York Times bestselling author of Braiding Sweetgrass, a bold and inspiring vision for how to orient our lives around gratitude, reciprocity, and community, based on the lessons of the natural world.

As indigenous scientist and author of Braiding Sweetgrass Robin Wall Kimmerer harvests serviceberries alongside the birds, she considers the ethic of reciprocity that lies at the heart of the gift economy. How, she asks, can we learn from indigenous wisdom and the plant world to reimagine what we value most? Our economy is rooted in scarcity, competition, and the hoarding of resources, and we have surrendered our values to a system that actively harms what we love.

Meanwhile, the serviceberry’s relationship with the natural world is an embodiment of reciprocity, interconnectedness, and gratitude. The tree distributes its wealth—its abundance of sweet, juicy berries—to meet the needs of its natural community. And this distribution insures its own survival. As Kimmerer explains, “Serviceberries show us another model, one based upon reciprocity, where wealth comes from the quality of your relationships, not from the illusion of self-sufficiency.”]]>
112 Robin Wall Kimmerer 1668072246 Sonja 5 Look to nature to solve our problems. Abundance and reciprocity is alive and well. We just have to see it and participate. Our overall mindset must change if we are to survive. Scarcity is a capitalist ploy to keep the system of profits going.

“This transition from exploitation to reciprocity, from the individual good to the common good has been seen as a parallel to the transition that colonizing human societies must undergo…�

“The Serviceberries show us another model, one based upon reciprocity rather than accumulation, where wealth and security come from the quality of our relationships, not from the illusion of self-sufficiency.�

There is much to relate to in this book. I highly recommend it.]]>
4.38 2024 The Serviceberry: Abundance and Reciprocity in the Natural World
author: Robin Wall Kimmerer
name: Sonja
average rating: 4.38
book published: 2024
rating: 5
read at: 2025/03/30
date added: 2025/03/30
shelves:
review:
Robin Wall Kimmerer wrote another wonder-ful book. This one is short but its simplicity in tone and message is an example of what to strive for in life.
Look to nature to solve our problems. Abundance and reciprocity is alive and well. We just have to see it and participate. Our overall mindset must change if we are to survive. Scarcity is a capitalist ploy to keep the system of profits going.

“This transition from exploitation to reciprocity, from the individual good to the common good has been seen as a parallel to the transition that colonizing human societies must undergo…�

“The Serviceberries show us another model, one based upon reciprocity rather than accumulation, where wealth and security come from the quality of our relationships, not from the illusion of self-sufficiency.�

There is much to relate to in this book. I highly recommend it.
]]>
<![CDATA[The Little Book of Courageous Living]]> 22374786 232 Miki Kashtan 0990007316 Sonja 0 to-read 4.69 2014 The Little Book of Courageous Living
author: Miki Kashtan
name: Sonja
average rating: 4.69
book published: 2014
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/03/30
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
Back To Bukhara 56324067 335 Shahzoda Nazarova Samarqandi 9492675110 Sonja 4 Not much is known about Central Asia. Some say it is defined by the “stans� for the most part but the geographical borders of these particular countries� Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, Kirghizistan, Turkmenistan and Tajikistan—is bigger and its borders are not true. People of different ethnicities wander. Malika, the heroine of this novel, is Tajik but considers Bukhara Uzbekistan her home.
The novel is based in a region that has both a patriarchal and matriarchal history. The ancient history of this area is fascinating and the novel does recount some of that. Patriarchy is represented by the cruel domineering Emir and the matriarchy by Bibi, Malika’s grandmother, who speaks of natural healing and women’s strength. The culmination of the novel is the story of the Emir which is actually very disappointing.
The rambling story very much reflects the culture of Central Asia. The unexpected shifts, the lack of a real structure, the ending itself may irritate the European “Western� reader, but isn’t access to unknown cultures worth the read?
I enjoyed Malika’s discussion of immigration and wanting to leave Bukhara for the quiet organized life of the Netherlands but also wanting to go back to her home. I loved the section where she described her grandmother Bibi and all the descriptions of Uzbek culture and history, including the Soviet influences.
Because of the similarities of the heroine’s story to that of the author who also left her Uzbek homeland for the Netherlands, I couldn’t help but think of them as one person. Shahzoda herself learned Uzbek, Persian, Russian and her native Tajik, then later English and Dutch. If you look at her website she has books in all these languages. She speaks of the domination of English� we are indeed lucky to be able to read about these cultures. She had an editor for this book but wrote it in English. Her books have not been published in her native land.
I suggest reading the author’s note at the beginning of the preview. It gives an overview of the novel and the author. Like me, you may decide to take the adventure.]]>
3.67 2020 Back To Bukhara
author: Shahzoda Nazarova Samarqandi
name: Sonja
average rating: 3.67
book published: 2020
rating: 4
read at: 2025/03/28
date added: 2025/03/29
shelves:
review:
Not wanting to give Back to Bukhara 3 stars, I still want to warn you that it is a book for those interested in Central Asia and in a woman who is fighting the specific demons of patriarchy in her country of origin.
Not much is known about Central Asia. Some say it is defined by the “stans� for the most part but the geographical borders of these particular countries� Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, Kirghizistan, Turkmenistan and Tajikistan—is bigger and its borders are not true. People of different ethnicities wander. Malika, the heroine of this novel, is Tajik but considers Bukhara Uzbekistan her home.
The novel is based in a region that has both a patriarchal and matriarchal history. The ancient history of this area is fascinating and the novel does recount some of that. Patriarchy is represented by the cruel domineering Emir and the matriarchy by Bibi, Malika’s grandmother, who speaks of natural healing and women’s strength. The culmination of the novel is the story of the Emir which is actually very disappointing.
The rambling story very much reflects the culture of Central Asia. The unexpected shifts, the lack of a real structure, the ending itself may irritate the European “Western� reader, but isn’t access to unknown cultures worth the read?
I enjoyed Malika’s discussion of immigration and wanting to leave Bukhara for the quiet organized life of the Netherlands but also wanting to go back to her home. I loved the section where she described her grandmother Bibi and all the descriptions of Uzbek culture and history, including the Soviet influences.
Because of the similarities of the heroine’s story to that of the author who also left her Uzbek homeland for the Netherlands, I couldn’t help but think of them as one person. Shahzoda herself learned Uzbek, Persian, Russian and her native Tajik, then later English and Dutch. If you look at her website she has books in all these languages. She speaks of the domination of English� we are indeed lucky to be able to read about these cultures. She had an editor for this book but wrote it in English. Her books have not been published in her native land.
I suggest reading the author’s note at the beginning of the preview. It gives an overview of the novel and the author. Like me, you may decide to take the adventure.
]]>
People Change 58587364
“A deeply generous and honest gift to the world.�
� Elliot Page

The author of I’m Afraid of Men lets readers in on the secrets to a life of reinvention.

Vivek Shraya knows this to be people change. We change our haircuts and our outfits and our minds. We change names, titles, labels. We attempt to blend in or to stand out. We outgrow relationships, we abandon dreams for new ones, we start fresh. We seize control of our stories. We make resolutions.

In fact, nobody knows this better than Vivek, who’s made a career of embracing many artist, performer, musician, writer, model, teacher. In People Change , she reflects on the origins of this impulse, tracing it to childhood influences from Hinduism to Madonna. What emerges is a meditation on change why we fear it, why we’re drawn to it, what motivates us to change, and what traps us in place.

At a time when we’re especially contemplating who we want to be, this slim and stylish handbook is an essential companion—a guide to celebrating our many selves and the inspiration to discover who we’ll become next.]]>
112 Vivek Shraya 0735238650 Sonja 4 3.94 2022 People Change
author: Vivek Shraya
name: Sonja
average rating: 3.94
book published: 2022
rating: 4
read at:
date added: 2025/03/28
shelves:
review:

]]>
<![CDATA[Sinister Wisdom 80: Willing Up and Keeling Over - A Lesbian Handbook and Death Rights and Rituals]]> 35601662 0 Fran Day 0980356806 Sonja 0 custom 5.00 Sinister Wisdom 80: Willing Up and Keeling Over - A Lesbian Handbook and Death Rights and Rituals
author: Fran Day
name: Sonja
average rating: 5.00
book published:
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/03/26
shelves: custom
review:

]]>
Love in a Fallen City 189123 Love in a Fallen City, the first collection in English of this dazzling body of work, introduces American readers to the stark and glamorous vision of a modern master.]]> 321 Eileen Chang 1590171780 Sonja 0 to-read 3.91 1943 Love in a Fallen City
author: Eileen Chang
name: Sonja
average rating: 3.91
book published: 1943
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/03/25
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
<![CDATA[A Child of War: Désirée’s Story � Part One]]> 221191755 From the rubble of war-torn France rises the story of Désirée, a young orphan trapped in the clutches of Nazi occupation. But beneath her perfect Aryan facade lies a fierce determination to reclaim her true French identity.

A Child of War is a gripping tale of courage and survival, one girl’s fight to reclaim her past and secure her future in a world of turmoil and danger. “I was born in France in 1932. On my eighth birthday, the Nazis came and killed my family, then left me for dead.�
Desi–May 1997

Soon after the Nazis occupied France in 1940, Oberstleutnant Anton Steigler (the Kommandant) discovers young Désirée in an orphanage, classifying her as the ‘Perfect Aryan child�. He takes control of Désirée and then presents her as a gift to his wife.

Désirée spends the war years living a life of privilege among the elite Nazi High Command in France, always pretending to be the perfect child the Kommandant believes she is, while constantly hiding her French identity under the looming threat of disposal.

Ultimately, she must choose the path to her future. Will she remain ‘Steigler’s Girl� forever or reclaim her French identity?

To escape, Désirée must be brave, strong, and clever, but her survival will come at a cost.]]>
417 D. Riesau-Moreno Sonja 0 to-read 4.67 A Child of War: Désirée’s Story – Part One
author: D. Riesau-Moreno
name: Sonja
average rating: 4.67
book published:
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/03/25
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
Who Said 17465608 88 Jennifer Michael Hecht 1556594496 Sonja 5 I enjoyed so many of her poems in this 2013 collection. “Lady Look-Alike Lazarized� is a favorite. She even has cryptograms at the end of the book—for us to solve� about the references in the poems.
Shall I quote some of her rhythmic lines?

“I measure every grief I meet
With penetrative arts
I wonder if it acts like me
Or hives in buzzing parts
And hides its ugly parts

O poetry, I want to trust
And thus presume
I want to hope
In a hat
To fly in
On her broom.

It’s hard not to feel like a failure
When you’re lonely among seven billion.
Starts to look like the problem is you,

In the Great Depression
Everyone lost everything and everyone
Blamed himself. You can see it in the
Photographs that won’t look back.�

This is just a quote of course. I apologize for taking it out of its context. You’d have to read the whole poem “Smells Like Every Grief I Meet,� but you can get an idea of her poetry.

This is from her long ending poem� “The Thesis Is That There Was a Beginning�

Yet we rarely change our minds.
We get our actual hearts replaced
More often than we change our minds
And our metaphorical hearts also change
Faster than we change our minds.

Makes you wonder!]]>
3.83 2013 Who Said
author: Jennifer Michael Hecht
name: Sonja
average rating: 3.83
book published: 2013
rating: 5
read at: 2025/03/25
date added: 2025/03/25
shelves:
review:
I fell for Jennifer Michael Hecht when I read The Wonder Paradox: Embracing the Weirdness of Existence and the Poetry of Our Lives. Her wisdom and humor is also evident in her poetry. After finishing Who Said, I wanted to read more of her poetry. I appreciate her tone of not taking ourselves so seriously. Humans really have gone overboard in our self importance.
I enjoyed so many of her poems in this 2013 collection. “Lady Look-Alike Lazarized� is a favorite. She even has cryptograms at the end of the book—for us to solve� about the references in the poems.
Shall I quote some of her rhythmic lines?

“I measure every grief I meet
With penetrative arts
I wonder if it acts like me
Or hives in buzzing parts
And hides its ugly parts

O poetry, I want to trust
And thus presume
I want to hope
In a hat
To fly in
On her broom.

It’s hard not to feel like a failure
When you’re lonely among seven billion.
Starts to look like the problem is you,

In the Great Depression
Everyone lost everything and everyone
Blamed himself. You can see it in the
Photographs that won’t look back.�

This is just a quote of course. I apologize for taking it out of its context. You’d have to read the whole poem “Smells Like Every Grief I Meet,� but you can get an idea of her poetry.

This is from her long ending poem� “The Thesis Is That There Was a Beginning�

Yet we rarely change our minds.
We get our actual hearts replaced
More often than we change our minds
And our metaphorical hearts also change
Faster than we change our minds.

Makes you wonder!
]]>
<![CDATA[Some People Need Killing: A Memoir of Murder in My Country]]> 124961437 A fearless, powerfully written on-the-ground account of a nation careening into violent autocracy—told through harrowing stories of the Philippines� state-sanctioned killings of its citizens—from a journalist of international renown

“My job is to go to places where people die. I pack my bags, talk to the survivors, write my stories, then go home to wait for the next catastrophe. I don’t wait very long.�

Journalist Patricia Evangelista came of age in the aftermath of a street revolution that forged a new future for the Philippines. Three decades later, in the face of mounting inequality, the nation discovered the fragility of its democratic institutions under the regime of strongman Rodrigo Duterte.

Some People Need Killing is Evangelista’s meticulously reported and deeply human chronicle of the Philippines� drug war. For six years, Evangelista chronicled the killings carried out by police and vigilantes in the name of Duterte’s war on drugs—a war that has led to the slaughter of thousands—immersing herself in the world of killers and survivors and capturing the atmosphere of fear created when an elected president decides that some lives are worth less than others.

The book takes its title from a vigilante whose words seemed to reflect the psychological accommodation that most of the country had made: “I’m really not a bad guy,� he said. “I’m not all bad. Some people need killing.�

A profound act of witness and a tour de force of literary journalism, Some People Need Killing is also a brilliant dissection of the grammar of violence and an important investigation of the human impulses to dominate and resist.]]>
428 Patricia Evangelista 0593133137 Sonja 0 to-read 4.19 2023 Some People Need Killing: A Memoir of Murder in My Country
author: Patricia Evangelista
name: Sonja
average rating: 4.19
book published: 2023
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/03/24
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
Desecrated Poppies 214519374
"Desecrated Poppies," written during the eclipse in April 2024 and in anticipation of the November 2024 elections, delves into the intersections of anti-trans and anti-Palestine politics, illustrating how they intertwine with fascism. Through essays and poetry, Yaffa navigates their experiences of these seemingly conflicting identities, both of which are weaponized to advance fascism. "Desecrated Poppies" also explores antidotes to fascism, with a particular focus on cultural work and the imperative to prioritize the most marginalized among us. A world beyond fascism exists, and we hold the pathway forward.]]>
166 Yaffa As Sonja 0 to-read 4.50 Desecrated Poppies
author: Yaffa As
name: Sonja
average rating: 4.50
book published:
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/03/24
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
The Impatient 59949727 A powerful, heartrending, and insightful novel of a trio of women in Cameroon who dare to rebel against oppressive, long-held cultural traditions—including polygamy and domestic abuse—that define and limit their lives.

Three women, three stories, three linked destinies . . .

In North Cameroon, well-to-do young Ramla is torn from her true love and wed to a manipulative older man. Safira, her co-wife, juggles envy and empathy for this new bride with disappointment in the husband she desperately loves. Like her older sister, Ramla, Hindou is married off to a man she does not know or want, a distant cousin whose instability and violence terrifies her.

From an early age, these women were raised to submit to men, or risk shame and repudiation of themselves and their families. They are advised to have munyal—patience. They are told that their fates are the will of the All-Powerful, and that it is unthinkable—or rather, impossible—to defy tradition. They are reminded of the Fulani proverb which holds, “At the end of patience, there is the sky.�

Yet Ramla, Safira, and Hindou are tired of waiting for a happiness that may never come. Their lives are driven by impatience and clouded by the suffering rooted in forced marriage and physical abuse, but it is this oppressive culture that binds them together. In a society that demands female obedience, how will these three impatient women free themselves

Djaïli Amadou Amal makes her literary debut in English with this remarkable novel that breaks taboos as it denounces the cultural mores of Africa's Sahel region. Inspired by the author’s own experiences and written with grace, strength, and veracity, The Impatient is a moving testimony to a shared pain and a call for change—an unflinching depiction of the psychic damage traditions can have on the women who must abide by them and a denunciation of violence against all women and the normalization of domestic abuse—not only in Cameroon but around the globe.

Translated from the French by Emma Ramadan]]>
176 Djaïli Amadou Amal 0063141620 Sonja 4 The first woman doesn’t want to marry and wants to pursue her education and a career but her family. She’d like to marry a man she knows but she is married off to a rich man who already has a wife. The second woman is her sister who is brutalized by her husband and ends up terribly sick.
The third is the co-wife of the first woman. She has been married to the rich man for twenty years. She only wants to get rid of the new young co-wife or drive her away.
These very sad stories show the situation of women focused on marriage because of tradition but it turns out to be a kind of slavery not only in relation to their husbands but also to their families and traditions.
Published in 2020, it is a courageous exposure of the some of the worst fates of women in these situations. Unfortunately the sanctioning of women’s oppression is still going on in many countries. But, while it is not the same, other women are being oppressed, even in the “land of the free.� We’ve just gotten used to it as the women of Cameroon have and rarely speak up.]]>
3.96 2017 The Impatient
author: Djaïli Amadou Amal
name: Sonja
average rating: 3.96
book published: 2017
rating: 4
read at: 2025/03/23
date added: 2025/03/23
shelves:
review:
The Impatient by Djaili Amadou Amal is a novel about the fate of women in Cameroon and in many places throughout the world. A woman is meant to marry and that’s it, even better if it is to a rich man. Being a co-wife can also be part of a woman’s fate. Three different fates are the subject of this novel, beautifully written and translated by Emma Ramadan.
The first woman doesn’t want to marry and wants to pursue her education and a career but her family. She’d like to marry a man she knows but she is married off to a rich man who already has a wife. The second woman is her sister who is brutalized by her husband and ends up terribly sick.
The third is the co-wife of the first woman. She has been married to the rich man for twenty years. She only wants to get rid of the new young co-wife or drive her away.
These very sad stories show the situation of women focused on marriage because of tradition but it turns out to be a kind of slavery not only in relation to their husbands but also to their families and traditions.
Published in 2020, it is a courageous exposure of the some of the worst fates of women in these situations. Unfortunately the sanctioning of women’s oppression is still going on in many countries. But, while it is not the same, other women are being oppressed, even in the “land of the free.� We’ve just gotten used to it as the women of Cameroon have and rarely speak up.
]]>
<![CDATA[Cleavage: Men, Women, and the Space Between Us]]> 211004927 What is the difference between men and women? Jennifer Finney Boylan, bestselling author of She’s Not There and co-author of Mad Honey with Jodi Picoult, examines the divisions—as well as the common ground—between the genders, and reflects on her own experiences, both difficult and joyful, as a transgender American.

Jennifer Finney Boylan’s She’s Not There was the first bestselling work written by a transgender American. Since its publication twenty years ago, she has become the go-to person for insight into the impact of gender on our lives, from the food we eat to the dreams we dream, both for ourselves and for our children. But Cleavage is more than a deep dive into gender identity; it’s also a look at the difference between coming out as trans in 2000—when many people reacted to Boylan’s transition with love—and the present era of blowback and fear.

How does gender affect our sense of self? Our body image? The passage of time? The friends we lose—and keep? Boylan considers her womanhood, reflects on the boys and men who shaped her, and reconceives of herself as a writer, activist, parent, and spouse. With heart-wrenching honesty, she illustrates the feeling of liminality that followed her to adulthood, but demonstrates the redemptive power of love through it all.

With Boylan’s trademark humor and poignancy, Cleavage is a sharp, witty, and captivating look at the triumphs and losses of a life lived in two genders. Cleavage provides hope for a future in which we all have the freedom to live joyfully as men, as women, and in the space between us.]]>
256 Jennifer Finney Boylan 1250261880 Sonja 0 to-read 3.76 2025 Cleavage: Men, Women, and the Space Between Us
author: Jennifer Finney Boylan
name: Sonja
average rating: 3.76
book published: 2025
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/03/22
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
Ibis 207003534 A bold, witty, magical new voice in fiction, Justin Haynes weaves a cross-generational Caribbean story of migration, superstition, and a search for family in the novelIbis. There is bad luck in New Felicity. The people of the small coastal village have taken in Milagros, an 11-year-old Venezuelan refugee, just as Trinidad’s government has begun cracking down on undocumented migrants—and now an American journalist has come to town asking questions. New Felicity’s superstitious fishermen fear the worst, certain they’ve brought bad luck on the village by killing a local witch who had herself murdered two villagers the year before. The town has been plagued since her death by alarming visits from her supernatural mother, as well as by a mysterious profusion of scarlet ibis birds. Now, skittish that the reporter’s story will bring down the wrath of the ministry of national security, the fishermen take things into their own hands. From there, we go backward and forward in time—from the town’s early days, when it was the site of a sugar plantation, to Milagros’s adulthood as she searches for her mother across the Americas. In between, through the voices of a chorus of narrators, we glimpse moments from various villagers� lives, each one setting into motion events that will reverberate outwards across the novel and shape Milagros’s fate. With kinetic, absorbing language and a powerful sense of voice, Ibis meditates on the bond between mothers and daughters, both highlighting the migrant crisis that troubles the contemporary world and offering a moving exploration of how to square where we come from with who we become.]]> 352 Justin Haynes 1419772775 Sonja 0 to-read 4.11 Ibis
author: Justin Haynes
name: Sonja
average rating: 4.11
book published:
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/03/22
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
<![CDATA[Call Me Ishmael Tonight: A Book of Ghazals]]> 101994 88 Agha Shahid Ali 0393326128 Sonja 5
The Poetry Foundation has an excellent essay online by Stephanie (Steph) Burt on Ali and the ghazal called Agha Shahid Ali: “Tonight� (written in 2010) if you want to check it out.


I loved reading this book it was recommended by Laura.
Now I recommend reading the whole book to get the full flavor of his artistry. it is really worth reading.
His Ghazals, playful and intricate, show what an accomplished poet he was. Characterized by couplets in regular rhythm, they end with a refrain which is the title of the poem. The line breaks make my heart skip a beat.

His humor: “SHAHID DEVASTATES FLORIDA is your dream headline, no hurricane will ever be named after you.� After You is the title of the Ghazal.

Agha Shahid Ali was Kashmiri, born in New Delhi India. He fervently supported the Kashmir Muslim cause. He died in 2001 but considered himself an American poet.

I liked his allusions/ dedications to other poets but they were mostly male (disappointing) with the exception of the great Emily Dickinson.

Here are some lines I liked

When Lorca died, they left
the balcony open and saw:
his qasidas braided, on the
horizon, into knots of Arabic.]]>
4.25 2003 Call Me Ishmael Tonight: A Book of Ghazals
author: Agha Shahid Ali
name: Sonja
average rating: 4.25
book published: 2003
rating: 5
read at: 2025/03/17
date added: 2025/03/22
shelves:
review:
Here is a great book of ghazals by Agha Shahid Ali who made the ghazal popular in English the U.S. by the turn of the century and died shortly thereafter.

The Poetry Foundation has an excellent essay online by Stephanie (Steph) Burt on Ali and the ghazal called Agha Shahid Ali: “Tonight� (written in 2010) if you want to check it out.


I loved reading this book it was recommended by Laura.
Now I recommend reading the whole book to get the full flavor of his artistry. it is really worth reading.
His Ghazals, playful and intricate, show what an accomplished poet he was. Characterized by couplets in regular rhythm, they end with a refrain which is the title of the poem. The line breaks make my heart skip a beat.

His humor: “SHAHID DEVASTATES FLORIDA is your dream headline, no hurricane will ever be named after you.� After You is the title of the Ghazal.

Agha Shahid Ali was Kashmiri, born in New Delhi India. He fervently supported the Kashmir Muslim cause. He died in 2001 but considered himself an American poet.

I liked his allusions/ dedications to other poets but they were mostly male (disappointing) with the exception of the great Emily Dickinson.

Here are some lines I liked

When Lorca died, they left
the balcony open and saw:
his qasidas braided, on the
horizon, into knots of Arabic.
]]>
<![CDATA[Blossoms into Gold: The Croations in the Pajaro Valley]]> 13117630 309 Donna F. Mekis 0932319122 Sonja 0 to-read 4.50 2009 Blossoms into Gold: The Croations in the Pajaro Valley
author: Donna F. Mekis
name: Sonja
average rating: 4.50
book published: 2009
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/03/20
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
The Red House 217453566 Award-winning novelist Mary Morris weaves together an unsolved family mystery, a poignant coming-of-age story, and a little-known corner of World War II history in this lyrical novel of family, loss and, ultimately, love.

Thirty years ago, Laura’s mother, Viola, went missing. She left behind her purse, her keys and her mysterious paintings of a red house. Viola was never found, and her family never recovered. Laura, an artist herself, held on to the paintings. On the back of each work, her mother scrawled in Italian, “I will not be here forever.� The family never understood what Viola meant.

Decades later, at a crossroads in her marriage and her life, Laura returns to Italy, where her parents met after World War II. Laura spent the earliest years of her childhood there before the family moved to New Jersey and settled into an American dream that eventually became a nightmare. Viola, who claimed to be an orphan, staunchly refused to speak of her life before marriage.

In Italy, Laura finds herself on a strange scavenger hunt to solve the puzzle of her mother’s lost years. She is certain that the paintings of the red house hold the answer to her mother’s past and her search takes her from her hometown of Brindisi, deep into Puglia where she encounters a man who knew her mother and who illuminates little-known secrets of Italy’s Second World War.

Blending elements of true crime with settings that evoke Elena Ferrante, Laura follows her mother’s trajectory as she ventures north to Naples, Turin and finally home. Along the way, she confronts the dark truth of her mother's story and at last makes sense of her own.]]>
304 Mary Morris 0385544987 Sonja 0 to-read 4.00 The Red House
author: Mary Morris
name: Sonja
average rating: 4.00
book published:
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/03/19
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
The Next Ancient World 612644 This wit that has taken her far, especially after the acclaim that The Next Ancient World received upon its publishing Now, twenty years later, Hecht’s lines are clear indicators of the long career that awaited her, demonstrating an unmatched understanding and mastery of both language and verse.]]> 78 Jennifer Michael Hecht 0971031002 Sonja 0 to-read 4.27 2001 The Next Ancient World
author: Jennifer Michael Hecht
name: Sonja
average rating: 4.27
book published: 2001
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/03/19
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
Mad Honey 59912428 A soul-stirring novel about what we choose to keep from our past, and what we choose to leave behind.

Olivia McAfee knows what it feels like to start over. Her picture-perfect life—living in Boston, married to a brilliant cardiothoracic surgeon, raising a beautiful son, Asher—was upended when her husband revealed a darker side. She never imagined she would end up back in her sleepy New Hampshire hometown, living in the house she grew up in, and taking over her father's beekeeping business.

Lily Campanello is familiar with do-overs, too. When she and her mom relocate to Adams, New Hampshire, for her final year of high school, they both hope it will be a fresh start.

And for just a short while, these new beginnings are exactly what Olivia and Lily need. Their paths cross when Asher falls for the new girl in school, and Lily can’t help but fall for him, too. With Ash, she feels happy for the first time. Yet at times, she wonders if she can she trust him completely . . .

Then one day, Olivia receives a phone call: Lily is dead, and Asher is being questioned by the police. Olivia is adamant that her son is innocent. But she would be lying if she didn’t acknowledge the flashes of his father’s temper in him, and as the case against him unfolds, she realizes he’s hidden more than he’s shared with her.

Mad Honey is a riveting novel of suspense, an unforgettable love story, and a moving and powerful exploration of the secrets we keep and the risks we take in order to become ourselves.]]>
464 Jodi Picoult 1984818384 Sonja 5 4.05 2022 Mad Honey
author: Jodi Picoult
name: Sonja
average rating: 4.05
book published: 2022
rating: 5
read at: 2025/03/19
date added: 2025/03/19
shelves:
review:

]]>
Thinking with Trees 58015891 New Poetries VIII anthology.]]> 128 Jason Allen-Paisant 1800171137 Sonja 0 to-read 4.05 2021 Thinking with Trees
author: Jason Allen-Paisant
name: Sonja
average rating: 4.05
book published: 2021
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/03/18
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
East of Eden 4406
Adam Trask came to California from the East to farm and raise his family on the new rich land. But the birth of his twins, Cal and Aaron, brings his wife to the brink of madness, and Adam is left alone to raise his boys to manhood. One boy thrives nurtured by the love of all those around him; the other grows up in loneliness enveloped by a mysterious darkness.

First published in 1952, East of Eden is the work in which Steinbeck created his most mesmerizing characters and explored his most enduring themes: the mystery of identity, the inexplicability of love, and the murderous consequences of love's absence. A masterpiece of Steinbeck's later years, East of Eden is a powerful and vastly ambitious novel that is at once a family saga and a modern retelling of the Book of Genesis.]]>
601 John Steinbeck 0142000655 Sonja 0 4.41 1952 East of Eden
author: John Steinbeck
name: Sonja
average rating: 4.41
book published: 1952
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/03/18
shelves:
review:

]]>
Пхенц = Pkhentz 228024522 29 Абрам Терц Sonja 0 to-read 4.50 1957 Пхенц = Pkhentz
author: Абрам Терц
name: Sonja
average rating: 4.50
book published: 1957
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/03/18
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
<![CDATA[Thank You For Calling the Lesbian Line]]> 219510412
With callers and agents alike dealing with first crushes and break-ups, sex and marriage, loneliness and illness (or simply the need to know the name of a gay bar on a night out), this is a celebration of the ordinary lives of queer women.

Thank You for Calling the Lesbian Line is timely and vital exploration of how lesbian identity continues to remake and redefine itself in the 21st century, and where it might lead us in the future.]]>
256 Elizabeth Lovatt 0349704619 Sonja 0 currently-reading 4.04 2025 Thank You For Calling the Lesbian Line
author: Elizabeth Lovatt
name: Sonja
average rating: 4.04
book published: 2025
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/03/17
shelves: currently-reading
review:

]]>
Landbridge: life in fragments 123856312
In 1980, Y-Dang Troeung and her family were among the last of the 60,000 refugees from Cambodia that then-Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau pledged to relocate to Canada. As the final arrivals, their landing was widely documented in newspapers, with photographs of the PM shaking Y-Dang's father's hand, reaching out to pat baby Y-Dang's head. Forty years later, in her brilliant, astonishing book, Y-Dang returns to this moment, and to many others before and after, to explore the tension between that public narrative of happy “arrival,� and the multiple, often hidden truths of what happened to the people in her family.
In precise, beautiful prose accompanied by moving black-and-white visuals, Y-Dang weaves back and forth in time to tell stories about her parents and two brothers who lived through the Cambodian genocide, about the lives of her grandparents and extended family, about her own childhood in the refugee camps and in rural Ontario, and eventually about her young son’s illness and her own diagnosis with a terminal disease. Through it all, Y-Dang looks with bracing clarity at refugee existence, refusal of gratitude, becoming a scholar, and love.]]>
312 Y-Dang Troeung 1039008763 Sonja 0 to-read 4.53 Landbridge: life in fragments
author: Y-Dang Troeung
name: Sonja
average rating: 4.53
book published:
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/03/16
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
There Are Rivers in the Sky 202468422 From the Booker Prize finalist author of The Island of Missing Trees, an enchanting new tale about three characters living along two rivers, all under the shadow of one of the greatest epic poems of all time.

In the ancient city of Nineveh, on the bank of the River Tigris, King Ashurbanipal of Mesopotamia, erudite but ruthless, built a great library that would crumble with the end of his reign. From its ruins, however, emerged a poem, the Epic of Gilgamesh, that would infuse the existence of two rivers and bind together three lives.

In 1840 London, Arthur is born beside the stinking, sewage-filled River Thames. With an abusive, alcoholic father and a mentally ill mother, Arthur’s only chance of escaping destitution is his brilliant memory. When his gift earns him a spot as an apprentice at a leading publisher, Arthur’s world opens up far beyond the slums, and one book in particular catches his interest: Nineveh and Its Remains.

In 2014 Turkey, Narin, a ten-year-old Yazidi girl, is diagnosed with a rare disorder that will soon cause her to go deaf. Before that happens, her grandmother is determined to baptize her in a sacred Iraqi temple. But with the rising presence of ISIS and the destruction of the family’s ancestral lands along the Tigris, Narin is running out of time.

In 2018 London, the newly divorced Zaleekah, a hydrologist, moves into a houseboat on the Thames to escape her husband. Orphaned and raised by her wealthy uncle, Zaleekah had made the decision to take her own life in one month, until a curious book about her homeland changes everything.

A dazzling feat of storytelling, There Are Rivers in the Sky entwines these outsiders with a single drop of water, a drop which remanifests across the centuries. Both a source of life and harbinger of death, rivers—the Tigris and the Thames—transcend history, transcend fate: “Water remembers. It is humans who forget.�]]>
464 Elif Shafak 0593801717 Sonja 0 to-read 4.38 2024 There Are Rivers in the Sky
author: Elif Shafak
name: Sonja
average rating: 4.38
book published: 2024
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/03/14
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
<![CDATA[Madness, Rack, and Honey: Collected Lectures]]> 198713552 ***e-book***
This is one of the wisest books I've read in years... �New York Times Book Review

No writer I know of comes close to even trying to articulate the weird magic of poetry as Ruefle does. She acknowledges and celebrates in the odd mystery and mysticism of the act—the fact that poetry must both guard and reveal, hint at and pull back... Also, and maybe most crucially, Ruefle’s work is never once stuffy or she writes this stuff with a level of seriousness-as-play that’s vital and welcome, that doesn’t make writing poetry sound anything but wild, strange, life-enlargening fun. -The Kenyon Review

Profound, unpredictable, charming, and outright funny...These informal talks have far more staying power and verve than most of their kind. Readers may come away dazzled, as well as amused... �Publishers Weekly

This is a book not just for poets but for anyone interested in the human heart, the inner-life, the breath exhaling a completion of an idea that will make you feel changed in some way. This is a desert island book. �Matthew Dickman

The accomplished poet is humorous and self-deprecating in this collection of illuminating essays on poetry, aesthetics and literature... �San Francisco Examiner

Over the course of fifteen years, Mary Ruefle delivered a lecture every six months to a group of poetry graduate students. Collected here for the first time, these lectures include "Poetry and the Moon," "Someone Reading a Book Is a Sign of Order in the World," and "Lectures I Will Never Give." Intellectually virtuosic, instructive, and experiential, Madness, Rack, and Honey resists definition, demanding instead an utter—and utterly pleasurable—immersion. Finalist for the 2012 National Book Critics Circle Award.



Mary Ruefle has published more than a dozen books of poetry, prose, and erasures. She lives in Vermont.


]]>
329 Mary Ruefle Sonja 5
“The poem as a made thing, the poem as imaginative vision, as a moment of searching—�

A moment of searching� There’s a certain humility here.

In an early lecture: “But the rose is not beauty. What beauty is is your ability to apprehend it.�

A title I love is: SOMEONE READING A BOOK IS A SIGN OF ORDER IN THE WORLD.]]>
4.29 2012 Madness, Rack, and Honey: Collected Lectures
author: Mary Ruefle
name: Sonja
average rating: 4.29
book published: 2012
rating: 5
read at: 2025/03/13
date added: 2025/03/13
shelves:
review:
So much wisdom in this book by poet Mary Ruefle! About writing, about life. I’ve highlighted some passages. Here are a few favorite quotes

“The poem as a made thing, the poem as imaginative vision, as a moment of searching—�

A moment of searching� There’s a certain humility here.

In an early lecture: “But the rose is not beauty. What beauty is is your ability to apprehend it.�

A title I love is: SOMEONE READING A BOOK IS A SIGN OF ORDER IN THE WORLD.
]]>
<![CDATA[The Housekeeper and the Professor]]> 3181564
She is an astute young Housekeeper, with a ten-year-old son, who is hired to care for him.

And every morning, as the Professor and the Housekeeper are introduced to each other anew, a strange and beautiful relationship blossoms between them. Though he cannot hold memories for long (his brain is like a tape that begins to erase itself every eighty minutes), the Professor’s mind is still alive with elegant equations from the past. And the numbers, in all of their articulate order, reveal a sheltering and poetic world to both the Housekeeper and her young son. The Professor is capable of discovering connections between the simplest of quantities--like the Housekeeper’s shoe size--and the universe at large, drawing their lives ever closer and more profoundly together, even as his memory slips away.

The Housekeeper and the Professor is an enchanting story about what it means to live in the present, and about the curious equations that can create a family.]]>
180 Yōko Ogawa 0312427808 Sonja 0 to-read 4.04 2003 The Housekeeper and the Professor
author: Yōko Ogawa
name: Sonja
average rating: 4.04
book published: 2003
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/03/10
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
<![CDATA[Dark Laboratory: On Columbus, the Caribbean, and the Origins of the Climate Crisis]]> 211953312 Award-winning historian, professor, and journalist Tao Leigh Goffe launches an investigation of the Caribbean as the seat of corrupt Western wealth and environmental exploitation.

When Christopher Columbus arrived on the Caribbean island of Guanahaní, it was remade, at least in mythology, as Eden. Since then, the Caribbean and its peoples have paid the price of relentless Western exploitation and abuses, falling prey to the planting of sugarcane and other cash crops. In Dark Laboratory, Goffe embarks on a historical journey into the influences that have made these islands—from Jamaica and Aruba to Cuba and Martinique—a target of Western capitalism and the foundation of the global economy as we know it today.

Through the lens of personal and family memoir, as well as cultural and social history, Goffe seeks to radically transform how we conceive of Blackness, natural history, colonialism, and the climate crisis. Her writing considers the legacy of slavery and indentured servitude as Chinese laborers worked alongside enslaved Black people to excavate products like sugarcane and guano—in its day more valuable than gold—from these island nations.

How can we combat contemporary racism and environmental degradation using the Caribbean and its dark history as guide? In autobiographical writing that shines light on both environmental upheaval and racial subjugation, Goffe offers solutions based on island ecologies, locating the origins of racism and the climate catastrophe in the colonization of the Caribbean. Her combination of personal narrative and research provides a record of the violence that has shaped these nations and a testament to our capacity for renewal.

In stunning, lyrical prose, Goffe dismantles our longest-held notions about island utopias and proposes new modes of thinking about the ruin and restoration of the environment.]]>
384 Tao Leigh Goffe 0385549911 Sonja 0 to-read 3.82 2025 Dark Laboratory: On Columbus, the Caribbean, and the Origins of the Climate Crisis
author: Tao Leigh Goffe
name: Sonja
average rating: 3.82
book published: 2025
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/03/10
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
<![CDATA[Animal fiero y tierno (Spanish Edition)]]> 4665985 Spanish 67 Angelamaría Dávila 0940238500 Sonja 0 to-read 4.77 1977 Animal fiero y tierno (Spanish Edition)
author: Angelamaría Dávila
name: Sonja
average rating: 4.77
book published: 1977
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/03/09
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
La querencia 21500754 198 Angelamaría Dávila 0865816298 Sonja 0 to-read 4.50 2006 La querencia
author: Angelamaría Dávila
name: Sonja
average rating: 4.50
book published: 2006
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/03/09
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
<![CDATA[Intern Six Vs. The Stupidest Door]]> 210339277 To secure her financial future, Zaheen needs to open an ancient, plastic-age door. She thinks it’s a simple enough task. But is she underestimating the resilience of the security in-charge and her rather reticent wife?

Zaheen, a university dropout, wishes to finally become financially secure by joining her homeland’s nearly monopolistic The Knowledge Corporation. Unfortunately, the corporation does not usually hire dropouts. Zaheen’s desperation makes her a potent tool in the hands of manipulators looking to achieve their own ends. In her quest to achieve financial security, Zaheen meets a mentor who sets her up on a mission to find skeletons in the government’s closet. The task seems simple Zaheen only needs to get past a non-smart door from ancient times. But the security in-charge and her wife are more intelligent and resilient than she expects. Someone has tried to open the door before and met an unfortunate and untimely end. Is Zaheen on course for a similar, burning destiny?]]>
374 Shumaila Badar 173833631X Sonja 0 to-read 2.50 Intern Six Vs. The Stupidest Door
author: Shumaila Badar
name: Sonja
average rating: 2.50
book published:
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/03/08
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
All Fours 197798168
A semifamous artist announces her plan to drive cross-country, from LA to New York. Twenty minutes after leaving her husband and child at home, she spontaneously exits the freeway, beds down in a nondescript motel, and immerses herself in a temporary reinvention that turns out to be the start of an entirely different journey.

Miranda July’s second novel confirms the brilliance of her unique approach to fiction. With July’s wry voice, perfect comic timing, unabashed curiosity about human intimacy, and palpable delight in pushing boundaries, All Fours tells the story of one woman’s quest for a new kind of freedom. Part absurd entertainment, part tender reinvention of the sexual, romantic, and domestic life of a forty-five-year-old female artist, All Fours transcends expectation while excavating our beliefs about life lived as a woman. Once again, July hijacks the familiar and turns it into something new and thrillingly, profoundly alive.]]>
336 Miranda July 0593190262 Sonja 3 3.52 2024 All Fours
author: Miranda July
name: Sonja
average rating: 3.52
book published: 2024
rating: 3
read at: 2025/03/06
date added: 2025/03/06
shelves:
review:
I didn’t like this book. I can always tell I’m bored when I start skimming. I was drawn to a book about a bisexual mother of a kid who is being raised non-binary. However, I got no insight into the child, a flat character. I also did not get much backstory for our “heroine.� And I wondered what all the gratuitous sex was all about. In the end, while the theme and plot about a fake road trip to New York from California may have been intriguing, nothing really made sense. I felt it was a bunch of acting out. The humor may have been a redeeming quality but that’s about it. On The NY Times Best Seller list? Who says?
]]>
The House of Eve 176443755
“A triumph of historical fiction� ( The Washington Post ), an instant New York Times bestseller, and a Reese’s Book Club pick, set in 1950s Philadelphia and Washington, DC, that explores what it means to be a woman and a mother, and how much one is willing to sacrifice to achieve her greatest goal.

1950s fifteen-year-old Ruby Pearsall is on track to becoming the first in her family to attend college. But a taboo love affair threatens to pull her back down into the poverty and desperation that has been passed on to her like a birthright.

Eleanor Quarles arrives in Washington, DC, with ambition and secrets. When she meets the handsome William Pride at Howard University, they fall madly in love. But William hails from one of DC’s elite wealthy Black families, and his parents don’t let just anyone into their fold. Eleanor hopes that a baby will make her finally feel at home in William’s family and grant her the life she’s been searching for. But having a baby—and fitting in—is easier said than done.

With their stories colliding in the most unexpected of ways, Ruby and Eleanor will both make decisions that shape the trajectory of their lives.]]>
384 Sadeqa Johnson 1982197374 Sonja 0 to-read 4.23 2023 The House of Eve
author: Sadeqa Johnson
name: Sonja
average rating: 4.23
book published: 2023
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/03/06
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
Slanting Towards the Sea 220160476 Spanning twenty years and one life-altering summer in Croatia, Slanting Towards the Sea is at once an unforgettable love story and a powerful exploration of what it means to come of age in a country younger than oneself.

Ivona divorced the love of her life, Vlaho, a decade ago. They met as students at the turn of the new millennium, when democratic Croatia was alive with hope and promise. But the challenges of living in a burgeoning country extinguished Ivona’s dreams one after another—and a devastating secret forced her to set him free.

Now Vlaho is remarried and a proud father of two, while Ivona’s life has taken a downward turn. In her thirties, she has returned to her childhood home to care for her ailing father. Bewildered by life’s disappointments, she finds solace in reconnecting with Vlaho and is welcomed into his family by his spirited new wife, Marina. But when a new man enters Ivona’s life, the carefully cultivated dynamic between the three is disrupted, forcing a reckoning for all involved.

Set against the mesmerizing Croatian coastline, Slanting Towards the Sea is a cinematic, emotionally searing debut about the fragile nature of potential and the transcendence of love.]]>
336 Lidija Hilje 1668078678 Sonja 0 to-read 4.66 Slanting Towards the Sea
author: Lidija Hilje
name: Sonja
average rating: 4.66
book published:
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/03/06
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
Hello Beautiful 217005288
But then darkness from William’s past surfaces, jeopardizing not only Julia’s carefully orchestrated plans for their future, but the sisters� unshakeable devotion to one another. The result is a catastrophic family rift that changes their lives for generations. Will the loyalty that once rooted them be strong enough to draw them back together when it matters most?]]>
416 Ann Napolitano 0593243757 Sonja 0 to-read 4.14 2023 Hello Beautiful
author: Ann Napolitano
name: Sonja
average rating: 4.14
book published: 2023
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/03/06
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
Love Conjure/Blues 1321824 89 Sharon Bridgforth 0965665968 Sonja 0 to-read 4.07 2004 Love Conjure/Blues
author: Sharon Bridgforth
name: Sonja
average rating: 4.07
book published: 2004
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/03/03
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>
<![CDATA[Beka Lamb (Caribbean Contemporary Classics)]]> 58152039 224 Zee Edgell 1398340472 Sonja 0 to-read 3.56 1982 Beka Lamb (Caribbean Contemporary Classics)
author: Zee Edgell
name: Sonja
average rating: 3.56
book published: 1982
rating: 0
read at:
date added: 2025/03/02
shelves: to-read
review:

]]>