Divine Might: Goddesses in Greek Myth || Natalie Haynes ★★☆☆☆ Started: 03.03.2025 Finished: 09.03.2025 Curiositas vincit omnia After being left thoroughly underwhelmed by Haynes's previous book, "Stone Blind", I wasn't all too willing to pick up "Divine Might". Unfortunately, my curiosity won, and I cracked it open, and had it not been for the flicker of hope this book gave me at the end of the first chapter with the paragraph about Sappho, I would not have finished it - I was hoping for similar insights about the other characters discussed in the book, and I got none. The narrative is very disjointed - Haynes has inundated her chapters with jokes that more often miss than hit, and with semi-fitting but ultimately uninteresting and dragging references to movies that are at best tangentially connected to the goddesses she writes about. There is a marked downgrade from "Pandora's Jar" - the discussion is nowhere near in depth or engaging. It's unfortunate to see an author's writing get worse and worse with every published book - I'm afraid this is the case with Natalie Haynes. It's hard to believe she was intrinsically motivated or inspired to write this book at all. In the chapter about Hestia (one of the weakest in the book, that tells very little, if anything, about the goddess), she admits to the following: "There comes a time in every author's life when she has to accept that she may not have made the absolute best possible decision. And the day when I blithely promised 10,000 words on a goddess who is barely mentioned in any ancient source, who makes no dent on the Renaissance? That may turn out to have been just such a time." Then why choose this particular goddess? Greek Mythology isn't lacking in goddesses, so why allocate that much literary real estate to a goddess you don't have much at all to say about? "Divine Might", while nowhere near as egregiously bad as "Stone Blind", was a frustrating read nonetheless - there are interesting points in there, but they are far too few and far in between to make this novel worth your time.
Lessons in Chemistry || Bonnie Garmus ★★★★★ Started: 14.03.2025 Finished: 04.04.2025 Set in 1960s California; Lessons In Chemistry is the brilliant, idiosyncratic and uplifting story of a female scientist whose career is derailed by the idea that a woman's place is in the home - something she most definitely does not believe - only to find herself the star of America's best-loved TV cooking show. Admittedly, I was a bit hesitant about picking up Lessons in Chemistry - mostly because of the quite unhelpful, quite pink, quite romance-coded US cover (nothing against romance, of course, just not what I'm looking for, most of the time). But then I came across the US edition with the periodic table cover and I simply had to know more - and I was not disappointed. Elizabeth Zott is such an incredible character, it was a true pleasure following her trials and tribulations along the pages of this book, and the family she found along the way was portrayed masterfully as well, no character flat or forgettable - it all made for a novel that was virtually impossible to put down. Definitely a strong start to April!
blood over bright haven by m.l. wang
because good people can turn desperate when the horrors are upon them—especially people whose culture of plenty has left them with no systems to cope with scarcity or cataclysm. good people will turn monstrous when it’s down to their survival or someone else’s.
I am not an artist but I couldn't get this image out of my head
"She found a cage for him. It felt appropriate that she should put him back in one, and Crow had a couple of the appropriate size for keeping messenger birds.
It broke Tress's heart to leave Huck inside, huddled against the bars, refusing to face her."
(rat foto i traced below the cut ^^ )
(Bonus: without the front cage bars)
The River Has Roots || Amal El-Mohtar ★★★★★ Started: 22.05.2025 Finished: 01.06.2025 In the small town of Thistleford, on the edge of Faerie, dwells the mysterious Hawthorn family. There, they tend and harvest the enchanted willows and honour an ancient compact to sing to them in thanks for their magic. None more devotedly than the family’s latest daughters, Esther and Ysabel, who cherish each other as much as they cherish the ancient trees. But when Esther rejects a forceful suitor in favor of a lover from the land of Faerie, not only the sisters’ bond but also their lives will be at risk…
Brandon Sanderson || art: Karl Gussow // Jean Claude Kabongo // George Frederic Watts
JOMP Book Photo Challenge
December 09, 2023 - Favourite Page Design
Do you lay bread on your tongue and think of me [...] do you swallow it like a sacrament, do you still get down on your knees?
Sophie Mackintosh, from 'Cursed Bread'
Working 9 to 5, reading 5 to 9. I do occasionally post in Bulgarian.
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