Tag: opinion
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The Shadow of the Gods – John Gwynne’s Inspired Take on Norse Mythology

We get to know our main characters in isolation, learning about their varied backgrounds, bonds, and motivations. Gwynne leaves just enough hints to allow readers to connect some of the dots on their own before their storylines begin to converge. Eventually, as all of their destinations start syncing up, it becomes clear that there’s more…
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Georgie, All Along Tempers its Romance with Thoughtful and Relatable Characters

Instead of focusing on the progression of falling in love, the bonds that grow between Levi and Georgie build toward a climax of healing past wrongs. Their romance is handled like an inevitability, leaving the dramatic tension to build toward whether each character will overcome their pasts. The most important journeys in this novel revolve…
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The Poppy War Had Promise But Wasn’t Quite What I’d Hoped

Three-hundred pages in and I felt like Kuang had yet to really hook me with any narrative weight. Worse, I realized I had been carried along for all those pages on a wave of story beats built entirely upon tired tropes of the fantasy genre.
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2022 Reading Round Up

As 2022 comes to a close, I feel like it’s necessary to summarize what may well have been my most active year of reading in years. What started as trying to establish a good habit – of reading for a set amount of time each night – has reignited my love of all things reading…
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Pride & Prejudice’s Characters Evolve into a Perfect Denouement

In the denouement, Lizzy’s interactions with her parents lays out the balance of pride and prejudice that she and Darcy need to attain to find happiness together. Mr. Bennet insists on Lizzy maintaining a level of pride in her own self-worth as she deserves not an advantageous marriage but a happy, loving one with an…
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Babel: An Arcane History – a Period-Piece Tackling Colonialism that Struggles at the Finish Line

Though I feel it fails to choose whether to be either a fantasy or fully-developed alternate history, Babel’s greatest success is as an engrossing and well-researched examination of early- to mid-nineteenth century Britain and the effects of its colonialism, both at home and abroad. It examines the mindset of those who are assimilated into Western…
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The Rings of Power is the Right Direction for Tolkien’s Work

Tolkien could very well have been writing his world based on his understanding of systems of power in the Middle Ages which, admittedly, was heavily white-favored. That doesn’t mean we can’t call out his writing as incorrect and make changes to it.
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Nevernight and Second Readings

There is a certain thrill that I feel when I crack open an old copy of a book. It’s exciting thinking about reliving the moments within, from the victorious action scenes to the heartbreaking tragic ones.
