KayTheCurler
Well-Known Member
I think we all know the author of this little, meticulously researched book!!!!!
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Was starting to read Jade City by Fonda Lee and may try to continue with the ebook from the library.
Did in fact carry on with this though still not done. It's a terrific novel. Lots of plotting and intrigue, action scenes are brief, fast-paced and bloody. The real appeal though is the Kaul family, three blood siblings and an adopted fourth, who are battling to save both their clan and their society when a rival starts a ruthless play for power. They aren't classically heroic and can be pretty ruthless and deadly themselves, but are also quite well-rounded, interesting people. Reviews I have seen of book 2 make it sound like she's kept the quality up, too.
Wow, good review and very descriptive! Welcome to Wondercafe2!Earthquakes in Candyland by Jennifer Robin.
If you’re feeling jaded, read this book. Jennifer Robin’s writing burns like a gasoline fire on a river. You can’t look away if you want to. Earthquakes is a wild nonfiction ride of travelogue, memoir, research, and trenchant observation told first-person as Robin takes you with her everywhere: into punk clubs and the floors of stranger’s homes, into New Orleans graveyards and wanderings with trash-picking teens looking for pills, into her mind and into her underwear, and into other people’s stories.
First-person writing tends by nature to be self-absorbed, but Robin’s perspective is passionately tuned to the big picture. She delivers haunting, unsentimental oral histories of strangers who live on the edge—some only met for a few moments at a bus stop, others that she has spent hours or days or weeks with. She’ll show you galaxies in shattered glass. Poetic imagery and sensation and genius juxtapositions come fast and furious like a series of black belt kicks coming from all directions making you breathless with discomfort then slamming you with catharsis. Robin’s work will scour you, leave you raw with sensation and awareness and images yet also uplifted and inspired to live, to love, to pay attention
I am reading “ The stranger in the woods” by Michael Finkel. A real life story of a “ hermit” in Maine. At 20 yrs of age he disappears into the woods of Maine, setting up a camp, perfecting his abilities to walk without leaving traces, breaking into the seasonal cottages in the area for supplies, never getting caught until 27 yrs later. He hasn’t spoken to anybody in all those years, only met a hiker once to who he said “ hi”, never met anybody else.
He goes to jail for the break ins, where the author becomes aware of him and researches his story.
The book also provides some background knowledge of the history of “ hermits”.
You could also save some money and borough your sisters book? Library?Mrs. Anteater...My sister-in-law told me about that book. Oh no...itchy fingers again. Indigo seems to be to easy to order from.