Reviews and Comments

unimatrix420

unimatrix-420@bookwyrm.social

Joined 1 year, 4 months ago

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Fall On Your Knees (Oprah's Book Club) (2002, Touchstone) 5 stars

An incredibly tragic story.

5 stars

Content warning Major spoilers ahead!

The Summer Before the War (2016, Random House) 5 stars

A cozy read, for the most part

5 stars

This book started off very slowly and didn't really come to life until about halfway through the second part, and it gets tragic very quickly. In fact, I don't remember ever crying while reading a book before!

The book follows the lives of the residents of a small English town called Rye, where class distinctions are strictly observed and adhered to, and one's status within this community determines how well they do outside of it as well. When World War I first begins, a patriotic air grips the town, unfortunately romanticizing recruitment and dying a hero on the front lines of the battlefield. However, reality sets in when the lists of dead soldiers easily exceeds the lists of upcoming weddings in the town's newspapers, and discharged soldiers return home mentally and physically damaged by the war.

One family in particular -- that of John and Agatha Kent -- quickly becomes …

Seven at Two Past Five (2017, Independently Published) 5 stars

An incredibly unique tale!

5 stars

The surreal, whimsical tale of Seven at Two Past Five by Tara Basi might be compared -- if it can be compared to anything else ever written, that is -- to Alice in Wonderland, given how ridiculously abstract the encounters by the main character are. Abi is seemingly your average, everyday button-maker, practicing her craft lovingly, carefully and studiously one monotonous, repetitive day after another. But on one of these days, she receives a sort of summons declaring her buttons to have "disturbance potential," setting poor Abi on an aggaravating, albeit necessary, path to justice.

We've all been there, waiting at the DMV or the Social Security Office, really any government office where impatience, aggravation and sarcasm are the norm. These frustrating experiences of our own make it very easy to empathize with Abi on her quest through a biased and impartial bureaucracy, especially when you imagine her as she …