Tuesday 29 July 2014

Percy Jackson and The Last Olympian by Rick Riordan

10:53:00 0
Warning: Spoilers (duh.)

MOST PEOPLE GET PRESENTS ON THEIR SIXTEENTH BIRTHDAY, I GET A PROPHECY THAT COULD SAVE OR DESTROY THE WORLD.

It happens when you're the son of Poseidon, God of the Sea. According to an ancient prophecy, I turn sixteen and the fate of the entire world is on me. But no pressure. Now Kronos, Lord of the Titans, is beginning his attack on New York City. And the dreaded monster Typhon is also heading our way. So it's me and forty of my demigod friends versus untold evil.



I couldn't stop myself from cracking on with the last book...and my Gods, was it a worthy ending. First off the entire book was basically one big battle. I find with series like this that the end battle is never as good as we hope it is. But this is the exception to the rule. The battle just got better and better. We started off with destroying the Princess Andromeda and the death of one of the campers and this really sets the tone of the book. 

This book got steadily darker throughout, we start with tragedy at the death of a camper and we see the camp still not back to normal after the previous battle. We see the struggled relationship between Annabeth and Percy which just broke my heart and yet things with Rachel appear to be...err going places. Though I never actually thought him and Rachel would end  up together. But when Percy sees Annabeth there was just this lovely moment.
Percy basically bathes in the River Styx, and has to think about something to hold onto his mortal soul. When he thought about Annabeth I was just all gooey on the inside. It was major cute-town.
But yeah away from the romance, the battle itself did feel a little long winded. The Titans did scare the be-jesus out of me. I don't know why but just the idea of them terrified me. We see many of them in the final battle and one of them even becomes like a giant tree which was totally awesome. Percy really takes a lot of responsibility during the battle. He has this "Achilles heel"part on his back which is the point of his mortality therefore not allowing his new powers to take over him. Percy literally destroys so many people, he was so cool just destroying people left right and center.


But the battle isn't really what sticks in my head about this book. What sticks is seeing how the characters I have known have developed throughout the series. Tyson became a warrior, Grover became the new Pan and Annabeth and Percy finally got together. Not to mention  Rachel literally becoming The Oracle. So much had happened and changed and at the time I hadn't even noticed. 


I don't think there is much I can say to turn you to this series or to even sum up what is it and what happened. But it's a classic that is no doubt. I think you should read it. There is this indescribable pull that lures you in and makes you adore these characters. It is something else entirely that you want to be a part of. 

Read it.
Enjoy.
Get back to me!

God what a journey this series has been.

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Thursday 24 July 2014

Guest blogger time! Meet Fee!

11:33:00 0
 GUEST BLOG ALERT!

So Fee of http://caterfeereviews.blogspot.co.uk/ aka caterfeereviews is sleeping at mine so i have unwillingly handed my laptop and blog over to her. She had me at gunpoint I swear!

Hi guys! So as Lou is a dear friend of mine, I just want to type how nice it is to meet you (can I write that? Is that not too weird?) but I guess today I'm just blogging about your local bookstores/sellers but ones that aren't your local ones. A contradiction or what hey? But yeah I generally just mean about other branches of that store.

So today I find myself in Barrow-In-Furness where I was brought to Waterstones and The Works! Hurray for great bookstores! But yeah Waterstones is completely different to the three branches I normally browse and it was far more interesting... Okay so Louise bigged it up to me many many many times and showed me her numberous signed copies of much loved YA!

She also took me to The Works which is a great store for snapping up 3 books for five poounds or as I like to say, buy UNPUBLISHED AMERICAN books for a bargain (Instead of paying a motherload of money for shipping and converstion rates on Amazon, Barnes and Noble and Ebay)....

Sadly I didn't snap up a bargain but who knows, maybe next time?

Ciao for now!

Fee
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Wednesday 23 July 2014

Book Annoyance.

04:52:00 0
Allow me to show you this picture.

Do you see it?

Do you?

You must.

Okay well, I suppose I'll just tell you then.


I have a real issue with the way publishers format series'. Bloomsbury USA posted this update yesterday that got me thinking about it.

I had been wanting to buy Hardback editions of this series but the cover did originally look like this:

and then when Crown of Midnight was released the designed changed completely so that only the Paperbacks matched. This post however showed me that publishers are aware that things like this annoy us. Heir of Fire is also going to be released in Paperback in the UK because the rest o the series is also in Paperback.

But not all publisher do that. Series tend to start of in Paperback format, then as they get more and more popular they upgrade to Hardback. And I hate it. I then have to choose between having them mismatched or waiting months for the other edition to come out.

Take the Divergent series for instance. I bought the first one in Hardback, with the silver cover. Then Insurgent came out in England, only in Paperback with a new purple design. I bought that and the first one in the new edition, assuming it would stay that way. Then Allegiant comes out  with that design but in GODDAMN HARDBACK! And the only way I can buy Allegiant in Paperback is in a full bind up of the series, but I already own the first two in that edition. Not to mention that Four came out in a tiny, odd sized hardback.

And that's another thing, sizing...

This has to be a joke right?

Why is Lola bigger than Anna? It's the same matching cover design. What made the publisher think that I wouldn't notice this inch difference (it might as well be the size of everest).

Okay fine, this shouldn't bother me as much as it does. And it didn't really, but with Bloomsbury reissuing hardback Throne of Glass' because they know fans want the matching set, I realised that publishers know this bothers us. I don't understadn why within publishing continuity isn't seen as important when it honestly drives me round the bend.

There is little that annoys me about books, but this is definitely one.



What about you? Does it annoy you? Am I crazy? Let me know!
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Tuesday 22 July 2014

Percy Jackson and The Battle of The Labyrinth by Rick Riordan

08:41:00 0
Warning: Spoilers (duh.)

Percy Jackson isn't expecting freshman orientation to be any fun. But when a mysterious mortal acquaintance appears on campus, followed by demon cheerleaders, things quickly move from bad to worse. In this fourth installment of the blockbuster series, time is running out as war between the Olympians and the evil Titan lord Kronos draws near. Even the safe haven of Camp Half-Blood grows more vulnerable by the minute as Kronos's army prepares to invade its once impenetrable borders. To stop the invasion, Percy and his demigod friends must set out on a quest through the Labyrinth - a sprawling underground world with stunning surprises at every turn.

You guys have followed me as I started and am ultimately going to finish this series. I left Percy a few weeks ago and have basically planned to read a book per month, but I fear I shall have to destroy the next one  a lot sooner than that as this was UH-MAY-ZING! This book didn't follow the typical Percy Jackson Format, I mean it did with the myths coming to life and all that excellent stuff. But in general they got straight into the quest, the whole keeping the prophecy a secret bit was so fresh and exactly what I needed from this series.

I'm gonna jump straight into what I wanted in this book. I wanted me some series Percy/Annabeth shipping...and did it deliver? I'm not sure. I thought at first with the "date" and the jealousy about Rachel. Then as we got on about the prophecy I figured that had something to do with Percy and then when she revealed she would lose someone she loved and she didn't know if it was Luke or Percy...I literally squealed. And then Hera showed up and ruined the whole thing. Then there was the kiss before he went off and her misery at the thought of him dead. I feel like it delivered on those terms but the ending. It just depressed me. I mean I understand Annabeth has all these feelings for Luke and so she is upset about Kronos ermmmm taking over his body #AWKIES. But you could feel the distance between her and Percy, you could feel all the bonding that had happened in the book drift away and that was somewhat heartbreaking.

Although I can't help but ship a little Jackson/Dare love either. Rachel is awesome she can see through the mist and she goes into battle without all the Half Blood Magic. I just thought she was a really great character and I am so glad she came back. Will she be in the next one? I gods damn hope so! (If you'll excuse the pun).

I felt the book got a lot older and darker than it's predecessor, some of the death scenes were a lot more violent, the battle, the rise of Kronos and even Kronos in general, having him there and the way he was described and talked and with Nico's powers. It was all a little scarier than the other books had been. I am incredibly scared of Kronos and the other Titans, like just hearing about them terrifies me and having the constant threat of them amped up in this book was great. Things are really starting to happen. I mean the Kronos' Army v.s Camp Half Blood battle was incredible.

I loved Quinto, his entire story Arc was really nice, I didn't figure out the twist and the whole demonisation and then redemption of him was really lovely to read, it was a nice little bit to take away from all the suffering that had been seen in this book. Speaking of suffering, Nico is slowly becoming one of my favourite characters. His struggle with Bianca's death really takes it toll and also the segregation from the rest of Camp Half Blood really broke my heart. The fact there is no Hades cabin actually made me mad. The way he had to sit alone in a dark corner, not welcome anywhere because of who his father is. I really felt for the kid and I was so glad when he showed up at Percy's house at the end. Plus how awesome are his powers, like seriously, so cool.

The thing about these books is that there are these dark moments followed by a part that's almost mocking itself. The sacrifice of Happy Meals to raise the dead and such and yet there are also the most beautiful quotes and observations you wouldn't expect from a "childrens" book. I'm already grieving the loss of this series and I haven't even finished it yet.

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Sunday 20 July 2014

Four by Veronica Roth

15:29:00 0
Warning: Spoilers (duh.)

Praise the lord, my readers block is gone.

After the aching void left in my heart after Allegiant. I was ecstatic to find Four being released. This book contains several short novellas from Tobias' point of view that all intertwine to create a new dimension on Divergent, the first book in the series. 

The Transfer

The Transfer is the first short story in the bind up and I thought it was was absolutely delightful, sure in Divergent we heard about what living with Marcus was like for Four but to see him pre-Dauntless was very odd and I think it really gave a new understanding to the character. I couldn't help myself comparing this novella with the first chapters of Divergent when Tris was making her choice. So many parallels and yet it felt different. Both Abnegation switching to Dauntless, both completely unprepared for whatever is ahead, They are in such similar positions and yet you can feel the difference in there motivations, its really a testament to sublime writing skill.

The Initiate

The Initate once again had me drawing up comparisons between Four and Tris' experience. I mean it was a terrible habit but can you blame me. I also got jealous on Tris' behalf when he thought he like Shauna, or started considering dating and he seemed so open. I was surprised Four wasn't the first jumper and I feel almost like his transformation into Dauntless was actually more dramatic than Tris'. We feel immediately in Divergent that Tris is different and hard as nails to use a Dauntless term, if not suppressed where as Four came across more as he had to learn those attributes rather than learn how to express them.

The Son

This was definitely my least favourite within the bind up but in no way does that mean it was bad. I think its because Four's mum just reminds me of Allegiant and its like I have P.T.S..."POST TRIS STRESS!"

The Traitor

This was my favourite novella. I adored seeing the romance between Four and Tris from his point of view. It was so different from what I imagined in Divergent. The tenderness and the way he looked at her made my heart melt. In Divergent she seemed weak but you can feel how strong he thinks she is and we saw all the big moments from his P.O.V and it was literally just magical.

I adore the three scenes that were included within the bind up as well. I actually read them first and one was actually of my favourite scene 'You look good Tris' I could never quite understand why that moment, what about that moment made him say that, it was the first moment I realised he was the love interest. The first moment I saw something in him that was endearing and not the harsh instructor we'd grown accustom to. The same goes for the 'Careful Tris' scene, I always felt I was missing something with that. Like it was maybe him just being a d**k or was it more? but what? and I loved finally knowing that.

The only problem is seeing them so lovely and wonderful and strong and courageous together makes me sad for the future that never was. But books aren't there to make me happy, they are there to make you feel something. And I feel something. Man do I feel it.

R.I.P Tris.

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Thursday 17 July 2014

Do "Classics" still matter?

00:59:00 3

I read a quote from Mark Twain about a year ago as I drifted through Goodreads.

“Classic' - a book which people praise and don't read.”

At the time this really stood out to me at the time, as even though I confessed to adoring books. I hadn't read any "classics." I pondered  the relevance of them, how could they relate to a contemporary audience? Why are they "classics" in the first place? But all in all I made a promise that I would make an effort to read classics...but what is a classic?

Naturally being one of today's lazy youth. I used Wikipedia to find out. 'A classic book is a book accepted to be particularly significant or noteworthy within a society.' That seems like a pretty solid, if not boring, description, so I delved deeper. They are the books we are forced to study and naturally hate because of them. They are the books we hear adults brag about reading and using in pretentious arguments. They are the books that people quote on Facebook to seem smart.

At this point I realised classics seemed to be related to how people are viewed. Then I met my best friend. Fee is obsessed with Jane Austen, an author I had always disliked (nothing personal I just figure she is kind of a hypocrite and her writing is a bit...dry). Fee talked about Austen in a way that really made me think about when I read her in school.  I figured I may be wrong about disliking the book so I gave it another try.

I still hated it. Although the second time I did feel myself relating more the Elizabeth. She is sharp and observant: No one crosses her field of vision without being assessed, and judged. I've always been one to make snap decisions and the book warned against that.

I decoded to read some more "classics" to see what the hype was about. I'd heard pretentious people raving about 'The Catcher in the Rye' plenty of times so I figured it could be fun to tear that apart.

THIS WAS THE MOMENT IT ALL FELL INTO PLACE!

I finished this book a mere hour later and wished I had read it when I was sixteen. I was so angry at the world, at myself. I hated everyone around me but I also loved them and never wanted them to leave. I looked at the world and called out its bullshit and felt so unbearably alone and yet I hated being around people. If I had read this book when I was sixteen. I would not have felt so alone. Holden is the embodiment of every angsty teenager, and not in a patronizing way. Salinger seems to remember exactly how it feels to be a teenager even though he wasn't a one when he wrote this decades ago.

I read more classics and the lessons followed. I quickly came to the conclusion that "classics" CAN and DO matter. We call them "classics" because they know something. Something about our society (Fahrenheit 451) or ourselves nature (Lord of the Flies). They give us insight into ourselves personally (The Great Gatsby) and to show, from one human being to another, that many of these isolating feelings are infact  universally shared.

Afterall...we read to know we are not alone.



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Monday 14 July 2014

The Reader's Affliction

12:47:00 2
Warning: You are about the enter the territory of a Word Nerd incapable of reading. Things could get dangerous!

I feel like I should be writing an ASS (After School Special) to bring up this terrible affliction. I've been struggling with this particular issue for almost a fortnight now and I am at my wits end. Ladies, Gentlemen and Gummy Bears...

I HAVE READERS BLOCK!

You can probably imagine what exactly this is, but if not, let us ask the almighty fountain of knowledge that is Urban Dictionary.

Last month I was on a roll. I had an extensive TBR and I smashed it. I was so proud and I figured my reading genius would continue through to July. I was wrong. This month I have read two books I couldn't finish (primarily because they were terrible) but now as I read Four by Veronica Roth I know this book is good and I should be able to sit down and just destroy this thing (figuratively) but I just can't focus. 

I feel broken, afflicted, suffering like I'm missing a leg or an arm. This is causing a lot of stress between me and my TBR. I look at it mocking me, I glare and I blame it for adding all this pressure to reading. I feel like a man who can't perform in the bedroom. I know I've done it before but it just isn't working. Maybe I need to relax. Take a deep breath (in & out) ahhh much better. NOT!

I will treat this issue as I would any other phobia or anxiety. 

Step 1: I will throw myself in. I will grit my teeth and make a date, refusing to leave my room until I've read a certain amount of pages and increase that everyday!

Step 2: I will build up slowly towards a book with poems and short stories. I have a book of sonnets I'd been meaning to flick through.

Step 3: Read a familiar book. I plan to take part in the Killer Read-along for Throne of Glass. I adore this book and hopefully it will relight my burning Word Nerd flame inside me. 

I can't say if I'm doing the right thing or if I'm just clawing at strings but hey! anything has to be better than not being able to read at all.

Do you have any tips for beating readers block? Share them below!
You suffering from it yourself? Lets help each other out.


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Why We Broke Up by Daniel Handler

12:31:00 0
This is the box, Ed. Inside is everything. Two bottle caps, a movie ticket from Greta in the Wind, a note from you, a box of matches, your protractor, Joan's book, the stolen sugar, a toy truck, those ugly earrings, a comb from the motel, and the rest of it. This is it Ed. The whole story of how we broke up.


 This book was given to me by my younger sister after I had a bad break up. She figured, it would help me with perspective and not feeling so alone, but at the time I wasn't ready to read this book. I recently picked it up and was left...disappointed.

The book is laid out like one long letter to accompany a box of things she is giving her ex. At first this premise sounded cute and almost like it was gonna be all the reason they should get back together. I imagined it very 13 Little Blue Envelopes like, but it wasn't. As soon as I read the first chapter, I knew me and Min weren't  going to be best friends and the more I read it was abundantly clear I was gonna scoff every time she spoke.  Min is such a cliche' the smart girl who drinks coffee and likes foreign films. We get it you are oh so cultured. And as soon as she starts dating Ed she moans about him and slags him off but puts up with it. I mean he literally acted like he owned her and she was more than happy to be owned. 

So no this book did not give me some insight into the psyche' of the recently broken up, or even some condolence. But it did in the end remind me why sometimes relationships have to end. Maybe the point Min is making is that at the time none of those events mattered. It was only looking back she realised how poisonous and terribly she was being treated. Okay scratch that, maybe I did learn something from this book. But that doesn't mean I enjoyed learning it. 

Sorry for the short review. My writer's block is just killing me right now. 
 
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Monday 7 July 2014

What's Left of Me by Kat Zhang

04:44:00 0
I should not exist. But I do.

Eva and Addie started out the same way as everyone else—two souls woven together in one body, taking turns controlling their movements as they learned how to walk, how to sing, how to dance. But as they grew, so did the worried whispers. Why aren’t they settling? Why isn’t one of them fading? The doctors ran tests, the neighbors shied away, and their parents begged for more time. Finally Addie was pronounced healthy and Eva was declared gone. Except, she wasn’t . . .

For the past three years, Eva has clung to the remnants of her life. Only Addie knows she’s still there, trapped inside their body. Then one day, they discover there may be a way for Eva to move again. The risks are unimaginable-hybrids are considered a threat to society, so if they are caught, Addie and Eva will be locked away with the others. And yet . . . for a chance to smile, to twirl, to speak, Eva will do anything.


I had picked this book up several times attempting to read it since its publication. I then decided I never would and got rid of the book, only to buy it again a few months later. Now having read as far as humanly possible, I have to say it. So much potential just lost and scattered to the wind.

Don't get wrong, the first 200 pages I flew through. I couldn't figure out how I'd been missing this book for so long. Eva and Addie were such an antithesis and there development was great to read. I adored the slight love story and Hally! My god Hally, Her and Lissa were just the coolest, the way the switched back and forth and gathered people to rebel and change the world quietly. I was loving it. I was pumped! 

Then they get taken to well, wherever the hell they were taken and I stuck it out as long as possible. It just got monotonous,  Nothing was happening, and if it was happening it was so unrealistic I just fond myself scoffing and muttering 'pfft sure' under my breath. 


The part that finally made me shut the book and never turn back, was the phone call to her Father. It made me mad. He promises not to let her stay there and that he'd come with her, I liked the idea he would try but something terrible would happen but so on so forth. But instead they use Eva and Addie's life as leverage to get there son a kidney. I'm sorry, even if he is ill, no decent parent (as we are led to believe they are) would let one child die to improve the life of another. Her brother isn't dying this isn't like a 'he needs this now or he will die' situation. This is a ''dialysis is really not ideal' situation and it was so ridiculous and made me so mad, I threw the book across the room. 


I don't care what happens. 

I literally just don't care and I should not feel that way about reading a book. I want to follow the charaetrs to the end, even if it isn't well written. There has to be something dragging me in, but there wasn't.

Such a shame because the premise really excited me and the first 200 pages were promising. This book was such a disappointment. Two stars!





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Wednesday 2 July 2014

June Wrap Up & July TBR

01:35:00 0
In all Word Nerd honesty, I admit my TBR's are...ambitious. I want to read everything immediately. But then life gets in the way, commitments, book hangovers, book purchases that you just cant wait to start and I find I don't stick to them religiously.

This month I read 8 books, 5 of them from my laid out TBR list. Much Pride, Many accomplish, WOW! But I also diverted off my beaten track of what I would read if I finished those. I ended up not reading Frozen by Erin Bowman or Dreams of Gods & Monsters by Laini Taylor. Why you ask? Because I just wasn't feeling it. I find I'm more likely to enjoy a book if I'm reading it because it's what I want to read, not because I agreed to read it so I have to. If I'm not feeling it, I'll come back to it. At some point.

Okay so in June I read the following:

The One by Kiera Cass 3/5 stars.

Tears of Heaven by R.A McCandless 1/5 stars. (Unfinishable)
The Summer I Turned Pretty by Jenny Han 4/5 stars.
The Bone Season by Samantha Shannon 5/5 stars.
More Than This by Patrick Ness 4/5 stars.
Percy Jackson and the Titan's Curse by Rick Riordan 4/5 stars.
Popular by Wagenen, Maya Van 5/5 stars.
What's Left of Me by Kat Zhang 2/5 stars (Unfinishable)

And onto July. This is an equally ambitious month with 5 books I selected then 1 from my TBR Jar.


From Bottom to Top.

We start with Why We Broke Up by Daniel Handler. My sister gave this book to me a few months ago when I was going through a bad break up, which was a sweet thought but it was too soon. A lot changes in a few months and so finally I'm reading the book. Really excited for it, seems right up my street and might give me a new perspective on the experience.

 Min Green and Ed Slaterton are breaking up, so Min is writing Ed a letter and giving him a box. Inside the box is why they broke up. Two bottle caps, a movie ticket, a folded note, a box of matches, a protractor, books, a toy truck, a pair of ugly earrings, a comb from a motel room, and every other item collected over the course of a giddy, intimate, heartbreaking relationship

Next we have my TBR Jar pick for this month Wonder by R. J. Palacio. This was a complete impulse buy a long time ago and I don't think I ever even thought I'd read it but that's the point of the jar. So I'm excited to see what I've been missing out on.

August (Auggie) Pullman was born with a facial deformity that prevented him from going to a mainstream school—until now. He's about to start 5th grade at Beecher Prep, and if you've ever been the new kid then you know how hard that can be. The thing is Auggie's just an ordinary kid, with an extraordinary face. But can he convince his new classmates that he's just like them, despite appearances?

Naturally I'll be reading the next book in the Percy Jackson series. Percy Jackson and the Battle of the Labyrinth by Rick Riordan. Having read it's three predecessors, I kind of know what I'm expecting in terms of writing style but I am excited to see how Percy and Annabeth develop, and what happens from the fallout of the last book. Nothing better than returning to Camp Half-Blood. 

Percy Jackson isn't expecting freshman orientation to be any fun. But when a mysterious mortal acquaintance appears on campus, followed by demon cheerleaders, things quickly move from bad to worse.




Next is the book I am actually currently reading. Take Back the Skies by Lucy Saxon. I have heard so many good things about this book and Saxon even did a Celaena Sardothien cosplay and had her book recommended by Sarah J Maas so there was no way I wasn't going to read it. I mean she might just be the coolest person ever and the book actually sounds UH-MAH-ZING!



Catherine Hunter is the daughter of a senior government official on the island of Anglya. She’s one of the privileged – she has luxurious clothes, plenty to eat, and is protected from the Collections which have ravaged families throughout the land. But Catherine longs to escape the confines of her life, before her dad can marry her off to a government brat and trap her forever.

So Catherine becomes Cat, pretends to be a kid escaping the Collections, and stows away on the skyship Stormdancer. As they leave Anglya behind and brave the storms that fill the skies around the islands of Tellus, Cat’s world becomes more turbulent than she could ever have imagined, and dangerous secrets unravel her old life once and for all .





I also decided as I read More Than This last month I would take a crack at A Monster Calls by Patrick Ness. It's an incredibly short book and so I'm sure I will fly through it and hopefully enjoy it as much as I enjoyed his other books.

The monster showed up after midnight. As they do.
But it isn't the monster Conor's been expecting. He's been expecting the one from his nightmare, the one he's had nearly every night since his mother started her treatments, the one with the darkness and the wind and the screaming...
This monster is something different, though. Something ancient, something wild. And it wants the most dangerous thing of all from Conor.
It wants the truth


Finally I will be incorporating a classic I have owned and skimmed a billion times but never took the time to read. From reading quotes I feel like me and Ernest Hemingway would be best friends, although we wouldn't call ourselves that,  we'd just be drinking buddies and talk about how hard it is to be intelligent and happy. A Farewell to Arms by Ernest Hemingway will hopefully live up to it's stellar reputation. 

In 1918 Ernest Hemingway went to war, to the 'war to end all wars'. He volunteered for ambulance service in Italy, was wounded and twice decorated. Out of his experiences came A Farewell to Arms. Hemingway's description of war is unforgettable. He recreates the fear, the comradeship, the courage of his young American volunteer and the men and women he meets in Italy with total conviction. But A Farewell to Arms is not only a novel of war. In it Hemingway has also created a love story of immense drama and uncompromising passion.

The book already contains what I think is the most romantic dialogue I have ever read in my life. 


Anyway that is what I plan to read this month but I'm sure if any of that changes, you'll be te first to know. So tell me, What are you reading? Have you enjoyed any of the books I'm about to start? Let me know your reccomendations! Come on lets starts conversing internet.

Have a good one.
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