Reviews
Browse all reviews by date posted or filter by rating, year read, or tag on the right to find something specific like a juicy memoir or a particularly unhinged review.
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- fiction 83
- American author 77
- 2019 59
- 200-299 pages 54
- female author 35
- Asian author 34
- 4-stars 33
- non-fiction 33
- 5-stars 30
- 2018 29
- 300-399 pages 28
- 3-stars 26
- 2020 25
- books with adaptations 23
- contemporary 22
- memoir 22
- Asian diaspora author 21
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- 100-199 pages 17
- Black author 17
- review type: heart eyes 17
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- 2-stars 15
- 400-499 pages 15
- review type: scathing 14
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- 10 out of 10 would recommend 11
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- five-stars 10
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- LGBTQ 8
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- review type: unhinged 7
- ATLA 6
Wild Seed (Patternmaster #1)
★★★★☆ Octavia Butler deftly weaves between the supernatural - the supernatural megalomania of Doro or the supernatural empathy of Anyanwu - and real historical devastations of slavery and its legacy on American society into the late 20th century.
Trick Mirror: Reflections on Self-Delusion
★★★★☆ Jia Tolentino is my absolute favourite cultural critic and essayist. She speaks to me and on topics I care about with such acerbic clarity and personality. My favourite essays from this collection…
Molly's Game: From Hollywood's Elite to Wall Street's Billionaire Boys Club, My High-Stakes Adventure in the World of Underground Poker
★★★★☆ Devoured this in a day after re-watching the movie recently, because I was interested in Molly Bloom and also wanted the dirt on the celebs she names. Not quite as self-critical as I personally would’ve preferred and more than a little self-congratulatory/self-absolving in the end.
The Marrow Thieves
★★★★☆ The idea of extracting the bone marrow of Indigenous people is so chilling. But Indigenous people having the unique ability to dream in this post-apocalyptic future is a beautiful counterpoint, and something that is given several incredibly evocative narrative moments.
The Hidden Witch (The Witch Boy #2)
★★★★☆ The second book in The Witch Boy graphic novel series. A wonderful world of queer witchcraft, deep friendships, and healing inherited family traumas. This second instalment focuses on themes of isolation, bullying, and adolescent angst.
Stormbreaker (Alex Rider #1)
★★★★☆ So cinematic, so cool, spy goodness with no extra fat or fluff, just a preternaturally talented teen spy, shady spy agency, some of the coolest action sequences put to the written word, garishly hateful yet trim villains, high stakes world-saving hijinks, bulls-eye set-ups and pay-offs, sensational sensorial action-driven writing, and a complicated series-spanning teen spy/hired assassin rivalry.
Dear Girls: Intimate Tales, Untold Secrets, & Advice for Living Your Best Life
★★★★☆ So so good, it’s called Dear Girls to her daughters but for me it was like reading a letter from an Asian American big sister.
My Lovely Wife
★★★★☆ Really juicy Gone Girl-esque murder-y psychological thriller about a married couple that starts killing people to get off. Doesn’t get too crazy twisted but is just enough to be super satisfying and fun to read.
My Sister, the Serial Killer
★★★★☆ Written in the perspective of a nice but annoyingly pushover woman whose little sister is a psychopath who kills the men she dates that the woman then has to help cover up for.
Watership Down
★★★★☆ Found this pristine paperback edition at a thrift store in my hometown and semi-recognized the title and then just died laughing at the back summary which is so epic but then you discover a few sentences in its all RABBITS.
On Earth We’re Briefly Gorgeous
★★★★★ Poet Ocean Vuong's debut novel is a shattering portrait of a family, a first love, and the redemptive power of storytelling. On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous is a letter from a son to a mother who cannot read.
The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian
★★★★☆ A bright, vivid, super fuckin’ funny contemporary novel about a teenage boy named Junior who leaves his reservation to go to a white school many miles away.