🍁 It’s harvest time Time to pluck the dreams That have ripened in my mind. 🍎 My mind’s an orchard Bearing ideas and ideals Bitter sweet fruits arisen From the fertile soil Of my childish fantasies cemetery. Oh these fantasies Whose slow decay Now nurtures wild reveries! Reveries unanchored, although born On the same same … Continue reading Harvest
A box
Just a scene that conjured itself up in my mind, begging to be put on paper (or screen...). It may still need some polishing 🍂 She owns a box That she seldom opens. But today, bygone days are calling to her. As she lifts the lid, Old treasures awake in her chest, Threads of past … Continue reading A box
Firethorns
All is quiet in autumn’s early light. From its faraway zenith, the equinoctial sun bathes the quivering world in its aureate gleam. Nature is simmering, fawn leaves are rustling in the expectant air. Soon all will burst in golden shades and brilliant tones. An ebullition of colour, a feast of warmth, a burning banquet. All … Continue reading Firethorns
A Place for Us, by Fatima Farheen Mirza
This novel was everywhere on Instagram, so I got it out of curiosity and after a few weeks waiting on my shelf, I finally picked it up. Time to share my thoughts! Here is the blurb as found on Penguin UK website, my review follows. A Place for Us catches an Indian Muslim family as they … Continue reading A Place for Us, by Fatima Farheen Mirza
Twelve Nights, by Andrew Zurcher
This novel was warmly recommended to me by a fellow 'bookstagrammer'. And then the author was very kind to send me a finished copy! And I am very happy he did, because Twelve Nights turned out to be a unique read. So here is the blurb from Penguin Uk website, my review follows. Kay's father … Continue reading Twelve Nights, by Andrew Zurcher
The Remains of the Day, by Kazuo Ishiguro
I had heard such rave reviews about this novel by the Nobel Prize winner, that I had to try it myself. Here is the blurb, my review follows. "Here is Kazuo Ishiguro’s profoundly compelling portrait of Stevens, the perfect butler, and of his fading, insular world in post-World War II England. Stevens, at the end … Continue reading The Remains of the Day, by Kazuo Ishiguro
The Joy Luck Club, by Amy Tan
This made for a very special read. First because I had not read anything centring around Chinese Americans before. But it is definitely the writing and the characters that made this book unique. Here is the blurb, my review follows. In 1949 four Chinese women, recent immigrants to San Francisco, meet weekly to play mahjong … Continue reading The Joy Luck Club, by Amy Tan
A Skinful of Shadows, by Frances Hardinge
Opening a new Hardinge is like coming home. Not that the different worlds she conjures up in each novel look much alike - quite the contrary, her glorious, seemingly boundless imagination allows her to weave unique, striking universes each time. But reading her always means basking in lush prose and bonding with fierce brave heroines. … Continue reading A Skinful of Shadows, by Frances Hardinge
The Lie Tree, by Frances Hardinge
Faith has a thirst for science and secrets that the rigid confines of her class cannot supress. And so it is that she discovers her disgraced father’s journals, filled with the scribbled notes and theories of a man driven close to madness. Tales of a strange tree which, when told a lie, will uncover a … Continue reading The Lie Tree, by Frances Hardinge
Les Fiancés de l’Hiver / A Winter’s Promise by Christelle Dabos
🇫🇷 En voilà une jolie lecture! J'avais un peu entendu parler de la Passe Miroir, mais c'est à l'occasion du salon du livre de Paris, où l'auteur était présente, que j'ai enfin pu découvrir cette série. Je me suis procuré un exemplaire, que je n'ai malheureusement pas pu faire signer, mais cela ne m'a pas … Continue reading Les Fiancés de l’Hiver / A Winter’s Promise by Christelle Dabos