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For this feature, I curate a small list of books that make me think, “I can’t believe I haven’t read that”. Then, you vote on which book I should read in the following month. I hope that I’ll be able to ‘catch up’ on certain books that I ‘should’ have read ages ago and finally be able to discuss those books with my fellow book lovers.
July’s Result – When You Trap a Tiger by Tae Keller
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You know that feeling when you start reading a book and it feels so right and fitting that you think early on, “Oh, this is a special one”, and you give it all your attention? By page 36, I knew for sure When You Trap a Tiger was one of those special ones. I had an inkling even before then! These kind of stories are hard to find. I may think I’ve just finished reading a great middle grade book, but then I read a novel like this one and realize, “Ah, this is different. It’s a whole different level.” Of course, that feeling can be very subjective. For me, I found a lot of personal resonance in this story, so that’s why it felt like such a special reading experience. Even taking that into consideration, I see why it won the Newbery. I reread the first Halmoni story a few times because I was so struck by it. When You Trap a Tiger isn’t my favourite genre of middle grade (I like my fantastical elements to be more real than allegorical), but this story is so well-written, you should give it a go.
And I’m angry. Because sometimes it’s like she has this whole other Lily in her head. An Almost Me that doesn’t match the Real Me. I don’t like tea. I don’t love libraries. And what if I’m not the best? How would she know? It’s not like she’s paying attention.
Pg 58
October’s Selection
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It’s September now so you know what that means! Cozy fall spooky autumn sweater season. Here are four books from my Goodreads to-read shelf that I imagine will be a good fit for the season. I sorted my shelf by date added, ascending, and chose the first four titles that prompted the “can’t believe” feeling (…and are also available from my local library within a reasonable timeframe, which limits things further).
- The City & The City by China Miéville (added Apr 2013)
- Weird fiction (urban SFF?). Miéville seems to me an author to read on a dark fall or winter evening.
- The Bone Key by Sarah Monette (added Nov 2013)
- Horror/paranormal short stories. Could this be a hidden gem? I didn’t recognize the title or author at all when I was skimming through my list.
- Poppy and Ereth by Avi (added Nov 2013)
- Middle grade starring woodland creatures. I still haven’t read Ereth’s Birthday but that’s not available at the library. I love walking through forests in autumn, so hear is forest-setting story.
- The Sleep Room by F.R. Tallis (added Dec 2013)
- Horror. This one has quite polarizing reviews – the person who put it on my radar gave it five stars, though!
Which book should I read in October? Vote on the poll below or by leaving a comment on this post. (I can’t tell who voted on Twitter, so if you’re really keen you can vote in the comments AND on Twitter!) Voting closes on 30 Sept.
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I voted for The City and the City, its one of the few China Mieville books I haven’t read😁
Thanks Tammy! I have only read three Miéville books, iirc. The Scar is a an all time favourite book of mine, though!
I haven’t read any of these, so I’m interested to see what other people suggest!
The City & the City has taken an early lead!
I’m voting for The Bone Key, looks like it fits spooky season really well and I love that it’s short stories
Thanks for your vote! I’m really not sure how that one got on my TBR, so I wonder how good it might be.
I’m voting for the Sleep Room, it sounds interesting.
I don’t know any of these, and Avi is the only author I have read anything by, so I voted for him. A forest creature story in autumn sounds perfect anyway.
Thanks Lory, appreciate it! I first read Avi’s Dimwood Forest series when I was seven or eight. I love those little mice!
I haven’t heard of any of these, but I am so glad you loved When you Trap a Tiger!! I love it so much.
It’s a beautiful story!