I endorse this opinion. It‘s always a bitter blow when I bite into an oatmeal chocolate chip cookie and discover those aren‘t chocolate chips, they‘re frickin raisins. 😠
I endorse this opinion. It‘s always a bitter blow when I bite into an oatmeal chocolate chip cookie and discover those aren‘t chocolate chips, they‘re frickin raisins. 😠
What does one do the day after the Readathon?
Read some more!
I knocked a digital freebie off La TBR first thing this morning (it failed the 3-chapter test), then dove into ICE CREAM LOVER by Jackie Lau over breakfast. It‘s off to a great start. There‘s comedy! There‘s grief! There‘s lots and lots of ice cream, with or without pie!
Also, I appreciate that Lau knows beer, even if her other books prove she IS anti-gose.
I signed up for Scribd after a few years away and now I‘m maybe a bit obsessed with seeking out short, diverse books for the #Readathon next weekend. It won‘t let me arrange them in a nice, photographable grid, but these five are only the start.
If you also wanna try Scribd for the Readathon or general stress relief, I‘d be grateful if you‘d use my referral link. That way, we each get 30 days free! https://www.scribd.com/gi/8e9too
1. Tagged and The Rise of Magicks by Nora Roberts
2. Nightingale by Kristin Hannah
3. The Giver of Stars by Jojo Moyes
#weekendrrads @rachelsbrittain
Not quite representative, in that the book is overall happier than this, but this quote was just one of those yes, that moments you have when reading. Text says: Grief isn't linear, it isn't constantly decreasing in strength.