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Three Apples Fell from the Sky
Three Apples Fell from the Sky | Narine Abgaryan
10 posts | 6 read | 6 to read
An unforgettable story of friendship and feuds in a remote Armenian mountain village In an isolated village high in the Armenian mountains, a close-knit community bickers, gossips and laughs. Their only connection to the outside world is an ancient telegraph wire and a perilous mountain road that even goats struggle to navigate. As they go about their daily lives harvesting crops, making baklava, tidying houses the villagers sustain one another through good times and bad. But sometimes all it takes is a spark of romance to turn life on its head, and a plot to bring two of Maran's most stubbornly single residents together soon gives the village something new to gossip about... Three Apples Fell from the Sky is an enchanting fable that brilliantly captures the idiosyncrasy of a small community. Sparkling with sumptuous imagery and warm humour, this is a vibrant tale of resilience, bravery and the miracle of everyday friendship.
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GatheringBooks
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Eggs 🍎🌳🍏 2mo
Allylu This is on my TBR list, too! 2mo
46 likes1 stack add2 comments
review
Darklunarose
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Bailedbailed

Started trying to read this book yesterday but couldn‘t get into it. So for now I‘m going to send it back to the library and try again later on this year.

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Onioons
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On Friday, just past noon, after the sun had rolled past its lofty zenith and begun sliding sedately toward the western edge of the valley, Anatolia Sevoyants lay down to breathe her last. Before departing for the next world, she thoroughly watered the kitchen garden and scattered food for the chickens, leaving a little extra since the birds couldn't go around unfed - how could ahe know when the neighbours would discover her lifeless body?

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mackelie
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Mehso-so

It was a lovely read about ageing community in a remote Armenian village of Maran. We are told stories of different villagers with particular focus on Anatolia. There wasn‘t a particular storyline that I could describe in the book but glimpses and backstories of what has happened to the people of Maran.

It reminds me a lot of ‘100 Years of Solitude‘ due to some miracles and unusual events. Nothing much happens overall but I enjoyed the flow.

18 likes1 comment
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IuliaC
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Pickpick

I simply loved this one!
I was completely absorbed by the life of this small Armenian village isolated on top of a mountain, where everything is soaked in magic and symbolism and a late love saves the world. It reminded me of my grandparents' life and I believe this book was for a good reason called “a balm for the soul“.

65 likes3 stack adds
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ReadingEnvy
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Reading Envy Podcast Episode 234: Punctuation Marks with Nadine

Jenny and Nadine reconvene to talk about reasons not to set reading goals, look back on the year, and discuss which books we've read and enjoyed lately.

Listen and subscribe:
https://tinyurl.com/ReadingEnvy234

Suet624 Can‘t wait to listen! 3y
Lindy Jenny, I was so happy to hear you talk about 3y
Lindy Also, I do the same thing as Nadine: towards the end of the year, I look at reading challenges from various sources (Read Harder, Reading Women) for the first time, just to see if I happened to read books that would fit their prompts over the past year. 3y
See All 8 Comments
ReadingEnvy @Lindy I don't think it got nearly enough attention in the US. 3y
ReadingEnvy @Lindy I vaguely track them but don't go out of my way to meet a category. Most of the time I find I've covered most of them! 3y
Lindy @ReadingEnvy I looked at the Reading Women challenge and have nothing for the first category: a book longlisted for the JCB Prize. But it did get me to look at those titles (none of which are available to me). 3y
ReadingEnvy @Lindy I wonder if you could count previous years because I do see some familiar titles - The Far Field and Djinn Patrol... Both of which I haven't read but I've heard good things about! 3y
Lindy @ReadingEnvy Ah! I only thought to look at the current year. Silly me. 3y
38 likes8 comments
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charl08
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"They're doors," Valinka explained to Nastasya.... "So when Judgment Day arrives, the deceased will rise, throw the door open, and enter heaven. That's why they put the stone markers with crosses at the feet."
"And what about the ones with the ordinary wooden crosses"
"The other deceased will take them away."
"How about that," was all Nastasya could say.

38 likes1 stack add
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Tonton

Long and lively article introducing young European writers in translation; all just put on my tbr. Worth checking out!

https://www.theguardian.com/books/2020/mar/07/shock-of-new-novelists-stories-eur...

rockpools Saving this for later - it looks great! Thanks for posting it. Also tagging a few people in case it‘s of interest- @bookwormm @Emilymdxn @Librarybelle @BarbaraBB 5y
Tonton @RachelO It is! Discovering writers Is so exciting. Thank you for spreading the word😎Love your book selections, too! 5y
rockpools @Tonton Thanks 😊 . I have the first of these to read as an ARC this week, so I don‘t want to read the article til after. 📚📚📚 5y
Tonton @RachelO Enjoy! 5y
BarbaraBB @RachelO Thanks Rachel this definitely sounds worth looking into 💕 5y
32 likes5 comments