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#EpistolaryNovel
blurb
Dilara
Historie van Mejuffrouw Sara Burgerhart | Betje Wolff, Aagje Deken
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Well I know what I want to read for #FoodandLit #Netherlands: the French translation of the tagged book. There was an article about the 2 female authors here: https://www.liberation.fr/culture/livres/elisabeth-wolff-et-agatha-deken-quatre-...
But it looks like the book's OCR isn't ready so I'd have to read the PDF of the 1787 print, and I'm not sure I'm ready for this😅
@Catsandbooks @Texreader

23 likes1 stack add
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lil1inblue
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Alwaysbeenaloverofbooks Cute cover! 4mo
Eggs Great cover and background! Sounds good 👍🏼 4mo
31 likes1 stack add2 comments
review
Aims42
Pickpick

I enjoyed this book very much, the MC‘s humor and wit (and unapologetic snarkiness) had me laughing out loud 🤣 I am starting the second book (“The Shakespeare Requirement”) right away 👍

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Aims42
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Did a little indie bookstore shopping on our last day in MN 😇 Stoked to read this series by a local author!!

Suet624 Nice!!
5mo
34 likes1 comment
review
Booksbymybed
Every Seventh Wave | Daniel Glattauer
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Pickpick

Since the sequel is so short, I ended up reading it in a couple of hours. Soft pick. I felt it was more messy than romantic, and I was getting impatient while characters trudged through the murky waters of their feelings. Wrapped up too conveniently. While it was fine, it would have been fine to stop at first book too. Or make it one book. I didn‘t hate it, but I doubt I will be rereading it.

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Booksbymybed
Love Virtually | Daniel Glattauer
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Pickpick

Epistolary novel. A pretty easy read. It is a story of how an accidental email turned into a pretty intense emotional affair. Was it a romance? Was it a warning that the line between flirtation and “too far” is invisible? Was it an invitation to look outside of one‘s bubble? To reassess a longterm relationship? I can‘t tell yet. The ending was logical. Apparently there is a sequel, I don‘t know if I care enough to read it.

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monalyisha
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This email made me laugh. In the endlessly quotable words of Neil Gaiman, “Truth is, there aren‘t any grown-ups. Not one, in the whole wide world.”

5feet.of.fury 🤣🍪 9mo
julesG 🤣🤣 9mo
48 likes2 comments
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Dilara
The Last Summer | Ricarda Huch
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Turgeniev and Chekhov loom large in this epistolary novella written by a German author, but set in Russia at the turn of the 20th century, at a time of social unrest, when university students were revolutionaries and the upper class held the lower classes in easy contempt. Every character is self-absorbed but thinks they're more observant than the others. I wanted to knock their heads together 😂
Peirene Press always make interesting choices

Dilara Photo of Turgeniev's estate by Сергей Свердлов, via Wikimedia Commons 10mo
Crazeedi I can still sound out the Cyrillic words!! 10mo
Dilara @Crazeedi Oh good! I copy-pasted the author's name mentioned with the photo because attribution is important, but since I can't read Cyrillic letters, I really hoped it was a real, non-inappropriate, name 😊 10mo
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Crazeedi Sérgei Svedliov is the English.( Roll the rrrrrrr's ) 10mo
Crazeedi Sverdliov (forgot the r) 10mo
Dilara @Crazeedi Thanks! 10mo
29 likes2 stack adds6 comments
review
kissmehardy
Yours from the Tower | Sally Nicholls
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Pickpick

Love a good #epistolarynovel! Polly, Tirzah, and Sophia had such unique situations, and their friendship felt lived in - like they existed before the span this novel is set in. Realistic depictions of the time without being overly forgiving or radical, and the letters from others were such a treat! Tbh, where's Theo and Albert's book?? #yalit #yahistoricalfiction

10 likes1 stack add
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Ididsoidid
Dangerous Liaisons | Choderlos De Laclos
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Pickpick

Merteuil and Valmont weave increasingly elaborate schemes and affairs as they each compete for the others approval. The letters reveal so much personality but you never know if you can trust the authors‘ intentions as the stakes and consequences become increasingly severe. 8/10