Here‘s how I did on #theunreadshelfproject2020.
Here‘s my progress so far on #theunreadshelfproject2020. For this month‘s reading challenge, a lot of the books I read for #bookoplathon worked for this. The only book I didn‘t own was Evidence Of The Affair by Taylor Jenkins Reid. I started borrowing it from Amazon Prime in 2019 and I finally got around to reading it. I forgot that I wanted to borrow it so it was sitting on my Kindle not being read.
Here are the books I read in June. Empty Promises by Ann Rule is by far the most disturbing. Knowing it really happened makes it so much worse. My favorites were The Exorcist and We Are Never Meeting in Real Life. And four of these reads are for #theunreadshelfproject2020.
That was pretty good. I kind of thought the husband was a big ol' jerk and I'm usually not interested in reading about married couples struggling with their relationship, but this was oddly compelling for me. I loved the descriptions of the places where they traveled, and of the actual sailing experience. Not a hugely uplifting book, though.
Thank you to #knopf for the free #arc.
#theunreadshelfproject2020
So much love for this amazing writer. Perfect read for these weird days.
#stayhome24in48 #theunreadshelfproject2020
My choices for the #owlcrateathon that starts today through the 27th. I'll get to knock some of for #theunreadshelfproject2020 as well!
I won‘t spoil it for my #LMPBC group (#GroupB), but this was a 5-star read for me! I hope they enjoy it as much as I did and don‘t get annoyed with all my little notes, lol.
#MiddleGradeMarch #TheUnreadShelfProject2020
Shame on me for judging this book by its cover! It was actually very good! I suppose this middle grade author is not well-known in America. He‘s a writer of historical fiction and masterfully weaves history and fiction together. I loved how he even worked the included map into the actual story. I‘m definitely up for reading more from this author. #AtoZLitsy (Letter F) #TheUnreadShelfProject2020