
"He who fights with monsters should look to it that he himself does not become a monster.
"He who fights with monsters should look to it that he himself does not become a monster.
Here is another audiobook from the haze that was February. It‘s a gritty tale of two brothers who have been surviving on their own since their teens. Everything gets turned upside down early one morning when one of them has an accident. The book walks a fine line by making the reader empathize with everything the main characters have been through while not hiding how absolutely stupid and horrible some of their decisions are.
It was interesting to get into the heads of the young female competitive boxers featured in this novel. I liked how the author conveyed the intensity of the moment while also shifting to times in the girls' pasts and futures.
#ToB25
#gottacatchemall (Marshadow: fight or fighter) @PuddleJumper
⭐️⭐️⭐️💫 A book I never would have picked up if not for the #ToB25 short list! Unique structure of telling the stories if 8 teenage girl boxers as they fight in matches at a tournament in Reno. It was interesting enough while reading, but I finished it a few weeks ago and none of the characters or stories stayed with me. Soft pick.
I thought it being about a young woman searching for her missing friend (and the 2020 PEN/Hemingway winner), this book would be right up my alley. But I've been reading, what would normally take me a few days, for three weeks now. Not giving up. Just have to accept this one's gonna take me a while. #currentlyreading
The writing reminded me of Paulo Coehlo. Very philosophical.
The sport of girls' boxing is compared to multiple aspects of life: dreams, quirks, visions, ways of thinking, and futures. Each girl is different, but all 8 girls are the same - with the same wants and fears and strengths.
I'm glad I read it.