Good day for reading outside😊
There should be a gold star option for the book rating. This is my absolute all time favorite book, if you haven't read it I suggest you do. It's a story of love and loss. Grace is a teenage runaway who is pregnant. Her step father has been molesting her for years. Eric takes her in and lets her stay in his clubhouse of rural Utah. They slowly fall in love while police are searching for grace. Eric is living the dream, until that night..
‼️‼️‼️HELLLLPPPP‼️‼️‼️
I'm trying to find a monthly book box. I've seen several different ones on here and Instagram but I want to know a relatively inexpensive one that many people love. I've wanted to subscribe to one for a long time but don't know which one is the best.
She was a runaway who taught me more about life than anyone has before or since.
"Until I feared I would lose it, I never loved to read. One does not love breathing."
Reading in the trees today friends🔆⭐️❤️
What's everyone's current read???
I like the book, there were some parts that were better than others though. Some parts were pretty graphic but over all it was okay. The ending could have been better though.
"A few steps from me a German, six feet plus, weighing about 250 pounds, took a little Jewish girl by the hand, led her to a wall, sat her down, even corrected her posture, and then moved back a few steps and shot her in the head"
This book is latching onto my feelings, the stories are so sad, the things that these people had to witness and go through... #neverrepeathistory
Name one book that's on your March TBR list🙌🏼🙏🏼
These are mine
Water for Elephants- Sara Gruen
Where all light tends to go- David Joy
1984- George Orwell
The girl on the train- Paula Hawkins
Tell the wolves I'm home- Carol Rifka Brunt
This book takes a while to get good but once it does it's so good. Honestly such a good book.
You are no longer quite certain which side of the fence is the dream.
I stole my friends book and found this😂
I liked this book. I like how the giver gave the boy (it's been a while I don't remember his name) the memories that had been torn from people when they removed feeling and emotion. It was definitely an interesting read.
I liked the story like but some of the parts were hard to get into or follow. But it's a good good over all. I definitely see why they use it in schools. Or at least mine.
This book was sad, obviously though because it was a true story about the time period, but it was so good. Books about the holocaust are always so intriguing to me but always make me cry😭
I had to read this book for school and I could not for the life of me get into it, I wanted to but I couldn't. The story like was okay but just the way it was written maybe?
Very good book, hard to put down. Ruby tells her story about loosing her family to of all things acid rain that has swept the world leaving only .27% surviving.
Sad story, but shows the spirit of a girl who knows that she did the right thing.
The book that got me back into reading, I love it so much. A young girl has to take care of her father with severe PTSD while maybe dealing with some of her own.
A very suspenseful and thrilling ending to an amazing trilogy. I would highly recommend this series to all.
I cried so hard, not even fair.
This book is honestly so sad. Sora is such an inspiration at the beginning of the book about how he deals with his ALS. He knows that it's coming but he doesn't want to let it take him. He'd rather do it himself and save his loving mom the pain of watching him slowly waste away.
I like this book a lot, it shows the struggles of Libby Strout, "America's Fattest Teen" and how she gets back into real life after having to be cut out of her house.
This book has the typical high school love story where the cute shy boy falls in love with the popular girl. Accept nobody knows about Sam's OCD. Or her obsession with the number three. Sam meets a girl named Caroline who helps her deal with her OCD and helps her get into a group called Poets Corner where she actually feels happy and that she doesn't have to worry about what all of her friends think. The thing is, Caroline isn't real.
The second book of the Mara Dyer trilogy is more gripping than the first pulling you in with lots of dramatic irony and suspenseful parts. Mara is in Horizons, which is a mental facility that her parents put her in because they didn't trust her. Mara isn't alone, or safe. Neither is anyone else inside Horizons.
This was one of the books that really got me back into reading after years. Mara Dyer went through a tragic experience after an asylum collapsed killing her two friends and her boyfriend. Mara soon regains her memory and realized that the building didn't only collapse because it was only but because Mara is capable of hurting or killing things with her mind. Great book.
This book reminded me of a childhood bedtime story and brought back memories of my dad telling me life lessons on how not to be selfish or greedy, and how to recognize when it's time to let something go. I relate to Conor in this story, like his dad, my mother isn't around so I know what it feels like to be confused when he magically appeared after his mom got sick. I love how Ness told this story. "The monster" is not a monster, but a friend.
I love this book so much. It's so extraordinary to see Nazi Germany from a little girls eyes. A little girl who has lost everything and is forced to start over in a new place, haunted by a single nightmare, every night, for years. To read about how a little girl doesn't see a Jewish man as bad or "the scum on the bottom of our shoes" is really amazing. This book made me cry like a baby but it was so worth it. I love this book❤️