Hello! I ended up reading a lot in May. I was trying to catch up on my reading challenge before classes start and I won't be able to read as much. For May, I tried to focus on books for APA month.
My Rating: 4/5 | My Rating: 3/5 | My Rating: 2/5 | My Rating: 3/5 |
My Rating: 3/5 | My Rating: 5/5 | My Rating: 3/5 |
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The Benefits of Being an Octopus by Ann Braden - This one really surprised me cuz it's intended for a middle school aged audience, but ended up being really deep. It covered a lot of issues like gun control and domestic violence. I loved how debate taught the main character to research issues from both sides and how to speak up.
Trumpty Dumpty Wanted a Crown by John Litgow - It's an amusing collection of political satire poetry about American politics during the last couple of years. It unfortunately requires a lot of American political knowledge. They have some explanation blurbs at the end regarding the events that went down, but it's not nearly enough to understand the juicy gossip if you were there at the time or know the topic well enough.
We Hunt the Flame by Hafsah Faisal - Okay this one was recommended to me a lot by readers who follow muslim authors. I just didn't see what they big deal is. It's a fantasy and she threw in a lot of Arabic words/terms to make it unique. The story didn't catch my interest. I've read other fantasies from muslim authors that were so much better.
Where the Crawdads Sing by Delia Owen - I feel like this was marketed towards the typical female centered book club audience. It's got the typical abandoned lonely female like in Circe. Anyways, the story is inspirational, but this swamp/"waste" people storyline is not for me.
The Leavers by Lisa Ko - It's about this Chinese American kid that gets abandoned and then ends up being adopted by a white American couple. The main character clearly had issues from the ordeal and was struggling with dual/forgotten identities. Some of the stuff I could relate to, but for the most part I couldn't get into the story. It's pretty popular on goodreads.
Nothing to Envy by Barbara Demick - Holy moly, this was amazing. It was like reading an addicting dystopian novel, except it's non fiction and based off a true story. I love how she included a little romance too. xD
Everything I Never Told You by Celeste Ng - It's about this biracial Chinese American girl who was found dead in a lake during the 70s and the toll it takes on her family. It covers many topics such as the struggle of being biracial, how interracial marriages were frowned upon/illegal back then, the struggle of women trying to break into a field that was non traditional for women at the time. Lots of food for thought stuff. It was interesting, I just wasn't satisfied with the ending I guess. I really loved this author's other book: Little Fires Everywhere.
For June, I will try to finish The Mountain Sings by Nguyễn Phan Quế . I may end up dropping this one cu it just seems so depressing. Also, I want to read The Henna Artist by Alka Joshi. Also for June, I will try to read a couple of books for Pride month. Right now I'm looking at Leah On the Offbeat by Becky Albertalli.