• Book cover for Syro Aphex Twin

    Syro Aphex Twin

    Aphex Twin

    Reviewed: May 24, 2023

    Syro is the sixth album created by the popular artist Aphex Twin. This album was recorded over a period of a few years and is an electronic album. It has a mix of tracks that are extremely enjoyable, some that are incredible, and some that are average or bad. It is a very mixed album, but when it has the opportunity to shine, it does so in an extravagant manner. A notable track is "Produk 29", which feels very similar to the older works of Aphex Twin. The track is quick and action-packed but begins with an interesting, semi-calm introduction. Another notable track and probably the... Read Full Review


  • Book cover for All the Light We Cannot See

    All the Light We Cannot See

    Doerr, Anthony

    Reviewed: May 17, 2023

    One book I have recently enjoyed is All The Light We Cannot See by Anthony Doerr. The book has two timelines, alternating between 1944 and the years leading up to it. There are two protagonists: Marie-Laure, a twelve-year-old who is blind and lives in Paris near the Museum of Natural History where her father works, and Werner Pfenning, an orphan who grows up with his younger sister and later gets recruited to be part of the Nazi Youth. Marie-Laure and her father leave Nazi-occupied Paris and flee to Saint-Malo, where her great-uncle lives in a house by the sea, which ultimately... Read Full Review


  • Book cover for The Disaster Artist: My Life Inside The Room, the Greatest Bad Movie Ever Made

    The Disaster Artist: My Life Inside The Room, the Greatest Bad Movie Ever Made

    Sestero, Greg

    Reviewed: May 10, 2023

    The Disaster Artist: My Life Inside The Room, the Greatest Bad Movie Ever Made is a nonfiction book co-written by Tom Bissell and Greg Sestero. It’s a biography recounting Sestero’s time in Los Angeles while working on the film The Room, a movie that although its box office income of less than $2,000, has absolutely soared in popularity in recent decades. The initial box office income was a comparative grain of sand next to the nearly $5,000,000 it has made these days.

    Greg Sestero’s recollection of events is a tale as old as time, "a young actor looking to make a... Read Full Review


  • Book cover for Citizen Kane

    Citizen Kane

    Reviewed: May 3, 2023

    Rosebud. This is the final word spoken by the immensely influential celebrity, politician, and owner of the New York Daily Inquirer. Moments before he collapses, this singular word erupts from his lips. A nurse soon rushes in, and it is reported that Charles Foster Kane is dead. The world is shocked by his passing, which has huge ramifications on the world after he’s gone.

    To understand the meaning of Kane’s mysterious word would be an amazing scoop for reporters and be immensely valuable information, and they flock to uncover the meaning of his last word. They begin to uncover... Read Full Review


  • Book cover for The Sea of Trolls

    The Sea of Trolls

    Farmer, Nancy

    Reviewed: May 3, 2023

    The Sea of Trolls is the first book in a three-part series by Nancy Farmer. The book is set in 793 A.D., following the main character, Jack, who is the son of a farmer. His father plays favorites with Jack's sister, Lucy, and never respects him no matter what he does. When Jack goes to feed the village Bard, he is asked to become the Bard’s apprentice. He learns all about the "life force" and is trained for about a year before everything spirals out of control. The Bard goes insane, Northmen attack Jack’s village, he and his sister are captured by the Berserkers, and they are... Read Full Review


  • Book cover for Annihilation

    Annihilation

    VanderMeer, Jeff

    Reviewed: April 27, 2023

    Annihilation is about Area X, a place blocked from society due to how weird it is. The government sends a team of four people—a biologist, an anthropologist, a surveyor, and a psychologist—to investigate this place, but they do not return the same. Some do not remember what happened. They act strangely as if they are in shock. Others do not come back at all, and their partners do not know what happened to them. The main character, a biologist, describes her surroundings from Area X. As you progress in the book, Area X gets weirder by the second, and the characters start to uncover... Read Full Review


  • Book cover for The Sun is Also a Star

    The Sun is Also a Star

    Yoon, Nicola

    Reviewed: April 12, 2023

    The Sun is Also a Star by Nicola Yoon tells the story of Natasha Kingsley, an undocumented immigrant teenage girl who is about to be deported, and Daniel Bae, a boy about to go to an interview with Yale University, a school he doesn’t want to attend but does so in order to please his parents. They end up meeting inside a record store. Following that encounter, they continue to spend time during the day together, poet Daniel trying to convince a ‘cold and calculating’ Natasha that love is indeed real. It’s a heartwarming story that shows how close two can become in just the span of... Read Full Review


  • Book cover for My Policeman

    My Policeman

    Roberts, Bethan

    Reviewed: April 5, 2023

    My Policeman by Bethan Roberts is a romance novel that takes place in the fifties and sixties. The main characters are Tom Burgess, Patrick Hazelwood, and Marion. The book is written in first-person journal entries from both Marion and Patrick.

    Marion begins as a simple schoolgirl who has taken a liking to her childhood friend’s older brother, Tom. When Tom enlists in the army, Marion begins her education and later becomes a schoolteacher. Once she settles into her new life and job, Tom returns as a trained policeman, and he and Marion reunite. Marion and Tom begin a... Read Full Review


  • Book cover for 16 Wishes

    16 Wishes

    Reviewed: March 29, 2023

    16 Wishes (2010)

    16 Wishes (2010) is a classic Disney movie—it's a fantasy that teaches you to enjoy what you have because if not, you’ll grow up too fast and miss out on being a kid. A 16-year-old girl named Abby creates a list of 16 wishes over the period of eight years in the hopes that they will be fulfilled on her birthday. She receives 16 candles from a fairy, each of which grants one of her sixteen desires. When midnight arrives, her wishes are unfulfilled and become unbreakable. However, she wishes to change her prior wishes one last time. In the process,... Read Full Review


  • Book cover for Uglies

    Uglies

    Westerfeld, Scott

    Reviewed: March 22, 2023

    One of my favorite books is Uglies by Scott Westerfeld. In Uglies, there are two cities that live separately. One city is where the Prettys live, and another city is where the Uglies live. The government makes everyone believe they were born ugly. The concept of "natural beauty" does not exist in this society. But once a person reaches the age of 18, the government makes them pretty. The main character, Tally Youngblood, is extremely excited to turn 18—until she finds out the cost of turning pretty. (That is all I will say because I do not want to ruin anything!)

    ... Read Full Review


  • Book cover for Lies We Tell Ourselves

    Lies We Tell Ourselves

    Talley, Robin

    Reviewed: March 15, 2023

    Lies We Tell Ourselves by Robin Talley tells the story of two girls, one Black, one white, in a newly desegregated school. Taking place in 1950’s Virginia, the dual narrative of the book gives insight into both lives, that of Sarah, one of the few Black students choosing to participate in integration, and Linda, a white student who comes from a family that firmly opposes integration, their views having passed onto her. The girls are forced together when assigned a group project and consequently become closer than they would’ve ever believed possible, breaking more than just one... Read Full Review


  • Book cover for The Hunger Games

    The Hunger Games

    Collins, Suzanne

    Reviewed: March 2, 2023

    In The Hunger Games there are 12 Districts. The Capital, which exists outside of these Districts, maintains control of the Districts by having the Districts play a game called The Hunger Games. Every District is forced to choose one boy and one girl to play this twisted game in which 24 people enter an arena—and they have to fight until there is only one winner left standing.

    The Hunger Games is one of the first chapter books I ever read, and I fell in love with it! This book is one of the reasons I am a bookworm. The book is very balanced and does not overwhelm... Read Full Review


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