
Welcome!
- Kayla
- Minneapolis, United States
- Hello! Thank you for stumbling on my blog, I'm so happy you're here. My name is Kayla, and I'm currently navigating my way through the publishing industry as a freshly hired intern. I love to read, and if you're here, you must love reading, too! I hope and wish and dream that this blog will help you discover books that will inspire, delight, make you laugh, and make you cry (in a good way, of course). Have a look around!
Saturday, April 14, 2012
We Have Always Lived in The Castle - by Shirley Jackson

Wednesday, April 11, 2012
The Hunger Games - by Suzanne Collins

News
Hello, friends! I'm interrupting my stream of book posts to tell you some exciting news! (At least, I think it's exciting. But I once thought that the addition of fresh celery at my college's dining center was exciting. So, proceed with caution). Anyway, it looks like I'm going to be a writing tutor at UMD next year! In addition to that, I get to take a sweet writing workshop for an hour a week. I'm excited!
Tuesday, April 10, 2012
Looking For Alaska - by John Green
I am going on a ceaseless rampage through every library within driving distance (or in my case, busing distance) to find all of John Green's books and read them immediately. As an aspiring (and interning) editorial publisher, I tend to read things critically and have a lot of snobby remarks going through my head, all of which I promise to refrain from writing on this blog. The honest truth is, I love John Green's writing and can't think of a single negative thing to say about it. It's beautiful, honest and truthful, and refuses to withhold anything from you. Green's characters are so vibrantly real that they feel like your friends. Their lives and your life become intertwined in this shockingly unbreakable way, that I have never experienced before with any kind of novel. Please click "read more" for the full review.
The Lost Symbol - by Dan Brown
Stop! I know what you are thinking! Either A) Not another fracking Robert Langdon book; why won't Dan Brown give the whole sadistic conspiracy theory shenanigans a rest, or B) Woohoo! My favorite character isn't dead and is featured in another book even though evil nay-sayers call it shenanigans and wished Dan Brown would give it a rest! Am I right? You probably didn't say shenanigans, though. That was probably just me. Please click "read more" for the full review.
Before I Go to Sleep - by SJ Watson
Here's the thing: the first half of the book is so ridiculously like Fifty First Dates, that I could not for the life of me get Adam Sandler's face out of my head. And you can guess how traumatic that would be; I don't need to explain it. Actually, I had Jimmy Fallon's impression of Adam Sandler in my head. Even weirder.
Please click "read more" for the full review and brief synopsis.
Please click "read more" for the full review and brief synopsis.
The Time Traveler's Wife - by Audrey Niffenegger
And I thought my love life was complicated. Meet Henry DeTamble. He is not your average Romeo. In fact, as far as relationships go, one with him would be the most complicated you could fathom. Picture long distance, but sporadic. Henry has the fictional disorder of "chrono-impairment". He randomly and uncontrollably time travels, often to different events in his own life. He re-experiences his mother's car crash over and over, and often disrupts his own future with unexpected appearances. But amidst a horrifyingly complex life, he manages to pull off one of the greatest, truest love stories I've read in awhile. (To be fair, I don't really read romance novels. Not even the not-dirty kind). Please click "read more" for the full review.
Ms. Peregrin's Home for Peculiar Children - by Ransom Riggs
If you were like me, and initially raised an eyebrow or two at the first chapter of this book, don't give up! Yes, the first few pages almost advertise themselves like a children's book. In fact, the feat of describing a world of levitating girls, invisible boys, and basically a troupe that is more akin to the X-Men than anything else and having it not be a children's book is quite applaudable. At first look at the cover, I thought it was going to be creepy and occult. After reading the first few chapters, I thought it was going to be about super power kids like from Charles Xavier's School for Gifted Youngsters... (sound familiar?). But actually, it turned out to be a fast paced adventure through a time portal. Which, by the way, Riggs did an excellent job of explaining, so it didn't feel like you were watching Terminator again. Anyway, I read this book in one day. I started it at around 4pm on Friday and finished around 10pm. (I am clearly awesome at Friday nights). Please click "read more" for the full review.
The Fault in Our Stars - by John Green

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