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Meet Me!

Hello, readers of book blogs.
I'm an amateur reviewer who felt that her goodreads reviews were a little long. (And ranty.) I also don't know how to write things that aren't book reviews or fiction, so excuse the writing of this. I'll try to post twice a week on here, and I'm super excited to get to know everyone in the YA blogging community! 
                          -Sarah 

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Why I'm Not Reading As Much YA

As you may have noticed, my blog has been in a bit of a lull. This has mainly because school and extracurriculars have made me super busy, but also because I've been undergoing a lot of shifts in my reading preferences. Before I go into this, obviously these are my own, personal reasons. There are tons of reasons to enjoy YA, but I'm going to be sharing why I've been moving away from it as a genre. Lastly, a little background on me. Without revealing my exact age, I am squarely in the center of the young adult demographic. I began reading young adult in about 2015 or 2016, slightly before I was demographic age and also slightly before the genre began blossoming as a whole. Last year, I read 161 books, and the year before that, 139. Of the 161, 20 were not YA, 10 in November and December. In 2018, 10 of the 139 were not YA. So it's safe to say I've had a lot of exposure to the genre. In my reading, I have settled on 3 concrete reasons why I've "left...

Disappointing Thrillers: How could they have been better?

I don't know what it is about thrillers that gets me. Maybe it's the jacket design or the reviews that call it a page turner. (If it is, I'm unaware of it.) Maybe it's that I want to be surprised. No matter what it is that keeps me coming back to thrillers, one thing is constant. I'm always disappointed. Today, I'm going to talk about three thrillers that I've read and where I think that they went wrong. Every one will have spoilers, so readers be warned. So, first up. "In A Dark, Dark, Wood," by Ruth Ware  was extremely disappointing to me. I am probably a third of the age of the target audience, and yet I still found it to be extremely predictable and dull. The character motivations were childish, the setting was mildly interesting but proved boring, and the plot was hardly there. The main thing that annoyed me about this was that the murders in the story were committed over a romance that had happened when the characters were sixteen, ten ...

Best Books Of 2018

Now that we're a month into 2019, I've decided to do a best books of 2018 post. Maybe by 2020 I'll be punctual and able to write blog introductions. Without further ado, my top 18 of 2018. (In no order.) 1. Sawkill Girls, By Claire Legrand Three girls unite to fight off a monster representative of the patriarchy on their tiny island.  Despite being about four hundred pages long, the story is extremely engaging and the characters are well developed. I cannot hype this one up enough.)   2. Far From The Tree, by Robin Benway Three siblings who grew up apart reunite and help each other recover from their various life traumas. The writing is simple and sweet, and despite there being a lot of characters, you really get to know all of them.  3. A heart in the body of the world, By Deb Calletti Anabelle takes off running from Seattle to Washington after tragedy strikes her at home. A heartbreaking story about family, recovery, and violence that will keep you read...