Cazadora by Romina Garber

The Cazadora cover, featuring a girl, Manu, being split in two by her inner wolf. Manu's hair grows into wild foliage, all set against a bloodred background.

Cazadora by Romina Garber

Magical Realism | Fantasy | YA

If you enjoy magical realism, you will love Romina Garber’s newest book in the Wolves of No World series. Netgalley gifted me a free e-ARC of the sequel, Cazadora, and I was so excited to jump in and finish the series! In the follow-up to Lobizona, Romina Garber continues to weave Argentine folklore and real-world issues into a haunting, fantastical, and romantic story that will reunite readers with Manu and her friends as they continue to fight for a better future.

“That’s why every new generation makes improvements.”

First of all, I love that this book was filled with Spanish aphorisms and phrases, and includes vocabulary in-context to help teach Spanish to non-speakers. As someone who is constantly trying to improve my Spanish, this is something I really appreciate seeing in new books. Garber does it well, allowing the reader to infer meaning from context clues without needing to use a translator. However, I can also really appreciate having the translation dictionary available if I do need it, conveniently built into my e-reader. It saves a lot of time not having to click out of the book, and as a visual learner I enjoy seeing side-by-side translations because it really helps me to understand spelling and pronunciation.

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Fat Girl Finishing School

Fat Girl Finishing School is the first full-length collection of poems from Rachel Wiley, the Queer-Biracial-Feminist poet, performer and body-positive activist whose work spans from body image, to love and loss, and feminism. Fat Girl Finishing School is a love letter to the body. When confronted with fatphobia, sexism, misogyny, and shame each poem chooses self-love, despite society’s expectations. This is a book steeped in experience, every story is striking, powerful, and unmistakably palpable.

I can very much relate to this book. Unfortunately, eating disorders and anxiety are very real issues that are really hard to talk about and tackle, but this book did a great job of it. As a woman who deals with many of these issues every day, many of these verses resonated with me deeply.

Wiley’s poems create a striking and very real commentary on important issues in our society. But this collection of poems covers much more than just eating disorders―gender, race, and faith are just a few of the various themes these poems touch on. These are more than just poems; they are special stories of the struggle for personal growth, self acceptance, and understanding the human experience. More than just a book about one single identity, Fat Girl Finishing School makes intersectionality multi-dimensional. 

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Rupi Kaur, The Sun And Her Flowers

The Sun and Her Flowers by [Kaur, Rupi]Books of poetry should be regarded as of the most readable genre of our time. Reader’s attention spans are shorter than they have ever been before; the average person typically will read snippets of text on social media and advertisements throughout the day, but will not sit to read a whole book. technology is changing our reading habits, and poetry offers a reading experience that mimics the way we read, today. Short and simple verses, accompanied by original drawings, is very similar to the way we read through Instagram or Twitter. Quick but effective, Rupi Kaur’s poignant poems keep readers flipping through pages, allowing readers to get lost similar to the way they can loose themselves scrolling through a feed. Her free verse poetry forgoes the difficult metaphors of what we traditionally associate poetry with, in favor of clear, plain language and simplicity. This is the type of book that can be read in a day, and will leave readers returning to it forever.

the sun and her flowers

In 2014, Kaur was infamously banned from Instagram after posting a controversial photograph, in which she is seen lying on a bed with menstrual bloodstained sheets. At the time, the news was filled with stories of women who have had their images — and bodies — censored by the social media platform, receiving Instagram time-outs for inappropriate content, sometimes resulting in a ban of the account and removal of photos. Instagram’s confusing and hypocritically sexist nudity guidelines for what is permissible sparked outrage over banned pictures and accounts, prompting activism across the social network and beyond. But some women, like Kaur, choose to violate these guidelines with purpose and intention. The guidelines, to them, are sexist — period.

Image result for rupi kaur periods

“Female nipples” aren’t allowed, unless they’re being used to breastfeed or a photo shows post-mastectomy scarring — and that’s where things get tricky. These caveats put some images in murky territory, leaving policy a bit confusing for users.

She took a stand against Instagram, pointing out the hypocrisy of a platform that hosted sexual images of women yet censored a typical female experience. Followers came in their droves – 1.3 million of them at the last count (though notably she follows no one). “My book would never have been published without social media,” she says. “I wasn’t trying to write a book, it wasn’t even in my vision. I was posting stuff online just because it made me feel relieved – as a way of getting things off my chest.” Lauded by her readers as an authentic, intensely personal writer who isn’t afraid of baring her innermost trauma, she’s considered a much-needed voice of diversity in a literary scene that’s overwhelmingly white. 

“I will not apologize for not feeding the ego and pride of misogynist society that will have my body in an underwear but not be okay with a small leak.”

Milk and Honey by [Kaur, Rupi]

After the social media controversy, instapoet Rupi Kaur earned herself a space in the bookshelves of millennials and bibliophiles worldwide. Her 2014 self-published debut collection, milk and honey, contained 200 pages of simple poems and line drawings about love and loss, abuse and healing that has sold over a million print copies and remained on the New York Times bestseller list for 52 consecutive weeks. Kaur uploaded a series of Instagram posts to announce her forthcoming second poetry collection — the sun and her flowers, was recently released on October 3, by Simon & Schuster.

The Milk and Honey collection tackled tough themes – rape, violence, alcoholism, trauma – written in Kaur’s trademark short, simple verses, published alongside her own original illustrations. The sun and her flowers characteristically follows suit, echoing the form of her first poetry collection. Both are divided into chapters that seemingly break-down the steps the chapters of Milk & Honey were about the healing process, the sun and her flowers is about the growing process.

Posting her work to Instagram keeps the poems accessible; though readers can purchase a copy of the collection, uploading them lets people access the work for free, earning her brownie points and exposure.

“People aren’t used to poetry that’s so easy and simple,” she says.

The poems in the collections can be broadly divided into two main categories: emotional and empowering. Kaur deals with the pain and joy experienced in familial and romantic relationships, as in:

the way they

leave

tells you

everything

or

i see you

and begin grieving all over again.

She is also popular for her verses that focus on female empowerment and self-esteem, such as this poem published on her Facebook page for International Women’s Day, entitled progress:

our work should equip

the next generation of women

to outdo us in every field

this is the legacy we’ll leave.

The poems are often accompanied by Kaur’s own line drawings, a form that can be traced throughout both her poetry collections:

Image result for rupi kaur the sun and her flowers rainbow

Image result for rupi kaur the sun and her flowers rainbow

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Rupi Kaur is a #1 New York Times bestselling author and illustrator of two collections of poetry. Born in Punjab, India, Kaur moved with her Sikh family to Toronto when she was four. She loved reading at school, but with English her second language she found it difficult to understand most of the poetry. What she loved was cutting and pasting words and images, or filling up poems with drawings. She started drawing at the age of five when her mother handed her a paintbrush and said—draw your heart out. Rupi views her life as an exploration of that artistic journey. After completing her degree in rhetoric studies she published her first collection of poems milk and honey in 2014. The internationally acclaimed collection sold over a million copies, gracing the New York Times Bestsellers List every week for over a year. It has since been translated into over thirty languages. Her long-awaited second collection ‘the sun and her flowers’ was published in 2017.

Rupi has performed her poetry across the world. Her photography and art direction are warmly embraced and she hopes to continue this expression for years to come. Follow Rupi on instagram and facebook for continuous updates.

Did you like this? Read about Rupi Kaur’s first book of poems, Milk & Honey, here!

Paulo Coelho, The Spy: A Novel Of Mata Hari

Image result for the spy coelhoPaulo Coelho, author of The Alchemist and The Witch of Portobello, again bewitches readers with The Spy, a novel based on the life of Mata Hari.

Based on real events

Based around the historical facts surrounding her life and 1917 arrest, Coelho weaves together a first-hand account of what really happened during her life – how she felt, and justifies some of the reasons for her actions.

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The Prologue describes Mata’s gruesome execution by firing squad. Imagining her final moments as she gets dressed for a final time and fearlessly faces her own death with open eyes – refusing to be blindfolded.

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A Crown Of Wishes

Image result for a crown of wishesThe sequel to Roshani Chokshi’s debut novel The Star-Touched Queen remains equally adventurous as the first, transporting the reader to the far-away otherworldly lands of Bharata & Ujijain, Alaka and beyond, this time following Mayavati’s younger sister Gauri on her own journey of self-reflection and self-discovery. Filled with adventure, politics, friendships, sisterhood, romance, illusion, transformation, sacrifices, trials and tribulations, A Crown of Wishes weaves an otherworldly story, carried on the wings of birds with feathers of glittering gold.

In A Crown of Wishes we find Gauri, the legendary warrior princess of Bharata, exiled and imprisoned in Ujijain at her brother Skanda’s command. Scorned by her people for the lies Skanda has spread, Gauri faces execution in Ujijain. But Vikram, the cunning ‘Fox Prince’ of Ujijain, sees her potential and offers Gauri a chance at redemption. Together, they enter the Tournament of Wishes with hopes of winning a wish from The Lord of Treasures that would secure them their greatest desires. Continue reading “A Crown Of Wishes”