currently reading:
la violence en spectacle - E. D. Marsault
currently listening to: nothing !
politics, activism, +
history
art
poetry
novels
saga | fantasy, horror
the gunslinger
the drawing of the threethe wastelands
wizard and glasswolves of the calla
song of susannah
the dark tower
the wind through the keyhole
oh god, i'm writing this review months and months after finishing and as of yet, i haven't returned to fiction.
i just still haven't finished grieving this world.
the closest i got is re-reading some harry potter books (ik), because i need the coziness to fall asleep.
anyways:
the dark tower series was imperfect, gut-wrenching, questionable, epic, and i wouldn't even change the parts that dragged
and dragged and dragged; it was all part of what made the experience of this slow quest all the more lived-in. i'm reading it
to a special someone as a way to cope. man, i really can't let it go.
audiobook | biographical
and yet, we keep repeating the same shit over & over again. if it is possible to inflict that much pain,
and exploit so horrendously one of the most powerful white women in the world, then what does that say about our
society, and about the position of minorities?
audiobook | biographical
TW:
violence towards children, negligence, eating disorders, sexual violence
an interesting read, and surprisingly not so hard to get through thanks to the tone of the book.
overview