User Profile

Avarla

Avarla@bookwyrm.social

Joined 6 months ago

I'm reading mostly Fantasy and Thrillers, Memoirs and scientific Non-Fiction. I'm reading wherever my current mood takes me, so I'm really bad at sticking to lists I set myself. Still I try to fulfill several to-read challenges every year.

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Avarla's books

Currently Reading

Jennette McCurdy: I'm Glad My Mom Died (Hardcover, 2022, Simon & Schuster) 4 stars

Review of "Summary of Jennette Mccurdy's I'm Glad My Mom Died" on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

Omg, this was terrifying. The way Jennette describes the things her mom does as so innocent and from a benevolent point of view makes everything even more fucked up. Even without all the pressure from Hollywood, experiencing this would have been awful.
It was a very gripping read, though, and even though I have never seen iCarly or had heard of Jennette McCurdy, this was a very intense memoir.
I highly recommend it!

Janina Ramirez: Femina (2022, Ebury Publishing) 5 stars

Brought to you by Penguin.

Extraordinary women have held positions of power throughout history. But, …

Review of 'Femina' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

I love the stories about women during the Middle Ages, although, of course, the women chosen can never represent the "average" woman of their respective time.

I liked to see how much influence women could have even back then, since that's a truth that's rarely spoken of in history lessons.

I absolutely have a problem with the sloppy editing of Femina, though. There are so many typos and grammatical errors in there that I was quite taken aback. This isn't something I expect from a professionally edited and published book.
And just for the record, it's called "Riesenkodex" ("Giant Codex"), not "Reisenkodex" ("Travel Codex")!

Maya Shepherd: Die Grimm-Chroniken. Band 01. Die Apfelprinzession (Paperback, 2018, Sternensand Verlag) 2 stars

Review of 'Die Grimm-Chroniken. Band 01. Die Apfelprinzession' on 'Goodreads'

2 stars

Leider nichts für mich. Das gesamte Buch, zugegeben nur sehr kurz, liest sich wie ein herausgezögerter Vorspann. Da die ganze Reihe wohl einen einzigen Spannungsbogen hat, nicht extrem verwunderlich, dennoch animiert mich dieser Einstieg nicht dazu, 20 weitere Einzelbücher zu lesen.

Auch mit der Vertonung des Hörbuchs bin ich nicht warm geworden, allerdings kann ich nicht sagen, ob es an der Sprecherin oder dem Schreibstil lag.

Nachdem ich noch dazu nicht die Zielgruppe des Buchs bin, da einfach zu alt, ist diese Reihe für mich hier auch schon wieder zu Ende.

A. K. Turner: Body Language (Paperback) 3 stars

Review of 'Body Language' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

Inconclusive. On the one hand, Cassie is yet another sherlockian mastermind who just notes all the details and knows stuff about people, which is a trope I have come across so often that it's boring by now. Yet there is something intriguing enough to make me want to try and read the second instalment.

I'm also not sure about both Cassie's and Flyte's tragic backstories, both seem a bit standard issue out of the box tragedies so far. We'll see where they go.

I did like the forensic scenes and I would hope for more in future books of this series.

reviewed Men at Arms by Terry Pratchett (Discworld (15))

Terry Pratchett: Men at Arms (Paperback, 1997, HarperTorch) 4 stars

Review of 'Men at Arms' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

I feel like this was a turning point in the watch cycle - with Guards Guards, it started in the King Carrot direction, but Men At Arms went more towards the Watch and the ending here cemented that direction. I'm curious what could have been, but I really like the Watch as it turned out.

Jasmin Schreiber: Abschied von Hermine (Hardcover, Deutsch language, Goldmann Verlag) 4 stars

Wir müssen alle sterben. Du, ich, die Tiere im Wald, die Pflanze auf dem Fensterbrett …

Review of 'Abschied von Hermine' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

Mir hat ein bisschen der rote Faden gefehlt. Die Mischung aus Biologie, Religion und Anekdoten mag ich an sich recht gerne, nur dass im Kapitel über die Zersetzung von Körpern plötzlich explodierende Wale zur Sprache kommen, der Ablasshandel im Kapitel zum Leben nach dem Tod thematisiert wird und die Paarung von Schnecken ein halbes Kapitel im Topic zur Zersetzung bekommt, um zu erklären, wieso Schnecken Knochen fressen, ist mir tatsächlich etwas zu durcheinander.

An sich guter Einstieg, aber für eine tiefere Beschäftigung mit dem Tod, sowohl biologisch als auch rituell empfehle ich die Bücher von Caitlin Doughty oder Mary Roach.