Ahh I missed these TBR planning videos so much! I always go back and rewatch your old ones for comfort, especially the spring and winter ones as the vibes are unmatched
My TBR for this month includes: 1. The Wind in the Willows, by Kenneth Grahame 2. The Canterbury Tales, by Chaucer 3. Romeo and Juliet, by Shakespeare 4. On Writing (and Writers), by C. S. Lewis 5. Warbreaker, by Brandon Sanderson 6. Sketches by Boz, by Dickens 7. The Poem of the Cid 8. Gulliver's Travels, by Jonathan Swift There's no way I'm gonna read them all, but a girl can dream. 😅
I used to listen to a cassette tape of Wind in the Willows to fall asleep when I was a kid. (I’m old-tapes were a thing!). Hearing you read the lines out loud I could recite every word with you! Love that story.
I love Ur videos so much they are heartwarming, your vibe is very chill, and anybody sees your channel will recognize that reading IS the portal to the places we cannot go to, and is the portal to understanding yourself and others, which leads to better life. READING is the key to the many doors of life. 👑👑👑📚📚📚❤
Anne of Green Gables is my desert island book. I've probably read it 50 times in my life. During lockdown in 2020 I finally read the series through Anne of Ingleside (plus Chronicles of Avonlea). Loved them. You've got a great TBR coming together!
I did not find The Birds uplifting but it is stunningly beautiful. Really look forward to hearing what you think when you get round to reading it. The Housekeeper and the Professor is wonderful. You will love the magic of the numbers!
I used to only have one bookshelf for everything and early last year i got really into book shopping and my other belongings filled up the remaining shelves so i also had stacks of books all over😭 thankfully now i have two more bookshelves and everything looks great
I had an old, beaten up copy of The Count of Monte Cristo (abridged, unfortunately 😔) that I stole from my father which I had never really thought much about, but seeing as you had enjoyed it so thoroughly- I was intrigued. It was SO GOOOOOD. I'm definitely going to read the unabridged version someday, that is, if I eventually get over my fear of large books. I'm soooo thankful that you liked it and mentioned it because I might never have read it otherwise. So again, thank you so much for the recommendation!! Much love ❤. Also, I hope everyone who's reading this comment has a great day/evening. And please, please, PLEASE recommend me more books that have the same vibes as The Count of Monte Cristo!
I love these TBR videos! Also, I'm reading Anne of Green Gables to my 10-year-old now--so love sharing this favorite of mine with my eldest! Also, the Emily trilogy was Montgomery's favorite. If you haven't read Montgomery's Emily books, I strongly recommend: she has the spirit and imagination of Anne; however, the books are slightly darker, slightly realer. So so good for Anne fans who want more by this amazing author.
Emma, I highly recommend A Tale For The Time Being, it's such a profound and expansive novel! Also excited to hear your thoughts on Jeanette Winterson, I loved some of her books and felt meh about others, but didn't read the one you picked.
i read lighthousekeeping at the end of last year and really enjoyed it. jeanette winterson is honestly in a league of her own 😅 i hope you enjoy it too!
It is so funny how many coincidences happened in our bookclub picks. I have a bookclub specialized on reading women authors. I pick a book every two months. For March and April we were also reading Middlemarch and I struggled the same as you did, and I also saved myself with an audiobook, so I feel you! And for May and June, I picked The Housekeeper and the Professor!!! I could not believe my eyes when you started writing "The Housekeeper...", I already knew which book you were going to talk about. Wish you a pleasant spring reading 🌸
You made me laugh so hard when you had to pull a book out with the plant and were like ‘ok, extra points’ in your game of Jenga. Great video, thanks for it!
The Dark Hills Divide was great!!!! Thank you so much for the recommendation ❤ ordered Beyond the Valley of Thorns … aaaand as I’m a teacher I’ve brought it in to school too ❤
I have been wanting to reread Anne of Green Gables for a while now.... Guess I will start this on my birthday this May and might be reading along with you!
This video popped as I was watching your last upload which is perfect timing. I hope you're having a wonderful time. I am currently reading 'Pachinko' by Min Jin Lee and loving it so far. Thinking of reading 'Pedro Paramo' by Juan Rulfo next. Hopefully it's great as well. Happy reading!
The only Yoko Ogawa book I've read was a very creepy short story collection called Revenge and I ADORED it. Surprised that The Housekeeper and The Professor appears to be something completely different. Sounds interesting though, I must join you on that one this month! Definitely check out Revenge if you like her writing. Would highly recommend.
Thank you for blessing us with another video so soon! 😍❤️ like many other said, we love the continuous videos lately please keep it up 🥹🙏💖 Wishing you a great day 🌸
I'm so excited for The Lord of the Rings! I haven't read them in years. Already looking forward to your reading vlog. 😄 Ngl I like the aesthetic of this new arrangement, even though it most be sooo inconvenient. I like it when books are stored kind of chaotically. (Which is lucky since my own shelves are overflowing haha.) I hope you and your mom have fun on your trip! ❤
A couple of years ago - on a whim - I listened to LotR on TH-cam, which was very nice. Currently I'm recovering from a major surgery and quite frankly I'm just too tired to read. I've yet to finish anything this year. My tentative plan is to read Amy Tan's The Opposite of Fate, and if that goes well then maybe I'll try to finish a Faulkner novel. Thx for the video - enjoyed.
Yes absolutely 100% take Jeanette Winterson's Lighthousekeeping with you on your trip. Jeanette Winterson signed my copy to me (addressed to me by name). The Waves (Virginia Woolf) is my favourite book of all time. To The Lighthouse (Virginia Woolf) is also wonderful, but more soul-crushing. Then again, I don't remember it crushing me when I first read it in my early twenties. But it crushed me on my re-read in mid-40's because of personal circumstances and phase of life stuff. But definitely, definitely take Ligthousekeeping with you; it's the perfect book and quite easy to read through, so it's good for a holiday I think. And you absolutely need to read more of Jeanette Winterson! She's one of my favourite authors. I was so hoping you'd read The Passion before or during the Venice trip. One of my favourite books of all time is her essays collection, Art Objects (not to be confused with Art & Lies, one of her other wonderful books).
Dear Emma, just a small recommendation, I hope you try out reading Faulkner one day! You are so well spoken, I trust your taste and would love to hear your thoughts on his books. Sending much love and appreciation 💫
Moomin papa at sea was unexpectedly heart tugging, especially during a season of upheaval & trying to find ‘home’. To the Lighthouse is one I’d recommend, & I added Lighthouse Keeping to my TBR. PLEASE READ THE GRACE OF WILD THINGS. Put it at the top of the pile 😅
Sooo Looking Forward TO Reading LOTR😊📚Still Chipping Away At Middlemarch (pg.355) I Also Want to Reread Wind in The Willows and Just Might (Thanks to You and Carolyn's Awesome Spring Book Rec, It Has Become my Most Favorite New Children's Book Read😊👍👍📚Thanks For All These Awesome Book Recommendation Videos😊👍👍📚
Whenever I see your Shatter Me series and now, the Selection series on your shelves, I feel a deep need of seeing you unhaul some books! Cuz I´m SURE you won´t want to reread them! So, please just think about an unhaul video! thank you bestie!
Emma you MUST read Olga Grushin!! Depressing yet super transporting and brilliant Russian author. I've read The Dream Life of Sukhanov and Forty Rooms and both are on my favorites list.
I really should read those Vesaas. Some on my May tbr: The Ambassadors - Henry James Emma M. lion Vol. 2 - Beth Brower Someone at a Distance - Dorothy Whipple
I’ve been obsessed with L.M. Montgomery since I was a little kid-you should also try Emily of New Moon if you haven’t read it yet. I prefer it over Anne of Green Gables (though that feels a bit blasphemous to say!).
Don’t skip the Murakami shelf haha I read Kafka on the Shore immediately before I went to the coast of Ireland and it couldnt be more perfect. I peeped Legends and Lattes and I read Bookshops and Bonedust immediately when I got back because I was missing the northern beach town vibes and did it deliver! As for Virginia Woolf, To the Lighthouse is definitely a more beachy read (The Waves is not about the beach lol). I’m not a huge huge TTL fan; Mrs. Dalloway is my fav; the waves a close second, but it’s up there in terms of Woolf. It’s about her family’s holidays to St. Ives and losely about her life and her siblings. 1 book away from finishing my Woolf reread and have officially read all of Woolf(‘s novels at least…. So many short stories and letters I haven’t touched!) safe travels!
Personally I'm going to give the next around the world pick a miss in May to give myself time to catch up a bit on my reading (currently I'm obsessed with Alice Oswald's Memorial though so that's really cool), but I'm planning to be back on board with GoT to nerd out about Tolkien with y'all so I'm really looking forward to that 😊
I was on a Stephen King kick, read Lisey's Story and Duma Key. Now I need a break from him so I am reading The Morning Star by Knausgaard. After that I am either reading Count of Monte Cristo or The Brothers Karamazov. I want to reread The Hobbit and Lord of the Rings, but those are better suited for fall/winter reading to me. For a translated work, The Morning Star is a pleasure to read even though I am not sure about the structure of the book that surrounds 5 characters and their lives.
I loved Shipwrecks.🌊 Yoshimura has a talent to wreak quiet devastation on the heart. One Man's Justice by him is amazing, too. However, Shipwrecks is a very quiet, understated and realistic historical novel, and not something you should pick up if you're really in the mood for a thrilling gothic murder and revenge fest, like the blurb makes it out to be. That might lead to disappointment.
I really enjoyed Anne of Green Gables when I read it last year and I think that it works so well as a standalone that I don't really plan on continuing on with that series. However, I am actually quite curious about the author's other series - Emily of New Moon. Have you maybe read it and if yes, would you recommend it? 🤔 I hope you have a lovely reading month! ☺(even though I don't envy you reading the whole LOTR trilogy in 2 months - I thought it's one of the most boring things I have ever read 😅Except Pippin! He's great and *the* saving grace of the story 😁)
I've been listening to the audiobook of Middlemarch and have a little over two hours left and it has been a slog to get through especially compared to Count of Monte Cristo. Looking forward to rereading the LOTR books. Haven't read them since the movies came out.
Hi Emma thanks for cheering me up with your video today; I needed it. My family just left after a week’s visit with me. It was like, OK everybody hug Kyle so he can get back to work. Bleh. … My guess for your trip is PEI.
My monthly tbr list is not that hardcore, i only read 1 book a month mostly, i have maaybe 100 to 125 books, ive initiated a book buying ban on myself until ive read all unread books in my collection, currently reading (bad habit) heart shaped box, firefly ghost machine and the mermaid the witch and the sea.
You wondered what Virginia Woolf's "The Waves" is about. I read it, quite some time ago, and couldn't understand anything I was reading, despite re-reading sections, in the hope it was just that my focus had slipped. I remember it as being a stream of consciousness style of thing, but I couldn't grasp any of the ideas, because there were all sorts of metaphors in it I couldn't understand. Perhaps I wouldn't have the same difficulty if I were to read it again, but it put me off reading Woolf for ages, until recently I picked up "A Room of One's Own", and thought it was a wonderful read, with no difficulties at all about grasping what she was saying. I'd love you to read and review "The Waves" sometime, to see if it was just poor focus on my part, all those years ago, that made it so unintelligable to me. I like the look of the selection of books you currently have on your shelves, and I think you're probably a discerning reader.
oh my god! how come you haven't read Waves by Virginia Woolf yet? it's like made for you. it was a 5 star for me, it's so beautifully written. It follows the life of these 5 people from childhood to adulthood and death; I genuinely felt emotional finishing it, like I watched them grow up. The writing is genuinely exceptional, like Woolf at her best. (idk about To the lighthouse, I have not read it, but I did find it boring when I tried to years ago.)
My TBR is a million miles long and you're not helping, Emma!!!😂 Loving the rash of videos lately, hope your week is going well!!
So real 😭
Excited for a new month of reading! I hope everyone has an amazing month! 💛
Ahh I missed these TBR planning videos so much! I always go back and rewatch your old ones for comfort, especially the spring and winter ones as the vibes are unmatched
These 'Plan a Month of Reading with Me' videos are some of my absolute favorite!
My TBR for this month includes:
1. The Wind in the Willows, by Kenneth Grahame
2. The Canterbury Tales, by Chaucer
3. Romeo and Juliet, by Shakespeare
4. On Writing (and Writers), by C. S. Lewis
5. Warbreaker, by Brandon Sanderson
6. Sketches by Boz, by Dickens
7. The Poem of the Cid
8. Gulliver's Travels, by Jonathan Swift
There's no way I'm gonna read them all, but a girl can dream. 😅
how did you end up doing lol
@@emmasims8608 I finished #1, #3 and #4 and DNFd #2.
I adored Anne of Green Gables. A book rec from my Great Grandmother.
The Wind in the Willows is a definite 5 star read! I've read this beautiful book many times. Just wonderful!!
Planning what to read and shopping one's shelves is so much fun! Thanks for sharing. Have a good time! 📚
YES LOTR!! I'm so ready!!
I used to listen to a cassette tape of Wind in the Willows to fall asleep when I was a kid. (I’m old-tapes were a thing!). Hearing you read the lines out loud I could recite every word with you! Love that story.
The sheer happiness. I just can't 😭✨
Thank you, Em.🥺❤️
Anne of Green Gables and The Housekeeper and the professor are wonderful choices, Emma! Oh! Wind in the willows too! ❤️😊
a tale for the time being mention!!! :0 it's one of my favorite books of all time, and it does have a something to do with the ocean...
I love Ur videos so much they are heartwarming, your vibe is very chill, and anybody sees your channel will recognize that reading IS the portal to the places we cannot go to, and is the portal to understanding yourself and others, which leads to better life.
READING is the key to the many doors of life. 👑👑👑📚📚📚❤
Absolutely!!!
Anne of Green Gables is my desert island book. I've probably read it 50 times in my life. During lockdown in 2020 I finally read the series through Anne of Ingleside (plus Chronicles of Avonlea). Loved them. You've got a great TBR coming together!
These monthly planning videos were definitely missed. I always look forward to your videos... sending love ❤
I did not find The Birds uplifting but it is stunningly beautiful. Really look forward to hearing what you think when you get round to reading it. The Housekeeper and the Professor is wonderful. You will love the magic of the numbers!
You must get your hands on The Sea The Sea by Iris Murdoch which won the 1978 Booker Prize. That is your book for the trip!
Wasn't meant for me but I'm taking that recommendation regardless. Thank you :)
@@zephyr2266 my pleasure!
I so missed the tbr videos, you made my day!
I used to only have one bookshelf for everything and early last year i got really into book shopping and my other belongings filled up the remaining shelves so i also had stacks of books all over😭 thankfully now i have two more bookshelves and everything looks great
The Secret Garden, Anne of Green Gables, and Wind in the Willows were my spring reads! And I started LOTR early because I just couldn’t wait 🙈
Can't wait to see Anne of Green Gables in the vlog. 😊 It's my favorite book of all time. It's the perfect spring/summer/autumn/winter read. 😁
I had an old, beaten up copy of The Count of Monte Cristo (abridged, unfortunately 😔) that I stole from my father which I had never really thought much about, but seeing as you had enjoyed it so thoroughly- I was intrigued.
It was SO GOOOOOD. I'm definitely going to read the unabridged version someday, that is, if I eventually get over my fear of large books. I'm soooo thankful that you liked it and mentioned it because I might never have read it otherwise. So again, thank you so much for the recommendation!!
Much love ❤.
Also, I hope everyone who's reading this comment has a great day/evening. And please, please, PLEASE recommend me more books that have the same vibes as The Count of Monte Cristo!
A Tale for the Time Being would fit the ocean vibes a lot, as it has an important role in the story
I love these TBR videos! Also, I'm reading Anne of Green Gables to my 10-year-old now--so love sharing this favorite of mine with my eldest! Also, the Emily trilogy was Montgomery's favorite. If you haven't read Montgomery's Emily books, I strongly recommend: she has the spirit and imagination of Anne; however, the books are slightly darker, slightly realer. So so good for Anne fans who want more by this amazing author.
Emma, I highly recommend A Tale For The Time Being, it's such a profound and expansive novel!
Also excited to hear your thoughts on Jeanette Winterson, I loved some of her books and felt meh about others, but didn't read the one you picked.
Seeing you arrange your tbr is so therapeutic
i read lighthousekeeping at the end of last year and really enjoyed it. jeanette winterson is honestly in a league of her own 😅 i hope you enjoy it too!
It is so funny how many coincidences happened in our bookclub picks. I have a bookclub specialized on reading women authors. I pick a book every two months. For March and April we were also reading Middlemarch and I struggled the same as you did, and I also saved myself with an audiobook, so I feel you! And for May and June, I picked The Housekeeper and the Professor!!! I could not believe my eyes when you started writing "The Housekeeper...", I already knew which book you were going to talk about. Wish you a pleasant spring reading 🌸
You made me laugh so hard when you had to pull a book out with the plant and were like ‘ok, extra points’ in your game of Jenga. Great video, thanks for it!
The Book of Disquiet is life changing!
The Dark Hills Divide was great!!!! Thank you so much for the recommendation ❤ ordered Beyond the Valley of Thorns … aaaand as I’m a teacher I’ve brought it in to school too ❤
You've inspired me to re-read LotR! I actually remember standing in line at the theater in the middle of winter when the films came out (worth it!!)
Love your book choices. I love love Wind in the willows 💕 I need to read it again.
Hi Emma! ❤❤❤ How are you? I read Anne of Green Gables a few years ago.
It's a great classic book!❤📕♥️
I have been wanting to reread Anne of Green Gables for a while now.... Guess I will start this on my birthday this May and might be reading along with you!
This video popped as I was watching your last upload which is perfect timing. I hope you're having a wonderful time. I am currently reading 'Pachinko' by Min Jin Lee and loving it so far. Thinking of reading 'Pedro Paramo' by Juan Rulfo next. Hopefully it's great as well. Happy reading!
When I think of essential "Oceanside" reading I think Beach Music by Pat Conroy. It's a very long book but a good one.
Wind in the Willows is a beautiful book.
Love Wind In The Willows, really want to reread it. Also Love Anne of Green Gables. ❤📚
The only Yoko Ogawa book I've read was a very creepy short story collection called Revenge and I ADORED it. Surprised that The Housekeeper and The Professor appears to be something completely different. Sounds interesting though, I must join you on that one this month! Definitely check out Revenge if you like her writing. Would highly recommend.
Thank you for blessing us with another video so soon! 😍❤️ like many other said, we love the continuous videos lately please keep it up 🥹🙏💖 Wishing you a great day 🌸
Hope you enjoy your reads ☕📚
this video was like pure asmr to me i dont know why! amazing as always, emma
I'm so excited for The Lord of the Rings! I haven't read them in years. Already looking forward to your reading vlog. 😄
Ngl I like the aesthetic of this new arrangement, even though it most be sooo inconvenient. I like it when books are stored kind of chaotically. (Which is lucky since my own shelves are overflowing haha.)
I hope you and your mom have fun on your trip! ❤
i LOVED the housekeeper and the professor so much- such a sweet book!
love today's video so much, Emma! ♡
SOO SO EXCITED for the lotr vlog !!
Anne of Green Gables is amazing!
A tale for the time being was a five-star for me, you should absolutely check it out if you're looking for a fun and trippy time!
A couple of years ago - on a whim - I listened to LotR on TH-cam, which was very nice. Currently I'm recovering from a major surgery and quite frankly I'm just too tired to read. I've yet to finish anything this year. My tentative plan is to read Amy Tan's The Opposite of Fate, and if that goes well then maybe I'll try to finish a Faulkner novel. Thx for the video - enjoyed.
Thanks for the notability inspo! I’m new to the app and am going to try out stickers 🎉
Yes absolutely 100% take Jeanette Winterson's Lighthousekeeping with you on your trip. Jeanette Winterson signed my copy to me (addressed to me by name). The Waves (Virginia Woolf) is my favourite book of all time. To The Lighthouse (Virginia Woolf) is also wonderful, but more soul-crushing. Then again, I don't remember it crushing me when I first read it in my early twenties. But it crushed me on my re-read in mid-40's because of personal circumstances and phase of life stuff. But definitely, definitely take Ligthousekeeping with you; it's the perfect book and quite easy to read through, so it's good for a holiday I think. And you absolutely need to read more of Jeanette Winterson! She's one of my favourite authors. I was so hoping you'd read The Passion before or during the Venice trip. One of my favourite books of all time is her essays collection, Art Objects (not to be confused with Art & Lies, one of her other wonderful books).
Dear Emma, just a small recommendation, I hope you try out reading Faulkner one day! You are so well spoken, I trust your taste and would love to hear your thoughts on his books. Sending much love and appreciation 💫
Moomin papa at sea was unexpectedly heart tugging, especially during a season of upheaval & trying to find ‘home’.
To the Lighthouse is one I’d recommend, & I added Lighthouse Keeping to my TBR.
PLEASE READ THE GRACE OF WILD THINGS. Put it at the top of the pile 😅
Sooo Looking Forward TO Reading LOTR😊📚Still Chipping Away At Middlemarch (pg.355)
I Also Want to Reread Wind in The Willows and Just Might (Thanks to You and Carolyn's Awesome Spring Book Rec, It Has Become my Most Favorite New Children's Book Read😊👍👍📚Thanks For All These Awesome Book Recommendation Videos😊👍👍📚
Whenever I see your Shatter Me series and now, the Selection series on your shelves, I feel a deep need of seeing you unhaul some books! Cuz I´m SURE you won´t want to reread them! So, please just think about an unhaul video! thank you bestie!
I can’t wait to read LOTR with you guys! The Return of the King is my favourite and I’m so excited to reread it! 😊
Emmie if you haven't already, watch the movie. Anne Shirley is played by Megan Follows. You will love it!
I would LOVE if you did some kind of video with you annotating a book. I’m interested in doing this, but I think I need some kind of guidance
I love Anne of green Gables
YESSSS something to watch while I paint my room 🥰
Emma you MUST read Olga Grushin!! Depressing yet super transporting and brilliant Russian author. I've read The Dream Life of Sukhanov and Forty Rooms and both are on my favorites list.
“Wake up! Emma posted a new video!”
RIP the black bookshelves. The end of an era. Book jenga seems like a fun game but for your sake, I hope you get new shelves soon.
I really should read those Vesaas. Some on my May tbr:
The Ambassadors - Henry James
Emma M. lion Vol. 2 - Beth Brower
Someone at a Distance - Dorothy Whipple
hope you enjoy the grace of wild things!! it was my favourite read of last year 💚🍃 (also jenga bookshelf solidarity 🤝)
I feel like I’m watching a game of jenga!!!!! Thank you for my books on my tbr!!!!❤
You should watch the ballet segment that’s about The Waved (Tuesday) it’s incredibly sad but so beautiful
I'm about to start Anne of the Island. I just finished Anne of Green Gables and Anne of Avonlea.
I love your planning/TBR videos SO much! And I’m so excited for LOTR! I DNF’d Middlemarch for the second year in a row 😢
Yayy yayyy yayyy ✨🥺
I’ve been obsessed with L.M. Montgomery since I was a little kid-you should also try Emily of New Moon if you haven’t read it yet. I prefer it over Anne of Green Gables (though that feels a bit blasphemous to say!).
Don’t skip the Murakami shelf haha I read Kafka on the Shore immediately before I went to the coast of Ireland and it couldnt be more perfect. I peeped Legends and Lattes and I read Bookshops and Bonedust immediately when I got back because I was missing the northern beach town vibes and did it deliver!
As for Virginia Woolf, To the Lighthouse is definitely a more beachy read (The Waves is not about the beach lol). I’m not a huge huge TTL fan; Mrs. Dalloway is my fav; the waves a close second, but it’s up there in terms of Woolf. It’s about her family’s holidays to St. Ives and losely about her life and her siblings. 1 book away from finishing my Woolf reread and have officially read all of Woolf(‘s novels at least…. So many short stories and letters I haven’t touched!) safe travels!
Personally I'm going to give the next around the world pick a miss in May to give myself time to catch up a bit on my reading (currently I'm obsessed with Alice Oswald's Memorial though so that's really cool), but I'm planning to be back on board with GoT to nerd out about Tolkien with y'all so I'm really looking forward to that 😊
Your handwriting is very nice.
I was on a Stephen King kick, read Lisey's Story and Duma Key. Now I need a break from him so I am reading The Morning Star by Knausgaard. After that I am either reading Count of Monte Cristo or The Brothers Karamazov. I want to reread The Hobbit and Lord of the Rings, but those are better suited for fall/winter reading to me. For a translated work, The Morning Star is a pleasure to read even though I am not sure about the structure of the book that surrounds 5 characters and their lives.
I loved Shipwrecks.🌊 Yoshimura has a talent to wreak quiet devastation on the heart. One Man's Justice by him is amazing, too. However, Shipwrecks is a very quiet, understated and realistic historical novel, and not something you should pick up if you're really in the mood for a thrilling gothic murder and revenge fest, like the blurb makes it out to be. That might lead to disappointment.
You’re my favorite Canadian.
I would suggest reading Written on the Body by Jeanette Winterson. Safe travels!
Oooh I’d love to see you read Tale for the Time Being! People have very mixed feelings about it so I’d love to hear yours!
Write a mysterious first line in a book and Emma is DEFINITELY going to pick that up
I really enjoyed Anne of Green Gables when I read it last year and I think that it works so well as a standalone that I don't really plan on continuing on with that series. However, I am actually quite curious about the author's other series - Emily of New Moon. Have you maybe read it and if yes, would you recommend it? 🤔
I hope you have a lovely reading month! ☺(even though I don't envy you reading the whole LOTR trilogy in 2 months - I thought it's one of the most boring things I have ever read 😅Except Pippin! He's great and *the* saving grace of the story 😁)
The Jenga was dangerous 😂
im kinda into the chaotic bookshelf. It adds some extra personality. Hope you're doing well :)
I've been listening to the audiobook of Middlemarch and have a little over two hours left and it has been a slog to get through especially compared to Count of Monte Cristo.
Looking forward to rereading the LOTR books. Haven't read them since the movies came out.
Hi Emma ! How often do you wash your hair ? It grows super fast
Thank you as always for a great episode. Oh, which tablet are you using?
You're so good at recommending books without recommending them
Where is your necklace from ? The black pendant is so pretty ❤
I have a feeling someone's going to the Maritimes hehe
Hi Emma thanks for cheering me up with your video today; I needed it. My family just left after a week’s visit with me. It was like, OK everybody hug Kyle so he can get back to work. Bleh. … My guess for your trip is PEI.
are you going to prince edward island? or possibly newfoundland?
I have had a hard time with Middlemarch too.
Nettle and Bone. Oh, and an Ember in the Ashes.
My monthly tbr list is not that hardcore, i only read 1 book a month mostly, i have maaybe 100 to 125 books, ive initiated a book buying ban on myself until ive read all unread books in my collection, currently reading (bad habit) heart shaped box, firefly ghost machine and the mermaid the witch and the sea.
You wondered what Virginia Woolf's "The Waves" is about. I read it, quite some time ago, and couldn't understand anything I was reading, despite re-reading sections, in the hope it was just that my focus had slipped. I remember it as being a stream of consciousness style of thing, but I couldn't grasp any of the ideas, because there were all sorts of metaphors in it I couldn't understand. Perhaps I wouldn't have the same difficulty if I were to read it again, but it put me off reading Woolf for ages, until recently I picked up "A Room of One's Own", and thought it was a wonderful read, with no difficulties at all about grasping what she was saying. I'd love you to read and review "The Waves" sometime, to see if it was just poor focus on my part, all those years ago, that made it so unintelligable to me. I like the look of the selection of books you currently have on your shelves, and I think you're probably a discerning reader.
Really ,I've exams in May I won't be able to join in reading but will get back as soon as they finish
The Birds by Vesaas is NOT an unplifting story lol, it will break your heart
oh my god! how come you haven't read Waves by Virginia Woolf yet? it's like made for you. it was a 5 star for me, it's so beautifully written. It follows the life of these 5 people from childhood to adulthood and death; I genuinely felt emotional finishing it, like I watched them grow up. The writing is genuinely exceptional, like Woolf at her best.
(idk about To the lighthouse, I have not read it, but I did find it boring when I tried to years ago.)