Books to Read Club
sumali
Fanpop
New Post
Explore Fanpop
 Magic Book
added by
litrato
added by fatoshleo
Source: @fatoshleo
added by Portia0623
video
books to read
sarah j maas
new book
no spoilers
the kelly clarkson ipakita
posted by sk8rgirl714
Preface

“Okay honey, it’s your first time on a plane!” my mother cooed me. I was five then so I didn’t hate it entirely. “I’m ready Mommy!” I said. We sat in section… 1A and 1B.
My mother was overly excited for the both of us because it was also her first time on a plane.
After takeoff, my mother spotted San Diego, which was the wrong direction. We were going to visit my grandparents in Michigan. It felt like the plane was dropping all of a sudden.
“Mommy, are we going to land now?” I asked. “I’m going to go talk to the pilot honey. I’ll be right back.” My mother...
continue reading...
We hear a lot about sexism against females, and some people think this extends to books, which it probably does. A lot of books have no females in them, or only have weak female characters, like damsels in distress which are just there to be saved sa pamamagitan ng males. But recently, there has been a lot of strong, resourceful new female book characters. Here are my favourite strong heroines- and two of them are from books written sa pamamagitan ng male authors, so well done men for realising that females can be string too.

1) Kestrel Hath, from The Wind on apoy series sa pamamagitan ng William Nicholson.
Most of you probably haven't...
continue reading...
added by Portia0623
added by Allies57
"War is not women's history," Virginia Woolf observed. But when confronted with it, members of that sex have summoned levels of courage and resourcefulness to rival those of any military commander. In A Train In Winter, Caroline Moorehead focuses on a group of women worthy of particular awe, both for the bravery they demonstrated and the brutality they endured.
The pamagat refers to a vehicle that in January 1943 transported 230 women — all members of the French Resistance battling the German occupation of their country — to Nazi death camps. They ranged in age from 15 to 68, in occupation...
continue reading...
In 1897 England, sixteen-year-old Finley Jayne has no one…except the “thing” inside her. When a young lord tries to take advantage of Finley, she fights back. And wins. But no normal Victorian girl has a darker side that makes her capable of knocking out a full-grown man with one punch…
Only Griffin King sees the magical darkness inside her that says she’s special, says she’s one of them. The orphaned duke takes her in from the gaslit streets against the wishes of his band of misfits: Emily, who has her own special abilities and an unrequited pag-ibig for Sam, who is part robot; and...
continue reading...
I just finished Pagsulat a novel a few months ago, and im trying to get as much feedback as possible on it :) it's fiction, pantasiya in particular. here's the summary for it! I'm not great at Pagsulat summaries, but i tried :) Please comment!!!

Its placed in older times, with magic and stuff like that, just fyi!




Ash and Anna are two ordinary girls, living two seperate lives in a world where magic is abundant. But when their prophecy brings the twin sisters together, and they learn that they have a long-lost triplet brother, kidnapped at birth, their worlds are turned upside-down, and every choice...
continue reading...
1. Harry Potter sa pamamagitan ng J.K. Rowling

Like, duh.

In my opinion, it's both the best YA series ever and the best pantasiya series ever. Why? Harry Potter is the best of everything - the best characters, the best plots, the best writing.

The characters are people you can fall in pag-ibig with, and not just the main bayani and the main villains. Even madami minor characters are pretty extensively developed, like Snape, Pettigrew, Neville, even Dean or Seamus. They all have histories and quirks and unique personalities and very few authors are able to so vividly create such a huge cast of characters.

Similarly, the...
continue reading...
added by loversdisengage
added by Sandfire_Paiger
added by vanillaicecream
posted by maja3322
 Bram Stoker's 'Dracula'
Bram Stoker's 'Dracula'
Vampires – just because some of them sparkle doesn’t mean there’re all bad.

The Classical Vampire
The first vampire to appear in fictional literature was created sa pamamagitan ng the British may-akda John William Polidori in his book ‘The Vampyre’. After this came the rather long short story ‘Carmilla’ sa pamamagitan ng Sheridan Le Fanu. But it was a work inspired sa pamamagitan ng these two stories that remains the greatest vampire story to this araw – Bram Stoker’s ’Dracula’. ’Dracula’, which was published in 1897, started a Vampire craze the hasn’t ceased yet. It is in this novel that we find the original,...
continue reading...
posted by AnnabethChase
Mmkay, this is a really powerful-but really long- quote and I really hope you take just a few minutos out of whatever you're doing and read it.

"I was telling you about evil, now that I know what it is. It's what makes a man get drunk and press a red hot poker on his child's back. It's what makes men have to queue for hours at the dock gates for a chance of a job when there are only a dozen jobs for a hundred men, so they fight each other in order to get them, and the foreman laugh and egg them on. It's what takes an old couple who've got nothing left but each other and splits them up to go...
continue reading...
added by colouredhazel
added by ayseblack
added by EkkoJohnny