October 2025
    M T W T F S S
     12345
    6789101112
    13141516171819
    20212223242526
    2728293031  

    For context I love fashion, art, music and biographies. Also poetry, women's stories and laughing.
    I want to start 2025 with a fun but creatively written book. Im not a big fantasy person, or mystery. I like true stories but also fiction that relates to real life art and beauty. Something that makes you go, wow and makes you sit and think about it. Something to appreciate.
    I enjoyed little weirds by Jenny slate for context.

    by pepperandplatinum

    12 Comments

    1. A Short Walk Through a Wide World by Douglas Westerbeke. Male author but the protagonist is female and it’s an excellent, unique novel that I couldn’t put down.
      Circe by Madeline Miller.

    2. Though it’s in translation, you might like Like Water for Chocolate. For beautiful prose style, EM Forster’s Maurice can’t be beat.

    3. I recently read Kaveh Akbar’s *Martyr*! It’s his first novel, but he’s published poetry collections, and the novel contains some poems. It’s about an Iranian-American poet/writer and recovering alcoholic/addict who is fascinated with the meaning and meaninglessness of death and martyrdom. And it has a bit about life, language, communication, and relationships.

      It has some funny moments, but it’s not a comedy, and some sections are beautifully written, particularly the ending which is also vague. (I’m still thinking about what really happened).

    4. Rich-Description2690 on

      The museum of modern love by Heather Rose – artsy and quite literally about art (and creativity, and how they are part of us)

    5. Jet-Black-Centurian on

      Jonathan Livingston Seagull. Granted it’s superficially about seagulls, but it’s clearly not actually. Newest version includes a bonus chapter that I unfortunately feel was better left out.

    6. Personal_Passenger60 on

      Said the shotgun to the head – Saul Williams

      She – Saul Williams

      Cheap ticket to heaven – Charlie smith

      Just kids – Patti smith

      Moonage Daydream: The Life & Times of Ziggy Stardust

    Leave A Reply