awhile back a similar thread was posted and i was able to discover never let me go, piranesi, and project hail mary because of it without knowing anything about it (so thank you). would love to get new recommendations!
I mean you DID ask for a recommendation for a book you want to go into blindly. If you’re up to the challenge, don’t read my review, just read the title and author in this paragraph and don’t read below.
It’s on Audible but may be on Libby. “A Short Stay in Hell,” by Stephen L. Pec k. I use text replacement and my shortcut is the properly spaced letters of the last name. I hope you enjoy this!
Title and author are to come, trust me. 😮😮😮😮😮 No one should go into this book blind, like I did. So, I’m not spoiling it for you. ?Hopefully I’m not spoiling your images of eternity? Who amongst you would like to spend eternity being charged with the burden of having to read millions of books trying to find the precise story of your own life? Sounds almost like heaven, right? Ha! R eaders could not imagine a better way to spend eternity…unless you’re the people in Stephen L. Peck’s short story “A Short Stay in Hell.” Before I listened to this audiobook I couldn’t’ imagine anything better. Well readers, be careful what you wish for.
Gray_Kaleidoscope on
Flowers for algernon is best blind because every synopsis spoils the story
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The Frugal Wizards Guide to Medieval Europe
I mean you DID ask for a recommendation for a book you want to go into blindly. If you’re up to the challenge, don’t read my review, just read the title and author in this paragraph and don’t read below.
It’s on Audible but may be on Libby. “A Short Stay in Hell,” by Stephen L. Pec k. I use text replacement and my shortcut is the properly spaced letters of the last name. I hope you enjoy this!
Title and author are to come, trust me. 😮😮😮😮😮 No one should go into this book blind, like I did. So, I’m not spoiling it for you. ?Hopefully I’m not spoiling your images of eternity? Who amongst you would like to spend eternity being charged with the burden of having to read millions of books trying to find the precise story of your own life? Sounds almost like heaven, right? Ha! R eaders could not imagine a better way to spend eternity…unless you’re the people in Stephen L. Peck’s short story “A Short Stay in Hell.” Before I listened to this audiobook I couldn’t’ imagine anything better. Well readers, be careful what you wish for.
Flowers for algernon is best blind because every synopsis spoils the story