[Top Ten Tuesday] – #8 – Top Ten Reasons Why Blogging/Reading is Cool Beans

Top Ten Tuesday is an original weekly meme created by The Broke and the Bookish. I thought this would be a fun way to share a condensed version of potential rambles and thoughts that I have.

This week’s theme:
Top Ten Reasons Why
Blogging/Reading is Cool Beans

Initial Thoughts:

We all have different reasons for doing what we do. For one, I’m eating kettle cooked chips that I nuked in the microwave for several seconds while writing this. Don’t chirp it until you’ve tried it. Anyways, the theme for this week considers why readers read and why bloggers blog from a personal standpoint.

Here are some of my long winded reasons:

1. Value Creation from Idea Engagement

Standard, but the thing I find most important. Regardless of the traffic you get, there’s something unfathomably enriching when content can further a dialogue or provoke a thought that may or may not have been considered. It’s in expanding one’s thought capacity that I feel matters most. Perspectives and angles can change; are limitless, and in reasoning the “why” rather than the “how” can deeper meanings be discovered.

2. Sharing is Caring…Seriously.

Albeit just a public opinion, regardless of the degree of positivity (or negativity) in shared content, it’s the effort in spreading ideas that keeps growth in motion. So this is more about giving back to the community (authors, readers, etc.) who have put the time and energy toward an art form that enjoys less exposure. This isn’t to say that literacy is declining or anything but just to highlight the idea that with the amount of distractions in the world, it’s understandable why some individuals may not find the time to read and/or discover certain reads. By keeping books in the spotlight regardless of one’s love/hate relationship with it, the importance lies in keeping literature in the present – and all parties alike only have you to thank for it.

So to you reading this… thanks for your continual effort!

Continue reading [Top Ten Tuesday] – #8 – Top Ten Reasons Why Blogging/Reading is Cool Beans

[Top Ten Tuesday] – #7 – Top Ten Books with Swoon Worthy Relationships

Top Ten Tuesday is an original weekly meme created by The Broke and the Bookish. I thought this would be a fun way to share a condensed version of potential rambles and thoughts that I have.

This week’s theme:
Top Ten Books with Swoon
Worthy Relationships

Initial Thoughts:

Man...It’s so difficult to develop weekly theme adaptations in keeping things in perspective for myself. Last week I touch base on moments in books that made me “cry with feels,” which to some degree is the same thing as swooning. So I decided this week to focus on swoon worthy literary relationships that make you believe in the process of love itself and its varying perspectives; not simply grounded in the happily-ever-after focus (but that’s always nice too). I’m hoping that makes sense! My selection focuses on books I’ve read within the past year-ish. (All images were taken from Goodreads).

ttt_post7_swoonbooks1

1. Jellicoe Road (Melina Marchetta)

Hue hue. So I’m still reading this book but I am quite pleased with how things are developing.

2. The Waiting (Joe Hart)

There is so much parental feels that makes me appreciate the lengths my rents have gone to that much more.

3. Divergent Trilogy (Veronica Roth)

Basically FourTris from beginning to endbut I will shout out the friendship antics via. fellowship of the ring...Allegiant style.

(LOL. Just to tangent this fellowship idea, imagine during the HG’s Quarter Quell:
“…you have my wire.”
“…and you have my trident.”
“…and my axe.”)

Continue reading [Top Ten Tuesday] – #7 – Top Ten Books with Swoon Worthy Relationships

[Review] Minders – Michele Jaffe

Book Title:                      Minders (Standalone)
Author:                             
Michele Jaffe
Number of pages:    
400

Michele Jaffe - Minders - Cover

Synopsis:

Q: If the boy you love commits a crime, would you turn him in?

Sadie Ames is a type-A teenager from the wealthy suburbs. She’s been accepted to the prestigious Mind Corps Fellowship program, where she’ll spend six weeks as an observer inside the head of Ford, a troubled boy with a passion for the crumbling architecture of the inner city. There’s just one problem: Sadie’s fallen in love with him.

Q: What if the crime is murder?

Ford Winters is haunted by the murder of his older brother, James. As Sadie falls deeper into his world, dazzled by the shimmering pinpricks of color that form images in his mind, she begins to think she knows him. Then Ford does something unthinkable.

Q: What if you saw it happen from inside his mind?

Back in her own body, Sadie is faced with the ultimate dilemma. With Ford’s life in her hands, she must decide what is right and what is wrong. And how well she can really ever know someone, even someone she loves.

 (re: Goodreads @ Minders by Michele Jaffe)

Should this book be picked up? the tl;dr spoiler-less review:
  • Enjoy looking through kaleidoscopes? Well, thoughts and emotions are seen in Technicolor. That’s pretty neat.
  • World building takes on contemporary realism with subtle science-fiction elements that aren’t overwhelming for non sci-fi fanatics.
  • The narrative is not anchored by romance in pacing (although I’d imagine you could still ship them); I mean, she’s pretty normal and he exudes the troubled bad boy.

minders-michele-jaffe-scorecard-600x300

Initial Thoughts:

Hmm, neat cover and premise but even neater opening prologue to the story. That’s really all I got for initial thoughts. Ha.

Lettuce explore my mind.

Disclaimer: Potential spoilers inherent to this review from here onward.

Continue reading [Review] Minders – Michele Jaffe

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