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The Rose Code by Kate Quinn

Hi everyone! About 2 years ago I read The Rose Code by Kate Quinn which, since then, has been my favorite book. The Rose Code follows 3 girls, Mab, Beth, and Osla. All three of them are quite different from each other. Osla is very elegant and is in the upper class. Meanwhile, Mab is much more poor and is struggling to support both her mother and younger sister, Lucy. Beth is more quiet and introverted and when Mab and Osla found her living with her crazy mom, they helped her get out of that house and they all began to live together. Each of these girls work in a coding school to help decode letters that have been intercepted from the Nazi. Over time, the three girls get comfortable with their job until they discover a threat to attack Coventry.  Now, before I continue, I would just like to say that the following information is a SPOILER: Beth decoded the threat and did not tell her two friends. They end up going to Coventry and Mab loses her younger sister and husband. Osla was the on
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The Maze Runner series

(This blog contains just enough to make someone interested, but if you're already planning on reading the Maze Runner, skip this review.)         The Maze runner is an action packed five book series written by James Dashner. If you enjoy sci-fi and thrills, this book is for you. The first book starts with a boy trapped in a black elevator which is rising and shaking. The boy is devoid of all memory, and doesn't even remember his name. After some time the elevator arrives at the Glade, a big green space surrounded by gigantic stone walls. There are many other boys who also don't remember their previous lives, and they introduce the green been to his new life. The boy soon remembers his name as Thomas. He quickly adapts to the life in the Glade, and becomes a runner, which means he runs in the maze trying to find an exit.       With the appearance of Thomas, many strange things started to happen. The first girl appeared, and was in a coma. In a few days the sky turned gray, a

The Iliad

The Iliad The Iliad, a twenty four book long epic written by Homer, is widely considered to be one of the most influential and well known pieces of literature from Ancient Greece. It follows part of the ten year long Trojan War, where all of Greece lays siege upon the city of Troy after Prince Hector abducted Helen, wife of Menelaus, King of Sparta. From the very first page, the epic explores both the horror and glory of war. The book opens with a great plague brought by Apollo which devastates the Greek soldiers, and the death and killing of soldiers in brutal war are depicted constantly. However, at the same time, there are triumphant moments, where the great heroes of both sides, such as Achilles, Odysseus, and Meneleus on the Greek side, and Hector on the Trojan perform incredible feats, single handedly shifting the tide of battle as they fight their way through hordes of enemies. They sometimes even fight in single combat over the fate of the war, such as the duel between Menelaus

My Experience With the Short Story

In this day and age, our attention spans are obviously limited. We can barely sit through a 60 second video, so who’s got the time to sit down and read a book?  Nevertheless, there are people out there who go through, like, a hundred books a year. No matter how hard I’ve tried to get sucked into novel like these people seem to do, no matter how hard I try to focus and become a reading freak, I have never been able to do it. It feels kind of humiliating. Why can’t I just read? Well. I got my ADHD diagnosis a few years ago, and that explained a lot. I wasn’t any more encouraged, though. I got my medicine and supplements, but for some reason, nothing happened.  For a really, really long time, I could still barely focus on half a chapter for schoolwork—much less enjoy one of the dozens of books people had recommended and raved about to me. I told my friends about this, praying they had some sort of advice or magical cure. Of course not.  “ shii bro 💀 ” was probably the most compassionat

The Hate U Give, I Love

Hello Everyone!  A couple days ago, I finished reading The Hate U Give by Angie Thomas. (For the fifth time. Yes, it is that good). So I decided I might as well share its amazingness with everyone! The title The Hate U Give is short for “T.H.U.G. L.I.F.E.” “T.H.U.G. L.I.F.E.” means The Hate U Give Little Infants Fucks Everybody. What this means: the hate America gives people at the bottom of society ends up biting them in the butt when they get older. Since the education in these low-income communities isn’t very good, people can’t get jobs. Since people can’t get jobs, people have to sell drugs. The art of selling drugs is a billion-dollar industry; they get flown into to these communities, then sold to people who sell them for more. But then, the police come and end up killing one of these people due to assumptions about low-income communities and then the people “fuck” them up by protesting and rioting because of this continuous cycle.  Throughout the story, Angie Thomas brings up