Summer TBR (week 1-... )
I'm done with my exams, so I thought I'd share the books I hope to read this first week.
I haven't been able to read in a while so it's a limited TBR, since I don't know how fast I'll be reading.
- 1. Witchcraft For Wayward Girls by Grady Hendrix
They call them wayward girls. Loose girls. Girls who grew up too fast. And theyβre sent to the Wellwood House in St. Augustine, Florida, where unwed mothers are hidden by their families to have their babies in secret, give them up for adoption, and most important of all, to forget any of it ever happened.
Fifteen-year-old Fern arrives at the home in the sweltering summer of 1970, pregnant, terrified and alone. There, she meets a dozen other girls in the same predicament. Rose, a hippie who insists sheβs going to keep her baby and escape to a commune. Zinnia, a budding musician who plans to marry her babyβs father. And Holly, barely fourteen, mute and pregnant by no-one-knows-who.
Every moment of their waking day is strictly controlled by adults who claim they know whatβs best for them. Then Fern meets a librarian who gives her an occult book about witchcraft, and power is in the hands of the girls for the first time in their lives. But power can destroy as easily as it creates, and itβs never given freely. Thereβs always a price to be paid . . . and itβs usually paid in blood.
Β Β 2. The Secret HistoryΒ by Donna Tartt
blurb:Β Under the influence of their charismatic classics professor, a group of clever, eccentric misfits at an elite New England college discover a way of thinking and living that is a world away from the humdrum existence of their contemporaries. But when they go beyond the boundaries of normal morality their lives are changed profoundly and for ever.
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Β Β 3. A Journal Of The Plague YearΒ by Daniel Defoe
blurb: In 1665 the Great Plague swept through London, claiming nearly 100,000 lives. In A Journal, written nearly sixty years later, Defoe vividly chronicled the progress of the epidemic. We follow his fictional narrator through a city transformed: the streets and alleyways deserted; the houses of death with crosses daubed on their doors; the dead-carts on their way to the pits.
And he recounts the horrifying stories of the citizens he encounters, as fear, isolation and hysteria take hold. The result is both a fascinating historical document and a supreme work of imaginative reconstruction.
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