✨ Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow by Gabrielle Zevin Trigger warnings + content warnings: loss of a loved one, murder, death, grief, disease/plague mentions, colonization, war, invasion, battle, talk of slavery, abuse, physical abuse from guardian, racism, xenophobia, colorism, use of slurs, blood, talk of suicide, talk of child labor, talk of inhumane work conditions, police brutality, torture, gun violence, brief sexual assault (unwanted touching with intent on more) mention of feet binding, misogyny, talk of drugs, stress + anxiety depictions, vomiting, talk of extreme stress put on students but right now i am just feeling in awe of rf kuang and everything they are doing in literature, showing all the different words people use for violence.īest footnotes. it made me feel pride, it made me feel shame, it made me hopeful, it made me grieve, it truly kind of made me feel everything. So many people are going to have so many individual heart shattering reactions to their identity because of this book. Power could only be brought to heel by acts of defiance it could not ignore. Power did not work against it’s own interests. ✨ Babel, Or the Necessity of Violence: An Arcane History of the Oxford Translators’ Revolution by R.F. and we will see what the rest of this year and reviewing has in store for me. i am still trying to not put too much pressure on myself when it comes to writing reviews like i used to, but it was still important to me to post these the way they are currently. Hi friends! today i am going to post some… not reviews, not even really mini reviews, but some very brief thoughts on some of my favorite books with the trigger and content warnings that i found while reading.
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