Tumgik
#wrapped bookshelf
Text
Tumblr media
Okay I saw someone on Instagram do a wrapped bookshelf where they wrapped 12 books they owned and hadn't read and I wanted to try it (except I'm usually so busy over the summer I don't have time to read so I'm only doing 10). I enlisted my younger sibling that likes to read to do it with me so we each picked out books (I actually had a hard time so I've got a few surprise recommendations coming to me too) and had the other wrap them so we didn't know which book was which month and since I finally finished Jane Eyre it's time to open my January book!
Tumblr media
Also for suspense here's a picture of my reading journal spread too I'm very excited about this.
Tumblr media
So January is Sarah Penner's The Lost Apothecary! This is actually a book I received for Christmas and I'm very excited to read it! There's just under a week left in the month but I've been reading a lot since my girlfriend is in Europe until February 1st so I've had a lot of time to myself when she's busy or asleep, so I think I can do it.
Tumblr media
11 notes · View notes
sherifftillman · 5 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
RJ'S SPOTIFY WRAPPED GIF MEME 2023 → 51 + leonard bast: consequences by lovejoy
93 notes · View notes
thecryptkeeper · 5 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
my little collection keeps growing ❤️
75 notes · View notes
Text
A Day Late: A Beauty and the Beast Retelling
Beatrice scrambled through the rose garden, tripping over the deep gold skirts she'd worn specifically to look nice for her host. Where was Beast? He wasn't in the library, dining room, conservatory, aviary, music room, ballroom, study, parlor, billiard room, or any of the castle towers. She'd thought she'd find him brooding in a melancholy corner, awaiting her return, but she was running out of melancholy corners and beginning to get frustrated. Where could an eight-foot-tall dog-tiger-monkey man possibly hide?
The garden had changed. The usual balmy summer had become oppressively hot and humid. The roses drooped. The damp air clung to Beatrice's skin and red curls escaped her hairpins and frizzed around her face. Where were the sparkling sunshowers that kept the gardens moist? Where were the playful breezes that kept the air fresh and cool? Beatrice hadn't seen so much as a fluttering curtain to indicate the presence of an invisible servant. Everything was silent. Still. Dead.
Half-mad with anxiety, she raced down cobbled paths and across the wide lawns where she and her Beast had played so many games of croquet. Past fountains where they'd splashed each other in ferocious water battles. She trampled beds of pansies and tore holes in hedges and prayed the invisible gardener would forgive her. If Beast meant to get revenge for her delay in returning, he was doing an excellent job of it, but when--yes, when--she found him, they would have words about how a single day of waiting did not justify throwing your guest into a blind panic.
She checked every bench in the garden, navigated the entire hedge maze, and even took a raft to check the bottom of the lily pond. When she came ashore, she leapt a short hedge and found herself at the far end of the south lawn, where the lush grass gave way to rougher scrub as the palace grounds approached the surrounding woods. A creek babbled over stones, separating forest from palace, and not far from its bank, Beatrice saw a lump of tawny-striped fur covered in a familiar blue cloak.
Beatrice raced to Beast's side and found him barely conscious. His fur was dull, his eyes were glassy, and he panted in the heat. The sharp teeth sticking out of his pointed muzzle were as dry as his black nose.
Beatrice struggled to catch her breath, then gasped, "Beast! What happened?"
Beast lay curled up on his right side, legs bent to his chest like a newborn babe, while he clutched his long tail in one monkey-like hand. Softly, he said, "You broke your promise." 
How could he be so maddening? "It was one extra day! I haven't seen my family in nearly two years! I thought you could manage without falling into a melancholic decline!"
Beast squeezed his eyes shut and clenched his jaw against some internal pain. "I told you. Three days only. Or I waste away and die."
"I thought it was a metaphor! You know how dramatic you get!"
He shook his head. "Rules of this place."
Beatrice's stomach sank. Though the sun shone hot as ever, it seemed to Beatrice as though a cloud had blocked all the light. She didn't...he couldn't...
Had she killed him for one extra day at home?
She clenched her jaw to hold back tears, furious that she was even considering wasting time by crying.
Beatrice pulled off the Beast's cloak, revealing that he was clad in the loose white shirt and rough brown trousers he typically wore in the gardens. She knelt beside him and snarled, "You can tell whoever runs this place, from me, that I am sick to death of their rules." She started loosening the shirt's laces, grinding out words with each piece of the string she yanked from the bindings. "Life imprisonment because my father stole a rose. Required daily marriage proposals. No dessert unless you eat the vegetables first. And now this!" She pulled out the entire string and threw it aside in a huff. "And worst of all, you follow those rules. You call yourself a beast, but you're just a fluffy little chicken."
Beast grimaced, and sounded apologetic as he rasped, "Not like...those rules. Law...like gravity."
Oh, was he really going to lecture over semantics when he was dying? "And that one's breakable! Haven't you heard? There are men in the south who fly in balloons. You can break any rule you want if you've got enough gumption." She grasped his muzzle in her hands and turned his head so he met her eyes. "Do you understand? You are not going to die on me."
Even though he could barely hold open his eyes, a corner of his wide mouth twitched upward. Good. He had enough life in him to laugh at her. "I'll try."
"You will do more than try." She stood and looked around wildly, desperate for something that could help. Where were those servants?
"You're just overheated," she said, willing it to be true. "Nothing to do with me. You're the one who came out here covered in fur in this eternal July."
Water. She needed water. She rushed to the creek and cupped what she could in her hands. She brought it back to him and he lapped at the scant film of droplets that she managed to hold through her mad flight. It barely dampened the tip of his tongue, yet Beatrice rushed back to the creek again, again, again, not knowing what else to do and thinking that any water was better than leaving him here to fetch other tools. Knowing him, he'd die the minute she walked away.
She babbled as she worked. He couldn't die so long as she kept him distracted, right? "It was one extra day. I didn't think you'd mind. My eldest sister has a new baby. The smiling-est thing you've ever seen. Four months old. I nearly stuck her in my bag and brought her with me. I couldn't leave so soon when there were babies."
Beast lapped weakly at the water in her hands, his eyes shut, as if merely moving his tongue was exhausting.
"My father begged me to stay," she said, desperate for him to understand. "He's gotten so old since I last saw him. I was afraid he'd be dead before I got leave for another visit."
Now Beast lay dying, and all she could do was bring sips of water. There had to be a better way to help him.
Her eyes fell on the cloak and inspiration struck. She gathered it up in deep blue folds, carried it to the bank of the stream and dunked it beneath the water. She fumbled it, dripping, into a ball against her chest, then staggered back to where Beast lay and squeezed as much water as she could over his body.
That woke him up. All his limbs jolted and his eyes opened wide.
"Good," she said with triumph, mercilessly squeezing more water from the saturated cloak. "You wake up and pull yourself together."
She squeezed the last of the water onto his tongue, then carried the cloak back to the river, shouting back to him, "You're the only dog-tiger-monkey-man thing in existence, you know. If you die, you'll be responsible for the extinction of an entire race, and you don't want that on your conscience, do you?"
She dunked the cloak back in the stream, shivering from more than the cold shock of the water. I don't want it on mine.
What if this didn't work? What if he died? Would she be set free? Could she even call such a life freedom? What would her life be without his morning grumbling and his terrible jokes? Who would listen to her ramble about the books she never finished? Or try the bread recipes she burned? How could her life have any joy, without him there to ramble through the gardens with her, or trounce her at billiards, or put up new curtains in her room, or talk about...well, everything, in a way she could with no one else?
It didn't matter because he wouldn't die. She couldn't let him.
But there were things she had to tell him.
She hefted the water-soaked cloth, struggling to gather it in her arms. "You know what I decided, in that extra day at home? It wasn't home anymore. Oh, it's nice. My family's there. Good memories. But I was homesick that fourth day. For the palace. For you." She gathered a heavy fold of the cloak against her chest while another one slipped from her grasp. "It seems that I love you. And the very next time you propose, I plan to marry you."
If the situation hadn't been so desperate, Beatrice would have looked back to see Beast's reaction. After she’d refused him five-hundred and twenty-eight times, her acceptance would be a shock. It had shocked her, that night at home, to realize how much she missed the nightly proposals, and how slim her reasons for refusal were getting. 
Behind her, Beast said weakly. "You'll...marry me?"
The cloak slipped from Beatrice's arms, and she cursed under her breath. "Yes, you overgrown throw rug, but first you have to live long enough to do it."
That was unfair. He deserved an explanation. She reached under the water for the cloak, but the current pulled bits of it just beyond her grasp.  "You’re as much a prisoner here as I am, so I can’t blame you for that anymore.  Your face is kind of endearing, now that I’m used to it. And marriage doesn’t seem so terrible now, not if it’s with you. You’re much smarter and kinder and more fun than any of the human-looking men I know. And you’re much more patient with my temper and my tongue.”  
"Beatrice."
Beast's voice, filled with awe, sounded stronger. The dousing must have done him good.
She sprawled across the bank and flailed an arm beneath the water, catching a corner of the cloak. "You’re too good of a man inside to really be a beast. You said once you had human parents, didn't you?"
"Beatrice."
The cloak slipped away again. She stuck her arm in the current, almost up to the shoulder, and snapped,  "Will you quit distracting me?"
At last, she snagged one edge in her left hand and continued, "Not that I mind if you naturally look like that. You can’t help the way you were born. But have you ever considered that it could be an enchantment? Maybe we could find a way to break it, after we’re married.”
"Beatrice, look at me."
Beatrice was offended at the hint of laughter in Beast's voice. Enchantment wasn't a completely ridiculous idea, not in a place like this.
"I know what you look like," she snapped. She rose to her knees and pulled the wet cloak halfway out of the water. "Doesn't mean you always looked like that. Maybe you're enchanted and just forgot about it."
A heavy hand gripped her shoulder. A human hand. A male hand.
Beatrice shrieked and pushed the hand away, scrambling backward along the bank like a crab. A tall, olive-skinned, dark-haired man stood over her, grinning like a madman.
Beatrice glanced wildly around. How had he gotten here? Had he come from the forest? He looked rough enough, wearing nothing but a long white nightshirt. Someone's escaped lunatic relative? Or maybe he was the true master of this place, the one who'd made all those maddening rules.
She looked to Beast for answers--except that Beast was nowhere in sight. No sign of him save the matted grass where he'd been laying a minute ago. Beast had been weak. Vulnerable. Had this stranger finished him off? Perhaps she’d run out of time, and the rules of this place had dissolved what was left of him. 
She reached further up the bank and seized a fallen branch with a thick shaft and a spray of branching twigs. Madman or mad fairy, she wouldn't go down without a fight. She hefted her weapon, pitiful as it was, with all the menace she could muster in her small form. "Stay back!"
The stranger backed away, hands held protectively before him, but his eyes sparkled with laughter. "Beatrice, don't you recognize me?"
There was something familiar in his voice, which might explain how he knew her name. Cautiously, she rose, the branch still held protectively before her, to examine him more closely. Recognition flashed like a lightning bolt. "The narcissist!"
The stranger gaped. "Excuse me?"
Beatrice examined the features. She was right. She was sure of it. She'd know those green eyes and sharp cheekbones anywhere. The clothes were different and the hair was longer, but the face was identical.  "The man with all the portraits!"
How she and Beast had laughed over those portraits, which seemed to haunt every corner of the palace, far outnumbering any other faces in the artwork. The sitter could be seen wearing military dress in the foyer, riding clothes in the library, and evening dress in the ballroom. He had posed in summer, winter, and spring, and had been painted with hunting dogs in autumn. A child version of him had even posed, sulking, next to a standing globe in a portrait hung in a back hallway. She had privately dubbed the subject a narcissist–a man with so many portraits was far too in love with his own face. 
Now the vast array of portraits made sense. He was the master of the castle, maker of the magical rules, come to deal with her now that Beast was...no, he wasn't dead.
She brandished the branch again. "What did you do with Beast?"
"Nothing. You--"
She whacked him with the branch. "I did not kill him!"
He pushed the twigs out of his face and backed away. "Beatrice, my love, please!"
She whacked him in the stomach for that one. "I am not your love."
"Then why," he gasped, doubled over and wheezing, "did you just agree to marry me?"
Beatrice froze. What did he mean? Had he overheard...?
She was missing something here.
She discarded her theories and looked at the evidence afresh. Beast dying. Beast missing. Portrait man here. Wearing shirt a lot like Beast's that was far too big for him. Talking, now that she thought of it, in a voice remarkably similar to her Beast’s. 
She threw the branch aside. "I am the biggest idiot alive!"
The man caught his breath and stood upright, grinning ear to ear. Even his smile looked a bit like Beast's. "I'd agree," he said, in Beast's velvet, teasing tones, "except that I'm still living."
Beatrice leaped toward him, flung her arms around his neck, and buried her face in his shoulder. He smelled of sweat and mud and rotting fur. She’d never smelled anything sweeter. "I told you that you were enchanted."
#
Beatrice sat with her Beast on the riverbank as the sun sank toward the horizon. The enchanted high summer had given way to the mellow autumn of the outside world. A castle full of servants, now visible, roamed the grounds behind them, greeting each other with joy as they celebrated the end of the enchantment, but Beatrice had yet to move from the river’s edge. She had too much to discuss with her prince. 
Her prince. She still couldn't quite wrap her head around it. His Royal Highness Prince Matteo Adriano Edmondo Nicolo, twelfth son of King Inocenzo of Bellarosa, had rejected a fairy’s marriage proposal, and consequently found himself cursed into the form of a beast until a woman accepted his hand in marriage. 
“Was that all it took?” Beatrice exclaimed. “You could have told me sooner!” 
Matteo laughed. “It wouldn’t have been much of a curse if I could have told you.” 
“You could have hinted!” 
“Daily marriage proposals weren’t hint enough?” 
She laughed, acknowledging his point. “What a pair we make–a girl too dense to accept a prince’s proposal and a prince obnoxiously in love with his own beautiful face.” 
Matteo raised one of his perfect dark brows. “Why do you insist I’m vain?”
“Your royal highness, no one needs that many portraits of himself.” 
He threw his hands up in feigned distress. “I’m royal! My mother commissioned them!” 
“You didn’t need to display them so ostentatiously.” 
“You think I had a choice?” His manner suddenly became subdued. “The fae arranged that. Made it impossible to forget what I’d lost.” 
Beatrice took his human hand in hers. “I’m sorry I delayed so long.” 
He pulled her into an embrace. “I’d say you were right on time.” 
Her stomach twisted with guilt. She hadn’t been on time. 
She rested her head on his shoulder, still barely able to believe he was alive and well. She closed her eyes, trying to shut out the mental image of his dying beastly form. “What if I hadn’t accepted?” she asked. “Would you truly have died?” 
She felt the rumble of his answer in her own chest. “Yes.” 
“Why?” 
“Under the terms of the curse, I would remain a beast until you accepted my hand in marriage, or until you left and doomed me to death.” 
She looked up and gaped at him in amazement. “And yet you let me leave.” 
“I wouldn’t die immediately,” Matteo said, “and I couldn’t deny you the chance for happiness. So long as you returned before three days were over, neither of us would come to harm.” 
Despite the risk to himself, he had taken the chance. He had trusted her.
And she’d returned after four days. 
“I nearly killed you,” she whispered. “I’m so sorry.” 
“It’s not your fault. You didn’t know.” 
“I still should have come back when I promised.” 
He ran his thumb along her face. “Under the circumstances,” he said with a laugh. “I think I can forgive you for being a single day late.” 
She put her hands and his shoulders and met his gaze straight-on. “You really are far too forgiving.” 
“You saved me from my curse! I’d be worse than a beast if I refused to forgive you after that.” 
He’d left her such an easy opening. She couldn’t resist the chance to tease him. “You’re worse than a beast now, your highness. You’re not nearly so lovable without the tail."
He became strangely subdued at that.
“Beatrice,” he said at last. “Do you truly wish to marry me?” 
A natural question, perhaps, given her number of refusals. But she really wished he’d quit asking. "Of course I do. It broke your curse. What more proof do you need?"
He looked down, suddenly shy and earnest as a schoolboy. "Do you still wish it? You agreed to marry a beast, not a prince with too many portraits."
Beatrice laughed at that. She couldn’t help it. “How shallow do you think I am? If I agreed to marry you as a beast, I'm certainly not going to refuse you just because you have a little less fur."
His face eased. She was glad. She'd seen him in enough distress today. 
Another thought struck her. "Did you mean it? Do you really wish to marry me, or did you just propose to get your pretty face back?"
Matteo threw back his head and laughed. "Beatrice, darling, I've loved you since the day you tied a knot in my tail for defeating you at billiards.” 
Beatrice grinned, the last of her doubts flying away. "Then it’s settled. I'll marry you, you'll marry me, we both love each other. Does that sound right?"
Matteo pulled her in for a kiss. "That sounds like an excellent plan."
When they pulled apart, a cool wind came off of the river, and Beatrice shivered.
"I wish I had a cloak to offer you, but someone threw mine in the creek," Matteo said.
"You're terrible!" Beatrice said, but she accepted his arm and his escort back toward the palace.
As they crossed the south lawn, Beatrice said, "You know, I'll have to go back to my father's soon. Someone has to tell my family about the wedding."
Matteo nodded. "Of course. Under one condition."
She pulled away and looked up at him in exaggerated disgust. "More rules? I thought we were done with all that."
He waved a hand to dismiss her protests. "I think you'll find these conditions acceptable." He numbered his points on his fingers. "You may return if I can accompany you. And this time, you can stay as long as you like."
"That's two conditions."
"Do you object?"
Beatrice took his arm and continued walking toward the lighted palace. It was good to be home. "Not at all."
521 notes · View notes
princessofmanyfaces · 5 months
Text
November Wrap-Up
Tumblr media
🗓️ I've read 1 books in November 2023
⭐ My reading experience was an average of 5 stars
📝Most prominent author was Rachel Gillig
📚 Books read in 2023: 102/100 - 102%
22 notes · View notes
Text
It is endlessly distressing to me that Maes Hughes never got to meet Ling
169 notes · View notes
themelodyofspring · 6 months
Text
Tumblr media
Tarot October BPC | Day 31
The World - Wrap-up 🌎
Read only 4 books but very happy with them, considering how much work I had this month. And the tarot cards go back in the box now ✨
18 notes · View notes
tolive1000lives · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media
My February wrap up!
16 notes · View notes
unstablebeing · 4 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Favorites books of this year:
A tale for the time being - Ruth Ozeki
Before the coffee gets cold - Toshikazu Kawaguchi
Cartas, 1964-1974 - Lygia Clark e Hélio Oiticica
Aquella Orilla Nuestra - Elvira Sastre
Cold Enough for Snow - Jessica Au
The bandit Queens - Parini Shroff
Leaves of Grass: The first edition (1855) - Walt Whitman
A vulva é uma ferida aberta - Gloria Anzaldúa
Teaching to transgress : Education as the Practice of Freedom - bell hooks
Les méduses n'ont pas d'oreilles - Adèle Rosenfeld
Minor Detail - Adania Shibli
Estrategias del Deseo - Cristina Peri Rossi
5 notes · View notes
fishandshesmygills · 1 year
Text
tearing up my basement bc i cant find my fucking jellyfish
14 notes · View notes
libertyreads · 1 year
Text
March Wrap Up--
Tumblr media
What a weird month March was. I had some highs and lows with my reading, but I was most surprised about the amount I managed to read. I was on vacation for a third of the month yet still managed to read 3,398 pages across 11 books. Arguments could be made that my goal to read less this year has been a spectacular failure since I’m already two-thirds of the way to my yearly goal. I will just make the argument that the only reason I’m reading as much as I am is that I’ve taken the pressure off the numbers by reducing my goal for the year.
Comics/Graphic Novels-- 1. Thinking of You by Beth Evans--4 stars.
2. Teen Titans: Robin--Kami Garcia, Gabriel Picolo--4.25 stars.
3. Deadly Class Vol. 1: Reagan Youth by Rick Remender--2 stars.
Novellas/Short Stories-- 1. A Prayer for the Crown-Shy by Becky Chambers--4 stars.
Novels-- 1. Inkheart by Cornelia Funke--3.25 stars.
2. Not a Happy Family by Shari Lapena--3 stars.
3. Silver in the Bone by Alexandra Bracken--3.5 stars.
4. Blood Debts by Terry J. Benton-Walker--3 stars.
5. Mask of Shadows by Linsey Miller--2.75 stars.
6. The Last to Vanish by Megan Miranda--4 stars.
7. The Library of the Dead by T.L. Huchu-- 2.75 stars. Average rating: 3.32 stars.
6 notes · View notes
Text
My February book! Aristotle and Dante Discover the Secrets of the Universe by Benjamin Alire Sáenz
I've started it, but idk there's something I'm not loving about it, at least right now. It's a recommendation from my younger sibling, and we do have different tastes so maybe it's just not my style, but I'm going to give it a shot and maybe I'll like it more by the end.
Tumblr media Tumblr media
It maybe doesn't help that I'm also currently reading The Priory of the Orange Tree and I'm loving it, I was worried about it's size but it's been a really quick read for me because I've had a lot of trouble putting it down! I'm maybe 2/3 or 3/4 of the way through, and I was expecting it to take like two months but I'm just loving it--I am starting to worry I'll be disappointed it's over when I finish it though!
4 notes · View notes
Text
2022 has been an amazing year in books for me. It’s been so hard to narrow down favourites because I’ve honestly loved every book in different ways.
Here are some of my favourite reads from each month.
Tumblr media
I couldn’t even pick my favourite of the year, there’s just too many.
Looking forward to 2023 - lots of exciting new releases due as well as my ever growing to be read list! It’s going to be another amazing year I have no doubt!
Happy New Year Everyone!! And a massive shout out to all the amazing authors who continue to provide such amazing worlds for me to dive into!!
7 notes · View notes
shiningstages · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media
If I ever buy a piece of clothing again, please apprehend me ( aka I finished my laundry / closet cleanout...for now ).
3 notes · View notes
boooklover · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media
Covenant of steel #1: The Pariah, Anthony Ryan
Crescent City #1: House of Earth and Blood, Sarah J.Maas
Calame #2: Les deux-royaumes, Paul Beorn
In Defense of Witches: The Legacy of the Witch Hunts and Why Women Are Still on Trial, Mona Chollet
Verity, Collen Hoover
Throne of Glass #5: Empire of Storms, Sarah J.Maas
Legion: The Many Lives of Stephen Leeds, Brandon Sanderson
The Wheel of Time #14: A Memory of Light, Robert Jordan and Brandon Sanderson
3 notes · View notes
princessofmanyfaces · 9 months
Text
July Wrap-Up
Tumblr media
🗓️ I've read 12 books in June 2023, DNF'd 2
⭐ My reading experience was an average of 3.5 - 4 stars, a good month.
📝Most prominent author was Lauren Asher and Jennifer Lynn Barnes
📚 Books read in 2023: 72/52 - 138%
18 notes · View notes