moonytoast's reviews
267 reviews

Anxious People by Fredrik Backman

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emotional funny medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

5.0


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Room by Emma Donoghue

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dark emotional hopeful medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes

3.5


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The Puzzle Master by Danielle Trussoni

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adventurous mysterious fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Plot

3.25


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The Kamogawa Food Detectives by Hisashi Kashiwai

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hopeful lighthearted reflective

3.75

Moving and deliciously cozy, The Kamogawa Food Detectives shows that a meal is never just a meal: it can be both the window to a long-forgotten past and the key to a more fulfilling future. 

The book centers on the Kamogawa Diner, housed in a nondescript building along the backstreets of Kyoto. Run by Nagare Kamogawa and his daughter, Koishi, the diner provides delectable meals, along with a unique service for their customers… The two are culinary detectives, recreating special dishes from a person’s memory through painstakingly detailed investigations. 

Each chapter is its own vignette, detailing a meal that the father-daughter duo recreate for an inquiring customer of the Kamogawa Diner—from beef stew to tonkatsu to Napolitan spaghetti. Fair warning: do not read these on an empty stomach. The descriptions of the meals are mouth-watering and lush, often weaving a story of nostalgia into the ingredients and the way the dishes are prepared, pulling the reader even further into the story until their stomach rumbles with each turn of the page. Underneath the nostalgia and aromatic cuisine, the customers of the Kamogawa Diner find something remarkable: comfort, wisdom, or closure. 

Perfect for fans of cozy literary fiction and magnificent food writing, this book is—at its heart—a love letter to the relationship between food, memory, and the power of human connection.

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The Haunting of Moscow House by Olesya Salnikova Gilmore

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dark emotional mysterious tense medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated

4.0


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Sparrow Being Sparrow by Gail Donovan

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lighthearted fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Loveable characters? Yes

3.5

Every Last Fear by Alex Finlay

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mysterious tense fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Loveable characters? Yes

3.75


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White Is for Witching by Helen Oyeyemi

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challenging dark mysterious slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated

2.75


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Morningside: The 1979 Greensboro Massacre and the Struggle for an American City's Soul by Aran Robert Shetterly

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challenging informative reflective slow-paced

4.0

Thank you to Netgalley and Amistad for providing me with a digital ARC of this book. 

Morningside: The 1979 Greensboro Massacre and the Struggle for an American City’s Soul is a deeply salient account of the Greensboro Massacre, where a protest led by a local chapter of the Communist Workers’ Party (CWP) against the Klan culminated in an armed ambush by the KKK and Neonazis and ended with the deaths of five people on November 3, 1979. 

As a Greensboro native who rarely ever heard of the 1979 Massacre growing up, I found this book to be devastatingly eye-opening and extremely detailed in its account of the event. Shetterly paints a colorful picture of a critical and overlooked point of American history through the lens of the Greensboro Massacre, when tensions between ideologies were on the verge of boiling over—post-McCarthy communist organizing, the blossoming white power militia movement in the wake of the Vietnam War, and the storied fight of multiracial coalitions in the South to create a better future in America. He also delves into the deep, conflicted history of the city of Greensboro, a city precariously balancing on a knife’s edge. 

The violence committed on November 3, 1979 is unfortunately all too familiar to us now in an era where gun violence has become a startlingly regular occurrence. It has been almost a decade since a white supremacist killed nine people at the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston, South Carolina. It has been seven years since the 2017 Unite the Right Rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, where a neo-Nazi drove his car into a crowd of counter protestors and killed Heather Heyer. Within the last several years, we have seen an increasingly violent response from police and right-wing agitators towards peaceful protests all across the United States. This is a story about America’s past and present—and a plea for our future. 

While the individuals whose lives were abruptly cut short that morning never received justice, their deaths did not snuff out their work. Their families, friends and loved ones continued their fight for justice and push for equality, only deepened by that loss. Despite efforts to paper over the event with corporate amiability and deliberate obfuscation by the Greensboro Police Department, the FBI, and other prominent Greensboro institutions, their loss and their memories continue to persist. 

A searing look at an overlooked act of racial and political violence, Aran Shetterly’s Morningside unravels the tensions between the multiracial fight for justice and the nation’s dark underbelly of white supremacy which still continue today. It is a call to reckon with the devastation of America’s racial past in order to move forward with clear eyes towards a brighter future. 

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