Book of the Week
The Sweet Sovereign and the Sugar Wall
Once upon a time in a realm where the skies shimmered with a candy-colored hue and the rivers flowed with the purest of honey, there existed a secret kingdom veiled by the legendary Sugar Wall. This wall, a colossal structure made entirely of crystalline sugar, sparkled under the sun, casting rainbows across the land that lay beyond.
By ANNA CORAL2 years ago in BookClub
Whispers in the Red Dust
Once upon a time Dr. Anya Petrova squinted at the Martian sunrise, the thin atmosphere turning the horizon a pale, bruised purple. Ten years. Ten years since she'd left the vibrant blue of Earth for the rusty red of Mars. Back then, she'd been filled with a fierce pioneer spirit, the first botanist on a fledgling colony. Now, a creeping loneliness gnawed at her.
By ANNA CORAL2 years ago in BookClub
The Idea of You
In a world where love and desire intertwine amidst the complexities of fame and self-discovery, Robinne Lee's "The Idea of You: A Novel" emerges as a compelling narrative that captivates the reader from the very first page. Available in its Kindle edition, this thought-provoking work delves deep into the lives of its characters, inviting readers on a journey filled with passion, introspection, and the quest for authenticity.
By Theo Jonathan2 years ago in BookClub
Why You Definitely Can't Survive a Nuclear Winter
The world looked totally different after the atomic war - a place, where people just wiped out and where nature reclaimed its rights over the remnants of once proud civilization: ruins were the only trace of the former order of things. A few moments later, Mason became a witness of the catastrophic sight of a radioactive canyon, where the only thing that was left was a ruined world unable to rise from ashes of an atomic bomb.
By Amine Oubih2 years ago in BookClub
Anna Karenina by Leo Tolstoy
"Anna Karenina" by Leo Tolstoy is quite possibly of the most eminent work in world writing. Distributed in sequential portions from 1873 to 1877, a rambling novel dives into subjects of adoration, society, profound quality, and the human condition. The story follows the existence of Anna Karenina, a wedded blue-blood and socialite, as she sets out on an energetic undertaking with the dapper Count Vronsky. Their illegal sentiment unfurls against the background of Russian high society, uncovering the deception, intricacies, and results of their activities. In the mean time, another storyline follows the ethical battles of Konstantin Levin, a landowner who wrestles with his place in the public eye and his quest for significance throughout everyday life. Tolstoy's stunning narrating and rich person improvement have established "Anna Karenina" as an exemplary of writing, respected for its significant experiences into human instinct and society.
By Sujon Hossain2 years ago in BookClub





