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Signs Preceding the End of the World
Signs Preceding the End of the World | Yuri Herrera
Signs Preceding the End of the World is one of the most arresting novels to be published in Spanish in the last ten years. Yuri Herrera does not simply write about the border between Mexico and the United States and those who cross it. He explores the crossings and translations people make in their minds and language as they move from one country to another, especially when theres no going back. Traversing this lonely territory is Makina, a young woman who knows only too well how to survive in a violent, macho world. Leaving behind her life in Mexico to search for her brother, she is smuggled into the USA carrying a pair of secret messages - one from her mother and one from the Mexican underworld. In this grippingly original novel Yuri Herrera explores the actual and psychological crossings and translations people make--with their feet, in their minds, and in their language as they move from one country to another, especially when there's no going back. Born in Actopan, Mexico, in 1970,Yuri Herrera studied in Mexico and El Paso and took his PhD at Berkeley.Signs Preceding the End of the World (Seales que precedern al fin del mundo) was shortlisted for the Rmulo Gallegos Prize and is being published in several languages. After publishingSigns Preceding the End of the World, And Other Stories will publish his two other novels in English, starting withThe Transmigration of Bodies (La transmigracin de los cuerpos) in 2016. He is currently teaching at the University of Tulane, in New Orleans. Lisa Dillman is based in Atlanta, Georgia, where she translates Spanish, Catalan and Latin American writers and teaches at Emory University. Her recent translations includeThe Frost on His Shoulders by Lorenzo Mediano,Op Oloop by Juan Filloy (longlisted for the Best Translated Book Award),Me, Who Dove into the Heart of the World by Sabina Berman andRain Over Madrid by Andrs Barba. She is obsessed with words, running, cooking and her dog, Maya.
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Jolynne
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Pickpick

Reflective.

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JGadz11
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Mexican author, Mexican restaurant, Bangkok: Why not?

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JGadz11
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✨What a beautiful way of looking at language diversity✨

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Pinta
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Pickpick

Journey across the Mexico-US border told as an epic quest. Makina “verses” out of one charged situation to the next in search of her brother. Rio Grande=River Styx. Monsters, sinkholes, wise women, guides through the underworld. Vibrant language that mixes colloquialisms & slang with a lyrical tone. Striking imagery. Immigration, language, identity, nativism, mythology, family. Lisa Dillman is an incredible translator. Tr. 2015

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stretchkev
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stretchkev
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I'd like to get to these next year if my sporadic brain can keep some semblance of a plan together! Figure these 14 can be a good backbone to be filled out later.

#TBR21

Ruthiella That‘s a good mix of titles! 3y
Exbrarian Kindred is my bookclubs February read, and I'm 10 weeks deep on my library's wait list for Earthlings so those two are definitely happening for me in 2021. 3y
stretchkev @Exbrarian I'm on the waitlist for both as well, but I'm excited to get to both of these in the coming months when they become available!
3y
26 likes3 comments
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ManyWordsLater
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Fellow Litsens,
I‘m loving my library in a whole new way right now. But it has totally changed the way I determine by TBR.
I can‘t read fast enough and if someone has a book on hold and I can‘t renew it. It‘s stressing me out!!

How have you approached this problem?

#stress #tbr #librarylove #2020challenge #grabandgo

cathysaid I have this problem with audiobooks so I take a screenshot when I know I‘m getting close to expiration. Then I can get back on the list and find my place in the book. Also, does your library offer the option of “postponing” (moving your hold out a few weeks)? Mine just implemented that feature in the last six months. 4y
JamieArc Yes, which is why I plan my reading out and take use of the freeze function, where the hold will pass over me if I‘m not ready to read it yet. I do the same with audiobooks, otherwise I would be getting 3-4 in at the same time and whatever I didn‘t finish would have to go back on hold for months! 4y
ChasingOm I usually deal with this by paying the fines, even though I get frustrated when someone keeps it over and I‘m waiting for it! 🙃 4y
SW-T @ChasingOm 😂😂😂 4y
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ChasingOm
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Pickpick

A short book about a sister crossing the Mexico/US border to find her brother and deliver a message, this covered a lot of ground (physically and metaphorically) in less than 150 pages. It was a perfect finish for the non-spooky first half of #LatinxHeritageMonth reading...now onto the Brujxes! 😄🔮

#IntegrateYourShelf

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Nebklvr
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Pickpick

This was short and interesting but if I had to read one more time how someone “versed”, I would scream. A different take on the immigration story with a strong female protagonist who is nobody‘s fool.

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mklong
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Pickpick

For all of its current relevance regarding immigration and xenophobia, at its heart, it‘s a story as old as storytelling itself. A hero sets out on an epic journey, overcomes many obstacles, relies on friends old and new, and then...well, I won‘t tell you how it ends. The epic feeling of this book is all the more impressive because it is all packed into about a hundred pages.

Bookish.SAM Lovely review 😊 4y
mklong @Bookish.SAM Thank you! 4y
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charl08
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We are to blame for this destruction...

Powerful border novel.

Suet624 Wow. That‘s powerful. 4y
charl08 @Suet624 This was recommended as an alternative to American Dirt. Short but packs a punch. 4y
Suet624 Thank you. I‘ll definitely look for it. 4y
readordierachel Powerful indeed 4y
charl08 @readordierachel Not sure how I missed this when published- will look for his work again. 4y
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Lindy
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They were getting married. Makina was so dazzled by the beauty of the ceremony that she didn‘t at first notice that the couples were either men or women but not men and women, and on realizing it she felt moved by how many tears were being shed, like flowers from their eyes, over how hard it had been to get there, and she wished that the people she‘d known in the same situation could have been that happy. #lgbtq

(Internet photo)

Cathythoughts Beautiful quote 4y
Lindy @Cathythoughts 😊🏳️‍🌈 4y
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Lindy
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Pickpick

A brilliant allegory encompassing contemporary latinx experience on both sides of the border between Mexico and the US—or life and the afterworld—told simply, yet with such inventiveness (“he angloed” rather than “said in English”) that I felt frequent thrills deep within my language-loving core. My heart was with the badass heroine and her archetypal quest, echoing with ancient mythology. A tour-de-force novella #translated by Lisa Dillman.

readordierachel Brilliant review of a brilliant book! 4y
Lindy @readordierachel Thanks! 😘 4y
Cathythoughts This review is brilliant ✨✨✨✨✨ 4y
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Lindy
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The stadium loomed before them. So, what do they use that for?
They play, said the old man. Every week the anglos play a game to celebrate who they are.

Cathythoughts I love this ,.. I love that playing music / sport / painting / is keeping the dream alive for people ... that it‘s playing .. 4y
Lindy @Cathythoughts Yes, you are defining what we think of as culture. 👍 4y
Cathythoughts That‘s it ! That‘s culture... ✨✨✨✨✨✨ 4y
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Lindy
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The city was an edgy arrangement of cement particles and yellow paint. Signs prohibiting things thronged the streets, leading citizens to see themselves as ever protected, safe, friendly, innocent, proud, and intermittently bewildered, blithe and buoyant; salt of the earth worth knowing.

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Lindy
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First there was nothing. Then she made out two mountains colliding in the back of beyond: like they‘d come from who knows where and were headed to anyone‘s guess but had come together at that intense point in the nothingness and insisted on crashing noisily against each other, though the oblivious might think they simply stood there in silence.

Cathythoughts ❤️ 4y
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rockpools
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Pickpick

Sneaking in another #NewYearWhoDis before the end of the month & I absolutely loved this! It was a read-in-one-sitting - I‘d be more than happy to start it again immediately. As suggested, I began with the translator‘s note, which helped.

Smart, savvy Makina is sent to the other side, to cross, to find her brother. Her quest takes her across the border, through a world that‘s almost dream-like, tilted on its axis a fraction.

🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟

KT1432 Yayyyy so glad you loved it! Perfect review! I had such a weird and busy second half of January. I will likely only finish the second one. But I want to continue reading your list throughout the year and tag you if that‘s okay.😊 4y
rockpools @lele1432 Of course! I‘d like to carry on as well - I‘m really excited to read the others on your list - this has been such a fun challenge! 4y
readordierachel Great review! 4y
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readordierachel
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Pickpick

This has the qualities of an epic journey. Makina crosses from Mexico into the U.S. to find her brother. She is guided by various figures, overcoming obstacles on her quest: violence, racism, disillusionment. The novel is dreamlike, allegorical, and haunting.

The translator's note at the end was fascinating and very helpful for understanding the way Herrera uses language. I recommend reading it first. 4⭐

Leftcoastzen I saw this at my local indie, think I will swing by and grab it. 4y
readordierachel @Leftcoastzen Cool! It's a very quick read. 4y
Cinfhen Looks good!! Thanks for sharing #Stacked 4y
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rockpools I‘ve just finished this. I loved it! I kind of want to read it straight away again, to see if I can work out what happened at the end though 🤔 4y
readordierachel @Cinfhen It's a good read 👍🏼 4y
readordierachel @RachelO I know what you mean! It def seems like a book that would reveal more of itself on multiple readings. 4y
Lindy I just finished this and I loved it too. 👍 4y
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Carolyn11215
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Pickpick

What an amazing book! The dangers the undocumented undergo in order to get into the United States and the myriad ways they can be taken advantage of once they arrive are explored in this novella about a girl who makes the crossing from Mexico to locate her brother who has gone missing after coming to the US to reclaim some mythical family land. Spare prose, gut punches, haunting situations, amazing use of language...this book is a jewel.

Carolyn11215 #lmpbc Group I. @aeeklund, I‘ll get this book into the mail to you this week. @rachelm @lele1432 loved reading your comments! 4y
KT1432 So glad you enjoyed it!! 4y
rachelm I adored this one!! 4y
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Carolyn11215
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Only got about 1/2 of the reading done I‘d planned for this past week so going to be a little more realistic about what I can accomplish this week.

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Carolyn11215
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@rachelm your package arrived today!! Thanks for the yummy chocolate!!

rachelm You‘re welcome! Enjoy the book (and the chocolate!!) 4y
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rachelm
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Pickpick

Finished and heading your way @Carolyn11215 ! I liked this a lot but starting with the translator‘s note definitely helped.

Carolyn11215 Thanks for the heads up! Looking forward to this one... 4y
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rachelm
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Yay! Got my book for #lmpbc #groupl today. Thanks @lele1432 ! I look forward to digging in.

KT1432 Yay!! I hope you like it! I wanted to hurry up and get it out to you, but I'm going to be sending an extra package your way lol. I wanted to add a couple of things. 😊 4y
rachelm @lele1432 you‘re too sweet!! 4y
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KT1432
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Pickpick

Missed the post office yesterday before leaving town, so this will be sent to @rachelm first thing in the morning!

Wholly different from what I was expecting, this short novel proved to be an important work in its own right. Its strength was the use of surrealism to convey the truths & nuances of present-day issues on the topic of immigration; bridging cultures & languages. The translator's note was very informative! 4⭐️s #LMPBC #Round7 #GroupI

Carolyn11215 Sounds amazing! Can‘t wait to read it! 4y
KT1432 @Carolyn11215 I hope you enjoy it! It took some getting used to, and as the translator notes at the end, it's non-standard and colloquial. And just a heads up, there are no quotations used. But there came a point when everything "clicked" and I was like, okay, I get what the author's doing with this and the themes he's conveying. Can't wait to hear your thoughts! 4y
rachelm Exciting! I‘ll keep my eyes open for it! 4y
KT1432 #PopSugarReadingChallenge #PopSugar2019 #Pop19 Zodiac Sign or Astrology Term in Title 4y
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Bertha_Mason

"To hell with it all, she thought, to hell with this guy and that one, to hell with all this shit, I‘m going to hang myself from a lamppost and let the wind whip me around like an old rag; I‘m going to start crying and then I‘m going to go to hell too."
Mood.

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Bertha_Mason

"Signs prohibiting things thronged the streets, leading citizens to see themselves as ever protected, safe, friendly, innocent, proud, and intermittently bewildered, blithe, and buoyant; salt of the only earth worth knowing."

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Bertha_Mason

"I‘m dead, Makina said to herself when everything lurched: a man with a cane was crossing the street, a dull groan suddenly surged through the asphalt, the man stood still as if waiting for someone to repeat the question and then the earth opened up beneath his feet: it swallowed the man, and with him a car and a dog, all the oxygen around and even the screams of passers-by."
Today in notable first sentences.

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KT1432
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Okay#LMPBC #Round7 #GroupI today was crazy so I'm just now able to post my choices. I'll tag them in the comments as well. 4 contemporary and 2 classics. I'm kind of leaning towards the tagged book, Signs Preceding the End of the World, but let me know what you all prefer!

KT1432 Mexican literature. A young woman must traverse the Mexican-US border to find her brother. (edited) 5y
KT1432 German literature. I was first introduced to Stefan Zweig through another #NYRB title I read for the #NYRBBookClub, Chess Story. I absolutely loved it. My only 5 star read so far this year. So I've been wanting to try another one of his works. 5y
KT1432 Hebrew literature. This one is a mystery concerning a hit-and-run. 5y
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KT1432 Another Spanish translation. We decided not to do The Shape of Ruins due to length, but I actually have a copy of this shorter title by the same author. It's intriguing as it deals with a political cartoonist who could ruin politicians' careers with his art. 5y
KT1432 Classic Indian literature. Described as three stories of forbidden love. Tagore received the Nobel Prize in Literature, the first Asian Nobel Laureate according to Amazon. He was also a poet. 5y
KT1432 I've been interested in this title for a while now, but it borders on Argentinian folklore/gothic horror, so probably not for the faint of heart. 5y
Carolyn11215 I‘d love to read Signs Preceding...but would be happy with any of these! 5y
KT1432 @Carolyn11215 okay great! If @rachelm and @aeeklund don't object, I'll go with that one! (edited) 5y
BarbaraBB I bought The Post Office Girl Too because of the #NYRBBookClub! 5y
KT1432 @BarbaraBB I also want Beware of Pity lol. 😊 He was an excellent author. (edited) 5y
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Lola
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This week‘s NYT By the Book interview is with the legendary Patti Smith. I LOVE Yuri Herrera and love that she talks about Kingdom Cons, which she read and loved, and the blurbed book, that she is taking on tour with her. I am going to see her next week-ah, how I wish we could discuss these books together! https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.nytimes.com/2019/09/05/books/review/patti-smith...

Lola A quote from the piece: “...I only finish books I love. I don‘t date. I can pretty much tell right away if I‘m going to commit.” ❤️ 5y
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sarahjane1077
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AshleyC816
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Pickpick

Loved this one! Very short, it only took me about 1.5 hours to read. The story of a woman who travels up to the US to find her brother. Beautifully written!

wanderinglynn It looks like someone wants attention! 😂 ❤️🐶 5y
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nudibranch
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Mehso-so

I dont think I know enough about Yuri Herrera's Mexico to understand what he was doing here. Embarrassing, but I suppose it just means I need to get educated on immigration and all the socio psychological elements that go along with it. Any recommendations to help me get started? #readdiversebooks

ohyeahthatgirl The best recent book I've read on immigration is 5y
nudibranch Thanks! Adding it to my list. 👍 5y
nudibranch Also, apologies; this is my "new to you" author choice as well for #booked2019, @Cinfhen @BarbaraTheBibliophage @4thhouseontheleft ...how do you tag someone outside of the text box on litsy?? 5y
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myellenbee
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#24B429 update. I got 13.5 hours of reading in . I finished If On a Winter's Night a Traveler by Italo Calvino, Signs Preceding the End of the World by Yri Herrera, got started on Luck in the Shadows by Lynn Flewelling and continued listening to Crown of Swords book7 of The Wheel of Time by Robert Jordan. Best of all I surpassed my Goodreads goal by 2 books!

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myellenbee
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#24B42019 This is likely more than I will finish but it's worth a try📚

Andrew65 Good luck with it. 😊👍 5y
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BakingAndBooks
Pickpick

This was a lyrical, short novella that was beautifully written and translated. It is especially relevant given the challenges that immigrants face when they arrive in the US. The translator's note in the back discusses the obstacles she faced trying to translated a dialect of Spanish that is spoken on the US/Mexican border. I found that part incredibly interesting.

Trashcanman Bueno, mi nombre es George. Donde está la biblioteca? 6y
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wanderlustforwords
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Pickpick

3.25 ⭐️
Inside the story of a girl taking a note to her brother, Herrera exposes the problems facing Mexican immigrants to, and emigrants in the US; Underlying the sisters journey are the topics of the underworld of smuggling humans, cultural clashes, profiling, and linguistic issues. It‘s not a blow your socks off book but I enjoyed the surface story, and I appreciate that the subject is current and important in the U.S..

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Adventures-of-a-French-Reader
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Pickpick

It's a short book that makes you cross a border. What becomes of you once you crossed that border? I think it's a book that is open to interpretation.
Here is mine: when you immigrate in a new country, your old self dies a little. The world in which you used to evolve goes on without you, and you do not evolve with it.
If you've read this book, what is your interpretation???

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Anna40
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Pickpick

I loved the story and the main character but I had such a hard time understanding "the language". Most parts feel like reading poetry and I just didn't understand the images, the metaphors and symbols. I did not understand the ending. I'm very much looking forward to discussing this book.

Anna40 This quote for example. What does it mean? 6y
Izai.Amorim No idea 🤷‍♂️ 6y
Anna40 @Izai.Amorim 😊that is a relief! Was a bit frustrated not getting parts of this book... How are you? Still swamped with work? 6y
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Izai.Amorim @Anna40 Yes, but taking time off and going to Berlin tomorrow until Saturday to check a few things out. Really considering moving in the summer of 2019 after son finishes school. Might get some reading done on the road. What about yourself? 6y
Anna40 @Izai.Amorim sounds good! Berlin is an awesome city! Doing well. Looking forward to the Xmas break. Haven't had time off since April - except the Thanksgiving weekend but I got sick 😣 ... have a safe trip! 6y
Izai.Amorim @Anna40 Thanks! 6y
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Anna40
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@Faibka and @Lola all the books I ordered arrived today! I started with Yuri Herrera and love the first pages!

Faibka That‘s great! 🙌 6y
Lola Can‘t wait to hear what you think! 6y
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BooksForYears
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#uncannyoctober day 4 - Moon

I love how the publisher used the moon design on the cover to highlight the book‘s title! 🌙

SuperPunkNinja That looks awesome! 7y
batsy It's a great cover. 7y
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nanoauthor
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Mehso-so

Settling in at my library carrel with some of my thesis reading for this semester. (Ancillary Justice and After the Quake are for this week) #college #writing #libraries

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Lacythebookworm
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#spinepoetry #24in48

Signs preceding the end of the world
Boundless
Anything is possible
Too much and not the mood
Becoming wise

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haileybean
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Pickpick

Read on my kindle: Yuri Herrera novels are quickly becoming favorites. I have Kingdom Cons, but I almost don't want to read it because then I will be out of Yuri Herrera novels.

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Dorianna
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My latest #bookmail

I keep buying Jeff Vandermeer's books but I haven't read one yet. I should probably fix that soon.

ReadingEnvy I have a vandermeer shelf at my house, between Jeff and Ann, but I did finally read Area X 7y
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bookwrm526
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Catching up on my photo challenges! I took this photo in Mexico when I was there for an archaeological dig several years ago. The only books I have read recently by #mexicanauthors are this one and Like Water for Chocolate, but I have several more on my TBR! It was such a beautiful place and I want to go back. #maybookflowers

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readtheworld
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“Their gestures and tastes reveal both ancient memory and the wonderment of new people. And then they speak. They speak an intermediary tongue that Makina instantly warms to because it‘s like her: malleable, erasable, permeable; a hinge pivoting between two like but distant souls, and then two more, and then two more, never exactly the same ones; something that serves as a link.”

ohyeahthatgirl Just finished this one! I feel I would get a lot out of a reread. 7y
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