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Alphabet of Heart's Desire
Alphabet of Heart's Desire | Brian Keaney
7 posts | 5 read | 2 to read
A visitor calls with a gift and a message from the past in this literary, historical novel. In 1802 Thomas de Quincey, a young man from a comfortable middle-class background who would go on to become one of the most celebrated writers of his day, collapsed on Oxford Street and was discovered by a teenage prostitute who brought him back to her room and nursed him to health. It was the beginning of a relationship that would introduce Thomas to a world just below the surface of London's polite society, where pleasure was a tradeable commodity and opium could seem the only relief from poverty. Yet it is also a world where love might blossom, and goodness survive. The lives of a street girl, an aspiring writer, and a freed slave cross and re-cross the slums of London in this novel about the birth of passion, the burden of addiction, and the consolations of literature.
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review
KimM
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Pickpick

#NetGalley

This is a multi-layered story set in 1802 London with 3 main protagonists - Tuah, Anne and Thomas. The novel is conveyed in POV chapters which I like. The story involves prostitution, slavery and opium - all the components of the seedy London underbelly of that time. But it also involves deeply realized characters that you come to empathize with even at their worst. Despite a few loose ends, I really enjoyed this one. 4⭐️s

review
Redwritinghood
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Pickpick

I got this on #netgalley in exchange for my review. This presents a fictionalization of the life of Thomas De Quincey, who wrote the first book about drug addiction. Based on his travels to London and time spent with a young prostitute, the book imagines the time before they meet, their meeting and drug use, and their eventual separation. There is a third voice of a young man captured by Dutch slavers, but I found that more of a distraction. 3.5⭐️

Redwritinghood I should also note here some trigger warnings for rape and some extreme violence. 6y
73 likes1 stack add1 comment
review
readingjedi
Mehso-so

Is similar in many way to The Wicked Cometh (time period, location, Anne's circumstances) & thus suffers in comparison - that one scraped a Pick. This doesn't. Not that I didn't enjoy it, I'm just harder to please these days. Pace & plot development are slow, the coming together of the 3 story strands came far too late in the day for my liking - for a long time it was like reading 3 separate books! ...more in comments... 👇👇👇

readingjedi Tuah's story held potential & I probably enjoyed that one most at first, but I soon began to feel it was rather superfluous. The section with Anne and Thomas was too brief & I found the ending contrived. Some scenes I found gratuitously graphic (TW). It was OK, but no more. 6y
70 likes1 comment
blurb
readingjedi
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Don't get me wrong, I love my Kindle. It has revolutionised my reading habits. It has saved my small house from collapsing under the weight of pulped trees and ink. I can buy books from my bed and start reading them STRAIGHT AWAY!!!

But .... I have always been a sucker for a pretty cover. This one is particularly effective in real life. It loses something in the translation to black & white.

Ah well, you can't have everything! 😉

Heatherfeather I used to read a crapton of Kindle books when I was super into romance, but now I'm all about print. Can't remember my last digital book. My Kindle has had the battery-dead image on screen for over a year. 6y
readingjedi @Heatherfeather In an ideal world I'd like a physical copy & the kindle version for convenience. But my house was full. Then I had a baby and now my house is Full with a big F!!! 6y
Songbird72 I love my Kindle for traveling and for easy access to books (my closest bookstore is 2 hours away). But I still love print books as well. 6y
TiredEyes I found Caraval like this..the book cover was stunning and the hard back copy had different ones with secret drawings.. gets lost with the kindle.. Must admit I'm the same and am like a magpie..drawn to pretty covers 😁 6y
89 likes4 comments
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readingjedi
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1. Black and pink
2. Summer
3. Fantasy
4. Constantly tidying up after my 3 year old 🤔🤔😭
5. Crisps - any type, I'm easy, but the more unhealthy the better!
6. Lager! Currently partial to a nice IPA.
7. Mavis von Drakenberg, my faithful Kindle.

Amanda.T We share the same hobby. 😫😭 6y
readingjedi @Amanda.T It's just SO rewarding, isn't it?! 😉 6y
Amanda.T @readingjedi 😂 Every day is a joy! 🙄😆 6y
93 likes3 comments
review
ailynk
Pickpick

The heroine was the girl who saved Thomas de Quincey from starvation. Even though that it was a fictional story of a real person, the author had made her seem like a person worth knowing. My only gripe is that the story is written with a modern voice despite the era.

RaimeyGallant Welcome to Litsy! #LitsyWelcomeWagon P.S. I just posted a screenshot of this month's #LitsyGames in case you want to play along. It's a great way to get to know the community. 7y
RaimeyGallant One more P.S. Here's a compilation of Litsy tips that some of us put together:
http://litsy.com/p/aDJja2lMZFFY
6y
2 likes2 comments
blurb
Jerdencon
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What to do when the entire network is super super slow and you can't get any work done??! Catch up on this one from net galley!