Activity
Mon
Wed
Fri
Sun
Nov
Dec
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
What is this?
Less
More

Memberships

The Book Circle

29 members • Free

3 contributions to The Book Circle
Let’s Pick Our May Mystery/Thriller!
Hey everyone! It’s time to pick our book for May’s Monthly Read! Since we’ve decided on mystery/thriller as the genre, I’d love to hear your recommendations. šŸ“– How it works: - Comment your book recommendation below (and a quick note on why you’re suggesting it—it’s optional but always fun!). - Interact with the recommendations you like most (leave a like and/or reply). If one book gets the most interactions, that’ll be our winner! šŸŽ‰ But if we end up with a few favorites, we’ll do one last poll to choose between the top picks. Let’s find the perfect mystery/thriller to kick off our May Monthly Read! Can’t wait to see your recommendations!
2 likes • Apr 24
Holly Jackson’s Good Girl’s Guide to Murder series has been popular. There are three books in the series.
I need ya'lls opinion!!
So I want to write a book, and I'm working on it right now. I want to know what ya'll think about the first chapter (it's not done, that's why it might seem short). It might be cringe, but if anything needs to be tweaked, please let me know! Here: One Griffith ā€œMama! Papa! Please don’t leave me!ā€ I burst into tears. I shake my head, not believing anything. My parents lie on the ground, blood splattered all over their clothing with a piercing hole through where their hearts were. I grasp their hands while my tears drop onto them. Their eyes are cold and white, their heads lolled to the side. ā€œPleaseā€¦ā€ I collapsed onto them, still crying. I suddenly jolted out of my sleep, sweat drenching my plain, dirt smeared shirt and my rough, cardboard bed. Great. My thin blanket is now soaked and stinky—not like it was ever clean. My eyelids droop, but I force them open. A headache crashes into my temples like a thunderstorm as I crawl out of bed. Sweat runs down my bare back as I strip my wet shirt off. I use a ragged towel to wipe the warm droplets off my skin. I then grab my only other pair of wrinkly clothes that are bunched up in a trash bag, and change into them. I grab a cracked mirror I found in the dump and check myself. My deep, aqua blue eyes pierce into the mirror as my curly, walnut brown hair falls down onto my forehead, just above my eyebrows. I left my wet clothes hanging, so they could dry. I then put on my muddy, worn out shoes and get out of my crappy tent. I take my usual seat outside my tent and put a red plastic cup in front of me, along with a sign that says, ā€œPlease donate. I lost my parents and I need money to support myself. Thank you!ā€ I don’t really know why there’s a ā€˜thank you’ part because I can’t say thank you to crap. The only donation I’ve got this week was a rusty copper ruhe. How am I supposed to live off a copper ruhe? I lost my parents when I was only six years old. I’m now seventeen, surviving by myself on the streets. I don’t clearly remember what happened, except for when vivid dreams reveal more and more. All I know is that their hearts were pierced and I cried so much that I collapsed on top of them. Whoever murdered my parents must die for making me suffer. Losing parents is one of the worst things that could happen to you when you’re a child.
0 likes • Apr 16
Daniel. It took me a bit to figure out the genre here. This is fantasy, right? That would have been clear to anyone who picked up the actual book, but not right away to someone just reading this chapter. I think the idea of writing about street children is intriguing. In some poor countries street children have a thriving economy. Could Griffith have some other, possibly even illegal means of supporting himself beside begging? A couple of questions: why does the man throw the gold coin literally down the drain? Is he rich and mean? Do people in this world typically behave this way? Another question: can the boyfriend explode things by just looking at them? If so, why does he not just explode Griffith? I like the idea of the main character; a homeless kid.
Dystopian novels
Hi! Just thought there wasn't a space for dystopian books, and just wanted to drop my recomendations while I'm at it. I really liked "The selection" I know it's for younger audience, but all I know is I read through it so so fast. Also, a really underhyped book and that everyone I recommend to loves it: The giver by Lois Lowry. Just one more 🤭: I really really enjoyed then "The darkests minds" series, but probably because I really enjoyed the movie when I was younger.
1 like • Apr 11
Another classic is A Canticle for Leibowitz. A novel about the aftermath of a nuclear apocalypse.
1-3 of 3
Mark Montgomery
1
2points to level up
@mark-montgomery-9844
I am a retired economics professor. My wife too. We writing a series of YA mysteries in honor of out grandsons.

Active 100d ago
Joined Apr 8, 2025
Powered by