Skip to content
The Littish Corner

  • Home
  • Books
  • About Me
  • 5 Star Reads
  • Home
  • Books
  • About Me
  • 5 Star Reads
  • 4 stars

    Book Review: “Sense and Sensibility” by Jane Austen

    January 20, 2025 - By chocpudding

    Sense and Sensibility is the fourth novel I’ve read from Jane Austen, and it certainly did not disappoint. Time and time again, Jane Austen has made clear her style of subtle wit and eloquence of expression that keeps the story sharp and tightly knit. I find myself gravitating toward her…

    Continue Reading
  • 5 stars

    Book Review: “The Hate U Give” by Angie Thomas

    November 16, 2024 - By chocpudding

    What’s the point of having a voice if you’re gonna be silent in those moments you shouldn’t be? When 16-year-old Starr Carter is the only witness to her best friend’s death at the hands of a police officer, it’s up to her to stay silent or decide against it. The…

    Continue Reading
  • 5 stars

    “The Vegetarian” by Han Kang Book Review

    September 9, 2024 - By chocpudding

    Imagine that one day you wake up a changed person. The Vegetarian by Han Kang attempts to answer the question of why. Enter Yeong-hye. When she suddenly wakes up a vegan, her only explanation being that she “had a dream,” her unremarkable life is delineated as something unthinkable. Her meat-loving…

    Continue Reading
  • 2 stars

    “No Longer Human” by Osamu Dazai Book Review

    September 5, 2024 - By chocpudding

    “Mine has been a life of much shame. I can’t even guess myself what it must be to live the life of a human being.“ While I’m not one to be against reviewing autobiographical works, there is always an underlying feeling of uneasiness. Imagine this feeling when No Longer Human…

    Continue Reading
  • 4 stars

    The Grand Finale: “The Burning God” By R.F. Kuang Book Review

    August 9, 2024 - By chocpudding

    “Oh, but history moved in such vicious circles.” In the grand finale of the Poppy War trilogy, R.F. Kuang writes with increased pace and skill. Rin’s journey is more hard-hitting than ever. The circumstances begin to fall into place with her as a truly monstrous yet compelling anti-hero. Rin, now…

    Continue Reading
  • 5 stars

    Vladimir by Julia May Jonas Book Review – An Exploration of Sexual Power, Obsession, and Self-Indulgence

    August 5, 2024 - By chocpudding

    Vanity has always been my poorest quality. I hate it in myself, and yet am as plagued with it as I am with needing to sleep or eat or breathe. The most noticeable thing when going into Vladimir by Julia May Jonas is its cover. The titular and attractive Vladimir, a…

    Continue Reading
  • 4 stars

    “Tender is the Flesh” by Agustina Bazterrica Book Review

    August 4, 2024 - By chocpudding

    The human being is the cause of all evil in this world. We are our own virus. With the emergence of a deadly, incurable virus within animals, humanity has turned to cannibalism to satiate its hunger for meat. Now, the field of slaughtering and domesticating humans is a large one,…

    Continue Reading
  • 4 stars

    “Almond” by Sohn Won-Pyung Book Review

    August 4, 2024 - By chocpudding

    I won’t tell you whether it has a happy ending or a tragic ending…neither you nor I nor anyone can ever really know whether a story is happy or tragic. There is a melancholy that permeates through this entire book. It toes the line between alienation and friendship, hope and…

    Continue Reading
  • 5 stars

    “The Great Gatsby” by F. Scott Fitzgerald Book Review

    August 4, 2024 - By chocpudding

    I was within and without, simultaneously enchanted and repelled by the inexhaustible variety of life. The Great Gatsby is the quintessential American novel of glamor, irony, and social class. A profound exploration of the American Dream, the novel presents the timeless themes of wealth, class, and love in the most…

    Continue Reading
  • 3 stars

    “The Handmaid’s Tale” by Margaret Atwood Book Review

    August 4, 2024 - By chocpudding

    The Handmaid’s Tale by Margaret Atwood is often seen as the go-to book for feminist literature. Published in 1985, it makes numerous “must read” lists; upon reading it, I can see why.  Offred is a handmaid—that is, her only function is to breed–in the republic of Gilead, an extremely oppressive,…

    Continue Reading
 Older Posts

Welcome!

Welcome to The Littish Corner! This is my blog for book reviews and all things literature. I have a passion for books and am always striving to find something to read.

Categories

  • 1 star
  • 2 stars
  • 3 stars
  • 4 stars
  • 5 stars

Tags

2 stars 19th century 2010 adult african american asia asian asian literature Booker Prize Nominee book review classic Classics coming of age contemporary dark dystopia dystopian fantasy feminism fiction high fantasy historical historical fiction horror jane austen Japanese Kazuo Ishiguro korean literary literary fiction literature litfic mental health mystery Never Let Me Go nonfiction novel novels philosophy r.f. kuang Romance science fiction stephen chbosky thriller young adult
Graceful Theme by Optima Themes