
Annie Kapur
Bio
I am:
ππ½ββοΈ Annie
π Avid Reader
π Reviewer and Commentator
π Post-Grad Millennial (M.A)
***
I have:
π 280K+ reads on Vocal
π«ΆπΌ Love for reading & research
π¦/X @AnnieWithBooks
***
π‘ UK
Stories (2899)
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What Happened to Bobby Fuller?
Bobby Fuller was an American rock and roll singer, songwriter, and guitarist, best known for his 1966 hit I Fought the Law. Born on 22 October 1942 in Baytown, Texas, he grew up in El Paso, where he developed a passion for music influenced by Buddy Holly and other early rock pioneers. Fuller formed several bands during his teenage years, eventually leading The Bobby Fuller Four, which gained local success before moving to Los Angeles in 1964.
By Annie Kapur10 months ago in Geeks
Book Review: "The Penguin Book of Elegy" ed. by Andrew Motion and Stephen Regan
At the time of writing this, I have had to take sick leave from work. Why? Well, of course it's going to be because of my mental health (have you seen my poetry? That's not the poetry of a mentally healthy person). Anyways, I needed some consolation poetry to soothe the brain and Penguin have a great anthology for that. Entitled The Penguin Anthology of Elegy, this book goes through years of thoughtful poems of death, mourning, loss and love from Catullus all the way down to Byron and beyond. If you ever think that you too, would like to read some elegy, I would highly recommend this brilliant anthology. You can tell it has been carefully and meticulously compiled to include the very best the sub-genre has to offer.
By Annie Kapur10 months ago in Geeks
The Beautiful and the Damned by F. Scott Fitzgerald
The Beautiful and the Damned, published in 1922, was F. Scott Fitzgeraldβs second novel and is considered one of his finest explorations of the Jazz Ageβs indulgence and decadence. Following the success of his debut novel This Side of Paradise, Fitzgerald was under considerable pressure to deliver a compelling follow-up. His first book had established him as a notable new voice in American literature, and he hoped The Beautiful and the Damned would solidify his position.
By Annie Kapur10 months ago in Geeks
Book Review: "This is Why You Dream" by Rahul Jandial
I had absolutely no intention of reading this book seeing as I was already well read in the department of dream theory and thought it was a load of tripe. I don't think though I have ever been happier to be proven wrong. There's a lot of contention about what dreams 'mean' and I don't think I have ever thought something was more rubbish than that Freudian stuff everyone's always going on about. Jandial though, takes a different approach. Instead of prescribing meaning to your dreams, he instead tells you why you are actually dreaming at all. Instead of Freudian psychology, he looks at neuroscience. This book is a wonderful companion to Matthew Walker's phenomenal Why We Sleep.
By Annie Kapur10 months ago in Geeks
"Radical Tragedy" by Jonathan Dollimore
Background and Context: Radical Tragedy by Jonathan Dollimore is one of the best books I read whilst on my undergraduate. I first read it in my second year and used it in multiple essays, read it cover to cover and honestly, I recommend it to anyone interested in tragedy, Shakespeare and those who wrote plays at the same time as him. So you can now tell there is a good range of plays, even outside of Shakespeare himself.
By Annie Kapur10 months ago in Geeks
Book Review: "How We Break" by Vincent Deary
I spent a while thinking about whether I actually wanted to read this. I usually get Penguin Nonfiction texts as ebooks because they work out cheaper and yet, I still had to think it over. Well, this is one of the situations where I am glad that I did actually read it because it turned out to be just what I needed right now. My mental health is in the gutter, my lifestyle choices have not been wise and I'm even on medication - so here we are. Here we are, about the dive into the book How We Break by Vincent Deary. Thankfully, this doesn't feel like an 'instagram positive vibes' book. Instead, there's a lot of science here.
By Annie Kapur10 months ago in Geeks
Book Review: "Open When" by Dr Julie Smith
I think that this book was recommended to me by someone but I don't remember who. If we put it into context, there's a whole thing about people recommending people self-help books when they know you well enough to do so. I think I have been recommended Atomic Habits more times than I can count and yet, I have no intention of reading it. For me, there is a fine line between self-help that actually works and self-help that comes off as taken straight from a 'positive affirmations' Instagram post. Unfortunately, this book by Dr Julie Smith toes that line and toes it carefully - sometimes it does fall into the latter and so, you know it isn't going to get the full marks from me.
By Annie Kapur10 months ago in Geeks
Book Review: "I've Been Thinking" by Daniel C. Dennett
As you know, I've been living in Nottingham for a few months now and it's February, but I still haven't made any friends. This means that more often than not, I have stayed in my apartment when not at work because I have quite literally nowhere I need to go. After my mental health going into the gutter I decided to book a doctor's appointment (yes, it's become that bad) and until the time for it came, I wandered around the streets of the city centre. This is where the independent bookshop Five Leaves comes in. I had been meaning to visit for a while but couldn't find the time or reason to go. Now, with both at hand, I picked up a couple of books and this was one of them. At the CaffΓ© Nero the next day - I sat and read most of the book, much to the surprise of some unusual on-lookers who, everytime I lifted by head, would give me a strange glance as if they'd never seen anyone read in a cafe before. But here we are...
By Annie Kapur10 months ago in Geeks
"Spurn Fate, Scorn Death"
Background and Context: If I've said it once, I've said it a million times - most of the readings for these essays come from things I did on my degree. Please, try to read the secondary sources if you're interested. There's a lot of great stuff in there! (If you want to be pointed in the direction of which are the best then please, do not hesitate to get into contact. I love sharing this stuff about Shakespeare).
By Annie Kapur10 months ago in Geeks
Book Review: "Fear" by Robert Peckham
I feel like there are a lot of deals on used books at the moment and this was one of them. I love books that re-examine our lives and times, our histories and the way we have been told certain narratives. This book, entitled Fear: An Alternative History of the World examines our relationship with fear through terrifyingly bad events such as the plague and the AIDS crisis. What drew me to the book was not only that, but the cover which features a plague doctor's mask topped off with a strange looking 1950s gangster-style hat. A lengthy book with big black lettering for its title, I was sure that this book could not possibly disappoint. And it did not. Let's have a look at the points I found most interesting and most shocking...
By Annie Kapur10 months ago in Geeks
Book Review: "James and John" by Chris Bryant
I've known for a bit that this book is a book to read and yet again, I had to wait for available funds to be able to get it. James and John is about a miscarriage of justice which resulted in horrors but then again, it is about so much more. It is about the way in which that from the Restoration to the Georgian period, the English especially began to get so disgusted by homosexuality that it was pretty much omitted from Victorian arrest records and the most famous case therefore became Oscar Wilde's 1895 trial after he wrote The Picture of Dorian Gray. Even foreigners from on the continent were confused about the Englishman's disgust at same-sex relationships to the point that homosexuality was punishable by execution. This book details England's dark years in which love was punishable by death. It was a truly terrifying time.
By Annie Kapur10 months ago in Geeks
"Instruments of Darkness"
Background and Context: Yes, I'm still sifting through those notes I'm finding on essay ideas I had but never wrote from back when I was in university. It was a long time ago but I think I had some pretty good ideas I never explored. Here's one of the finished products.
By Annie Kapur10 months ago in Geeks










