Nonfiction
Wake up!. Content Warning.
You start opening your eyes, it's hard they seem stuck like your brain and body are not awkening together, but you know the day is starting, you have to get out of the bed, body is hurting from all the seizure activity happening in your sleep, nocturnal epileptic seizures and taking that Emgency medication last night because of the clustered seizures you really did not want to do but knew if you did not things could go very bad..
By Cryptic Edwards3 months ago in BookClub
"Men": The Acclaimed Play by Stefano Labbia is Finally Released in English.
There is a profound resonance when a piece of art transcends its original language, moving across borders not just of geography, but of soul. It signifies that the core of the message, the essential human truth within the narrative, is potent enough to reach us all, no matter where we call home. Today, we are witnessing this powerful moment with the English edition release of the theatrical work, Men. This isn't just a translation; it is an invitation. An invitation to look closer, to listen harder, and to feel the sometimes-uncomfortable reality that the playwright, Stefano Labbia, places so deftly right before us.
By Ria Bassett4 months ago in BookClub
The Quiet Conflict: Why We Set Good Books Down
We've all been there. That moment when you hold a new book, heavy with promise, the scent of the pages like a fresh start. You commit. You dive in. And then, somewhere between the introduction and the rising action, something shifts. The momentum stalls. You find yourself glancing at the clock, your eyes tracking the lines but your mind floating somewhere between the grocery list and that email you forgot to send. Eventually, quietly, almost shamefully, you place the book face-down on the nightstand, where it becomes not a window to another world, but a gentle reproof.
By Ria Bassett4 months ago in BookClub
A Hard Fall and Good Bounce
Poetry, for me, has always been a way of gathering fragments—the daily objects, passing moods, and uneasy questions that won’t stay quiet. A poem begins with a small detail, then grows into something larger, a landscape where memory and imagination blur.
By Brian D'Ambrosio 4 months ago in BookClub
In-Sight Publishing Announces Noesis: The Journal of the Mega Society (November 2014–June 2025) Release
British Columbia, CANADA, September 2025 /www.in-sightpublishing.com/ -- In-Sight Publishing announced the release of Noesis: The Journal of the Mega Society (November 2014–June 2025) by Scott Douglas Jacobsen, a comprehensive 524-page collection of contributions to the Mega Society's official journal spanning more than ten years. The first edition was released on September 2, 2025: https://in-sightpublishing.com/books/.
By Scott Douglas Jacobsen4 months ago in BookClub
The Bookclub That Never Agreed
M Mehran Most bookclubs bond over shared taste. Ours bonded over the exact opposite. We never agreed on anything—not the genre, not the author, not even the definition of a “good book.” And strangely enough, that was the secret that kept us together.
By Muhammad Mehran4 months ago in BookClub
The Secret Bookclub in the Park
M Mehran Most people walked past us without noticing. To them, we were just a cluster of strangers on picnic blankets, sipping tea from mismatched thermoses. But for those who stopped and listened, they’d realize something unusual: we weren’t talking about the weather or politics. We were unraveling worlds, chapter by chapter, beneath the old oak tree in the park.
By Muhammad Mehran4 months ago in BookClub
"Romantic YA Books That Will Make You Fall in Love With Reading". AI-Generated.
Young adult love stories have a timeless charm that captivates readers of every generation. These books explore the excitement, vulnerability, and raw emotions of first love, making them relatable and heartwarming. For many young readers, love-themed books provide not just entertainment but also emotional comfort and life lessons about relationships, self-discovery, and personal growth.
By Fashion World4 months ago in BookClub
And what do you think, Mr. Robbins?. Top Story - September 2025.
No, I had no idea what the title meant when I picked up this book from the local library. And no, I was not a long time fan of the author when I heard of his death and found that I had two of his paperbacks ready to go: “Another Roadside Attraction” (his first novel), and “Jitterbug Perfume” (catchy titles, I think). But I knew his name. I had seen the books and I knew that someone was actually insane enough to make a film out of his “Even Cowgirls Get the Blues,” a film starring Uma Thurman as a hitchhiker with a very generous length of thumb (no, it was not a hit). And I stayed away from them all. My feeling was that Mr. Tom Robbins belonged to that interesting clique of writers from the late sixties that once had the ear of the zeitgeist, but soon lost it when people realized that they had nothing else to say (reviewing the remainder pile of the local bookstores has become an unmerciful duty). There was no place in my life for books on hippies, the counterculture that failed, and the false promise of psychedelics.
By Kendall Defoe 4 months ago in BookClub











