ok I’m bad at updating goodreads and enjoy book threads so I’m going to leave short reviews of every book I finish in this thread 
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9. Euphoria by Lily King. I bought this in 2015 but didn’t read until now—love triangle between 1930s anthropologists studying tribes in New Guinea based off a real-life situation from Margaret Mead’s life. Filled with longing, heartbreak, complicated relationshipspic.twitter.com/sVD1wjigCN
10. Strangers Assume My Girlfriend is My Nurse by Shane Burcaw. I love the Squirmy and Grubs youtube channel and it’s really interesting reading stories about an interabled relationship since we have so few good social narratives about them! Plus Shane is hilarious.pic.twitter.com/ne0tKfCTn6
11. My Dark Vanessa by Kate Elizabeth Russell. Explores the psychological dynamics of a 15-year-old girl who had a relationship with her teacher, then and now. Claustrophic and intense, weirdly romanticized at parts. Heavy themes of obsession/abuse/attachment/healing.pic.twitter.com/oWG8Xq3hgQ
12. Draft No. 4 by John McPhee. A book on the writing process, McPhee on McPhee, v deft. Happy @andy_matuschak turned me onto this, definitely the right book at the right time. He has this line about how writers are either overtly insecure or covertly insecure that kills me.pic.twitter.com/E6yeWAyVdH
13. You Think It, I'll Say It by Curtis Sittenfeld. @csittenfeld is so incisive it blows my mind. I don't read too many short stories but I remember stumbling across one of hers in the New Yorker and just being like, what... how? She skewers her characters. I love it.pic.twitter.com/VtXQA48rxO
14. The Buddhist by Dodie Bellamy. A woman falls in and out of love with a Buddhist, in the style of I Love Dick. This is a reread and I enjoyed it much more this this time aroundpic.twitter.com/Do8ymnehzO
15. I’ll Tell You in Person by Chloe Caldwell. A frank, messy, beautifully written essay collection about being in your late twenties (topics include heroin, bulimia, Lena Dunham). Reminds me a bit of Kathleen Halepic.twitter.com/rJ1MqDlvJ9
16. The End of Overeating by David A. Kessler. Really well-written book about why hyperpalatable foods are making us fatter and the industry that’s creating them. Nothing shocking for me bc I’ve read simjlar books, but v interesting and informativepic.twitter.com/fbdK4XP83s
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