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From exclusive content and book clubs to the collaborative publishing of entirely new voices, Bindery empowers tastemakers and their communities to elevate and celebrate stories that deserve to be read.
Apologies on the late posting, busy week! Here are the options for May.
Jane and Dan at the End of the World by Colleen Oakley
Jane and Dan have been married for nineteen years, but Jane isn’t sure they’re going to make it to twenty. The mother of two feels unneeded by her teenagers, and her writing career has screeched to an unsuccessful halt. Her one published novel sold under five hundred copies. Worse? She’s pretty sure Dan is cheating on her. When the couple goes to the renowned upscale restaurant La Fin du Monde to celebrate their anniversary, Jane thinks it’s as good a place as any to tell Dan she wants a divorce.
But before they even get to the second course, an underground climate activist group bursts into the dining room. Jane is shocked—and not just because she’s in a hostage situation the likes of which she’s only seen in the movies. Nearly everything the disorganized and bumbling activists say and do is right out of the pages of her failed book. Even Dan (who Jane wasn’t sure even read her book) admits it’s eerily familiar.
Which means Dan and Jane are the only ones who know what’s going to happen next. And they’re the only ones who can stop it. This wasn’t what Jane was thinking of when she said “’til death do us part” all those years ago, but if they can survive this, maybe they can survive anything—even marriage.
Heartwood by Amity Gaige
In the heart of the Maine woods, an experienced Appalachian Trail hiker goes missing. She is forty-two-year-old Valerie Gillis, who has vanished 200 miles from her final destination. Alone in the wilderness, Valerie pours her thoughts into fractured, poetic letters to her mother as she battles the elements and struggles to keep hoping.
At the heart of the investigation is Beverly, the determined Maine State Game Warden tasked with finding Valerie, who leads the search on the ground. Meanwhile, Lena, a seventy-six-year-old birdwatcher in a Connecticut retirement community, becomes an unexpected armchair detective. Roving between these compelling narratives, a puzzle emerges, intensifying the frantic search, as Valerie’s disappearance may not be accidental.
Wait for Me by Amy Jo Burns
Young folk singer Elle Harlow reaches the height of her prowess in 1973, with two wildly beloved albums to her name and a hidden history of impossible heartbreak. When she sets foot on the famed Grand Ole Opry stage, a far cry from the mountain that raised her, Elle gives the biggest performance of her life. Then, to the dismay of shocked fans, her producer, and the man who still loves her, she vanishes.
Almost two decades later, eighteen-year-old Marijohn Shaw is spending her summer pumping gas, writing songs on her broken mandolin, and longing for a mother. Her father, Abe, has always sworn he was the last person to see Elle Harlow alive, but when a meteor strikes the woods of their sleepy Pennsylvania town and a piece of Elle’s past emerges from the wreckage, the truth of her disappearance sets fire to everything Marijohn believes about herself, her music, and her ability to love with abandon.
The Bright Years by Sarah Damoff
Ryan and Lillian Bright are deeply in love, recently married, and now parents to a baby girl, Georgette. But Lillian has a son she hasn’t told Ryan about, and Ryan has an alcohol addiction he hasn’t told Lillian about, so Georgette comes of age watching their marriage rise and fall.
When a shocking blow scatters their fragile trio, Georgette tries to distance herself from reminders of her parents. Years later, Lillian’s son comes searching for his birth family, so Georgette must return to her roots, unearth her family’s history, and decide whether she can open up to love for them—or herself—while there’s still time.
Told from three intimate points of view, The Bright Years is a tender, true-to-life novel that explores the impact of each generation in a family torn apart by tragedy but, over time, restored by the power of grace and love.
There’s something uniquely unsettling about magical realism… and I mean that in the best possible way.
Not unsettling in a horror sense (although sometimes it absolutely can lean that direction), but in the way these stories quietly slip something impossible into an otherwise ordinary world and then refuse to explain it.
A woman tastes emotions in food. A house mourns alongside a family. Ghosts linger at kitchen tables like relatives no one talks about anymore. Time bends. Memory becomes physical. Grief takes shape. And everyone just… accepts it.
That’s the magic of magical realism.
This genre doesn’t ask you to suspend disbelief in the same way fantasy does. It asks you to sit with emotion. To accept that some feelings are too large, too strange, too complicated to exist in realism alone.
And honestly? Some of the most memorable books I’ve ever read live here.
So let’s talk about it 👇
🌙 What Magical Realism Really Is
Magical realism blends realistic settings with subtle magical or surreal elements that are treated as normal by the characters within the story.
The world itself remains grounded in reality: real cities, real families, real grief, real relationships.
But woven through that reality is something impossible. Not explained. Not systemized. Not questioned all that much. And that distinction matters.
Because magical realism is less interested in the mechanics of magic and more interested in what the magic represents.
These stories often explore:
memory
identity
generational trauma
love
loss
culture
family legacy
longing
The “magic” usually functions as emotional truth rather than plot device, which is why these books tend to linger long after you finish them.
✨ The Vibe
If I had to describe magical realism in a feeling, it would be: dreamlike intimacy with an undercurrent of melancholy.
These stories often feel:
atmospheric and immersive
emotionally layered
slightly uncanny
lyrical or reflective
deeply human
There’s softness here, but also ache. And unlike plot-heavy fantasy, magical realism tends to move quietly. The stakes are usually personal rather than world-ending. A fractured family can carry as much weight as a war. A ghost can represent grief more effectively than pages of dialogue ever could. And somehow these stories make the impossible feel deeply familiar.
🧠 The Themes That Define the Genre
What makes magical realism so compelling is that the surreal elements almost always point back toward something painfully real.
These stories constantly ask:
What does grief look like when it becomes physical?
How much of our family history do we inherit?
Can memory distort reality?
What parts of ourselves do we bury to survive?
And perhaps most importantly: how do we keep living alongside things we cannot fully explain?
That’s why magical realism often overlaps beautifully with literary fiction. The focus isn’t spectacle. It’s emotion. Atmosphere. Symbolism. The magic simply gives those emotions shape.
📚 Where to Start: Beginner to Advanced Picks
🪄 BEGINNER PICK: Practical Magic
A story about sisters, family curses, love, grief, and the kind of magic that feels woven into everyday life.
Why it works:
incredibly accessible entry point into the genre
cozy, atmospheric, and emotionally grounded
balances whimsy with real emotional depth
magical elements feel intimate rather than overwhelming
Magical realism elements:
inherited family magic
generational trauma wrapped in folklore
magic treated as an ordinary part of life
emotional relationships at the center of the story
This is the perfect starting point if you want something enchanting, emotional, and deeply readable.
🌌 ADVANCED PICK: Piranesi
A quiet, surreal, labyrinthine novel about memory, isolation, identity, and a world that feels both impossible and strangely sacred.
Why it works:
more abstract and literary in structure
heavily atmosphere-driven
trusts the reader to sit in uncertainty
blends surrealism, philosophy, and emotional symbolism
Magical realism elements:
dreamlike setting treated as reality
blurred boundaries between memory and identity
emotional truths hidden inside surreal imagery
mystery built through atmosphere rather than action
Save this for when you want something immersive, strange, and quietly devastating.
🔮 Magical Realism vs Fantasy
This is probably the biggest point of confusion with the genre because technically… yes, both contain magic. But they approach it completely differently.
Fantasy asks: “What if magic existed?” Magical realism asks: “What if magic existed… and no one found that particularly unusual?”
Fantasy typically builds worlds around magic: systems, rules, politics, conflict, chosen ones, wars, quests.
Magical realism keeps one foot firmly planted in reality. The setting usually looks recognizable. Ordinary. Familiar. And instead of the story revolving around how magic works, the focus becomes what the magic means emotionally.
A dragon in fantasy changes the structure of the world. A ghost in magical realism usually changes the emotional dynamic of a family dinner. And honestly, that distinction is what makes magical realism feel so intimate.
The surreal isn’t there for spectacle. It’s there to reveal something true.
🌧️ Why This Genre Works So Well Right Now
I think magical realism resonates so deeply because reality itself already feels a little surreal lately.
We’re constantly navigating grief, uncertainty, nostalgia, loneliness, identity shifts, collective exhaustion… all while trying to maintain the illusion of normalcy.
And magical realism captures that tension perfectly. It acknowledges that sometimes emotions feel too large for realism alone. Sometimes grief does feel like a haunting. Sometimes memory does distort reality. Sometimes love does feel supernatural.
This genre doesn’t escape reality. It reframes it. And I think that’s why these books feel so personal to so many readers.
🌙 Final Thoughts
Magical realism lives in the space between the ordinary and the impossible.
It’s quiet. Emotional. Atmospheric. Sometimes confusing. Often beautiful.
These are stories where houses breathe, ghosts grieve, and memory becomes something tangible enough to touch. Not because the world is magical, but because being human already is. Few genres capture emotional truth quite like this one does.
Happy May, First Editions members! A new month means a fresh aesthetic for your bookish content. We are so excited to unveil this month’s exclusive template drop, designed to help you share your reading journey with ease and style.
Whether you’re looking to deep-dive into a review, gamify your TBR with Trope Bingo, or give your followers a stunning visual wrap-up, we’ve got you covered. From carousels to reels, these are officially ready for you to customize in Canva!
Your May Template Links:
18 May Templates https://canva.link/g4s8ud4x3fez69d
12 May Square Templates https://canva.link/3hrq0wgdqkpdabc
Story Book Review Template https://canva.link/lejjk32qu8ypk2j
May Reading Log https://canva.link/xinwvmsjmihksrv
Book Review Template https://canva.link/4bboiu010szlgci
Book Review Template https://canva.link/lv11jsnjc26jhgh
Story May Wrap Up https://canva.link/ciwzul5y7px9my6
This or That Post Template https://canva.link/tw6jshxweeggspk
Story Last, Current and Next Template https://canva.link/w1pb0176d37bkm2
Top 5 Reads Template https://canva.link/ceykitobirjk2sm
Engagement Posts https://canva.link/efvlhico58blguc
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Story May Wrap Up https://canva.link/2z3hz3nyzq2x1y9
May Carousel Template https://canva.link/u4wefot4f9eycx6
May Reading Journal https://canva.link/v4jkoifmdixs5hb
Trope Bingo Card https://canva.link/2kus5rpkgcn8t44
Happy creating, and happy reading! Be sure to tag us so we can see your beautiful May feeds!
❗️If you have any issues with the templates or need to request a specific template please send us an email at the link in our bio or at thepageladies6@gmail.com
Happy May, everyone!
The flowers are blooming, the days are getting longer, and your TBR pile is probably getting taller. To help you share your love for all things literary this month, we’ve put together a special set of Free May Templates just for you!
Whether you're looking to share your latest five-star read or just want to organize your reading goals, these Canva templates make it easy and aesthetic to keep your followers updated.
What’s in the May Freebie Pack?
Grab your favorites below and start customizing them to match your personal style:
4 Free May Templates https://canva.link/4ee8m9dhi7qsis5
Free Story Book Review Template https://canva.link/lejjk32qu8ypk2j
Free Story May Wrap-Up https://canva.link/ciwzul5y7px9my6
Free This or That https://canva.link/tw6jshxweeggspk
Free May Reading Log https://canva.link/xinwvmsjmihksrv
How to Use Your Templates
Click the links above to open the templates directly in Canva.
Customize the colors, fonts, and images to fit your vibe.
Download and post to your favorite social platforms!
Love these freebies? If you want to take your content even further, don't forget that our First Editions paid members get access to a massive library of 16+ exclusive templates every single month, including Bingo cards, carousels, and professional reading journals.
Happy reading and posting! Be sure to tag us so we can see your beautiful May feeds!
Watching queer and trans rights get stripped away in real time while companies slap rainbows on products every June feels impossible to ignore now.
Across the US, lawmakers have introduced hundreds of anti-LGBTQ bills in recent years, many targeting trans people directly through healthcare bans, ID restrictions, education censorship, bathroom laws, sports bans, and efforts to erase legal recognition of trans existence. The ACLU tracked hundreds of anti-LGBTQ bills in state legislatures, many specifically targeting trans people.
This isn't an abstract policy debate. These laws impact access to healthcare, employment, housing, education, safety, and public life. Researchers, legal scholars, and genocide prevention experts have publicly raised alarms about the pattern and scale of these coordinated attacks.
The Lemkin Institute for Genocide Prevention issued multiple “Red Flag Alerts” warning about what they describe as an escalating genocidal process against trans people in the United States. Former presidents of the International Association of Genocide Scholars have also publicly warned that the rhetoric and legislation targeting trans people match early stages of genocidal processes historically seen before mass atrocity crimes.
Even legal scholars who debate whether the current moment fits the strict international legal definition of genocide still describe the harm, erasure, and targeted legislation against trans people as severe and systematic.
So yeah, people are angry.
While queer and trans people are fighting for basic safety, dignity, healthcare, and survival, some companies still decide Pride Month is the perfect time to platform authors who openly align themselves with administrations and public figures actively fueling anti-queer and anti-trans rhetoric.
You do not get to profit from queer readers during Pride while uplifting people who publicly support the political machine working to erase us.
And dedicating a book to a public figure who has openly and vocally spread hatred toward queer and trans communities is not “neutral.” It is a choice. Public support is political. Dedications are intentional. Silence is intentional, too.
And I hear a certain company is deleting comments.
Book spaces love to talk about community until accountability enters the room.
Queer and trans readers are not overreacting for refusing to financially support people who celebrate those helping dismantle our rights. We are responding rationally to a climate where lawmakers debate our existence daily, while violence against trans people continues rising, and access to care disappears state by state.
Pride started as resistance. Not branding. Not rainbow capitalism. Not “both sides.”
If your business wants queer money, queer trust, and queer community support, people are going to ask where you stand when queer and trans lives are under attack.
Instead, let's go ahead and support businesses who make it known that they align with our identities. Bindery for one, and I'm truly not biased, it has been a joy to see so many queer books published, and majority sapphic too!
There are so many other book boxes out there doing the work year round to demonstrate their allyship.
✨ Can't go wrong with a Susie Tate book ✨
♥️ Clara is a shy, assistant teacher at a school for all the posh kids. One of the kids is Ozzie, the son of Rafe, the sexiest and the richest barrister.
Things take a romantic turn between Clara and Lord Rafe Sterling, when Clara begins to help Ozzie with his dyslexia. But little does he know that Clara is timid because of some secrets - dangerous secrets.
♥️ I really enjoy the way Susie Tate writes her stories! She reveals her character flaws in their prior conversations with other characters or monologues and then when those flaws show up in the main act breakup, it makes so much sense of why the characters acted the way they did. It makes me relate with the character much more.
Another point to note is the sensitivity and positive around neurological differences.
Really enjoyed this one too. Rafe is hot with his possessive, decisive personality. Also, my sweet Oz! 😭💕🫶.
✨♥️ 10/10 ♥️✨
✔️ Available on KU
Author - @susietateauthor
#bookstagram
#bookrecommendations #romancebooks #singledad #simplyvaish
Hey Bookish comrades!
It’s Mental Health Awareness month! If you are familiar with my IG, you probs know I have my fair share of MH struggles. I have had a hard time my entire life. I've tried all the pills, all the therapies, all the groups, the treatments, the detoxes, the hospitals, the cultural things, etc. But Every day is still a struggle for me. Medical trauma and stigma is SO real. I've experienced so many horrors in hospital. But I've been lucky to have people who care and have held me in my darkest hours. Now, some days the pain is paralyzing, others I can be ok! I’m just trying to do the teeniest tiniest things to push through. Showering, walks at night, tending to my plants, crafting, reading, sitting outside with a tea.
Below is a list of books I recommend that deal with different mental health conditions. And If anyone has suggestions for books on other mental health issues I’d love to hear!
Mental Illness/ Developmental Condition Rep:
A Mind Spread Out On The Ground - Alicia Elliott | Memoir / Depression, Anxiety (*Indigenous author)
Things In Nature Merely Grow- Yiyun Li | Autobiography / Suicidal Depression
Almond - Won-pyung Sohn | Litfic / Alexithymia
Get Me Out of Here - Rachel Reiland | Memoir, BPD
Interesting Facts About Space - Emily Austin | Litfic / Anxiety
Trainspotting - Irvine Welsh | Litfic / Addiction
Rough Magic - Miranda Newman | Memoir / BPD
The Autistic Survival Guide to Therapy - Steph Jones | Self-Help / Autism (recognizing
Girl interrupted - Susanna Kaysen | Memoir / BPD
Making Love With the Land - Joshua Whitehead | Memoir, Essays / Eating disorder (*Indigenous author)
Giovanni’s Room - James Baldwin | Litfic / Depression
The Bell Jar - Sylvia Plath | Litfic / Depression
Furiously Happy - Jenny Lawson | Memoir, Humour / Depression, trichtillomania, anxiety,
You Better Be Lightening - Andrea Gibson | Poetry / Depression
Betty - Tiffany Mcdaniel | Litfic / Various MH issues such as addiction, trauma/PTSD, psychosis, suicidal depression, etc (*Indigenous author)
What My Bones Know - Stephanie Foo | Memoir / C-PTSD
A Two-Spirit Journey - Ma-Nee Chacaby | Memoir/ Addiction, PTSD (*Indigenous author)
An Anthology of Monsters: How Story Saves Us from Our Anxiety - Cherie Dimaline | Autobiography, Essay / Anxiety (*Indigenous author)
Krik? Krak! - Edwidge Danticat | Litfic / Various MH issues such as Depression, PTSD, Psychosis, etc (*Indigenous author)
The Crying Book - Heather Christle | Memoir / Depression
Fire Song - Adam Garrett Jones | YA / Depression , etc (*Indigenous author)
While You Were Out - Meg Kissinger | Memoir / Various MH issues such as Bipolar, Depression, Anxiety, Addiction, etc
My Year of Rest and Relaxation - Ottessa Moshfegh | Litfic / Depression
All the Bright Places - Jennifer Niven | YA / Bipolar disorder
Everything Here Is Beautiful - Mira T. Lee | Litfic / schizoaffective disorder, psychosis
Shred Sisters - Betsy Lerner | Litfic / Bipolar, addiction
Freshwater - Akwaeke Emezi | Litfic / DID (if framed by a western lens) (*Indigenous author)
Pitiful - Brandi Bird | Poetry / Eating Disorder, Depression, Psychosis, OCD (*Indigenous author)
Notes of an Indigenous Futurist - Cliff Taylor | Memoir / Depression, Addiction (*Indigenous author)
Boy Swallows Universe - Trent Dalton | Litfic / Addiction
Building a Life Worth Living - Marsha Linehan | Memoir / BPD
Happy AAPI month friends! (Asian American Pacific Islander)
Here are some book recommendations for the month, more to come!
Burn the Sea by Mona Tewari
My first book by this author, not my last. I was blown away by this historical Indian fantasy that reimagines the 16th century Portuguese attacks on South India.
Sword of Kaigen by M. L. Wang
Feminine rage at its best, this standalone fantasy was my favorite read of last year!
Fundamentally by Nussaibah Younis
Debut novel that follows Nadia, a British academic who takes a UN job in Iraq.
Julie Chan is Dead by Liann Zhang
A satirical thriller about a supermarket cashier who assumes the identity of her deceased influencer twin sister Chloe to escape her own life.
We Dance upon Demons by Vaishnavi Patel
Contemporary fantasy novel with an iconic cover. A burnt out reproductive health worker gains supernatural powers.
If we cannot go at the speed of light by Kim Choyeop
A collection of Korean sci-fi stories that will take you on such an amazing journey.
Cleo Dang would rather be dead by Mai Nguyen
Dark humor explores a grieving mother who deals with the loss of her daughter and struggles to heal.
The Photonic Effect by Mike Chen
Space opera? Say less
Vibe Summary: GO TEAM!!!!!
Final Count: 3 (guys help the slump is DEEP)
Comeback (3.5 stars)
format: audiobook
I had never heard of this series before, but I saw the description for this one and was so intrigued that despite it being third in the series I read it as a standalone. Archer is deaf and ASL is a key form of communication throughout the story. I have long held a deep interest and appreciation for deaf culture and ASL, possibly because I was pronounced deaf at birth (was not true) or because nonverbal communication helps me as well in daily life due to my autism. I felt like, while definitely not perfect, the discussions and portrayal around deafness and chronic illness were pretty accurate and added to the story rather than feeling like a prop or diversity point. The romance itself was swoony and soft and had me rooting for them HARD. While football was in the book... it was minimal so like take that how you will.
Rooting Interest (5 stars)
format: paperback
Me love this book. Me want more. Me want Hollywood Stars merch from 831. Me think this is the best women's basketball I've read yet, especially in terms of representation of the actual sport, the W, and the OTHER WOMEN/ROLES THAT SURROUND THE PLAYERS. The main character is a sports journalist, and it shone through in the voice that the novel was written in, feeling like the authentic voice of a journalist chronicling her life. Fucking adored it. I also think that her initially being an NFL writer and being a total novice with basketball gives an excellent entry point for new fans or readers without that background. While the book is super realistic in its sport rep, it manages to explain things without feeling on the nose. If you didn't read this for our book club, READ IT NOW and come message me about it ;)
Love Overboard (4 stars)
format: audiobook
TEAAAAAAAAA this book feels exactly the Bravo show it reminds you of- except I enjoyed this so much more. Not only was this a WILD drama ride from start to finish, but it gave great commentary on how much we can trust reality shows to represent the people on it, the events, and how they shape the heroes and villains of a season. I love a book where no one is fully a villain, just varying levels of fucked up humans all living from their own perspective and this delivered that. Kandi is super talented, but this might be the best one yet. While the others are clearly sports related, this felt super team oriented in the greater forced proximity of uhhhh boat. We all stuck in this boat, together, and if the billionaire guest hates us then we all go down together, even if you did steal my ex boyfriend :( I love an ensemble :)
"You never know what's waiting on the other side - whether things work out the way you planned them or not. Everything will be all right in the end. And if it's not all right, it's not the end."
GENRE: Romance
RATING:4.5/5
FORMAT:eBook OR physical
Tropes:Ex-childhood best friends to lovers, small town, found family
Review:
Okay first, we get to continue in the Oaks Sisters series AND second, we get a ex-childhood best friends to lovers in one book with Fable and Theo? AHHHHH
Oh what a lovely book. We get to dive into the story of Fable and Theo, which is such an emotional filled journey. Fable is going through grief after the loss of her grandfather and is trying to find what she is meant to do in her life while living in her late grandfather's A-frame that is slowly crumbling. Meanwhile, Theo is back in town as a Vet and wants to settle down for good after escaping the place he thought could never be home.
Both of their stories are so emotional in different ways. Slowly throughout the book, we get to know both of our MCs and watch how they ended up where they did today. Learning about Theo's past and how hurt he was growing up helps us understand who he is now and learning how Fable and him grew up together and what caused them to drift apart was such a wholesome and emotional story.
In a way, they both have something that they need from the other and can only give it to each other by learning to trust one another and being vulnerable, which is HARD for them (& really for all of us as humans, let's be honest).
I dont know if this review makes sense as I dont want to give away any spoilers, but essentially, this book is about finding who you are and learning to forgive yourself for your past mistakes. It's about learning to trust yourself and your choices. It's about being okay with falling in love and trusting people again. And oh, what a lovely journey it is!
Oh and I always love it when one of our MC (or both really) love reading and we get to dive into books in our books! I think this one is perfect for those of us who love our emotional Romance with a lovely, emotional & wholesome journey for our MCs. I was provided a free advance reader copy and I’m sharing my honest thoughts.
"When a game makes room for our words, our tastes, our creations, we become a part of it. And if it feels like this world has a soul, maybe that's because we infuse it with our own."
GENRE: Non-Fiction
RATING:4.25/5
FORMAT:eBook/physical ARC
Review:
What a nostalgic book on Nintendo games and what a visit through all our games that we grew up with. I'm slowly expanding into non-fiction and so I took this book one step at a time, read a chapter and just digested it in terms of nostalgia. It reminded me of so many things throughout my life in terms of gaming and my god, the memories I had forgotten. One of the games I was obsessed with was Nintendo Dogs and I had totally forgotten about it till reading this book.
Diving into Super Nintendo and reading about the various games was a fun journey. I didn't get to play all of them as I am Deaf and games didnt always have subtitles so they werent accessible. And yet, I grew up around Mario, Zelda and so much more.
This is a non-fiction that tells you so much about Nintendo itself but also tells you about how we keep our child spirit alive long after we've grown up and life has taken over and how a lot of people now are passing this love of Nintendo to the next generation.
It was also so interesting to see how Nintendo focuses on innovation and creativity as opposed to always aiming for a fast turnover, especially in today's climate. The idea that no work goes to waste in the long run was also super interesting. It's the balance between productivity and creativity that was explained so well in here and leaves you feeling inspired. It's the idea that we do things for the sake of enjoying them and then hoping it succeeds rather than designing something to succeed without any joy in it, but in an efficient and smart way.
Another notable thing was the fact that Nintendo slowly expanded to different population for gaming, which included everyone from kids to older people that would not have grown around Gaming itself. Its watching all generations fall in love with coming together and playing, whether it's truly Wii Sports, Mario, Animal Crossing and more.
And finally, the start of games because they're vibe-based and cozy started here in Nintendo and if you dont know me, Cozy games are my FAVOURITE so reading into this, seeing how the way was paved by Animal Crossing and generally Nintendo was a fun dive into the history of cozy gaming itself.
This was a lovely, nostalgic book. I think its a great read for those who don't usually pick non-fiction but love gaming to remind you of the memories we grew up with over the years (no matter when you did) and if you're new to gaming, it's a great book to see how Nintendo and the love for gaming started. I was provided a free advance reader copy and I’m sharing my honest thoughts.
🌸 Curated Shelf: Picnic Basket Bookshelf
There’s a certain kind of story that belongs to May. Not too heavy. Not too loud. Just enough movement to keep you turning pages… but soft enough that you can look up, feel the sun, and not lose your place.
This is that shelf. Built for afternoons outside, slow mornings, and the kind of reading that feels like exhaling.
☀️ The One to Build Around
Project Hail Mary by Andy Weir
Why it fits May:
It’s bright, curious, and quietly emotional in a way that sneaks up on you. The pacing keeps things moving, but the heart of the story (connection, resilience, problem-solving) grounds it.
Vibe:
Sunlight through trees. Big questions. Unexpected friendship.
Take it with you if:
You want something immersive that still feels good to sit with outside.
🧺 Pack the Basket Picks
The House in the Cerulean Sea by TJ Klune
Found family, quiet magic, and the kind of warmth that lingers.Happy Place by Emily Henry
Messy love, nostalgia, and the ache of things changing.Legends & Lattes by Travis Baldree
Cozy fantasy with purpose; building something new, one small step at a time.The Summer Book by Tove Jansson
Atmospheric, reflective, and perfect for slow, thoughtful reading.Small Things Like These by Claire Keegan
Short, quiet, and deeply impactful; best read in one sitting.
🌿 Under-the-Radar Gems (the ones you bring to share)
The Music of Bees by Eileen Garvin
Healing, community, and starting over with nature woven through every page.The Collected Regrets of Clover by Mikki Brammer
A death doula, a life half-lived, and the quiet courage to change it.The Island of Missing Trees by Elif Shafak
Lyrical, layered, and rooted in place; this one feels like reading under a tree.Remarkably Bright Creatures by Shelby Van Pelt
Grief, connection, and an octopus you will absolutely fall in love with.
🎧 Audiobooks for Long Walks & Golden Hour Drives
Tom Lake by Ann Patchett
Warm, reflective storytelling that feels like someone walking beside you.The Very Secret Society of Irregular Witches by Sangu Mandanna
Cozy, whimsical, and easy to sink into while you’re out moving.Daisy Jones & The Six by Taylor Jenkins Reid
Full-cast narration that feels alive, perfect for longer walks.
❓ What book are you bringing to the picnic this month?
Stardust Books
Joy
Welcome to Stardust Books! I am Joy and I run the Bookshop. Whether you're seeking escape, adventure, or simply a moment of rest, you'll find it here at Stardust Books – where every story is a portal to a world of endless possibilities.
The Cavanaughts
Kate
Let's explore stories and hop across genres together! 🐸
vellichor ventures
Shawn Berry
Welcome to my Bindery! Subscribe for all things books from yours truly. Join the Discord, ask for a rec, or just hang out and enjoy the vibes. Will be happily yapping about sci-fi, fantasy, and surreal Japanese fiction.
Laura Bookish Corner
Laura
Welcome to my bookish corner! I'm glad to have you. I hope you find books you love here
Black Girl Nerds
Jamie
The intersection of Geek Culture and Black Feminism
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