Books Are Jazzy

A reader lives a thousand lives before they die. The person who never reads lives only one.


As 2018 ground to a close, I started to reconsider how the blogger commemorates the end of an old year, and the beginning of a new one: mainly through the release of “best books of” and “most anticipated books of” lists. I was wondering how I should qualify which books I could list as my favorites of the year: should I choose out of all the books I read during 2018 or just out of the ones that were released in 2018 that I happened to read. Another question for me was how could I reasonably recommend my “favourite” books of the year when with the speed at which I read and the amount of books I read each year, I could barely remember the plots of most books I’d read, I only had a generic emotional response connected to each book. 

It was a conundrum for me, did I really want to end the tradition on our blog just because I was struggling to understand the concept of these years end posts? After weeks of silent debating by myself, and figuring out answers to these questions that satisfied me, I decided I would still release a list of books that were the ones that had left the biggest impact on me looking back on them now at the end of the year. 

So, here we go in no particular order:

  • The Gentleman's Guide to Vice and Virtue by Mackenzi Lee
  • Obsidio by Amie Kaufman and Jay Kristoff
  • The Fifth Season by N.K. Jemisin
  • A Conjuring of Light by V.E. Schwab
  • Kingdom of Ash by S.J. Maas
  • Muumipappa ja meri by Tove Jansson


Anna’s top pics/most worthy of a mention from 2018:
In total I managed to read 21 books, which I am very glad about since I had a hard time finding joy in books at times this year. I was in a sort of rut and couldn’t find a book that would keep me so hooked that, I would constantly be craving just a small moment of free time when I would brew some tea and get lost in the words of a great read. That’s why the A Court of Thorns and Roses series by Sarah J. Maas  as a whole has been my most notable, favorite, life changing read this past year. It brought back not only my love for reading but my love for fantasy. I was, and still am, obsessed through and through.
And just as Laura said, I’m picking my favorite out of the four parts by reflecting on the generic feeling I get. The first was great but the second blew my mind so therefore A Court of Mist and Fury is my first.

Second I would like to mention a Finnish novel that actually won the Finlandia prize in 2016. Akvarelleja Engelin kaupungista by Jukka Viikilä taught my about the time of C.L. Engel and the building of our capitol Helsinki. I loved the journal entry style and depictions of Turku, where I now live, hit home with me.

The third book I’m going to raise to the podium here is the Swimmer Among the Stars by Kanish Tharoor, a book of short stories that I picked it in Paris from Shakespeare & Co. (I admit, the setting for reading this book did enhance my experience. But none the less I was inspired by these colorful stories.

Fourth and fifth were similar and I can’t really set them apart in my mind but both inspired me greatly and I remember them with a spark of happiness. You Are a Badass by Jen Sincero and #GIRLBOSS by Sophia Amoruso have helped shape my attitude and the way I perceive things (as did Homo Sapiens by Yuval Noah Harari too by the way) and they were a big part of my nonfiction phase of 2018.

We hope you find amazing reads in 2019!
Laura and Anna
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Bonjour à tous et à toutes! 

I had the absolute pleasure of spending the past few days in Paris. Oh, the warm breeze by the Seine, the sweet chant of French treating my ears and all those pretty views. I could write a novel about all the amazing feelings the city gave me and my adventures, but I'll only concentrate on what is relevant concerning this blog. And that is my little travel reading diary.

On my first day I walked through the blossoming Jardin du Luxembourg and witnessed locals enjoying the sun with a book in hand. This made me envious and I just had to experience this luxury of stopping in the middle of the city's hustle to praise the unexpectedly beautiful weather and get lost in a book. Luckily, I was already on my way to the well known bookstore Shakespeare & Co. Why not treat myself to a new book? With this thought in my mind I traversed towards Notre Dame and the Seine to where the book shop was located -almost in the center of France that is.




I fell in love with this cozy, mystical shop already on my first visit to Paris. I now returned to find myself adoring the walls stacked with books from floor to ceiling, the ladders, the cat, typewriter and allover vibe even more than four years ago. I took my time picking out a book considering what would feel most calling to my soul at that moment. I ended up picking up a collection of stories, Swimmer Among the Stars by Kanishk Tharoor. It was a choice well made as reading one story at each location I would stop at turned out to be just the right dosage per read.






So far the book has been cracked open in Montmartre in a park just below Sacre Coeur, in Jardin du Mars, under the steel legs of the Eiffel Tour, on a bench on Champs Elysées and I remember not where else. These moments, sitting down, breathing in the Parisian air and reading a couple of pages were one of my favourite moments on the whole trip.





Bisous,
Anna
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About Us

Hi! We're Laura and Anna, two twenty-something women who love reading! We originally met each other in Atlanta, GA, over 10 years ago. Since then, we moved back to our home country of Finland, and now that we are in university, Anna lives in Turku, Finland, studying medicine and Laura lives in Asheville, NC, studying literature.

We read in a wide variety of genres, including all forms of young adult fiction and some adult books as well. Laura tries to focus on fantasy, but sometimes her coursebooks get in the way, whereas Anna is happy to read anything other than her textbooks!

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