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Saturday, October 29, 2016

Blind Rabbit Books is a Go!


It's LIVE! I've started a book vlog and I'm crazy excited to talk books with everyone! Click, take a look, like it, share it, comment! I want to hear from everyone!

Love,

Sarai 

Friday, October 21, 2016

Books for the Halloween Spirit

If you're anything like me, you want to read something a little spookier during the fall season. But if you're like me, you also don't always know where to start. I'm a total baby about scary movies, and although I'm a little bit better with books I'm still someone who has to stay far away from anything too spooky, too bloody, too terrifying. A little bit is fine. But too much will keep me up at night. That doesn't stop me from enjoying the necessity of the season--a book that sets my heart racing while I cuddle up on the couch. I've explored different types of books over the years, for this purpose, and I've found some winners for those of us who have delicate sensibilities. I hope you find at least one of these books to give you that sense of dread we all want to feel this time of year (while being able to safely make hot chocolate if we want). 

My picks:


We Have Always Lived in the Castle--Shirley Jackson

If you've read any Jackson before, you know she's not scared of delving into the most horrifying and eerie parts of humanity. Just as dark and shocking as her short story "The Lottery" but much creepier, and with a foreboding atmosphere. It's quite short so I read it in one sitting. I could not stop talking about it right after, and I told my husband every detail of the plot at two in the morning because I was so hung up on it. It might not scare you, but it will creep you out. 


The Historian--Elizabeth Kostova

I first tried to read this in middle school, but it is massive, especially when you're in eighth grade. Instead of finishing it I forgot about it for years and then one day decided to buy it and finally finish it. And I'm immensely happy that I did. Obviously it's a historical fiction, but the history is rich, and full, and spans years and years of research and storytelling. It deals with Vlad the Impaler, my favorite historical villain/hero (depends who you ask), and a young girl who wants to find her family at all costs. If that's not enough, Vlad the Impaler is the original inspiration for Count Dracula. But this is not a story about Twilight vampires. The villains of a story that explores the history of the most famous vampire of all time are not sparkly, nor are they friendly. 


And Then There Were None--Agatha Christie

The queen of mystery and suspense! No Halloween is complete without some Agatha Christie to keep you guessing. I loved this book so much. Ten people, all with secrets too horrific to tell, are stranded on a mysterious island until the storm passes. And interestingly enough, no one seems to know who invited them all. A thriller, and a perfectly woven mystery, it's impossible to put down and keeps you hooked until the last second when you think you've figured it out. But you haven't, I promise. 

Since Halloween is soon to be over, I'll leave it at this for now. In the meantime, I'll come up with some cozy fall reads that don't have to do with things that go bump in the night. Until then, say hi to the monsters under the bed for me. 

Love,

Sarai





Tuesday, October 18, 2016

Towards the Sun

I still recall being
A paper doll
In his unsteady hands.
I watched with horror as my sweet wax wings
Melted in the sharp, white sun
Before I could even fly.
And that the feathers
Slowly walked down from the sky
To wait for me.
But as I took the last few steps
My feet went missing
And I bumped my way down
Into the yawping mouth below.

Monday, October 10, 2016

In the Bread Aisle

I have a short list of words—
Words I would whisper out into
The deepdeepdeep night
With the bigbigbig trees—
The trees that I think are all
About sex.
An arrangement of letters
Wrapped into one of those billions
Of words
That I haven’t ever said to you before.

I would touch your ear again,
Feeling the
Peach fuzz that
Covers it completely. Feeling your
Heart
Beat
Through the thin fabric of your pajamas
Across your broad ribcage.
I can feel each coil of muscle
Where it attaches
To each piece of bone.

But who watched you move silently,
Violently,
Achingly aware of your proximities.
Stiffly grasping, like a broken-backed bird.
All the while silently sobbing—
But refusing to wake
The sleeping world?
Me.

So I’ll stare at the intrusive glow of
My phone screen,
The blue reaching back into my
Orbital Fenestra,
Where it can’t hurt anyone.

I will turn it off
And go to sleep.