March Wrap Up

Another month bites the dust. I feel like the older I get the more quickly time seems to pass. I was not as productive this month in my reading as I would have liked having only read four books. I feel like my DNF pile for March is bigger than my read pile (which isn’t true, just feels that way) which is a bit depressing. Hoping to do more in April.

Read and Reviewed

  • A Conjuring of Light by V.E. Schwab – The conclusion to V.E. Schwab’s Shades of Magic trilogy. I think she wrapped it all up very nicely though the book did drag on a bit. 4/5
  • The Song Rising by Samantha Shannon – This is the third book in Shannon’s The Bone Season series. I had been waiting for it to be released for two years and it was well worth the wait. The best in the series so far and my first autographed book. 5/5
  • Red Rising by Pierce Brown – I picked this one up out of curiosity and wasn’t entirely sure what to expect as the book and it’s trilogy have a lot of hype around them. But, I loved it. Well written, good story, just a little tough getting through the first chapters. 5/5
  • Cinder by Marissa Meyer – Another book with a ton of hype and huge following. I wasn’t as impressed as I thought I would be. The story and characters felt hollow. 3/5

 

DNF

  • This Savage Song by Victoria Schwab – Picked this one up by Schwab as I had loved her Shades of Magic books so much. I didn’t even make it half way. Nothing against the story, it was well written, just not for me.
  • Midnight Riot by Ben Aaronovitch – This one had been recommended to me by several Redditors on the /r/52book board. Got about 3/4 of the way through and bailed. There was a story in there somewhere but it was too shallow to keep going.

 

Upcoming Month

I am currently reading The Masked City by Genevieve Cogman. This is the second book in her The Invisible Library series. I previously reviewed the first one, titled The Invisible Library, and you can find my review here and it’s Goodreads page here.

 

What were you reading this month? Any books you would recommend for to me for as an upcoming read?

WWW Wednesday – March 29

WWWWednesday

 

WWW Wednesday is a meme hosted by Sam at Taking on a World of Words and was formerly hosted by A Daily Rhythm. It is open for anyone to participate, even without a blog you can comment on Sam’s post with your own answers. It is a great way to share what you’ve been reading! All you have to do is answer three questions and share a link to your blog in the comments section of Sam’s blog.

The three Ws are:

What are you currently reading?

What did you recently finish reading?

What do you think you’ll read next?

What are you currently reading?

TheMaskedCity

 

“All right, Irene thought, I have officially met someone who makes even more reckless plans than I do. ‘This could indeed be the beginning of a beautiful friendship,’ she agreed, and she couldn’t help smiling.”

The Masked City by Genevieve Cogman. I picked this one up from the library yesterday and am looking forward to getting started on it. I read the first book in the series, The Invisible Library, earlier this year and loved it. Hoping the second installment gives me the same warm feelings.

 

 

 

What did you recently finish reading?

Cinder

 

“Vanity is a factor, but it is more a question of control. It is easier to trick others into perceiving you as beautiful if you can convince yourself you are beautiful. But mirrors have an uncanny way of telling the truth.”

Cinder by Marissa Meyer. This book certainly left me with that “meh” feeling. It just didn’t give me the fizz. Sandra @Reading Through the Nights recommends I try the rest of the series and I probably will read the next one, just to see if it gets better. As it is, for being such a popular book I was completely let down, especially after having enjoyed Heartless by the same author as much as I did. Sigh.

 

 

What do you think you’ll read next?

WhatAngelsFear

“Sometimes he wondered if most people experienced the world around them a little bit differently from their fellows, if the assumption of commonality was simply an illusion.”

What Angels Fear by C.S. Harris. From the sounds of it, this is a historical thriller with murder and mayhem. I could use a little mayhem, it’s the spice of life. You know, I couldn’t help but want to read this after so many people seemed to have their bowels in an uproar about it. Someone on Goodreads said that the book was, “…inappropriate for mankind’s eyes with it’s violence and disturbing themes.” I’ll judge that for myself, thanks.

 

 

I hope everyone has a wonderful Wednesday, and thanks for reading!

Cinder by Marissa Meyer

Cinder

Where to begin, where to begin…

I had no plans to read this book. It wasn’t on my TBR and I really knew nothing about it. Sure, I’d noticed people talking about it here and there and my younger cousin had mentioned once that she enjoyed it but it just didn’t ping on my radar. But, meandering through the library one day while waiting for my daughter to decide between a book about Christmas (it is March) and another about a trash truck (this was apparently a taxing book choice for a toddler) I stumbled across Cinder. I’d read Heartless before by the same author and loved it so into my bag it went without much thought.

When I sat down and opened this book up the next morning I can’t say I really knew what to expect. So, with the vague understanding that I’d be getting myself into a Cinderella retelling, in I dove.

What I didn’t expect was to be entertained.

“Even in the future the story begins with Once Upon a Time.”

We begin with Cinder, a teenage girl who is part machinery which makes her a cyborg. The year is…well, sometime in the future. I’m sure the date was mentioned but I couldn’t be bothered to jot it down. Cinder runs a mechanic’s repair booth in the market in New Beijing where people bring her datapads, androids, and other electronic odds and ends to fix. Her life gets turned upside down one day when Kai, the crown prince, brings her his android incognito for repair. He hints to Cinder that he just has a sentimental attachment to the machine but she can tell he is lying and there is something more important to the android beneath the surface. Cinder, despite being a cyborg, is still a teenage girl and gets all awkward with the handsome prince but does promise to fix his android.

In recent years, New Beijing and other parts of the world had been having trouble with a plague. Scientists couldn’t figure out where the plague was coming from and there appeared to be no cure. The disease is highly contagious and had been decimating populations and has found it’s way into Cinder’s home.

Of course, being a Cinderella retelling, Cinder lives with a guardian aka wicked stepmother and her two daughters. Most cyborgs were treated as property but one of her “stepsisters” had become friends with Cinder and treated her as just another person. A friend. This stepsister contracts the plague and Cinder is devastated. Her stepmother/guardian blames Cinder for her daughter catching this incurable disease and “volunteers” Cinder to be taken by the government for testing as they try to find a cure.

“My only mistake was in waiting too long to be rid of you”, Adri said, running the washcloth between her fingers. “Believe me, Cinder. You are a sacrifice I will never regret.”

From there Cinder’s life changes irreparably. Moon people are involved. Okay, they aren’t called “moon people” but that is what they are. Also with any Cinderella story, even a futurist retelling, we have our pumpkin coach, glass slipper, and ball gown. I did enjoy seeing how those themes were worked into Cinder.

The story turns out to be fairly interesting and being YA it was an easy read. Admittedly I had reservations about a story with a cyborg Cinderella from the future. It just didn’t tickle me the way so many other people seemed to enjoy it. The story was quick and caught my attention but I probably won’t be handing it more than 3 stars on Goodreads. For me it just didn’t have any meat. Everything was expected and that just makes things dull. Not to mention the whole awkward teenage girl thing. Why is that necessary? I’d love a YA novel with a strong, intelligent, not silly young protagonist. One that doesn’t get the flutters around visually appealing Y chromosomes. Sigh…

In a nut shell, entertaining book but it could have been better.

 

Red Rising by Pierce Brown

RedRising

 

I finished reading this book several days ago and have put off writing a review of it of. This book is very popular and so many people have had their say about it, what could I have to add that would put something new into the conversation? What thoughts could I have that dozens of other people haven’t brought up before? So, I waited to write this, hoping for some kind of epiphany. I’m sorry to say that epiphany moment never came. All the same, I felt the need to throw my two cents in regarding this book.

Why? Because it is wonderful.

“I would have lived in peace. But my enemies brought me war.”

It was impossible not to fall in love with this story. I tried. I don’t like hopping on the bandwagon. But, when Rick Riordan and Patrick Rothfuss both gave it glowing reviews on Goodreads I thought I would be doing myself a disservice to not pick it up. So, I picked up a very well thumbed copy of it at my local library (this sucker was falling apart at the seams) and settled in.

Not going to lie, those first couple chapters are a hard sell.

We are introduced immediately to our hero, Darrow. Darrow lives in a mining community on Mars. These miners and their family’s are a part of the Red class. They are there working to make Mars habitable for future generations to settle the planet from the dying Earth. These miners are very serious about their jobs and the work is hard. Most die young. Darrow is very good at his job, if sometimes a little reckless. He also has a loving young wife, Eo, who he obviously adores. If it wasn’t for Eo, Darrow would be nothing. She is his hope, his dreams, his everything. When she is put to death, he is broken.

“I live for the dream that my children will be born free. That they will be what they like. That they will own the land their father gave them.’
‘I live for you,’ I say sadly.
She kisses my cheek. ‘Then you must live for more.”

Now, I very nearly put down the book and returned it to the library at this point. Darrow seemed like a spineless, gutless sack of flesh and I couldn’t see how he could possibly grow to be anything else. He annoyed me. He was completely and utterly broken by his wife’s execution as she was the only thing he had ever cared about and was just a slobbering mess. No thoughts of his own, no nothing. Just Eo.

So, with a great deal of sneaking and deception, Darrow is taken from his Red camp and is shown by a leader of rebellion that everything he thought he knew was wrong. His people weren’t living and dying in the mines to make Mars habitable to save future generations. The future was already here and the planet was settled in glorious fashion. Towering cities, lush accommodations, and so much frivolity that it was sickening to Darrow who had never had enough. The rebellion selects him to lead a revolution, freeing the people from the ugly caste system of which the Reds are the lowest. The Golds, the ruling class, fly high above everyone and govern with an iron fist.

To succeed in this rebellion, Darrow must become a Gold.

The story from that point on is entirely enthralling. Each time I put it down I only wanted to pick it up again. Darrow joins this group of rebels and commits to their cause for Eo. Her dream was to be free, for her people the be free, and Darrow lives on and fights for her. Nothing is going to stop him.

I couldn’t care less about his little love story but since it is his driving force it is certainly important for the plot to progress. From that point Darrow finds himself transformed into a Gold and put into a game that is meant to train a class of Golds to rule. That’s where the real story for this book is, during this game. This training exercise. Golds that are on the cusp of becoming adults are tested and conditioned to become the best of the best. They slaughter each other to come out on top and through this Darrow must adapt or be destroyed. If he dies, Eo’s dream is lost.

I think Darrow ended up being such a good character because of his capacity to learn. He starts the story as a weak willed little shit that annoyed the crap out of me with his mindless drudgery. But he learns. He makes takes chances, makes mistakes, and learns how to be better. He learns how to be good enough to maybe, just maybe, win in this war game with the young Golds. If he does that, he will then have the opportunity to try to topple the government and free the enslaved people of not only Mars, but all humans who are subjugated to a slave-like existence under the ruling class.

If you haven’t read this book I sincerely suggest you give it a try. The world Brown wove is so vivid and enthralling I couldn’t help but fall in love with it. I’ve seen many people compare this to The Hunger Games but it is so much more than that. Don’t get me wrong, I enjoyed those books, but the story with Darrow has so much more depth and detail. The Reds, Golds, and everyone in between are written as to seem human with their flaws and triumphs. I’m very much looking forward to reading the other two books in this trilogy down the road. I don’t think there is any way that Brown can let me down.

“Funny thing, watching gods realize they’ve been mortal all along.”

The Candy Book Tag

I spotted this tag over at The Book Corps and couldn’t resist doing it. Laura has put together a very nice blog over there. You should check it out!

The Candy Book Tag

candy-image

Apples – Healthy food. It is deep, meaningful, and probably won a lot of awards but it really isn’t your thing.

RomeoandJuliet

Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet. I hate this play. Conceited children who throw their lives away and cause so much family strife because of an intense teenage crush. I want to throw things when I hear someone call it romantic. No, no it’s not. Have you even read it? It is a tragedy, not romance.

 

Milk Chocolate – This is a book you’d recommend to absolutely EVERYONE.

adarkershadeofmagic

A Darker Shade of Magic by V.E. Schwab. This book quickly hit my list for top 5 all time favorites. Schwab hands you this complex world full of interesting and developing characters and you can’t help but be completely sucked in. Sure, it won’t appeal to absolutely everyone because not everyone likes a touch of fantasy but that won’t stop me from recommending it.

 

Black Jellybeans – Why do these exist?

sequence

SeQuence (The Heart of the Ocean #1) by Lorraine M.L.M. I have said it before and I will say it again, this is one of the worst books I have ever read. It showcases a weak, mindless, powerless girl who thoughtlessly follows all of the rules and expects others to take care of her. She is completely incapable of doing anything on her own and of course falls for a man that ignores her and pushes her away. Is that supposed to be romantic or something? This book is an insult to females.

 

Chocolate Kisses – Awww this novel had the best romance

ShadesOfMagic

The Shades of Magic trilogy by V.E.Schwab. Yes, I know, I used Schwab again. It took me quite some time to come up with what to list here, give me a break. I’m not much of one for romance. However, the complex relationship between Lila and Kell is very entertaining. It is not just about a romantic pull and the superficial, that would make it boring, but it is rooted in hard won respect. That is something I can get behind.

 

Gummy Spiders – Eek! You made sure to check under your bed every night for a week after reading this scary one.

24690

24690 by A.A. Dark. I’ve been asked before what I found frightening about this book. Dark shows you depths of the depravity of mankind when they think there are no consequences to their actions. What people will do when they are given free reign to act on their pleasures and whims. That is what made this a book of horror. Not the actions themselves but the festering pit of darkness that dwells within man.

 

Jumbo Lollipop – This took you forever to get through, but hey! You did it!

TheLordoftheFlies

The Lord of the Flies by William Golding. I’ll be short, sweet, and to the point here. It took me months to get through this book. Being an award winning classic that speaks to the inner workings of society does not necessarily make for an entertaining read.

 

 

I’m not going to specifically tag anyone for this but if you want to do it, feel free!

WWW Wednesday – March 15

WWWWednesday

WWW Wednesday is a meme hosted by Sam at Taking on a World of Words and was formerly hosted by A Daily Rhythm. It is open for anyone to participate, even without a blog you can comment on Sam’s post with your own answers. It is a great way to share what you’ve been reading! All you have to do is answer three questions and share a link to your blog in the comments section of Sam’s blog.

The three Ws are:

What are you currently reading?

What did you recently finish reading?

What do you think you’ll read next?

What are you currently reading?

RedRising

“You do not follow me because I am the strongest. Pax is. You do not follow me because I am the brightest. Mustang is. You follow me because you do not know where you are going. I do.”

Red Rising by Pierce Brown. I have been hearing about this book for ages and it has some amazing reviews on Goodreads so I finally picked it up from my local library. I’m only on page 80 but I already feel hooked. Brown’s writing style makes the story vivid and the characters relatable. The world building is flowing as well for me but hopefully that will change as the story progresses.

 

 

 

What did you recently finish reading?

thesongrising1

Following a bloody battle against foes on every side, Paige Mahoney has risen to the dangerous position of Underqueen, ruling over London’s criminal population. –from Goodreads

The Song Rising by Samantha Shannon. I had been waiting for this book, the third in Shannon’s Bone Season series, to be released for two years. When I finally got to read it I was not disappointed. This third book is easily the best of the series so far and I cannot wait to for her write more. It feels like waiting for the Harry Potter books to come out all over again. What a good feeling.

 

 

 

What do you think you’ll read next?

TheHauntingOfAshburnHouse

 

Adrienne doesn’t believe in ghosts, but it’s hard to ignore the unease that grows as she explores her new home. Strange messages have been etched into the wallpaper, an old grave is hidden in the forest behind the house, and eerie portraits in the upstairs hall seem to watch her every movement. – from Goodreads

The Haunting of Ashburn House by Darcy Coates. I have been wanting to read this one for a while but haven’t been able to get my hands on it. Can’t find it at libraries and even Amazon doesn’t have it currently available as a purchase. You know what? That just makes me want it more. I need a good horror/thriller read.

 

 

What books have had your interest recently? Happy reading, everyone!

 

 

 

The Song Rising by Samantha Shannon

thesongrising1

 

The Song Rising is the third book in Samantha Shannon’s The Bone Season series. When the first book came out Shannon was compared to JK Rowling and many press releases said that her books would be more popular and influential than The Hunger Games. She was 21. I don’t know about you but at 21 I was hardly mature enough to be allowed into public, no less sign a six figure book deal. When I discovered this series in 2015 I was hooked and have waited for two years for the third installment to be released. Folks, I was not disappointed.

The Song Rising picks up precisely where The Mime Order, the second installment, left off. Paige Mahoney is the newly appointed head of an underground faction of clairvoyants in Scion London. Many among them feel that she unfairly took the title from her previous mentor, Jaxon Hall, and that she doesn’t deserve the crown. Despite the unrest among them, Paige is determined to unite all the clairvoyants of London against Scion and bring the corrupt government to it’s knees. This would free Paige and those like her from their years of being viewed as lesser beings, not worthy of respect, and help lead them to the path to freedom instead of suffocating oppression.

Scion is introducing a new level of that oppression in the form of a portable scanning device that easily allows their foot soldiers to reliably identify four types of clairvoyants. This device could bring Paige and her followers to it’s knees if it is not somehow stopped. Despite the unrest within her Mime Order, Paige and a group of trusted voyants set off out of London in an attempt to stop the scanners from being put into use. No leader within their order has ever left London before and more voyants seem to be losing their trust and patience with Paige’s reign. She has urged them underground, literally into the sewers, in an effort to keep them shielded from the scanners that would quickly end their lives. Despite the fact that she is trying to help them she has become immensely unpopular.

She and her small group depart London with a seemingly impossible task. Their dangerous quest will lead them from London and into Manchester then on to what was formerly Scotland. In true Paige form, nothing goes quite as planned but she never gives up despite the immense weight of what she has to do. As a female lead she is everything I look for. Strong but not without fault. She thinks forward to what the future could be instead of just accepting her circumstances. Paige has a defined goal and set of principles that she isn’t willing to give up. She truly is one of the best leading female characters I have ever read.

Alright, in a nutshell I adored this book. I think it is easily the best of the series out so far. Yes, it is the shortest of the three but there is so much going on, so much action that it is impossible to care about the length. I have never rooted so hard for a group of fictional characters in my life. The end was both painful and optimistic. While the story is obviously ongoing most of the story lines within the book were wrapped up nicely before moving on. I appreciate that. I hate when I get to the end of a book that I know will have a sequel and there are too many plot lines in the wind. Some sense of closure is needed even though the story itself is nowhere at an end. I can’t wait to see what Shannon comes up with next for these characters.

The other books in The Bone Season series include:
The Bone Season
The Mime Order

Also, follow the author on twitter and Goodreads.

WWW Wednesday

WWWWednesday

 

If you read book blogs very often I’m sure at some point you’ve stumbled across someone’s WWW Wednesday post. WWW Wednesday was originally hosted by A Daily Rhythm, and was then revived by Taking on a World of Words.
It covers the following three questions:

  • What are you currently reading?
  • What did you finish recently reading?
  • What do you think you’ll read next?

This is the first time I’ve done it so let’s see how it goes, shall we?

 

What are you currently reading?

 

thesongrising1

 

Today that is a bit of a touchy subject and I’ll tell you why. Yesterday was the release date of The Song Rising by Samantha Shannon. If you have read some of my posts you may have noticed I have been anticipating this book for a long time as I bring it up probably more than I should. That being said I had pre-ordered that puppy, a signed copy no less, last year from Amazon for delivery yesterday March 7th. It didn’t come. I had made sure to have finished (…mostly) my previous read so that I could start on The Song Rising right away. To say that I am a bit peeved would an understatement.

 

 

What did you finish recently reading?

 

MidnightRiot

 

Midnight Riot by Ben Aaronovitch. Well, not quite finished. Honestly, I don’t think I’m going to finish it. The story and characters just aren’t there for me. Maybe something was lost in it from it’s original version which was titled Rivers of London. As I was reading it there were obvious places where terms and phrases had been altered for the American audience and made those bits of the story feel broken. For instance, I’m fairly certain no one outside of America would say “soccer player” instead of “footballer” which was a conversion in this book. Just made it feel awkward.

 

What do you think you’ll read next?

 

RedRising

 

Red Rising by Pierce Brown. This book is talked about so much by other bloggers, by people I follow on twitter, and even my little local library has a display based around this book. I’m starting to feel like I’m really missing out having not read this one!

 

 

Now I’m going to go call UPS and try to figure out where my package with The Song Rising is…again. I need my book! Happy reading, everyone!

 

 

 

 

March Book Releases

This March has so many upcoming new releases. Here are a few that have piqued my interest.

 

thesongrising1

I’ll start with one that I have been looking forward to for a long time. The Song Rising is the third installment of Samantha Shannon’s The Bone Season septology. I’ve been anticipating this book since it’s predecessor was released back in early 2015. It promises bloody battles, criminal uprising, and a new technology that threatens to doom them all. If you haven’t read The Bone Season and enjoy dystopian fantasy then I highly recommend picking it up. Release date March 7th, 2017

 

 

 

 

 

TheEndOfOz

 

The End of Oz  is the 4th book in Danielle Paige’s Dorothy Must Die series. I haven’t read them but I have to admit they sound fascinating. You follow Amy Gumm on her adventures in Oz and, from the sounds of things, I think Dorothy dies. Kind of says so in the series name. Many people have read Gregory Maguire’s Wicked take on Oz it could be fascinating to get it from another point of view. Release date March 14th, 2017

 

 

 

 

 

TheGargoyleHunters

 

This isn’t my usual type of book but it sounds fascinating none the less. “Hilarious and poignant, it is a love letter to a vanishing city, and a deeply emotional story of fathers and sons.” – from Goodreads. From the description it sounds like the reader may have to suspend their belief in reality for the novel to be enjoyable but I’m up for it. Release date March 21st, 2017.

 

 

 

 

 

 

TheWomenInTheCastle

“Set at the end of World War II, in a crumbling Bavarian castle that once played host to all of German high society, a powerful and propulsive story of three widows whose lives and fates become intertwined” -from Goodreads. I love historical fiction but haven’t found myself interested in a book set during WWII before. This one, however, sounds really interesting. Release date March 28th, 2017.

 

 

 

 

 

 

There are so many books being released this March but these are the ones that caught my eye. You’ll be seeing a review of The Song Rising by Samantha Shannon coming soon as my copy is out for delivery today. I can’t wait!

A Conjuring of Light by V.E. Schwab

aconquringoflight

 

I’m sitting here staring at a blank screen, completely unsure of where to start. I came across the first book of this series, A Darker Shade of Magic by V.E. Schwab, only last month. I devoured it and the second book, A Gathering of Shadows, in three days. I couldn’t get enough. The characters were diverse and had depth and the story was completely engrossing. So, of course, I immediately got on Amazon and pre-ordered the third book which came out Feb 21st, 2017. The thing is that when it was delivered I postponed starting on it. I didn’t want the story to be finished. This world Schwab created had gotten to me and I knew that once I read this book it would be over. Sure, you can go back and re-read a book as many times as you like but there is only one first time. I wasn’t ready to say goodbye to that magic.

Obviously, I finally gave in. I was not disappointed.

“Love and loss,” he said, “are like a ship and the sea. They rise together. The more we love, the more we have to lose. But the only way to avoid loss is to avoid love. And what a sad world that would be.”

We return to the story exactly where A Gathering of Shadows left off. Kell has been captured and taken to White London where he is being mercilessly tortured. Because of their magical bond that means every pain inflicted upon Kell is felt by his brother, prince Rhy. Lila understands what is happening and takes off to save Kell. Go Lila! It is difficult not to love such a strong, determined character. She takes matters into her own hands and usually comes out on top. If you are the kind of person that looks for a a strong female lead in literature you could do a lot worse than Lila Bard.

Kell’s capture is the beginning of a devastating time for Red London. The city is under siege by an ancient enemy. Osaron, the dark king of Black London, has invaded Red and seeks to claim it for his own. Every citizen is at risk of being consumed by Osaron and precious few are able to avoid his dark grasp. It spreads through the city quickly and there is no one able to stop the onslaught of this black plague.

Once Lila succeeds at rescuing Kell they both return to their home in Red. Despite valiantly trying to save as many citizens as possible they are forced to retreat to the palace. The palace has been warded against Osaron’s onslaught and for now those few who are within it’s walls are safe. Now they must find a way to combat this usurper and save their citizens.

Kell, Lila, Alucard, and (surprisingly) Holland take on this task and work tirelessly to defeat Osaron once and for all.

This book has everything. A motley cast of characters that you can’t help but love and root for, the arch villain (who oddly reminded me of Ultron from The Avengers) set on destroying everything they hold dear, and the perilous task to stop him. Will the three Antari’s magic be enough?

Schwab’s conclusion to her Shades of Magic trilogy is wonderful and (shall I say it?) magical. She gives us something to root for while systematically breaking your heart. The writing is full of lovely details and has excellent flow. I will admit that it didn’t grab me as much as the first two books did but maybe that was just me avoiding the inevitable end to a fantastic story.

“Anoshe was a word for strangers in the street, and lovers between meetings, for parents and children, friends and family. It softened the blow of leaving. Eased the strain of parting. A careful nod to the certainty of today, the mystery of tomorrow. When a friend left, with little chance of seeing home, they said anoshe. When a loved one was dying, they said anoshe. When corpses were burned, bodies given back to the earth and souls to the stream, those left grieving said anoshe.

Anoshe brought solace. And hope. And the strength to let go.”