i did a quick search on my goodreads and here are some <150 page reads that i gave 5 stars! heart berries by terese marie malhot- uniquely told memoir about the life of an indigenous canadian woman a room of one's own by virgina woolf- classic, brilliant feminist text happening by annie erneaux- annie erneaux has lots of really short books. i've read two by her and both have absolutely blown me away, this one is about her experience having an illegal abortion in 1960s france the eye by vladamir nabakov- only 100 pages and thrilling!
Jan 26, 2025

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thank you!! i will definitely check these out!!
Jan 26, 2025

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orbital - samantha harvey the mortal and immortal life of the girl from milan - domenico starnone small things like these AND foster - both by claire keegan five-carat soul - james mcbride (short stories but they go by quick) lie with me - philippe besson if an egyptian cannot speak english - noor naga the boy and the dog - hase seishū home - toni morrison scattered all over the earth AND the emissary - both by yoko tawada franny and zooey- j. d. salinger the black tree atop the hill - karla yvette the white card - claudia rankine
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A Little Lumpen Novelita by Roberto Bolaño Pedro Pàramo by Juan Rulfo Self-Portrait in Green by Marie NDiaye Sweet Days of Discipline, SS Proleterka, both by Fleur Jaeggy The Employees by Olga Ravn Marie Redonnet’s trilogy: Hotel Splendid, Forever Valley, Rose Mellie Rose I could go on forever—I love little books
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It has like 80 pages. The Yellow Wallpaper by Charlotte Perkins Gilman has like 10 pages or so. In Watermelon Sugar by Richard Brautigan is also very short. My Sister, the Serial Killer by Oyinkan Braithwaite. Carmilla by Sheridan Le Fanu. Animal by Lisa Taddeo.
Nov 28, 2024

Top Recs from @abbooooo

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hiii i have lived in spain for a few years and it has changed who i am and how i see life so positively!! im v jealous you're just starting the whole experience re: the job—i'm not teaching atm but did for the three years before. i didn't get a TEFOL certificate so i taught through the auxiliars program (i was a teaching assistant). in my case, it was super chill, i didn't have to plan lessons and the teachers helped me a lot. in any case, most public schools in spain run from 9-2 which is a work schedule i'll probably miss for the rest of my life. private schools generally run on a standard 9-5 schedule. the main problem you'll come across in the schools is poor organization and communication. my main piece of advice is brushing up on language skills if necessary—knowing spanish helps you communicate with the kids and the teachers a lot better. to be honest, the job had almost nothing to do with why i moved here, i just wanted to live in spain. that was mostly not a problem. my main issue with the job was being bored. okay, work aside—life in spain is a dream. spaniards value work much less than we do in the us, and it's a more social, laid-back culture. take advantage of it!! travel around spain—it's pretty cheap and there is sooo much to see. i never experienced "culture shock" or anything like that, but i live in madrid so it's maybe easier than in a pueblo. that doesn't mean it's always easy or that it doesn't take a bit of time to adapt, but i don't personally know anyone who has moved here and had a negative experience. sooo anyways idk what else to add but rest assured you're making a great decision
Jan 25, 2025