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ohjoyce · 12 days
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Sweet treats and wide open spaces are my reason for being
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ohjoyce · 4 months
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she is me, i am her
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ohjoyce · 6 months
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Vincent van Gogh Still Life with French Novels and Glass with a Rose 1887
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ohjoyce · 1 year
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Gold and pearl egg cup charm, 1959
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ohjoyce · 1 year
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ohjoyce · 1 year
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The tusk of a woolly mammoth being unearthed from a Siberian riverbed. 
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ohjoyce · 1 year
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The Long Way  -  Kayla Martel , 2022.
Irish, b. 1980s
Oil on canvas , 24 x 30 cm.
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ohjoyce · 1 year
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half asleep, half dreaming.
by louis jean françois lagrenée and paul oxborough.
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ohjoyce · 1 year
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sun
tea, coffee
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ohjoyce · 1 year
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by salman toor, van gogh, cecilia rosslee, van gogh.
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ohjoyce · 1 year
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The problem with adulthood was feeling like everything came with a timer-- a dinner date with Sam was at most two hours, with other friends, probably not even as long. There was maybe waiting for a table, there was a night at a bar, there was a party that went late, but even that was just a few hours of actual time spent. Most of Alice's friendships now felt like they were virtual, like the pen pals of her youth. It was so easy to go years without seeing someone in person, to keep up to date just through the pictures they posted of their dog or their baby or their lunch. There was never this-- a day spent floating from thing to another. This was how Alice imagined marriage, and family-- always having someone to float through the day with, someone with whom it didn't take three emails and six texts and a last minute reservation change to see one another. Everyone had it when they were kids, but only the truly gifted held on to it in adulthood.
This Time Tomorrow, Emma Straub
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ohjoyce · 1 year
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Logging onto here is like walking through a bead curtain
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ohjoyce · 1 year
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paintings of me trying to get out of bed in the morning
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ohjoyce · 1 year
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2022 in books
It’s been a good year in books. More waves of covid = more time spent inside reading, away from crowds of people so silver linings and all that.
Happily, I’ve also been lucky enough to have lived with and befriended fellow keen bean readers and we’ve swapped our lil paperback collections back and forth. One of my top 5 favourite feelings has got to be watching someone you know read a book you love. Up there too is chatting with a friend about a book they’ve lent you as you read it for the first time. Chef’s kiss experiences.
This year, I elected to read almost entirely for pleasure. I switched jobs two times and worked on getting into a consistent fitness routine of going to the gym 3 times a week so was not looking for anything else challenging or intellectually stimulating to do in my free time. Unfortunately, Canberra does not have very good libraries so I didn't have access to a huge variety of options. But, the library of friends came through with the goods.
Without further ado, a list of my 2022 in books in chronological order that I read them.
The Vanishing Half by Brit Bennet
Quite an interesting and thought-provoking exploration of race and the extent to we are able to choose who we become. Two mixed-race twins growing up in 1950s America experience very different parallel realities as one chooses to capitalise on her lighter skin colour to pass as white. Raised questions of material comfort versus cultural integrity have no clear answers but makes for compelling food for thought.
How We Love by Clementine Ford
This book is slight departure from Clementine Ford's usual stuff-- more tender and vulnerable. Each chapter is about one of the loves in her life and it's as much a letter to a past and future selves as it is an ode to non-romantic love. I also went to her ‘Secular Love Sermon’ aka How We Love book tour show in November of this year which was maybe the best event I went to this year. Here’s to love as bearing witness to life and telling stories always.
The Dry by Jane Harper
Before this year, I hadn't read any of Jane Harper's books. This year I read them all. Goes to show how addictive and effective they are as crime thrillers. The story unfolds and weaves together to reach such a satisfying conclusion. I can't really say too much without spoiling it but Jane Harper has a wonderful way of characterising the Australian bush landscape as a focal point in her novels.
Harry Potter and the Cursed Child by JK Rowling, John Tiffany, and Jack Thorne
Incredibly unmemorable. It was pleasant but I can't remember a single thing on reflection.
The Survivors by Jane Harper
Not one of my favourite Jane Harper novels, but as always a great page-turning read.
After I Do by Taylor Jenkin Reid
An interesting exploration of love after marriage and the reality of the highs and lows that starts after most romance stories end. As can be clearly seen from the other books by the same author I kept picking up after this one, I really relished this unconventional premise.
Malibu Rising by Taylor Jenkin Reid
I picked this up because the cover was kind of pretty and I was on a lunch-break walk to Civic Library and this was the best pleasant surprise. Something about this novel reminded me of getting deliciously absorbed into a book during school holidays — falling asleep reading and then reading again first thing in the morning. I have a big soft spot for self-made underdog stories and eldest/only daughter protagonists.
The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo by Taylor Jenkin Reid
Absolutely devoured this story of old-school glamour, love, and disappointment. Nice and neat tie-in with the narrator/journalist’s own modern day sub-plot.
Entire ACOTAR series by Sarah J Maas.
Faerie smut that fits in just about every trope of men written by a woman for the female gaze in a good way. Very fun.
Love Stories by Trent Dalton
Touchingly earnest, Trent Dalton shows us that in hard times, sometimes the best thing to go is to choose to go soft. To choose to show and share the hurt and highs of loving and being loved that are the only things that'll matter in the end. This got me through a chaotic and draining month I worked in family law. I cried a lot.
Force of Nature by Jane Harper
Again, a lesser favourite but good fun nonetheless.
The Lost Man by Jane Harper
This one is up there, so good I reread it a week ago. The perfectly placed red herrings, the family tension, and small-town grudges and secrets. 10/10 times. I particularly enjoyed how men's mental health, loneliness, and isolation were prevalent themes. Jane Harper also sprinkles easter eggs throughout her Faulk novels which subtly intertwine the characters from her books which is fun to spot.
Milk Fed by Melissa Broder
There was a lot of online hype about this book, and the author is behind a twitter account I used to follow called 'SoSadToday' (yeah, I know bahaha). But the rather triggering portrayal of disordered eating and punitive calorie counting made this one a pretty stressful read. There was also zero sense of closure at the end, only confusion.
Book Lovers by Emily Henry
A very sweet and delightful rom-com read for those of us who are sometimes sick of the overly predictable cookie-cutter romance novel. The protagonist is very relatable and is all in all a refreshing palate cleanser to the saccharine netflix christmas holiday movie tropes.
Everything I Know About Love by Dolly Alderton
Absent of any particularly astute life advice at least in any productive sense but deeply comforting that the era of being in your twenties is as chaotic as it is character-building and all of it is normal.
The No Show by Beth O'Leary
Slightly over-complicated plot-twist but props for originality and side-plot which I may or may not have become more invested in than the main plot by the end.
Second First Impressions by Sally Thorne
A fun, quirky, alternative rom-com read with colourful characters and the evergreen message that it's more than ok to be a cosy offbeat weirdo as long as enjoy it.
No Matter Our Wreckage by Gemma Carey
Written by a now-Canberran dwelling lady academic researcher, this book reflexively documents   her own childhood sexual assault and abuse. Which is to say things get very real and very dark at points. But, Gemma Carey refuses to let her story go untold and that courage glues together what is an otherwise tragic and deeply personal patchwork of recollections and tribulations.
Conversations with Friends by Sally Rooney
Honestly, I can't say I'm a big Sally Rooney fan but sometimes you are having a mid time and simply want to escape into someone else's even mid-er time this hits. I can't explain it any other way.
The Switch by Beth O'Leary
I tried to listen to the audiobook of this story and didn't make it very far but when I found a copy of the paperback, I got through it quite readily. Cosy as all Beth O'Leary novels are, if the obstacle-boyfriend can be a bit characterised as a bit obviously shit.
November 9th Colleen Hoover
If you miss the days of scoffing down random wattpad stories as a tween, this is perfect.
Love and Virtue by Diana Reid
I spent on year studying at the University of Sydney in 2017 and used to always wonder what went on behind the hedges of the overpriced colleges where presumably people with very rich parents lived. This book is almost definitely a very accurate window into the answer. Having studied law and arts at Usyd herself, the
Verity by Colleen Hoover
Wtf!? Truly I was relentlessly gazumped and then bamboozled. No sense can be made of this one, it's beyond sense.
Love on the Brain by Ali Hazelwood
I've just finished this book, it might be my last read of 2022. A very sweet and escapist read (mostly for me, as a mathematically and scientifically challenged legal professional lmao). Though I will say I enjoyed Ali Hazelwood's other novel The Love Hypothesis a smidge more.
Whew, that was quite a test for my memory. Any outstandingly great or shitty reads for you in 2022? KEEN TO DISCUSS as always.
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ohjoyce · 1 year
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sleeping nooks >>>>
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ohjoyce · 1 year
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HEARTBREAKING: Poor girl has to get out of the soft warm bed even though she is so so so so comfy
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ohjoyce · 1 year
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