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#kevin christopher snipes
qbdatabase · 8 months
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Daily Book - Milo and Marcos at the End of the World
Milo and Marcos at the End of the World Kevin Christopher Snipes YA Romance, 2022, 384 pg Christian closeted gay male MC x mlm male LI When Marcos moves to town, Milo is forced to acknowledge the feelings he’s kept hidden, especially from his religious parents. But as natural disasters begin to befall them the closer they become, Milo and Marcos soon begin to wonder if the universe itself is plotting against them in this young adult debut by playwright and creator of The Two Princes podcast, Kevin Christopher Snipes.
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aurorawest · 1 year
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Reading update
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Once again Cat Sebastian took characters I actively disliked/didn't care about from a previous novel and made me love them. This one was lovely and the twist totally took me by surprise, even though it shouldn't have. A+ Cat Sebastian please write more books (I have totally already preordered her next book).
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Who would think a book about living through the AIDS epidemic in NYC in the 80s would be as funny as this book is? It will also tear your heart out and stomp on it. Highly recommended. This was a 5 star read. Also takes place partly in Minneapolis (and is by a Minnesotan author) so it gets bonus stars for that.
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Another delightful entry into Roan Parrish's Garnet Run series. This one was the most lighthearted. My only problem with this series is that I kind of don't want the old characters showing up as much as they do. I never like them as much when they're just side characters.
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Neal Stephenson...you might want to consider taking a break from writing. Parts 1 and 2 were pretty good - typical Stephenson, though I wouldn't say he's at his best in this one. The science is super interesting (I have no idea if it's realistic) and it's an interesting doomsday scenario. Part 3, on the other hand, was unnecessary and simplistic (Cold War in space! Noble Savage! White Savior!). It was such poor payoff for the first 2/3 of the book that I repeatedly wished he hadn't bothered at all—and that I hadn't bothered reading the book.
Also it was almost 900 pages long.
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I didn't LOVE love the first book in this series, but you know, it was good enough for me to pick up the sequel. I was actually enjoying this one more, but it fell apart for me during The Break Up. One of the main characters is basically allowed to get away with his bullshit because...I don't know, he's just Like That. It irritated me.
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Despite the printing error, I was able to read this book. I love this series and am sad it's over. If you want a good space opera with a friends to lovers to enemies to lovers again, I highly recommend this one. It's also Very Gay! Plus great female characters.
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This is a queer military series so if that's not your thing, you won't like this book haha. So far it's followed two guys serving on a submarine. It's pretty typical Annabeth Albert, and tbh the military stuff is pretty secondary (and in this one there is 0 time spent on a sub). This one has a single dad as the love interest, and while I'm always pretty eh about romances involving children, Albert does it pretty well.
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Man was this one heavier than I thought it was going to be. Milo and Marcus both come from very conservative families and meet at Bible camp, where they room together and fall for each other, though neither of them acts on it. Milo decides he's going to tell Marcus how he feels, only for Marcus to disappear from camp. Three years later...Marcus moves to Daytona Beach and starts at Milo's high school! There is a lot of internalized homophobia in this one and a lot of Milo struggling with what he's been taught in church and by his parents, and at times it got hard to read. It was really good, though.
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This is one that I kept almost buying because it's pretty, but then I'd read the summary (again) and think, eh. I ended up picking up a used copy at my local indie bookstore, and...eh. Definitely not a bad book. I loved the world, and I really like Lexos. Rhea was...not great. I realized after reading this that I really don't care for the current popular trope of the Unhinged Woman Who Doesn't Know What She Stands For. Like, she's got this thing that's ostensibly driving her, but that thing gets taken away, and now she's empty. I don't know that I've ever seen it pulled off in a way where I didn't go at the end, "Oh, so she actually was just a super flat character all along?" I was trying to think of examples of male characters who fit this trope. I'm sure they're out there but I couldn't think of any. Anyway, I'll probably read the sequel, because the world really was cool, and Lexos is poor little meow meow material (spent his whole life trying to earn his father's love and respect, never could).
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Oh man this book was great. The first one had some horror elements, but this one was straight up horror for large portions of the book. Like, action-horror—think Army of Darkness. I love all the characters so much. The bond between Rune and Brand is *chef's kiss*. Male friendship done beautifully.
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KJ Charles is like Cat Sebastian in that no one does historical romance like she does. I confirmed once more that I love the interwar period, especially when one of the mains is a Wounded Veteran of WWI. This book actually reminded me of Cat Sebastian's Hither, Page (which is post WWII) which I love, so I was pretty primed to also love this. I'd love to see the further adventures of Archie and Daniel, but considering it was written in 2015, I'm not sure that's going to happen.
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I liked this book, but also the dialogue got very annoying at times. Is this how The Kids talk these days? Also rolled my eyes hard at the section devoted to the author getting up on his soapbox to share how he feels Call Me By Your Name is really problematic. But overall I enjoyed it, and the bi rep was top tier, as was the yearning.
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Okay so while I enjoyed this book well enough, it would have been half the length if Pons had cut out all of the 'I've never felt so connected to another person in my life' paragraphs. I swear, the main character was constantly connecting with his boyfriend in a way he never had with anyone else ever. The book was very much about Will, but there was some heavy stuff introduced about Graham that I didn't think was really given the due it deserved. But it was a sweet love story, and a story about healing. Also I didn't see the twist coming.
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So coincidentally, Call Me By Your Name was right there in my TBR pile as I was reading This is Why They Hate Us. I liked it a lot, though the weird racist interlude really threw me and I can't figure out what the metaphor was or what Acimen was trying to say.
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Fam, I am finally reading Dark Rise. It is not gay yet, but I'm only up to page 100. I really didn't know what it was about and only picked it up because Pacat wrote it, so the plot has surprised me so far. Very different from Captive Prince.
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miss-kookiio · 2 years
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What KCS Thinks of Ruling shippers
I asked Kevin Christopher Snipes (creator of the two princes). What he thought of Ruling shippers on his Q&A He didn't answer it, but he did send me this message And my pride has been hurt...
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THE TWO PRINCES PODCAST FANZINE
The Phoenix Issue 4: Halloween
DEADLINE EXTENDED TO
August 31st!
Refer to rules in previous post. Submit via email to ThePhoenixFanzine at gmail dot com.
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publishedtoday · 2 years
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Milo and Marcos at the End of the World - Kevin Christopher Snipes
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When Marcos moves to town, Milo is forced to acknowledge the feelings he's kept hidden, especially from his religious parents. But as natural disasters begin to befall them the closer they become, Milo and Marcos soon begin to wonder if the universe itself is plotting against them.
tw: bullying, emotional and psychological abuse from parents, homophobia, internalized homophobia, racism, religious guilt/trauma
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magicalyaku · 1 year
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Thanks for joining me on this ride through 2022! When I started my reading spree in autumn 2021 I did not expect to find so much joy (and sometimes frustation) to motivate me to write hundreds of words about books every month. I read and write what I want and because I want to, but it's nice to know that sometimes there’s actually someone interested in what I have to say. So thank you for even the small interactions. :)
I had to edit this overview like five times because whenever I thought I was done I found another book I missed. So if I counted correctly I have read a total of 93 books (written and audio, not including manga, comics and non-fiction). That is ... a damn lot! Like 6 years combined compared to before. I also reread two of those books and while editing my novel I read it two whole times. That counts, right? (That’s why there’s 94 covers up there. Because i snuck it inbetween. Because I can. uAu) Only 14 of all these books I would categorise as non-queer. Funnily enough, 6 of those I didn’t like very much. Of the remaining 75 queer books I only found 1 book really bad and I’m picky about 2 more. Huh.
On to the award ceremony! (But don’t expect laudations. I wouldn’t shut up.)
Least favourite phrase:
... it smelled like boy.
(from: The Song that moves the Sun, Darius the Great (probably the 2nd) and the third time I already blocked from my mind (Here the Whole Time???)) That sentence came up fucking three times! Seriously. WHY?! I hate it. 8D
Favourite phrase:
But we have more important things to do than hook up.
(from: The Darkness Outside Us) I laughed so hard at this sentence. Finally someone who gets it! All stupid YA heroines should listen to this.
Favourite protagonists:
Jack Shannon (Aces Wild) and Neil Josten (All for the Game)!
Favourite covers:
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Least favourite books:
A Far Wilder Magic (Allison Saft) and If You Change Your Mind (Robbie Weber)
Favourite books (no order):
The Darkness Outside Us (Eliot Schrefer)
Aces Wild: A Heist (Amanda DeWitt)
The City Beautiful (Aden Polydoros)
Every Bird a Prince (Jenn Reese)
All for the Game series: (Nora Sacavic)
I Wish You All the Best (Mason Deaver)
I Hope You Get this Message (Farah Naz Rishi)
More books I greatly enjoyed:
Both can be true (Jules Machias)
A Taste of Gold and Iron (Alexandra Rowland)
The Language of Seabirds (Will Taylor)
A Complicated Love Story Set in Space (Shaun David Hutchinson)
At the Edge of the Universe (Shaun David Hutchinson)
Milo and Marcos at the End of the World (Kevin Christopher Snipes)
Little Black Bird (Anna Kirchner)
The Girl Who Fell Beneath the Sea (Axie Oh)
In Deeper Waters (F.T. Lukens)
So this is Ever After (F.T. Lukens)
All that’s Left in the World (Erik J. Brown)
.... aaaand many many more! uAu
Bonus!
At the half year point I actually counted how often the protagonists names were being used throughout those different books. I felt to lazy do to it in detail for the second half, but I can still present you my preliminery count of most used names for the protagonist, love interest and possibly best friend. These came up at least 3 times!
Will/William
Matt
Nate/Nathan
Andrew/Drew
Daniel
Lame, right? 8D My favourite name choice award goes to Rosemary and Rowan from Mirrored in Evergreen by B. Pigeon!
That’s it! Phew! Thanks the universe for books! :D
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drool4musc · 3 months
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My Faves:
Seth Feroce, Alexey Shabunya, Ole Kristian Vaga, Rodrigo Junqueira, Steve Benthin, Armin Scholz, Dani Kaganovich, Joshua Taubes, Stanislav Lindover, Bradly Castleberry, Wesley Durden, Flex Lewis, Jeff Nippard, Calum von Monger, Nikolay Vorobiev, Raul Maghiar, Rafael Varela, JJ Bergin, Logan Franklin, Mahmoud al Durrah, Chris Bumstead, Iain Valliere, Stian Bjornes, Brandon Myles White, Nikita Tkachuk, Charlie Barrett, Evgeni Filatov, Konstantin Kolotygin, Caleb Blanchard, Trey Brewer, Szymon Lada, Andy Bell, Chris Lodge, Rico Lopez Gomez, Joshua Lenartowicz, Mike Kleeves, Con Demetriou, Roman Fritz, Eric Janicki, Anthony Tenuta, Petr Brezna, Chris Robshaw, Sajad Niknam, Fouad Abiad, Steve Naidovski, Konstantin Kolotygin, Stan Efferding, Paolo Fontana, Nicolas Vullioud, Behrooz Tabani, Tomas Bures, Meysam Keshvari, Lasse Schulz Nielsen, Adam Gerber, Luca Pennazzato, Joey Sergio/ Swoll, Doumit Ghanem, Georgi Karamishev, Ruben Baars, Marcello De Angelis, Revaz Nadareishvili, Robert Piotrkowicz, Vladimir Holota, Adam Kayser, Antoine Vaillant, Grant Gunstream, Bruno Tarchetti, Frank McGrath, Ruslan Bogdanov, Robert Burneika, Artemus Dolgin, Florian Poirson, Mousa Motahari, Dean Lesiak, Vojta Koritensky, Michal Krizo Krizanek, Martin Kjellstrom, Alfonso Del Rio, Michal Mikulewicz, Marek Olejniczak, Radoslav Angelov, Alex Marushin, Joel Thomas, Kevin Wolter, Franco Dominguez, Ben Blevins, Casey Christopher, Mattia Vecchi, Constantino Polesel, Soren Falby, David Riley, Mark Richman, Ronny Rockel, Anatoly Senkin, Ludovic Bogaert, Krzysztof Piekarz, Steffan Gerhard, Yasin Amanipour, Bob Paris, Frank Sepe, Arkady Velichko, Jason Huh, Ben pakulski, Alexander Federov, Boian Ivanov, Andrew Pickering, Jose Raymond, Lukas Gabris, Hidetada Yamagishi, Buck Branson, Jon Anderson, Erik Fankhouser, Guy Cisternino, Brandon Beckridge, Charles Griffen, Craig Golias, matthew schmidt, kille kujala, Lefteris Sidiropoulos, Vitaliy Ugolniko, Ales Bursa, Roger Snipes, João Victor Silva, Alexander Marushin, Kyle Kirvay, Pedro Rodriguez Sanchez, Jo Palacios, Kaique Cerveny, Vlastimil Kuzel, John Jewett, Saeed Khanehsaz...
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mieczyhale · 2 months
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"One benefit of fainting is that he is no longer glaring at me like I'm some sworn enemy he's vowed to challenge to the death. Instead, he just looks like someone who got tossed a rare tropical fish without any instructions on how to keep it alive."
-"Milo and Marcos at the End of the World" by Kevin Christopher Snipes
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bensbooks · 4 months
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Underrated 2022: Milo and Marcos at the End of the World
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When Marcos moves to town, Milo is forced to acknowledge the feelings he's kept hidden, especially from his religious parents. But as natural disasters begin to befall them the closer they become, Milo and Marcos soon begin to wonder if the universe itself is plotting against them in this young adult debut by playwright and creator of The Two Princes podcast, Kevin Christopher Snipes. Milo Connolly has managed to survive the first three years of high school without any major disasters, so by his calculations, he’s well past due for some sort of Epic Teenage Catastrophe. Even so, all he wants his senior year is to keep his head down and fly under the radar like the quiet, well-behaved, churchgoing boy that everyone thinks he is. Everything is going exactly as planned until the dreamy and charismatic Marcos Price saunters back into his life after a three-year absence and turns his world upside-down. Suddenly Milo is forced to confront the long-buried feelings that he’s kept hidden not only from himself but also from his deeply religious parents and community. To make matters worse, strange things have been happening around his sleepy Florida town ever since Marcos’s return—sinkholes, blackouts, hailstorms. Mother Nature seems out of control, and the closer Milo and Marcos get, the more disasters seem to befall them. In fact, as more and more bizarre occurrences pile up, Milo and Marcos find themselves faced with the unthinkable: Is there a larger, unseen force at play, trying to keep them apart? And if so, is their love worth risking the end of the world?
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bookaddict24-7 · 2 years
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(New Young Adult Releases Coming Out Today! (May 24th, 2022)
___
Have I missed any new Young Adult releases? Have you added any of these books to your TBR? Let me know!
___
New Standalones/First in a Series:
Just Your Local Bisexual Disaster by Andrea Mosqueda 
How We Ricochet by Faith Gardner
Primal Animals by Julia Lynn Rubin
Two Truths & A Lie by April Henry
I Guess I Live Here Now by Claire Ahn
Milo & Marcos at the End of the World by Kevin Christopher Snipes
Break this House by Candice Iloh
Echoes of Grace by Guadalupe Garcia McCall
Only On the Weekends by Dean Atta 
New Sequels: 
A Cruel & Fated Light (The Hollow Star Saga #2) by Ashley Shuttleworth
Spark of Ash (Ember of Night #3) by Molly E. Lee
___
Happy reading!
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starrlikesbooks · 2 years
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Happy May!
May is the best month- AKA my birth month- and it's also full of really incredible books this year!
As always, check under the cut for more on each~
Book of Night by Holly Black is the amazing Holly Black's adult debut! This is a dark fantasy novel of literally shadowy thieves and magic, and I've heard nothing but fantastic things!
The Hacienda by Isabel Cañas is a modern Gothic Horror piece, set in Mexico after the War. It's supposed to be a bit of a mash up between the classic Rebecca and Mexican Gothic.
I Kissed Shara Wheeler by Casey McQuiston is McQuiston's YA debut, and since I was lucky enough to score and advanced copy, I can tell you it's great! Part indie movie mystery, part queer culture celebration, all love, it's going to be a lot of people's all time favorite very soon. I also wouldn't be surprised to see it get a movie deal!
Seasonal Fears by Seanan McGuire is the sequel/companion to the phenomenal Middlegame, an SFF books of twins and alchemy. That's one of my favorite books, and Seanan McGuire is an excellent fantasy writer, so consider me pumped!
When Women Were Dragons by Kelly Barnhill is a feminist magical realism story with actual DRAGONS. Sign me up, immediately.
Cafe Con Lychee by Emery Lee is Lee's sophomore novel after their very trans romance "Meet Cute Diary". This one is looking to be just as queer, and has some fun rivals to lovers.
Dead End Girls by Wendy Heard is a sapphic story of faking your own death, running from the cops, and also running from some people who might want you actually dead, and uhhh accidentally maybe causing some people to be actually dead. This is also one I've already read, and I can tell you it's a RIDE.
See You Yesterday by Rachel Lynn Solomon is for all the time loop fans out there! (Me.). This is a time loop romance about a girl reliving her awful first day of college.... with her nemesis.
Milo and Marcos at the End of the World by Kevin Christopher Snipes is one of my favorite books of the year! This one is a queer story of internalized homophobia and religious trauma- it's heavy and messy, but it's also got SUCH a good romance to balance it out. If I could shove this book into every queer teen and young adult's hands I would.
Queer Ducks (and Other Animals) by Eliot Schrefer is another book I'd love to shove into people's hands- it's also the only nonfiction book on this list! This is a study on queerness in nature, firmly and humorously shutting down arguments that queer living is "unnatural". It's also by the author of the phenomenal queer scifi thriller "The Darkness Outside Us".
The Fae Keeper by HE Edgmon is the long awaited sequel to The Witch King! This book promises a follow up to those truly divine vibes!
Together We Burn by Isabel Ibanez is about- wait for it... both dragons and flamenco dancers. There's also enemies to lovers!
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linus-wickworth · 9 months
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June 2023 Reading Recap
5 Stars:
Just Between Us by J. H. Trumble
There Is A Light by Ban Gilmartin
Gypsy Boy by Mikey Walsh
The Five Stages of Andrew Brawley by Shaun David Hutchinson
Carousel by Brendan Ritchie
The Boy Who Steals Houses by C. G. Drews
The Kings of Nowhere by C. G. Drews
What About Will by Ellen Hopkins
A Little Life by Hanya Yanagihara
They Cage the Animals at Night by Jennings Michael Burch
Out of Time, Into You by Jay Bell
4.5 Stars:
Bait by Alex Sanchez
Junk Boy by Tony Abbott
Gypsy Boy on the Run by Mikey Walsh
Milo and Marcos At the End of the World by Kevin Christopher Snipes
4 Stars:
The Ghosts We Keep by Mason Deaver
My Dear Henry by Kalynn Bayron
A Map of Days by Ransom Riggs
The Edge of Being by James Brandon
He Forgot to Say Goodbye by Benjamin Alire Sáenz
This Winter by Alice Oseman
The Conference of the Birds by Ransom Riggs
Beyond Carousel by Brendan Ritchie
Keep This to Yourself by Tom Ryan
Every Day by David Levithan
The Gravity of Nothing by Chase Connor
If I See You Again Tomorrow by Robbie Couch
3.5 Stars:
Here's to You, Zeb Pike by Johanna Parkhurst
Five Have Plenty Of Fun by Enid Blyton
Caterpillars Can't Swim by Liane Shaw
Boys of the Beast by Monica Zepeda
Invisible Boys by Holden Sheppard
Anything Could Happen by Will Walton
Running with Scissors by Augusten Burroughs
Dead Flip by Sara Farizan
Every Moment After by Joseph Moldover
Hold by Rachel Davidson Leigh
Trailer Trash by Marie Sexton
Always Leaving by Gene Gant
Kings of B'more by R. Eric Thomas
3 Stars:
Five Go To Mystery Moor by Enid Blyton
These Fleeting Shadows by Kate Alice Marshall
Things We Couldn't Say by Jay Coles
Golden Boys by Phil Stamper
The Desolations of Devil's Acre by Ransom Riggs
This Is Not a Love Story by Suki Fleet
Another Day by David Levithan
Toughing It by Nancy Springer
2.5 Stars:
Arctic Zoo by Robert Muchamore
Keesha's House by Helen Frost
Trying Hard to Hear You by Sandra Scoppettone
Pain & Wastings by Carrie Mac
2 Stars:
Qualities of Light by Mary Carroll Moore
Small Town Monsters by Diana Rodriguez Wallach
1.5 Stars:
Izzy, Willy-Nilly by Cynthia Voigt
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Note
Book rec! Milo and Marcos at the End of the World by Kevin Christopher Snipes. It’s a sweet, funny, and slightly heartbreaking new YA novel about two teen boys falling in love amidst mysterious apocalyptic events. The author is actually a friend of mine since we worked in the same office years ago and he’s a big swiftie. (mild spoiler) When Milo and Marcos have their first kiss, they are slow-dancing to “a melancholy Taylor Swift ballad” which Kevin confirmed is meant to be Lover 💕 Also you can absolutely judge this book by its cover art which is SO beautiful and intriguing.
Omg what a fantastic and very thoughtful rec. Thank you for sharing!!! Also what a fun personal tidbit/flex ;)
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ghoulishbuck · 4 months
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#109 of my 2023 reads and #60/480 of my physical tbr- Milo and Marcus at the End of the World by Kevin Christopher Snipes
I hadn’t looked at the blurb of this book since I bought it in January so I was quite shocked by all the talk of religion. It was a lot. I also didn’t know how to feel about this book for a long time.
The relationship between Milo and Marcus reminded me a lot of Paul and Noah from Boy Meets Boy. This isn’t a book I’d recommend to everyone but by the end I came to really enjoy this. Although, I will admit how the story was going I definitely thought it was going to go a way that would of made this my worst book of 2023.
4 Stars
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ovyy-pvcure · 1 year
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10 people I want to get to know better
Hey, a tag game fun! Thanks for the tag @libertyreads
Relationship Status: Happily single and chilled
Favorite Colour(s): (Royal)Purple, Blue, and Red.
Favorite Food: Uhhh...total blank I’m afraid. If you set a bunch of things in front of me I could for sure pick a favorite but to just pick a favorite food???? Impossible. Herculean.
Song Stuck in my head: It was YAOASOBI’s “Yoru Wo Kakeru” until I re listened to If/When’s “Best Worst Mistake”.
Last Thing You Googled: DnD 5e Grappling Rules. Was listening to an Actual Play (Rolling With Difficulty strong recommend), and got curious about some stuff.
Time: 8:48pm (AST)
Dream Trip: Maybe it’s the festive mood in the air but I wanna do a full-on Zombie Island haunted house tour. Attempt to romance me by taking me to the top 10 scariest haunted prisons, and end with a fun daylit urban romp through Hashima (or Gunkanjima)
Last Thing You Read: I recently finished Milo and Marcos At The End of The World by Kevin Christopher Snipes, a fairly good little romance that handles anxiety about coming out and the changes that entails. It was a nice change of pace from The Bladed Faith by David Daglash, and The Last House On Needless Street by Catriona Ward; the first in a fantasy series involving politic and revenge and a murder mystery respectively.
Last Book You Enjoyed Reading: See above, maybe could have kept one of those for here but I enjoyed em all so they call get a shout out.
Favorite Thing to Cook/Bake: Cookies so much cookies. Peanut Butter in particular. Simple, easy, and delicious, so I’m never just too out of it to make ‘em when I need to Make Something Physical
Favorite Craft To Do In Your Freetime: Not super crafty I’m afraid.
Most Niche Dislike: Ahh time for the Something Wrong With Me to rear its head. I really don’t know? I guess bad faith arguments in general. I have to push down the urge to yell every time someone brings up “FFX Laughing Scene” when people talk about bad VA work.
Opinion on Circuses: Nada.
Sense of Direction: Yep! I’m no good and giving them but once I know the general direction I’m basically good to get anywhere.
Gonna pass on the tagging, but if someone wants ta by all means tag me in and answer away.
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publishedtoday · 2 years
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I Guess I Live Here Now - Claire Ahn ✊🏾
Only on the Weekends - Dean Atta ✊🏾🏳️‍🌈
How We Ricochet - Faith Gardner
Two Truths and a Lie - April Henry
Break This House - Candice Iloh ✊🏾
Spark of Ash - Molly E. Lee (Ember of Night #3)
Brace for Impact - Gabe Montesanti 🏳️‍🌈📗
Just Your Local Bisexual Disaster - Andrea Mosqueda ✊🏾🏳️‍🌈
Primal Animals - Julia Lynn Rubin 🏳️‍🌈
A Cruel and Fated Light - Ashley Shuttleworth (Hollow Star Saga #2) 🏳️‍🌈
Milo and Marcos at the End of the World - Kevin Christopher Snipes 🏳️‍🌈
Beauty and the Besharam - Lillie Vale ✊🏾🏳️‍🌈
✊🏾 POC 🏳️‍🌈 LGBTQ 📗 Nonfiction
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