poll: What books would you like to read and discuss in the fall and winter? Some really interesting options this time!
PLEASE ONLY VOTE IF YOU WILL RETURN TO DISCUSS (Seriously, think about this - we get too many people who vote but don't discuss, which is unfair to those who participate.) Thanks, and happy voting! —> people who voted for: The Book Censor's Library by Bothayna Al-Essa
2019, 263 pages, 3.85 stars
$9.99 Kindle, print starts at $13.01, likely also at library

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PLEASE ONLY VOTE IF YOU WILL RETURN TO DISCUSS (Seriously, think about this - we get too many people who vote but don't discuss, which is unfair to those who participate.) Thanks, and happy voting! —> people who voted for: The Book Censor's Library by Bothayna Al-Essa
2019, 263 pages, 3.85 stars
$9.99 Kindle, print starts at $13.01, likely also at library

"A perilous and fantastical satire of banned books, secret libraries, and the looming eye of an all-powerful government.
The new book censor hasn’t slept soundly in weeks. By day he combs through manuscripts at a government office, looking for anything that would make a book unfit to publish―allusions to queerness, unapproved religions, any mention of life before the Revolution. By night the characters of literary classics crowd his dreams, and pilfered novels pile up in the house he shares with his wife and daughter. As the siren song of forbidden reading continues to beckon, he descends into a netherworld of resistance fighters, undercover booksellers, and outlaw librarians trying to save their history and culture.
Reckoning with the global threat to free speech and the bleak future it all but guarantees, Bothayna Al-Essa marries the steely dystopia of Orwell’s 1984 with the madcap absurdity of Carroll’s Alice in Wonderland, resulting in a dreadful twist worthy of Kafka. The Book Censor’s Library is a warning call and a love letter to stories and the delicious act of losing oneself in them."












