Latest Entries
Be “Your Own Kind of Girl” in 2021: A book review of Clare Bowditch’s memoir
Australian / Book Reviews / nonfiction / The Latest

Be “Your Own Kind of Girl” in 2021: A book review of Clare Bowditch’s memoir


Clare Bowditch became famous for her singing and songwriting in Melbourne, Australia from the early 2000s. She also went on to be an actress in a nationally famous T.V. series Offspring. Of course I had heard of her music, but I never really grew up listening to her songs. Similarly, I am not one for … Continue reading

Book Review of Megha Majumdar’s “A Burning”: Social media, news, and factual reporting
Book Reviews / indian / The Latest

Book Review of Megha Majumdar’s “A Burning”: Social media, news, and factual reporting


Megha Majumdar’s debut novel was released in June 2020 and what a stellar first novel! Majumdar was born in Kolkata and now lives in New York after moving the U.S. for studying. Her novel, A Burning is also set in Kolkata and follows the lives of three very different characters, Lovely, P.T. Sir, and Jivan. … Continue reading

A Review of Ottessa Moshfegh’s “Eileen”: An Ode to Daphne Du Maurier’s “Rebecca”?
American / Book Reviews / British / feminism / The Latest

A Review of Ottessa Moshfegh’s “Eileen”: An Ode to Daphne Du Maurier’s “Rebecca”?


I am a big fan of Ottessa Moshfegh’s writing. I have also reviewed her novel My Year of Rest and Relaxation which you can check out by clicking on the title. Moshfegh has an amazing way of writing perfectly awful characters in such a nuanced and special way. I feel like you love to hate … Continue reading

A Review of Elena Ferrante’s “The Lying Life of Adults”: a perfect study of human nature
Book Reviews / Italy / The Latest

A Review of Elena Ferrante’s “The Lying Life of Adults”: a perfect study of human nature


Ciao miei cari lettori! Oggi io voglio palare di uno degli autori più famosi d’italia, Elena Ferrante. Today, I wanted to take you on a little literary journey and share some personal experiences with you. I first started studying Italian when I was in high school. I was eleven years old and had just come … Continue reading

“Witch Doctor Poet”: The body, beauty, and poetry with Bola Juju
African / American / Book Reviews / poetry / The Latest

“Witch Doctor Poet”: The body, beauty, and poetry with Bola Juju


Bola Juju is an American author and this is her first collection of poems. Bound2Books is no stranger to poetry. I love to read poetry books, I love to talk about poetry, and I feel like it is extremely important to celebrate and keep poetry alive and in conversation in the contemporary world. Juju’s collection … Continue reading

Book review of “My Dark Vanessa”: Nabokov’s “Lolita” re-imagined
American / Book Reviews / The Latest

Book review of “My Dark Vanessa”: Nabokov’s “Lolita” re-imagined


My Dark Vanessa feels very much like a modern take on Vladimir Nabokov’s Lolita. But with a twist. Kate Elizabeth Russell writes this harrowing tale of manipulation, grooming, and assault from the perspective of a teen girl, Vanessa, being seduced by an older male. Russell has done an amazing job at telling Vanessa’s story. I … Continue reading

3 Things to take away from Aminatou Sow’s and Ann Friedman’s book “Big Friendship”
African / American / Book Reviews / nonfiction / The Latest

3 Things to take away from Aminatou Sow’s and Ann Friedman’s book “Big Friendship”


2020 has been an interesting year, to say the least. It has made a lot of us rethink our goals, our relationships, and our personal boundaries. But just because we are all thinking about these things, doesn’t mean we know what we need or should be doing for ourselves and the people we love. I … Continue reading

Four Shakespearean-Era Tributes Hidden in Maggie O’Farrell’s Award Winning “Hamnet”
Book Reviews / British / historical / The Latest

Four Shakespearean-Era Tributes Hidden in Maggie O’Farrell’s Award Winning “Hamnet”


Maggie O’Farrell won the Women’s Prize for Fiction in 2020 for Hamnet and if you have read her novel, it is easy to see why. It is not easy to take on a literary great like William Shakespeare, yet O’Farrell does so with grace. The story of Hamnet is gripping as it chronicles Shakespeare’s career … Continue reading

“Nonbinary”: Exploring gender and identity
American / Book Reviews / nonfiction / queer / The Latest

“Nonbinary”: Exploring gender and identity


Literature – the writing and telling of stories – has always been a way for marginalised groups to express themselves in ways that mainstream culture would not allow. It allows cis people, like myself, the opportunity to hear from and support nonbinary and trans voices. It allows nonbinary and trans voices to connect and find … Continue reading