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  Blind date with a book (18 views)

6 Jun 2025 19:51

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Article about blind date with a book:
Choose from this list of 10 unnamed books to have your perfect blind date with a book! When you find the one, click, and meet your true love. Blind Date With a Book: Which of These 10 Books Is Your Perfect Match?



Those of us who have experience with dating apps know that a date with a good book might be a hell of a lot better than a date with a real person, who might engage in all sorts of appealing behaviors like (1) talking about their exes or (2) stiffing the waiter on the tip. Unfortunately, sometimes dates with a book can be a little like meeting up with that Tinder match: you judge based on appearance, you&#8217,re disinterested, you get turned off quickly, sometimes for arbitrary reasons. To ensure that this Valentine&#8217,s Day you fall in love with a &hellip, Those of us who have experience with dating apps know that a date with a good book might be a hell of a lot better than a date with a real person, who might engage in all sorts of appealing behaviors like (1) talking about their exes or (2) stiffing the waiter on the tip. Unfortunately, sometimes dates with a book can be a little like meeting up with that Tinder match: you judge based on appearance, you&#8217,re disinterested, you get turned off quickly, sometimes for arbitrary reasons. To ensure that this Valentine&#8217,s Day you fall in love with a new story, let&#8217,s play a little game. (Normally, you won&#8217,t want your new suitor to play games with you. This time, you can make an exception.) Here are the rules: this article will list ten incredible books WITHOUT using their title, author, or official blurb. The choices are varied in terms of genre, length, and writing style, so there&#8217,s something for everyone—even you! Each description will conclude with a link to purchase the secret book, and, although you&#8217,ll meet your date face-to-face when you click on the link, try not to judge a book by its cover! While you might be tempted to change your mind, just remember&#8230, nobody likes a cheater! Image Via Steam. Bachelor #1. Image Via Medical Daily. This harrowing memoir offers a raw depiction of addiction and chronic illness, told in straightforward language with frequent, striking insights. You&#8217,ll want the narrator to make &#8216,better&#8217, choices—the two of you will have that in common. Chapters aren&#8217,t numbered but are instead titled after the place the author was when the following events took place. The only constant setting is the author&#8217,s body—a grim landscape, always unfamiliar terrain. This is a rare story of recovery that doesn&#8217,t promise a neat ending: as is the nature of chronic illness, the author is still sick. The memoir confronts the assumptions of what a sick person is supposed to look and act like. With its honest, almost painfully vulnerable voice and tone, it explores how illness works when the end goal isn&#8217,t wellness but life itself. Interested? BACHELOR #2. Image Via twitter user lifemachine. Ever wanted to feel warm and cozy AND intensely creeped out—all without attending a family reunion? This work of genre fiction takes place in a reality only slightly different from our own, not so much an alternate universe as a universe adjacent. The fun parts of this novel feel like the warm shelter of the fictional island in which this story takes place, full of cinnamon twists and rich tea and wool scarves. The terrifying parts of this novel are also the fun parts. Plot points include: a deadly race, a slow-burn romance, delicious pastries, organs strewn across the roadway. The language is as witty as it is poetic, with snappy dialogue and a rich sense of place. If it&#8217,s relevant, the ending made me cry both happy and sad tears. Swipe right? BACHELOR #3. Image Via Master file. This one&#8217,s for the coldhearted realists out there—tense, dark, and short as life. Here&#8217,s the thing about this one: everyone dies at the end. That&#8217,s not so much a spoiler as it is most of the plot. Our setting is the passenger seat of a car—you&#8217,ll never leave, and neither will they. The language is succinct and the structure creative, since the book takes place over about the course of an hour, it should take you about as much time to read the novella as it does for the characters to meet their grisly, unstoppable fate. Can it really be called a murder mystery if you know exactly what&#8217,s coming? This is an intelligent literary exploration of sexuality, violence, and control with the rapid heartbeat of a paperback crime novel. Read for fast cars, dark roads, and bad men. Is it a date? Bachelor #4. Image Via Voice of Detroit. Magical realism meets immigration, xenophobia, global conflict, and human rights in this expansive literary novel. The story takes place on multiple continents as our displaced narrators travel the world searching for a home that may always be further and further behind them. The book explores what brings people together and what drives them apart, filled with love that&#8217,s sometimes stronger for places than for other people. Generally, the language is direct with little stylistic flourishes—not exactly blunt and to the point but not filled with metaphors either. Since the whole thing is probably a metaphor, your thirst for literary beauty (as well a close examination of the technical consequences of the story&#8217,s magical element) will still be sated. It&#8217,s international, somewhat intergenerational, highly relevant, and certainly gorgeous. Curious? Bachelor #5. Image Via Last Bottle Wines. If you&#8217,re a fan of downward spirals, misanthropic female narrators, and the idea of New York more than the place itself, you&#8217,re about to have an excellent book date. The novel explores escapism, isolation, and self-involvement as the narrator slips further and further away from herself and the few people who remain in her life. Strange, pessimistic, and often completely merciless, this novel presents us with a somewhat despicable narrator who, although she is rife with privilege, goes to extremes to relieve her alienation from society. If you want an unflinching look at human grossness, look here. Though the language is often confrontational, it&#8217,s equally clear that the author has a strong grasp of her characters, voice, and tone. Bonus: the author is actually aware of her character&#8217,s shortcomings and advantages. Wanna try? Bachelor #6. Image Via curbed.













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