Nonfiction
The Silent Patient: The Mind-Blowing Thriller That Left Me Questioning Sanity, Secrets, and the Truth We Hide
When I first picked up The Silent Patient, I expected a typical psychological thriller. A shocking twist or two, some suspenseful scenes, and an entertaining read. What I didn’t anticipate was how deeply it would unsettle me, how it would keep me guessing until the very last page, and how it would make me reflect on the very nature of truth, perception, and silence.
By Lukáš Hrdlička9 days ago in BookClub
Unhinged Healing - Raw Poetry For The Abused
The book that was never meant to be. In a moment of discontentment and boredom, I began to gather my poetry that was scattered across writing platforms, old journals, and forgotten documents on my Google Drive to bring some sort of organization to my writing portfolio. I realized I had a lot more poems than I thought I did. It was a joke at first. I said to my family, "Man. I didn't realize I had this many poems written. I could make a book of them." When my husband suggested actually making a poetry book to add to my portfolio with them, I almost automatically responded with: "Because I am no Poe or Emily Dickinson. No one wants to read my trash poems."
By Hope Martin14 days ago in BookClub
Michael Croslin
By LEAVIE SCOTT In the mid‑1970s, when hospital corridors thrummed with the hum of ventilators and rolling carts, and when the rhythm of care still leaned heavily on the instincts of nurses and physicians, a quiet revolution began to take shape at the bedside. It did not arrive with the drama of a breakthrough surgery or a headline‑grabbing drug. Instead, it came in the form of a compact, box‑shaped instrument that sat unobtrusively beside patients, its small display flickering with numbers that would soon alter the course of modern medical practice.
By TREYTON SCOTT15 days ago in BookClub
Rachel Reviews: The First Call was Mine by Kay Blake
Kay Blake's memoir has everything that I like about a real life recount. It has the confrontation of the past and the troubles that the person has faced; it has candour in its examination of the experiences and the resolutions reached, if that applies; it has humour, recognition, a humbleness to it and an appreciation of where that person is now and a true acknowledgement of the things that shaped them.
By Rachel Deeming18 days ago in BookClub
Out Of The Doll's House
This is such an interesting book! I’m fascinated by history but when it’s connected with women’s progress in history — I literally couldn’t put the book down. It isn’t just about the Suffragettes but goes from the Victorian Era right up to the 1980s, when the book was first published.
By Ruth Elizabeth Stiff23 days ago in BookClub









