Fiction
Sympathy For An Old Man
British citizens of the 1700s wanted to be known for their good morals and compassion as citizens and needed to have a standard to follow. Charlotte Temple, written in 1791 by Susanna Rowson, is a sentimental novel that delivers the framework the British populace needed. Two aspects of sentimental novels that are seen in Charlotte Temple are stereotypical good and bad characters and excessive emotion. Charlotte’s grandfather, Mr. Eldridge, is a good character who exemplifies the qualities a man of his time should possess. Mr. Eldridge is a sympathetic, good character and shows excessive emotion that is typical of sentimental novels.
By Stephanie J. Bradberry4 days ago in BookClub
Book Review: Atmosphere by Taylor Jenkins Reid. Top Story - February 2026.
I flipped the book over in my hands in the centre of the small airport book shop. Although I had heard promising reviews of Atmosphere by Taylor Jenkins Reid, I hesitated. The synopsis didn’t compel me - I wasn’t much of a space girly. In high school it made me cringe when my peers would talk about the stars.
By sleepy drafts5 days ago in BookClub
I read Half His Age
If there's one book you add to your reading list this year, make it Half His Age by Jennette McCurdy. I went into this one already a fan of McCurdy as an author, but this book solidified exactly why she's become one of my favourites. It's personal, it's immersive, and it's the kind of story that stays with you long after you turn the last page.
By Parsley Rose 7 days ago in BookClub
The Day I Heard What Silence Really Meant. AI-Generated.
I was sitting in the living room, scrolling through my phone, the way I always did after a long day. The TV was on, but I wasn’t really paying attention. It was just noise background comfort. Across the room, my dad sat in his usual chair. He had his book open, but I could tell he wasn’t reading it. His glasses were perched on his nose, his eyes fixed on the same spot on the page. He hadn’t turned it in a while. For years, I had been used to this. The quiet evenings. The way he never said much. We weren’t the kind of family that filled rooms with talk. Conversations were short, practical. Growing up, I thought that was normal. I thought silence was just how people lived. But that night, something felt different. It was like I had finally noticed the quiet for what it really was. “Are you okay?” I asked, breaking the stillness. He looked up, startled, as if he’d forgotten I was there. He nodded quickly, almost too quickly. “I’m fine,” he said, his voice low. I wanted to believe him. I wanted to go back to my phone, let the moment pass. But I didn’t. “You seem... not fine,” I said, my voice awkward. I wasn’t used to pushing, especially with him. He hesitated, then closed the book slowly, resting it on his lap. He took off his glasses and rubbed his face. I could see the weight in his movements, the kind of heaviness you can’t fake. “I miss her,” he said quietly. It hit me like a cold wind. He didn’t need to say her name I knew who he meant. She had been gone for six months. My mother. His wife. I had been so caught up in holding my own grief together that I hadn’t stopped to think about his. I thought he was fine because he never said otherwise. He went to work. He made dinner. He read his books. But now, with those three words, I saw the cracks that had been there all along. “I miss her too,” I said. For a long time, we just sat there, the TV flickering in the background. I wanted to say something something big, something that would make it better. But nothing came to me. Instead, I got up and walked over to his chair. I sat on the armrest, the way I used to when I was a kid, and leaned my head against his shoulder. He didn’t say anything, but he reached up and held my hand. His grip was steady, warm. We sat like that for what felt like hours, not saying a word. And for the first time, the silence didn’t feel empty. It felt full of grief, of love, of everything we didn’t know how to say. That night, I learned something I hadn’t understood before. Silence isn’t just silence. Sometimes it’s a wall, a way to hold back the things we’re too afraid to feel. And sometimes, when you sit with someone long enough, it becomes something else. A bridge. When I went to bed, I didn’t turn on my phone. I didn’t need any noise to fill the space. Before I left the room, I glanced back at him. He was still sitting in his chair, his book unopened, his glasses in his hand. But he looked different lighter, maybe. Or maybe I had just finally learned how to see him. That moment didn’t fix everything. Grief doesn’t work like that. But it changed something. Sometimes, the most unforgettable moments are the quiet ones—the ones where nothing happens, except that you finally hear what the silence has been trying to tell you all along.
By DJADA Mahamat7 days ago in BookClub











