anticipations

Anticipated Books Coming May 2022

Hello everyone, welcome to May! I can’t believe the weather is only just starting to warm-up, yet here we are. We have a huge list for you this month, there are just so many good books coming! As usual, I’ve linked the goodreads link for your convenience. Check them all out!


May 3

Book of Night by Holly Black
The Noh Family by Grace K. Shim
The Agathas by Kathleen Glasgow & Liz Lawson
Bravely by Maggie Stiefvater
See You Yesterday by Rachel Lynn Solomon
An Unreliable Magic by Rin Chupeco

May 10

A Show for Two by Tashie Bhuiyan
The Ghosts of Rose Hill by R. M. Romero
Breathe and Count Back from Ten by Natalia Sylvester

May 17

We Were Dreamers by Simu Liu
Once Upon a K-Prom by Kat Cho
Twin Crowns by Katherine Webber & Catherine Doyle

May 31

Private Label by Kelly Yang
The Counselors by Jessica Goodman
The Merciless Ones (The Gilded Ones #2) by Namina Forna
Rivals (American Royals #3) by Katharine McGee
Postcards from Summer by Cynthia Platt
Tokyo Dreaming by Emiko Jean
Places Weโ€™ve Never Been by Kasie West
My Mechanical Romance by Alexene Farol Follmuth
Love Radio by Ebony LaDelle


What are you most looking forward to this month? Let us know in the comments below!

discussion

Let’s Talk Bookish – To Annotate or Not to Annotate

Aria @ Book Nook Bitsย will be the new host for Letโ€™s Talk Bookish! If you arenโ€™t following her yet, good check out her blog and give her a follow!

APRIL 29:ย TO ANNOTATE OR NOT TO ANNOTATEโ€ฆย (ARIA @ย BOOK NOOK BITS)

Prompts:ย โ€ฆthatย is the question*. Do you like annotating books? If so, how do you annotate them? Is there a difference for you between ebooks, physical books, and audiobooks? If youโ€™ve ever had to annotate books in school, does this affect your willingness to annotate the books you read for fun? What are some downsides to annotating books in your opinion?

Welcome back to another week of LTB here at DTRH! Actually last week in my exam haze I totally posted the “wrong” topic…! Luckily, this is a free week, so I shall use it to catch up on last week’s topic proper. Sorry about that!

Honestly, I refuse to annotate by doing anything permanent to any book. Even my textbooks, which I know are often annotated, remain completely blank. Something about re-sale value? Though I don’t even usually re-sell all my used books. I guess I was taught (by who…?) never to mark a book, and so I can’t even bring myself to dog-ear them or honestly even write in pencil.

No judgment against those who do though. If it’s your own book, feel free to mark it up however you’d like! In fact, I think there is definitely some charm in seeing notes in a second-hand book. After all, you get a glimpse into what someone else thought about the book, and it also makes you think about whether you agree with what the previous person has chosen to annotate.

I wouldn’t mind marking up an e-book though. As long as it’s erasable, I’d be okay with it. That being said though, if I do make notes, I usually make them on a separate piece of paper rather than writing into the book. After all, if I want to find that note later, it would be more trouble to look through the book and find my note than to have a separate piece of paper pointing to the page number and line I wanted to annotate. As for audiobooks…how does one annotate an audiobook? If you know, please let me know in the comments down below.

I still don’t want to annotate my books even for class. I see the people around me doing it now, but I still can’t bring myself to do it for some reason. I can’t even really think of the reason why, I think it’s just ingrained into me. I imagine that people who annotate their textbooks, etc., are more willing to annotate the books they read too (please let me know if this applies to you!), but I actually have no idea. I think for me, I always want to have the book in a condition where I can share it with someone else, free of my own ideas.

I suppose that’s a bit contradictory, to find it charming that I can read someone else’s thoughts if the book is marked up, yet not want to mark it up myself for the exact opposite reason of not wanting to affect someone else’s reading. I wonder if one way of thinking or the other is actually more dominant in our community…

All in all though, please keep your books in good condition and free of markings if it’s someone else’s book! The number of times I’ve gotten my book back in…horrendous conditions from lending it out…I’m sure many of you can relate. Why do people do that?! I will never know.


4.5 star

Review: When You Trap a Tiger by Tae Keller

Some stories refuse to stay bottled up…

When Lily and her family move in with her sick grandmother, a magical tiger straight out of her halmoni’s Korean folktales arrives, prompting Lily to unravel a secret family history. Long, long ago, Halmoni stole something from the tigers. Now, the tigers want it back. And when one of those tigers offers Lily a deal–return what Halmoni stole in exchange for Halmoni’s health–Lily is tempted to accept. But deals with tigers are never what they seem! With the help of her sister and her new friend Ricky, Lily must find her voice… and the courage to face a tiger.



I didn’t know this book was actually classified under a children’s book when I picked it up. I suppose I should have known once I started reading a little bit of it, as it does revolve around quite a young girl. However, the story is very touching and has some really good elements, especially the Korean folktale ones, so I would still recommend this!

When You Trap A Tiger revolves around a young girl, Lily, whose grandmother (Halmoni in Korean) is sick and their whole family decides to visit her back in their home time. On the way, Lily spots something impossible: a tiger, on the road. Growing up, she had always been taught by Halmoni not to trust tigers, and now suddenly one appears in front of her, and even asks her for a deal. What will Lily do in the face of this new obstacle? Find out as she navigates her new life in the old town, and as she learns to become a part of a web of relations long sown.

Continue reading “Review: When You Trap a Tiger by Tae Keller”