seehawkswin.bsky.social
Reading too much to cope with the climate crisis. She/her
225 posts
195 followers
100 following
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If you know anyone who would be interested please @ them!
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#booksky💙📚 book 16 of 2025: The Ex Vows. Really cute second chance romance. I loved this but didnt love the MC choosing SLU as a Seattle neighborhood to live in 🤣
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#booksky💙📚 book 15 of 2025: how to live in a chaotic climate. This is good for people struggling with the overwhelming emotions brought on by accepting the climate crisis.
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#booksky💙📚 book 14 of 2025: the Milkweed Lands. I loved this book. It’s short and sweet. Gives Milkweed the beautiful story it deserves and shows how interconnected we all are❤️
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#booksky💙📚 book 13 of 2025: collection of nature inspired poetry. Didnt love the ableist language that served no point. Poems were okay. This is a series of nature books I reviewed to fix my netgalley feedback ratio🤣
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#booksky💙📚 book 12 of 2025: The Comfort of Crows. Honestly wanted to love this it was just a little boring. Still pleasant. Basically small entries for each week of the year pertaining to seasons about the magic of nature around us.
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#booksky💙📚 Book 11 of the year: Original Sins by Eve L Ewing. Comes out this week and I highly recommend. Required reading for educators. Explores our propaganda based education system and its intentions to force the erasure and disappearance of Black and Indigenous people.
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🤣
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“The seasons I remember most are the ones I never want to come again. And isn’t this how each story starts? With a list of things we know we cannot take back?”
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“It is somehow easy to forget that there are so many ways to die while black & not all of them involve being made hollow while the world watches & isn’t that a funny thing?”
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“& I didn’t know how to talk about distance out loud.”
“which is a weird way to say I think I could love you until even the sun grows tired of coming back every spring.”
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“you’re right maybe there is no such thing as a country maybe there is just gutted land and rows of sharp teeth that have torn at my flesh for so long I’m not exactly sure which wound is the one I belong to.”
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“Blessed be the destruction of all things too beautiful to endure an untouched life.”
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“She asks if I have ever watched a singer throw his grief over an audience like a blanket, a mass of boys weeping in the front row & I tell her yes because I have seen a father singing a prayer into his palms while a woman he loves fades away forever & I think this may be the same thing”
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“There are ten different ways to say sunset. The bartender says my face is wearing all of them.”
“you may ask why I allow my face to drown in less and less joy with each passing year and I will say I just woke up one day and I was a still photo in everyone else’s home but my own.”
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“I am like you. I still want to feast on the happiest moments of strangers. I don’t know what this makes men like us except bound to our loneliness”
“how much of our language has been pulled over the tongues of everyone but us?”
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#booksky📚💙 book 10 of 2025, finally book of Jan was this unforgettable collection of Hanif Abdurraqib’s. He blends music and grief together in a way that always leaves me reeling.
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I felt really similar
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Oooh what did you think!!
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And as much as I absolutely loved it, I think it would have benefitted from being about 200 pages shorter
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Yeah it took my like 3 weeks🤣
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booksky book 9 of 2025: Dengue Boy. Gifted from Astra House publishing. This is a bizarre book that follows multiple story lines, including that of Dengue Boy who is Dengue Girl who is Dengue Void who holds our fate at the end of her blood sucking stinger. Climate fiction from Argentina.
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#booksky book 8 of 2025: Against Erasure. A beautiful collection of photos from Palestine before and during British occupation. Not just a collection of memories, but also a promise.
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#booksky book 7 of the year: Sanderson’s Wind and Truth. The final installment in part 1 is the Stormlight Archive. While struggling at times in dialogue, this story wrapped up perfectly with just enough cliffhangers to leave you wondering.
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2025 reading: book 6- Where They Last Saw Her. This is an indigenous thriller following a main character who gets swept up in trying to find out what is happening to missing women and people in her area.
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La esperanza es nuestra resistencia. Juntos enfrentaremos lo que venga con valentĂa. Guarda el nĂşmero de la LĂnea Directa de Defensa contra la DeportaciĂłn (1-844-724-3737), imprime recursos de Conoce Tus Derechos y Ăşnete a un Equipo de Respuesta Rápida hoy: tinyurl.com/waisnrapidresponse. 5/5
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Because I forgot to add ALT text here is where ICE has been spotted:
Kent
Auburn
Seattle (3rd & University)
Queen Anne
Tukwila (also where immigration offices are)
Yesterday:
Renton highlands
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Yeah no fucking kidding