hi there booktube - we are going to talk about my winter TBR I have a stack of 16 books
I hope to read during the rest of
December and January and February let's
start this TBR with the two non-fiction
books I hope to read during the season
the first one is one that is
really personal for me I want to read
all in my head
an epic quest to cure an unrelenting
totally unreasonable and only slightly
enlightening headache by Paula Hammond
this is a memoir about a woman that does
have us from chronic headache which is
what I am suffering from for the last 15
years so I find it very important to
read the type of book
I heard fantastic things about this book
I will let you guys know what I think
about this book and if I think it's a
good book to read for chronic pain or if
it is not for me the next one I have is
a reread I wanted to do because my mom
very nice got me a new copy of it
and that is the glass castle by
Jeannette Walls this is about Jeanette
Walls who shares her life growing she
has a very different life her parents
are a bit strange and I really remember
enjoying that so I wanted to see what I
think about it now the next one is the
only classic on my list and that is
crime and punishment I am just in the
mood for this book I'm in the mood for
Russian classic and it's perfect for
winter time it is a reread that I read
this book over ten years ago for the
first time and I remember really really
enjoying it just remember enjoying the
writing what kind of topics he handled
and how he handled them and it made me
think and really love this type of
classic more so I just want to be
experienced this or experience it for
the first time in English then I have two
YA books one is a fantasy and one is
a futuristic kind of fantasy I want to
read three dark crowns by Kendra
Blake it's about three sisters that have
to fight for the throne all three have
different types of magical powers the other one is the thousands floor by Katherine
McGee this is a book I added simply for
the entertainment point of reading a book
it is about this huge building in New
York and the future there it is a
thousand floors high and a girl gets
either pushed or jumps from the
penthouse level of it and then I have a
children's middle grade kind of book
that is the lie tree by Frances
hardigan and this book is illustrated by
Chris Riddell I want to read this book
because it is about a tree that only
grows if you're tell lies
it is about this girl whose father is
supposed to be a scientist but as it
turns out he is quiet a good at lying
and telling untruth about his
scientific discoveries this edition has
as I said illustrations in it here's
another one and then moving on to the
rest of the books now I have a good
mixture of English and German books
because I felt like reading books in
German so I just added them I normally
try to not show so many German editions
and titles and books here on booktube
since I am doing it in English I just
decided here you know what? I will always tell you guys the English title if the books
are available in English and we just see
what happens with that but you guys
get to see the German covers of the some
of the books which i think is always fun
the portable veblen by Elizabeth
McKenzie I looked it up before I started
this video and forgot since then this
book is either about a woman that starts
to imagine a talking squirrel or it is
about a woman that notices a squirrel
following her and she starts talking to
it I cannot wait to read this book and
figure out what it is all about the next
one is every read and that is the Night
Circus it is about a circus that seems
to appear out of nowhere and is gone
just as fast the next one is one I never
ever heard anybody mentioned but I just
thought it sounded really fascinating
north of Boston or as it is called in
German die Frau die die Fror by Elizabeth ello
this book is about a woman that cannot
feel the code she is never cold
she cannot feel the freezing
temperatures and she's kind of somebody that
people find fascinating and scientists
wants to study to figure out why it is
that she can't feel cold I just want to
give it a try I think the cover is
really fitting for winter the entire
book reminded me of winter so I would
give this book a read during winter and
we are moving into the historical
fiction section of this TBR the kept
by James Scott which is in I mean just
look at the cover clearly it's a winter
which we have snow landscape and burning
house clearly screams winter this is set
during 1897 in winter in America in
state of New York you cannot remember a
lot about it it looked so wintery and
fitting for the season that this time to
read it and figure out what it is all
about the miniaturist that Jessie Burton
this is another historical fiction set
in Europe in Amsterdam and a young woman
has to marry an old man the story is
about how the husband gives his young
wife a miniature house of their own and
the story that wife starts to play in
the miniature start to reflect the life
and the real actual normal-sized house
the next historical fiction is the pillars
of the earth or die Säulen der Erde by Ken Follett
this is a historical fiction that is very epic
it's one of those story that that you
sink in and get completely absorbed by I
remember really loving it when I read it
now I will re-read it and see what I
think about it now
the next one is another one that is just
perfect for winter because it has snow
in the title and that is it snow falling
on Cedars or Cedars whatever you call it
in English and that is by David Guterson
 I have no idea how
to say that name sorry this is in the
beautiful Bloomsbury modern classics
edition that just came out this year and
loved the cover of it it is about a
fisherman that is found dead in the net
of his own fish boat he is a Japanese
American immigrant in the... I cannot
remember the time it is set in but it
is historical fiction it's just about
what the time is like for immigrants and
what they can expect to happen when some
like that happens rate thinks about it
and it fits winter because you know snow
and the last historical fiction I have
to share in this third to last book is
the butcher's hook by Janet Ellis I
bought it in the anticipation that I
would read it right away because I
remember knowing what it was about and
being completely fascinated by it now I
kind of forgot what it is about other
than it is about a girl that either has
to marry the butcher's son or wants to
marry the butcher's son and that is just
not something that you should do or want
to do or something like that I can not remember!
I will tell you guys what it is about and what I
thought about it moving on to the last
two books six four and this is a
Japanese crime book about girls that are
getting kidnapped and the police cannot
figure out who is the kidnapper and what
is happening to the girls and the last
book I hope to read is Sakrileg or The
Da Vinci Code by Dan Brown and at the
second in the Robert Langson serious we
follow a professor of religious studies
who's trying to help in solving murders
and gets really ridiculous really really
fast but it's really entertaining and
I'm just in the mood for that so I added
it to the pile and it's time for re-read
anyway those were all 16 books I hope to
read during next two and a half...  little bit last months
I would love to hear what you guys
plan to read during the winter season
and if you have any recommendations for
nonfiction books about chronic illnesses
please let you know and I'll definitely
check those I would hope you guys
enjoyed this video and I hope to talk
with you guys in the comments and - see
you in the next video and I wish you all
a fantastic day bye
