Here, you will find the book of the month, some interesting book updates, our monthly theme, and new printables! (If you like).
“What really knocks me out is a book that, when you're all done reading it, you wish the author that wrote it was a terrific friend of yours and you could call him up on the phone whenever you felt like it. That doesn't happen much, though.”
― J.D. Salinger, The Catcher in the Rye
February Reading Challenge is live!
• New February Printable: Writing resources/
• YA Pick of the Month posted
• New playlists added
• QR code sheets updated
I chose the writing theme for February because I love writing just as much as I love reading. I know that I'm not the only one struggling to get her story, so I decided to dedicate this month to helping writers like me find their footing!
Beginnings ''Reading Quest” ❤️
February will be all about writing a story that represents you! Each week, there is a task that helps you write with more honesty, depth, and feeling. They're not just prompts — they’re creative missions.
🗺️ Create a visual “heart map” of everything that matters to you — people, places, memories, fears, dreams.
Then, write a short piece inspired by one item on your map.
Goal: Tap into personal meaning and emotional truth.
✉️ Write a letter to someone you’ll never actually send it to — a fictional character, a version of yourself, someone from your past.
Be raw, honest, and unfiltered. (Like in To All The Boys I've Loved Before!).
Goal: Practice your emotional vulnerability and voice.
🕰️ Choose a real memory and rewrite it as if it happened differently — change the outcome, the setting, or the people involved. (Like in Verity!).
Goal: Explore emotional degrees and creative control.
👟 Write a scene from the perspective of someone completely different from like you — different age, background, beliefs.
Make it empathetic and real.
Goal: Build emotional range and character depth.
Write a story where the central emotion changes every paragraph — joy, fear, anger, hope, grief, love.
Use rhythm, pacing, and imagery to make the reader feel each shift.
Goal: Improve emotional transitions and dynamic storytelling.
I am just starting to read this book, but I am really liking it! It really reminds me of Hunger Games but at the same time it's original in its own way!
“March's theme is all about love — in all its forms.” 🤔