Status Updates From Lockwood & Co., Book 2 The ...
Lockwood & Co., Book 2 The Whispering Skull (Chinese Edition) by
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Kaylee M
is finished
"It's truth carried Dangers", "Muffling the daylight" "I felt the floor pitch under me" "My senses were alive" "Somewhere came a birdsong, very beautiful, very loud." At this point in the story the author is trying to create a feeling of uncertainty and mystery through word choice, noting that the characters are very on edge and how the birdsong didn't feel right. Without these words, the tone would be different
— Dec 18, 2024 07:42AM
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Kaylee M
is finished
I accidentally chose the Mandarin version on Goodreads. My book is in English, and I obviously can't read Mandarin. The book is starting to wrap up at this point, and I'm not a big fan of how it ends; they kill the antagonist. It just seems like a bit of a cop out, because the author didn't know how to have a respected member of society reintroduced to the world as a criminal. This is the second time he's done this
— Dec 16, 2024 08:05AM
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Kaylee M
is finished
If the main character was a food item, they might be a pineapple, pointy and guarded on the outside, not willing to allow people close, but has a soft interior if not a little bitter.
— Dec 10, 2024 08:08AM
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Kaylee M
is finished
I just realized that I accidentally picked the mandarin version on good reads. I cannot speak Mandarin.
— Dec 10, 2024 08:03AM
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Kaylee M
is finished
I think Lucy would pick "First fig" that she would relate the most to. She's not big about showing emotions, but she doesn't hide them either; she's an open book. She's a very hardworking character, driven to success that she can never quite reach. The nature of her job makes her work all the time, and she is likely very close to burning out. She continues on because her friends need her and to spite her enemies.
— Dec 06, 2024 08:05AM
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Kaylee M
is finished
I'm not a big fan of how this story is starting out. I think it falls into the trope that most ya novels fall into; really dumb romance tropes about a cool guy and a girl who acts cool but secretly is in love. I hate this trope, especially when none of the characters have any real personalities. The author doesn't understand how women work, and he justifies why a character is bad by insulting their appearance.
— Dec 04, 2024 07:48AM
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Kaylee M
is on page 381 of 384
A set of words I find interesting is the River Thames. It's not a descriptive word, and doesn't really have a definition, but the River has a lot of history tied to it; it was the River that the country of England first founded itself on through the transportation of goods and was founded in 43 Ad by Romans. I find it interesting that parts of the real world can be found in works of fantasy, and it's mentioned a lot.
— Dec 02, 2024 08:07AM
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Kaylee M
is on page 346 of 384
I wouldn't really say this book is the type of story where you get profound messages or teaches you much, but as a whole series, there are a few lessons. Being a story about ghosts, there are a lot of messages around death, namely that trying to escape it is impossible and it's better to just live every day to its full potential.
— Nov 25, 2024 08:05AM
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Kaylee M
is on page 320 of 384
I don't think Lucy would fully believe in the American dream, partly because she isn't American and lives in the Uk. Ignoring the American part , Lucy might believe in the ability to work your way up in the world. Not to the extent that you can be anything, but you can still live a good life; she get's to work with her friends while living comfortably and is well respected, which is all she wants from her life.
— Nov 21, 2024 08:04AM
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Kaylee M
is on page 320 of 384
I don't think Lucy would fully believe in the American dream, partly because she isn't American and lives in the Uk. Ignoring the American part , Lucy might believe in the ability to work your way up in the world. Not to the extent that you can be anything, but you can still live a good life; she get's to work with her friends while living comfortably and is well respected, which is all she wants from her life.
— Nov 21, 2024 08:04AM
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Kaylee M
is on page 320 of 384
I don't think Lucy would fully believe in the American dream, partly because she isn't American and lives in the Uk. Ignoring the American part , Lucy might believe in the ability to work your way up in the world. Not to the extent that you can be anything, but you can still live a good life; she get's to work with her friends while living comfortably and is well respected, which is all she wants from her life.
— Nov 21, 2024 08:04AM
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Kaylee M
is on page 320 of 384
I don't think Lucy would fully believe in the American dream, partly because she isn't American and lives in the Uk. Ignoring the American part , Lucy might believe in the ability to work your way up in the world. Not to the extent that you can be anything, but you can still live a good life; she get's to work with her friends while living comfortably and is well respected, which is all she wants from her life.
— Nov 21, 2024 08:04AM
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Kaylee M
is on page 320 of 384
I don't think Lucy would fully believe in the American dream, partly because she isn't American and lives in the Uk. Ignoring the American part , Lucy might believe in the ability to work your way up in the world. Not to the extent that you can be anything, but you can still live a good life; she get's to work with her friends while living comfortably and is well respected, which is all she wants from her life.
— Nov 21, 2024 08:04AM
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Kaylee M
is on page 282 of 384
I don't think the main character of the story would really celebrate the holidays. Lucy is very obsessed with her work and taking up any project or assignment she can for her group, mainly to anger her competitors. She's also really bad at being emotionally open with people and not close enough with her work colleagues to really consider them true friends. If she celebrates the holidays, it would be something small.
— Nov 19, 2024 08:14AM
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Kaylee M
is on page 216 of 384
There are a lot of themes present about death, more specifically how it's inescapable and obsessing over it can consume someones life. Through the story, we're given random ghosts that the characters fight against, who are people for some reason or another, couldn't let go of their life, mainly out of regret. I don't think the author intended this message; it's meant for kids and the story is more about adventure.
— Nov 11, 2024 08:05AM
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Kaylee M
is on page 181 of 384
Not a massive fan about how the book is starting to pan out. The author has a tendency to write a lot of characters in weird ways, especially women characters. The recent introduction was flo, a girl who seemingly lives without a family on a river bed, without a home. How does the author handle this character? He just calls her ugly and states that she smells bad over and over. The characters aren't well written
— Nov 05, 2024 08:04AM
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Kaylee M
is on page 160 of 384
One memory that Lucy might have frequently might be about the time she left her family behind to start working in the city. Lucy was never fond of her mother, and always ended up taking care of her sisters, but she still cared for them. From a young age, she was made to work, but setting out on her own, she could now work for herself. She did encounter a lot of danger in her first job, that may have stuck as memories
— Oct 30, 2024 07:45AM
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Kaylee M
is on page 128 of 384
I think the protagonist of the story believes that independence will make her successful. I don't fully agree with her; independence isn't everything, and isolation is never good for a person's emotional well-being. At the same time, she's also really desperate for the attention of her friends, which isn't great either, but I can't tell whether that's done on purpose, or the author doesn't know how to write women.
— Oct 28, 2024 08:03AM
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Kaylee M
is on page 76 of 384
The amount of child labor in this book is kind of surprising. I get it's a YA book about kids ghost hunting, but parts of it feel like something out of a dystopian. Ghosts plague a country, but only children can see them? Why not send kids to risk their life, instead of moving away! It feels like it could have been a commentary on the demands put on children, but the author doesn't acknowledge how messed up it is.
— Oct 16, 2024 07:39AM
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