How To Kill Your Family

How To Kill Your Family by Bella Mackie
Reviewed by Omma
📘📘📘📘

Well done Bella for doing an incredible job of writing a satirical and socially relevant fictional book!

I know ethically I shouldn’t support a murderer but somehow you can’t help but see Grace’s point of view and secretly want to be friends with her!

Grace’s social commentary and view of the world and is so spot-on and it marvels at the ridiculousness of some aspects of the life led by the rich.

The only reason I didn’t give it a full 5 stars was because I found the pace to be slow during the chapters where she was writing in her diary and I was frustrated by the ending as I wanted more for Grace!

Omma Ahmed

I’ve always loved reading as a kid because it was one of the few Asian-mum approved hobbies although she would have preferred ‘less novels and more school books’! I also grew up in the Harry Potter era so that’s when I really remember falling in love with reading. (Big up my Y7 English teacher for reading a few pages of Philosophers stone at the end of every lesson! You were a real one Mr Williams!) I love being part of this book page (even though I slack massively due to lack of energy and concentration!) because sometimes it felt like a lifeline to help keep me sane. We started it during the time I was feeling really shitty about my Crohn’s disease. It’s been a tough 7 years and the last 3 have probably been the hardest especially mentally so when Linda suggested putting this page together, without hesitation I was down and I’m so proud of us! Writing reviews helped me to organise my thoughts and even resulted in me creating a second Instagram page (@AnOstomateForLife) about my Crohn’s journey. Yes that was a shameless plug and I’m not sorry! Along with reviews, I’ve also loved the creative side of things such as having input in our logo, creating our bookmark and taking book pictures even though it’s awkward af in public! So a few of my fave books: The Godfather by Mario Puzo (made me love the film even more! I’m a self-proclaimed movie buff too btw), Autobiography of Malcolm X by Malcolm X and Alex Healy, The Harry Potter series (obviously), Jemima J by Jane Green, Moonlight over Manhattan by Sarah Morgan, Where’d You Go Bernadette by Maria Semple and We Should All Be Feminists Chimamanda Adichie.

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Beautiful World, Where Are You

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Things We Do Not Tell the People We Love