• ⌂
  • About
  • Categories
    • #books
    • #cafes
    • #crochet
    • #lately
    • #travel
  • bookstagram
  • ✉︎
Brunch at Audrey's

featured

Switzerland travel diary

featured

My favourite secondhand bookstores in Philly

featured

Birthday disposables

books

All the books I read in the second half of 2023

January 8, 2024

I hit a reading slump mid-year and my reading never really picked back up. In the second half of 2023, I read 19 books or 5261 pages, bringing my 2023 total to 53 books or 16611 pages. I didn’t think I’d hit 52 book this year and had even gone back to readjust my Goodreads reading challenge in the last days of December, lowering it to 50, but I hit 52 books just in time and randomly came across a picture book that got rave reviews from Redditors, taking me to 53. The number doesn’t matter so much to me, but I still wanted to remember reading that book! (I promptly reverted my Goodreads reading challenge goal back to 52.)

I’m a slow reader and turn to books to avoid responsibilities, so I spend more time than I should reading and have been telling myself to read less, or at least not get so caught up in reading the incredible number of books that it feels like so many other bookstagrammers do. Quality, not quantity! That said, I only have one new all-time favourite from the second half of the year and two honourable mentions. Anyways, I’m planning to share my 2023 reading wrap up in a separate post (including top reads), so look out for that!

Read More

books

2023 mid-year book freak out tag

July 16, 2023

It’s been a very lacklustre reading year so far! January started off strong, as I usually like to get ahead of the Goodreads reading challenge over winter break. February and March were steady. April was finals month, so I only managed to binge the Twisted series. I kicked off summer break in May with a super casual readathon and kept the momentum going, but it all fell apart in June haha. In the latter half of June, I was hyperfixated on James Cameron, maritime disasters, and Bakery Story, so I barely picked up a book. I’m still ahead of my Goodreads reading challenge though, thanks to the buffer I set up for myself in January. Across these past six months, I’ve read 34 books or 11350 pages, of which 81% were by women authors and 55% by authors of colour. 5 were rereads, and I have 2 new all-time favourites, so all is not lost!

Some bookish highlights include hosting my first ever bookstagram giveaway where I gave away one of my crochet love letter book sleeves, receiving an ARC and signed final copy of Yellowface by RF Kuang from the publisher, and receiving a Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow publisher tote bag and signed hardcover, which Cheryne won in a giveaway then sent to me?? Speechless.

The bookish lowlight was the end of Book Depository, rip. I’ve loved watching everyone’s final Book Depository hauls… but at what cost??? For those in the US looking for UK editions, Blackwell’s is an affordable option, but unfortunately I don’t have any recs for those in the UK looking for US editions. Please share if you know any!

Read More

travel

The Super Mario Bros Movie & Super Nintendo World

April 18, 2023

Super Nintendo World is absolutely swarming right now, what with it being just over a month since opening, The Super Mario Bros Movie just coming out, spring break, and the first week of good weather LA has had in months! These marketers know what they’re doing!

The Super Mario Bros Movie

We watched The Super Mario Bros Movie the night before visiting Super Nintendo World as a pre-game. While I can’t personally speak to the movie’s nostalgia factor since I don’t play video games, I know that there are a ton of references that fans will enjoy. The movie is pretty much all references and no plot, but hey, sometimes you just need something that’s not that serious! My favourite sequence was towards the beginning of the movie when Mario and Luigi were running to their first client. It was a great adaptation of the game mechanics without being too literal, and it was a great scene for characterisation as well.

Super Nintendo World

The next day, we headed out to Universal Studios Hollywood bright and early, and made a beeline to Super Nintendo World. We only had two things on our itinerary: Mario Kart: Bowser’s Challenge and Toadstool Cafe. The only other things to do at Super Nintendo World are the four mini games, which you need to buy a power-up band to play (they’re kind of like the wands at Harry Potter World), but you can just buy one for your party and pass it around if you don’t want to shill out the bucks.

Despite arriving only 30 minutes after the park opened, we snagged some of the last spots for Super Nintendo World’s virtual line. Luckily I found a link for Toadstool Cafe reservations the previous night, so we were able to book that on our drive over once the link went live for the day. Otherwise, we would have had to wait until we got into Super Nintendo World to scan the Toadstool Cafe reservation QR code, and they definitely would have been fully booked by the time we got in.

Read More

travel

Six Flags Magic Mountain

February 23, 2023

Without thinking too much about it, I accepted my friend’s invite to Six Flags off the high from Disneyland and Universal Studios. I’m an amusement park girlie now, didn’t ya know? I went to bed binging POV videos on Youtube, slowly realising what I was getting myself into, wondering if I’d survive the day ahead.

The first time I ever went on an extreme roller coaster was a trip to Six Flags Great Adventure (New Jersey) during summer camp in middle school. I have no idea what my friend and I spent our time doing, because we were too scared of the big kid roller coasters. We probably just ate a lot of food and browsed the merch shops, but at some point, we figured we should probably go on at least one. Working up the courage for Bizarro (now Medusa), we promised to hold each other’s hand through the whole ride. As soon as we tottered on the first crest, it was every woman for herself. We immediately released each other to grip our own restraints.

Read More

lately

Journals I’m keeping in 2023

February 1, 2023

Nothing like starting a fresh journal at the beginning of the year and forgetting about it three months in. Let’s hope the three I’m keeping this year stick around 😉

Weekly planner

I’ve kept a planner since elementary school, and for the last few years I’ve settled on using 5 x 8.25″ gridded Moleskines, keeping it simple with single-paged monthly layouts at the beginning of the notebook followed by single-paged two-columned weekly layouts: the first column divided into daily blocks for priority tasks and deadlines, the second column left empty for ongoing tasks and notes. No fancy typography or anything, completely utilitarian. (See my old planner system)

Then after all these years, I stumbled upon a Daiso planner laid out EXACTLY the same way (with the monthly layouts and weekly layouts) and I felt so validated. Yup, mhm, this design is official. So this year I’ve forgone the Moleskine for the Daiso planner. I love how it’s all laid out for me exactly as I would have done, how there are the exact number of pages needed for the year, how it’s thinner without the excess pages than the generic notebooks I usually use as planners, and it’s Daiso cheap! Daiso better continue manufacturing these planners every year, because I fully intend to continue using them!

Monthly booklet calendar for daily journaling

This journal was inspired by Amaris. Rather than journal in a typical notebook, she uses a calendar booklet with full-spread monthly calendars and journals in the daily blocks. I love that the limited space takes the pressure off writing something long and impressive, like it’s giving me permission to be mundane — small notes for small spaces. As a matter of fact, so far my daily journaling has largely consisted of listing off the food and media I consume; school days with more social interaction sometimes inspire more emotive inventory haha. Riveting stuff.

It’s super satisfying to be able to review a month at a glance, kind of like 1 Second Everyday videos or BeReal’s Memories, but I find writing works a lot better for me because I get too caught up in aesthetics otherwise (leave it to me to figure out how to curate a BeReal haha) (jk I don’t have BeReal). Also, I always forget to take videos or pictures when I’m doing things, but with writing, I have the luxury of documenting after the fact.

Reading notebook

Just a plain lined A5 notebook with a page of thoughts and reviews of varying formality for each book I finish. None of that fancy habit tracking, goal setting, monthly TBR stuff. Since I switched to sharing quarterly highlights on the blog instead of monthly reading recaps, I’ve been much more irregular about reviewing books and reflecting in general. I plowed through 111 books last year — the most books I’ve ever read in a year — but I admit that it wasn’t the most thoughtful experience, so this year I want to challenge myself to review every book I read in my notebook — just for myself, so I don’t need to concern myself about scheduling reviews promptly, talking about books in a consistent format for others to easily interpret, or any of that unimportant stuff.

However, at the same time, I’ve just up a Notion account, and I have a good flow going for tracking reads and for work (still figuring out a good flow for school). I’ve found myself doing all my note-taking on Notion (which works much better for detailed plot notes than a single A5 sheet) and drafting reviews, then transcribing a more succinct version in my physical reading journal. We’ll see whether a physical reading journal will continue to be a helpful tool for me, or if Notion will suffice. There’s something comforting about having a physical journal though, a reassurance that its contents won’t get lost in the ether.

Read More

books

2022 in books

January 27, 2023

This year I read 111 books or 34,036 pages, of which 83% were by women authors and 67% by authors of colour. I spent $116.49 and saved $1,459.61 from read books not bought. But all those stats and achievements pale in comparison to the fact that: I read my favourite book of my life!! No, not just of this year or in a particular genre. It’s THEE one. If you follow me on bookstagram, my favourite will come as no surprise at all: Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow by Gabrielle Zevin.

I was lucky enough to receive an ARC of tmrx3, which I binged the week I finished my Spring 2022 finals and left me in a book hangover for a month. Tbh I’m not sure I’ve gotten past it even now, half a year later! Cindy gifted me the stunning iridescent UK edition in paperback, which is currently out of stock almost everywhere. Almost 20% of my bookstagram posts this year were for tmrx3, and all two of my Reels were for tmrx3 (here and here). I made origami crane bookmarks with Hokusai printed origami paper (here and here). I bought three custom pressed flower bookmarks with tmrx3 quotes from Page Petal (here) — shout out to Macey for introducing these bookmarks to me! I got back into Tamagotchi (here). I delved into Gabrielle Zevin’s backlist, revisiting Elsewhere — one of my childhood favourites — and reading The Storied Life of AJ Fikry, Memoirs of a Teenage Amnesiac, and Young Jane Young for the first time. And the tmrx3 train doesn’t stop there. In 2023, I hope to reread tmrx3 as well as A Little Life, which I found some similarities with, and also dip into Emily Dickinson’s Complete Poems and Macbeth, both which are inspirations in tmrx3.

Besides everything tmrx3, the other major bookish moment of 2022 was crocheting bookish accessories — all freehanded! 🤗 I crocheted this checkered tote; perfectly sized to fit a few library books, a reading journal, and a stationary pouch; not too big for my petite self and not too small to hold everything I need. It’s probably in my top 2 most frequently used bags. I crocheted this checkered Kindle sleeve with a cute fuzzy pink trim and perfectly sized to my Kindle Oasis. And I also crocheted a love letter book sleeve, which I’m doing an Instagram giveaway for next week — you heard it here first!

Crocheting also meant dipping into the mysterious world of audiobooks. I’m an amateur crocheter after all and need to keep a close eye on my stitches, so audiobooks (and podcasts) are much better suited for crocheting for me than Netflix. At first I felt really accomplished for blazing through audiobooks while also making amazing progress with my crochet projects, but I soon realised that I’m not the most active listener and I’m much more of a visual learner. There were some books in my honourable mentions that I listened to on audio that I think could have made my top reads of 2022 if I had read a physical copy, like Braiding Sweetgrass by Robin Wall Kimmerer, which I intend to reread in 2023. But the best kinds of books for me to listen on audio were the books I didn’t really want to read and just wanted to get the gist of to understand what other people were talking about on bookstagram.

And now, drumroll for my favourite reads of 2022!

Read More
Newer Posts
Older Posts

Hey there!

Catch me burrowed in a book with some boba on hand. My life is pretty average, but it’s the little things that count, right? Thanks for stopping by! -Audrey

[[ more >> ]]

Stay in the loop

Subscribe to new posts by email

Archives

Copyright 2025 Brunch at Audrey's | Site design handcrafted by Station Seven