The Bookish Bee Blog

8/20/2024

Review of Wednesdays were for Dying

by August Keller

This is the book I'm currently reading so I will occasionally review books that I find enjoyable, informative, etc. with the blogging feature here on the website: Link to Amazon below: The book is also sold at Barnes & Noble

Allegedly franticness is available to be purchased in London. Dr. Ezra Talbot isn't accepting, not when his was free.

As a subsidiary doctor with the Thames Police Court, Ezra has one work — to sort the rational from the distraught. In any case, some way or another, he's wound up on some unacceptable side, for Ezra has his very own issue. While his condition doesn't have a name in 1848, he realizes without a doubt what happens when you trust some unacceptable individual. One stumble and his mysteries will disintegrate.

For Magdalena Trudeau, destiny isn't a fantasy. She can nearly hear it talking… or maybe it's the water. Auntie Salomé showed all her names matters and insider facts unwind themselves, yet these mysteries are very tangled. At the point when she meets Dr. Talbot, he stirs in her a yearning for more, yet additionally a craving to help him, and perhaps herself all the while.

Dr. Talbot thinks he killed his fantasies quite a while in the past. Magdalena can awaken those fantasies, above all, she'll need to stroll through the dim. Together they leave on an excursion of torment, franticness, and trust.

A verifiable secret set in Victorian Britain, Wednesdays Were for Biting the dust is composed according to a double point of view and investigates the connection between psychological well-being and neurodivergence at a time before either was perceived.

To ORDER FROM AMAZON: https://amzn.to/4fP2ZGH