LIBRARY OF LEWIS LUCARDA

Here's my little library and a small reading log.

Recommended reading of this month:
The Nightingale and the Rose by Oscar Wilde

Last month's (January) reading:
Is Gender Necessary? (Redux) by Ursula K. Le Guin

* This note is draggable!

I love books! I used to be quite the bookworm as a young teen and then there was a long period of time in my young adult life where I did not read much at all. This changes NOW!! There's too many curiosities out there that it'd be a shame not to explore them. Let's go!

Hover over each cover to see the respective author and title.


CURRENT READ: The Talented Mr Ripley by Patricia Highsmith

NOTES: I've seen the film adaptation with Matt Damon.



Reading Log


Read from Feb 15 to 20
Go Tell It on the Mountain by James Baldwin

What an incredible read! Christian guilt and shame, transgenerational and/or intergenerational trauma and pain, all of that prose soaked the pages and left me - well, thinking! Thinking a lot about my own family, my own mortality, my own sins...



Read from Feb 14 to 15
Earthlings by Sayaka Murata (English translation by Ginny Tapley Takemori)

I quite liked this one, unexpectedly. Relatable at points and repelling at others, just another challenge to think and feel over...



Read from Feb 10 to 13
Hijab Butch Blues by Lamya H.

So beautifully written, it was an emotional rollercoaster that led me to many dark places I didn't dare to go by myself. I'm very glad I came across this book from other people!



Read from Feb 8 to 9
The Vegetarian by Han Kang (English translation by Deborah Smith)

Stunning prose. The ending left me unsatisfied but it was all-in-all still quite good!


Read from Jan 20 to Feb 8
One Day, Everyone Will Have Always Been Against this by Omar El Akkad

Lots to say, but in general very interesting and important read. Accessible and still respectful of both subject of the topics and the readers. Feasible grief and anger. Slight lack of direction for me.


Read from Dec 18 '25 to Jan 19 '26
Demian by Hermann Hesse (English translation by Damion Searls)

Beautifully translated; Searls did a good job of conveying the "mood" of Hesse's writing in Demian. I read this for the first time (in German) back in my high school days, which was honestly the perfect timing. It is an important coming-of-age text slash Bildungsroman in my opinion - no matter which language you read it in.


Favorites
Bram Stoker - Dracula
Mark Z. Danielewski - House of Leaves
Jonas Jonasson - The Girl Who Saved The King Of Sweden
Ocean Vuong - On Earth We're Briefly Gorgeous
Hermann Hesse - Unterm Rad
5★ Books

Jonas Jonasson - The Hundred-Year-Old Man Who Climbed Out Of The Window And Disappeared
Albert Camus - The Stranger
Torrey Peters - Detransition, Baby
Louise Glück - Winter Poems from the Collective
JRR Tolkien - The Hobbit
Franz Kafka - Brief an den Vater
Franz Kafka - Die Verwandlung / Das Urteil
Susanna Clarke - Piranesi
Virginia Woolf - A Room Of One's Own
Richard Siken - Crush
Ocean Vuong - Time is a Mother
Ursula K Le Guin - The Left Hand of Darkness
Jules Verne - Around the World in Eighty Days
Audre Lorde - Zami: A New Spelling Of My Name, A Biomythography
Erich Maria Remarque - Im Westen Nichts Neues
James Baldwin - Giovanni's Room