partridgemod: (Default)
partridgemod ([personal profile] partridgemod) wrote in [community profile] in_a_peartree2019-12-05 10:01 am

lt_aldo_raine's Tree

This is the Tree for [personal profile] lt_aldo_raine! Below are the requested Pears it can be decorated with (beginning 24 December).



Username: [personal profile] lt_aldo_raine

AO3 Username: LT_Aldo_Raine

Request 1: picspam for BabeRoe! (Band of Brothers)

Request 2: playlist of songs from your favorite type of music/artist(s)

Request 3: book/film/tv recommends for historical fiction (of any era!) and/or non-fiction about WWII

Request 4: literally anything involving Christmas (surprise me!)

Request 5: ficlet featuring a Babe/OFC and/or Gene/OFC (again, Band of Brothers)

Additional Information: I'm pretty easy-going, and I really appreciate any/all pears! <3



slightlytookish: Girl sitting in a field of flowers, reading a letter (Reading)

Book Recs

[personal profile] slightlytookish 2019-12-28 12:05 pm (UTC)(link)
Happy Holidays! Here are a few recs:

1. I Capture the Castle by Dodie Smith - coming of age story set in 1930s England. I consider this book comfort food and try to reread it every year.

2. The Glittering Hour by Iona Grey - a dual-narrative book that actually kept my interest in both halves of the book (doesn't always happen!) set in 1920s and 1930s England (I think you are seeing a pattern: I have a big interest in the first half of the 20th century :p)

3. The Stationery Shop by Marjan Kamali - (I break the pattern!) This is set in a historical time and place that I know little about (1950s Iran) so that was a great interest to me (I should note that part of the book does take place in current times).

I hope you enjoy these if you read them! :)
lt_aldo_raine: (Default)

Re: Book Recs

[personal profile] lt_aldo_raine 2019-12-31 01:32 am (UTC)(link)
I'm really interested in multi-narrative novels, especially those that feature large temporal shifts, so 2 and 3 are definitely of interest. Also, The Glittering Hour just sounds like a perfect read in general. I also really appreciate the descriptor of "comfort food" when given to anything that's not food, so I'm curious about the first text, too! I'll have to give them a gander.

Thanks so much for the recs, Took! <3